By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Come on, what’s cooler than stuffed squirrels and bluegills…together? Am I alone when I say that every self-respecting angler should have one of these beauties on the mantle?
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By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
RIVER CONDITIONS:
South Boulder Creek at Lincoln Hills above Gross Reservoir
Flow - 200 and dropping in the afternoon
Bugs - Grey Drakes and PMDs hatching all day
Hooks ups / Netted - 80 / 60-plus
What to use (size) - Soft Hackle Pheasant Tail (16); Un-named Fly (10 read below); Matuka Streamer (8); Black Stonefly (12); Prince (12-14)
This is my favorite time of year to fish as it is big bugs
and crashing fish. What more can you ask for? There is nothing like seeing an
aggressive trout rise to the surface and crash that big floating bug.
You got that right – it is hoppers, drakes, stimulators,
ants, beetles, and other terrestrials you may tie at the bench while sipping on
a Jimmy Buffet Boat Drink late in the evening on the back picnic table getting
ready for the morning drive to the fishing hole. What else do you need? I won’t
go there but life is pretty perfect now!!!
I am excited to report that the Grey Drakes are starting to
pop with abundance in Colorado.
I was fortunate enough to be at Lincoln HIlls Fly Fishing Club on South Boulder Creek over the weekend with
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Anglers lined up a mile deep for the July 17 reopening of Colorado's Antero Reservoir, closed since being drained in the wake of the 2002 drought. Most caught 20-inch rainbow trout that grow 1.5 inches a month on a rich diet of insects and crustaceans. Opening day produced one grand surprise: A state record 18.5-pound cutthroat-rainbow hybrid. [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
When my friendly neighborhood fly shop guy, Jason Owens showed me this photo of himself off the coast of Huatulco, Mexico I could hardly believe my eyes. Here was a 50 plus inch needle fish caught on the fly. Jason was fishing for dorado and sailfish when this four foot beast inhaled his blue and white seeker. It’s almost impossible to hook needle fish on the fly as their mouths are almost entirely made of bone and teeth. This was a rare catch indeed. So rare, they decided to eat it. Apparently needle fish is delicious and much to Jason’s surprise the bones of the fish were fluorescent green and blue. Strange. [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
It might be a bit difficult walking the belly boat to the water, but once in kicking around your favorite lake or pond you'll be the envy of all the other women. Float-tubing has never been so stylish. [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Think some of the flies you tie are complicated? This praying mantis by Bob Mead has ten separate steps and eight individual tying procedures just for one front leg. It takes him eight hours to tie one. The book “Art of the Trout Fly” by Judith Dunham has Bob’s masterpiece as well as a number of other amazing creations that you’ll never even think of tying. [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Smith Reinvents Interchangeable Lens Sunglasses
I've seen several attempts at interchangable lenses in sunglasses, and most were whiffs. The idea, of course, is brilliant, and couldn't fit better among flyfishers. We start out fishing on a bright day, and need dark, polarized lenses. Then the clouds roll in, and we want to switch to a yellow or a lighter gray or copper. So we either switch glasses, or use slide-in lenses. The problem for me, is that those slide-ins also slide out, and inevitably end up in tiny fragments on the ground.
Smith Optics seems to have landed on a pretty slick solution. Called "Interlock" the system involves twisting the stems of the frames to open the sockets where the lenses sit ... then twisting them back to lock the lenses in place. Coming soon for anglers will be models that include two lens colors, a copper or brown, and a yellow. Lenses are carbonic and polarized. Retail will be $139-149, which isn't bad at all, considering you get two sunglasses in one. And, when we twisted and pulled on them, the system... [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
5. Place the opposed biots at the hook bend with one on each side of the hook shank. Turn them so they are slightly off-center toward the near side of the hook.
6. Wrap two turns of thread over the biots to hold them in place on the near side of the hook. If you tie them in at a slight angle, thread torque pulls them onto the correct position. Pull the tying thread down to tighten the loops of thread and pull the biots on top of the hook shank.
7. Wrap forward over the butt ends of the biots to just in front of the hook point.
8. See photo for properly tied-in biot tails.
9. Continue wrapping forward over the butt ends of the biots up to and onto the lead wraps. The butt ends will help build the taper to the lead wraps.
10. Clip the butt ends of the biots and wrap a smooth thread base from the base of the tail to the three-quarter point on the shank. The thread base should be as smooth as possible and have an even taper... [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Ross Enters the Rod Realm …
That’s right … you heard it here first.
The number one question I get asked from friends and family members looking to get into flyfishing is: “I don’t have a ton to spend, but I want to get started … what should I buy?”
There are a number of good options out there, but I think we chanced upon a real winner today. Ross, the reel people, have teamed with casting guru Mel Krieger to create a new “Essence” (playing off Krieger’s required reading, The Essence of Flycasting) series of new rods. Proprietary graphite technology is employed to build #3, #5, and #7-weight rods. The FS model is $99 and comes with a one-year warranty; the FC model is $149, and the FW, with slicker components including a maple reel seat, is $199. Both the FC and FW have unconditional lifetime warranties.
The company also is planning to sell packages: An open stock FS, with reel, line, and backing is $129. The Essence package in the FS will include, rod, reel, tube, sock, reel cover, line, leader, and an instructional DVD for $199. The FC... [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
What's the best part about Monday in Montana? If you're fishing, you can pin down a stretch of river all to yourself. When we got to the West Fork of the Bitterroot, there were no swimmers, canoers or float-boaters on the river. The only things on the stream were cutthroats that didn't seem too particular about what they ate. We scored fish to 18 inches on sculpin streamers, adams, caddis, and yellow sallys. If you can't afford a float trip, this is the river for you. It's very wadeable and is tight and technical with varying water styles.--Joe Cermele
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By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
The fly shop death toll is rising. Every week, it seems, I hear about another biting the dust. And that makes me sad, because the specialty fly shop is an American outdoors icon. I remember many long hours during my growing up years, listening to stories, learning to tie flies, and just hanging out in my local fly shop (now gone). I can almost smell the must, feathers, and head cement … hey, maybe that explains my hair falling out, those trout hallucinations and the urge to flyfish for sharks …
Anyway, it’s easy to blame the big boxes for the fly shops’ demise. Wal-Mart killed the toy stores. Bass Pro and Cabela’s are killing the fly shop. Well, not exactly.
I shop at Cabela’s and local fly shops with a clear conscience, knowing that each has a value proposition, and, as an angler, I can benefit from both.
Think of Cabela’s as the grocery store, and the fly shops are restaurants. At Cabela’s (in the mega-stores, in the millions of catalogs they print, and online) you can... [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Are we seeing the rebound of the South Platte River below Cheesman Reservoir? Some guides think so.
For those of you who need some backgrounding, this section of the South Platte is one of the most famous trout fisheries in the West. About an hour from Denver, it's a tailwater, and a virtual small bug factory (bring RS2s). But the poor river has been much maligned recently ... due to the inevitable pounding it takes from anglers/proximity to a major metro area ... the effects of whirling disease ... and of course, the 2002 Hayman Fire that burned nearly 150,000 acres; the runoff from the burn later choked the river with muck.
But here's what's happening now (yesterday): Guide Jeremy Hyatt from The Hatch Flyshop says the fishing is going ballistic, especially at Deckers. Why? Bugs. Mass clouds of caddis that start about 9 a.m. and roll consistently until sundown. Standard tan elk hairs in various sizes. Then around noon, the PMDs start hatching. The hatch lasts about two hours.
Relatively high flows (the river just dropped to 456 cfs from 600 cfs) is keeping the fish tight to the banks (and flushing... [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Can you think of a better place to get engaged? I did the deed over the Fourth of July holiday and thankfully she (Ellie Childs) said yes. I was trying to think of all the cheesy one-liners I could post like, “best fish in the sea” and obviously I couldn’t use, “biggest fish in the river.” So I just settled on this picture taken on a small creek near Jackson Hole.
--Tim [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
With a lack of water on the upper Big Hole, our high hopes of landing some bruiser trout faded quickly. Fish were rising on the occasion, but they were confined to a deep, slow stretch near the Squaw Creek Bridge. That water gave them plenty of time to study our flies as they passed overhead. We lost a few on black caddis, but the bite wasn't consistent enough for us to stick around. So we high-tailed it out of Wisdom and rolled into Hamilton just in time to use the last light of the day to try and score on the main stem of the Bitterroot. Since it was Sunday, no fly shops were open for info, so we shot from the hip and ended up cashing in with tan caddis on a fast stretch of river just up the road from our motel. The rise didn't start until around 9:30 and lasted well into dark. Mark turned this chunky brown trout at 10:00 sharp with a short roll that put his fly just a few feet from where he was... [ Read Full Post ]