By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
By Andrew Steketee. Photos by Liz Steketee.
Every June on Nantucket, a dune-infested island thirty miles off the southern coast of Massachusetts, cool Atlantic waters begin to warm, attracting spearing, sand eels, seabirds, pinnipeds and the season’s first run of decent striped bass. Chronically abutting the island’s rips, shoals and sand-to-moraine shoreline, stripers (or greenheads), generally are hungry and agreeable during low light and heavy, seal-free tides. Looking to increase your odds? Hunt down a veteran captain and his center-console, and be ready to deliver Mushmouths eighty-feet away. Check out these photos from our recent trip with Jeff Heyer.
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By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Fishing here on Nantucket has done nothing but improve. With the week-long blow long behind us and a stable air mass the fish have moved in almost everywhere. Nantucket harbor is fishing well and I have had several reports of good size fish there. On the West End the sight/flats fishing has opened wide up; this past week Jaime Rantanen from PA landed 12 stripers up to 17 pounds and pulled hooks on 3 others. Dan Zemann of NY landed a nice 40 incher (22 1/2 pounder) along with 3 other nice fish a few days ago, and managed 8 today all ranging from 29 to 36 inches, and Jim Beasley of Florida landed several nice fish with a personal best on fly of 34 inches. The rips have exploded with squid so we took a "store" trip out yesterday morning and were doubling and tripling up with stripers ranging from 30 inches to 37 inches; not as big as the report I had from the previous day but all nice fish. Capt Shawn Bristow has been getting into some fish up to 43 inches in the rips.
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By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
We're starting to settle into the heat of the Northern California summer here in Redding. The famous Hex Hatch is on at Fall River, and should last through the middle of July. The shad fishing on the Sacramento River near Corning has been red-hot. The Lower Sacramento has been fishing well for trout, with consistent nymphing all day long and some decent dry fly action on caddis in the evenings. The mountain streams (McCloud, Pit, Hat, Upper Sac) have all been fishing well, especially in the evenings when caddis and golden stoneflies come to the water. [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
The weather gods have smiled upon us here in the Keys the past couple of weeks. Light winds, hot temperatures and afternoon storms have finally made it start to feel like summer in Key West. The fishing has responded. I have been solely focusing on tarpon and have been finding a good number of fish laid up in backcountry basins and cruising the Atlantic fish lanes. In addition, we have seen sporadic shrimp and guppy hatches where the tarpon have been feeding with gusto in the early mornings. One thing to try when the wind drops and the fish get spooky, try putting away the 12-weights and pick up a 10-weight rigged with a long leader. The lighter line can definitely make the difference between casting to a ton of fish and hooking some of them. Hopefully this good weather and good fishing will continue as we move into July. [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Because of the low snow year, the Snake is red hot, which is even an anomaly because it never fishes good until mid-July. Big stones, both salmonflies and golden stones, yellow Sallies and pmds, plus many, many caddis.
The South Fork is fishing well in spots, nymphing. The famous salmonfly hatch is days if not minutes away from Section 4, or down by Lorenzo.
The Green has been up and down with water, i.e. cold or cool, so fishing is good, but when the river quits fluctuating the big browns will be more happy and likely to take flies. [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Could someone please tell this guy it's OKAY to roll up your jeans before entering the river?
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By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
If carp are so damn hard to catch on fly rods, why are these suicidal fish literally jumping into the boat? Watch as CNN’s Dave Mattingly gets absolutely drilled, not once, but twice by two huge Asian carp as he reports on the infestation of the Mississippi’s tributaries [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Long casts, while impressive, are often overkill. And while bombing flies into hula hoops on the back lawn improves your aim, what matters most in the real fishing world is accuracy under pressure. Pro redfish angler Travis Holeman shared with me this “40 feet in four seconds” practice drill that will help you lose the casting “yips.” His theory: if you master shorter casts -- on target and on time -- you will definitely hook more fish, from trout rising in the river to bonefish cruising the flats.
It’s a two-person exercise. Set out five targets (trash can lids, hula hoops, doormats, whatever) at 40 feet. When the caster is ready, the timekeeper calls a random target, one through five. Using a stopwatch, or shouting “one Mississippi, two Mississippi …” (like the pass rusher in a flag football game) he/she counts four seconds. The caster must hit the target before time is called. Mix it up, then trade places.
This drill makes judging distance second nature, so you focus on aiming the cast, not measuring line. The trick is to start by paying out 20 feet... [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
By Kirk Deeter. Photos and video by Tim Romano
Introducing the first of the Fflogger “what they won’t let you do out back of the flyshop” gear tests …
The Premise: The most important factor for me in selecting a reel is how smooth the drag is ... particularly in the startup, when a fish makes its initial run. A smooth reel will pay out line evenly as the fish pulls against the drag; the rod responds by flexing at a fairly constant arc. A bad reel leaves the rod bouncing as the drag hiccups along. The hiccups are bad, because a bouncing rod might cause the fish to come off, and if the reel is "sputtering" you have less feel and control as you fight.
The Test: We chose 15 of the most popular brands and models of fly reel, in three different size classes (trout, bonefish, and big game), then took them to the street. Specifically, we tied them up to the ass end of a street bike, burned a little rubber, then watched -- and felt -- how each reel reacted. We paid close attention... [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Drought conditions persist in Tennessee and the Smoky Mountains, but there has been a shift in our weather pattern. Afternoon thunderstorms have become a regular thing as they are every summer in East Tennessee so conditions should not get any worse.
Creek fishing in the Smokies is superb this time of year. A short hike into the backcountry will not only get you away from other anglers and roadside tourists, but will also get you into eager fish. Wet wading is the comfortable way to go and the fish typically rise well to dry flies. Attractors like #16 Parachute Adams, Stimulators, and Wulffs usually get the job done. Major hatch activity has wrapped up by now but watch for egg-laying flights of Yellow Sallies late in the evening. The best fishing will be at elevations of 3000' and higher, but lower elevation streams are good. Most of these streams have rainbow trout but many have brookies and/or browns.
Tailwater fishing should be good this summer. Dry conditions limit the amount of water TVA can generate which leads to optimal flows to wade. The Watauga and South Holston are both superb rivers with good hatch activity through the summer. Sulphurs hatch in abundance... [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
A few months ago I got crucified by some fieldandstream.com readers who thought a Chile-by-helicopter adventure story I wrote for the website didn’t have enough “big fish” pictures in it. Granted, I’m no photographer, but when I was shooting snapshots of the trip I thought the real angle was the exploration of places that had hardly been fished before. Whatever, I whiffed. I traveled to the virtual bottom of the world in a totally unique way, fished in previously inaccessible regions for wild trout, and, in the end, it was still all about the grip ‘n grin. My bad.
Or not.
The thought of an angler de-sliming a beautiful fish as he fumbles for the camera for a hero shot repulses me. Which is why I'm worried; is the pressure on magazines (and blogs like this) to run nothing but fish porn feeding our addiction to this stuff?
I understand having an exciting big fish image often cements the memory of a wonderful experience. If you get to snap the photo, great, you should. But do it right. And if you don't get the shot, that should be okay also. ... [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
From a Seattle Post Intelligencer article titled "Judge Sides With Wild Salmon":
The push by property-rights advocates to count hatchery-bred salmon toward the goals of the Endangered Species Act is misguided and runs afoul of the law, U.S. District Judge John Coughenour ruled Wednesday in Seattle. His decision flatly rejects the idea that if enough salmon can be produced in hatcheries, there is little need to protect wild stocks. It also strikes down what environmentalists widely viewed as a Bush administration policy to appease building and agriculture interests. ...
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Check this out ... kinda like catching a trout you hooked last year and finding your fly still stuck in its mouth. But way more insane. I had no idea whales could live for hundreds of years.
--Tim [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
By Gregg Arnold
Clean water is key right now. Find it and find these; standard crab and shrimp imitation patterns always apply. This is the end of the real window for good redfish … prime time is October through March. Truthfully, the wind has been blowing all month … conditions generally suck! It is good work I would not trade with anyone. With tarpon season starting now, I’m beginning to focus my attention on Carrabelle.
But I just caught this fish along with a bunch more its size (29 pounds).
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