By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
The Royal Poinciana trees are in full bloom and that means snook are in full bloom as well. The snook fishing and been great around the outside islands closest to the Gulf of Mexico. Look for the "rain minnows" small shiners dimpling the surface, snook won't be far behind ready to bust them. The best flies have been baitfish patterns, Wht/Chart, Gray/Wht with some flash.
Tarpon fishing has been getting better in the backbays near larger creeks. Watch for fish to roll and get within casting range with the push pole. Best flies have been Chat/Wht baitfish patterns on 2/0 super
sharp hooks. I have been using 20lb tapered leaders and 50lb bite for the tarpon and using 40lb bite for the snook.
Today we jummped 6 up to 50lbs on fly and 2 about 15-20lb on topwater plugs [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Tim's post on the Felt Soul videos prompted me to watch "The Hatch" again ... which started me daydreaming about salmonflies ... which got me thinking about "religious experience" bug events. You know, insects raining from the sky, waters parting with trout wakes ... the moments that ruin you, and transform you into a trout bum forever.
My top 10 "religious experience" bug events in America:
1. Salmonflies. Early-mid June, Gunnison Gorge, Colorado. 20-inch fish hammer 2-inch dry flies, sometimes before they hit the surface. 'Nuff said. The Big Hole and Rock Creek in Montana are also epic salmonfly rivers.
2. Hexagenia. Mid-late June, western Michigan. Giant bugs fill the night sky ... you fish into night, and when you lose light, blind cast by sound at gulps and splashes. Mmmmmm.
3. Green Drakes. Early August, Frying Pan River, Colorado. Wait until the monsoon rains start in the afternoon, then boogie to the river and wait for the armada to float downstream. With their wings up, they look like tiny sailboats ... until they get crushed by trout.
4. The "Smolt Bust." Mid June, Naknek River, Alaska. Fine ... it's not a... [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
If you haven’t seen Travis Rummel and Ben Knight’s last two movies, you are missing out. The film-making geniuses are taking fly fishing entertainment to higher levels than anybody out there. “The Hatch” and “Running Down the Man” literally give me goose bumps every time I watch them. Not only are Travis and Ben making great movies, but they’re doing it for a damn good reason—conservation. Right now the duo is spending 70+ days filming in Bristol Bay Alaska trying to convince the world to stop the largest proposed open pit gold mine in North America. Check out their blog to stay updated on filming and the Bristol Bay project. [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
The last two weeks have provided some exceptional fly fishing in Northern California. The Lower Sacramento River in Redding, Ca. has been flowing between 13,000 and 15,000 cfs, typical summer flows, and the drift fishing for large, colorful, rainbows has been very good. Twenty to forty fish days are common with the average size rainbow going over 16 inches. Smaller nymphs such as caddis pupae and micro mayflies are producing in the upper drifts with stonefly nymphs and large rubber legs producing in the
lower drifts.
A little closer to home our central valley rivers have provided some incredible days on the Stanislaus and Mokelumne Rivers. Nymph fishing has been very good but the dry fly fishing and streamer fishing have been epic. My clients have had days of up to 75 trout with fish up to 23 inches coming on dry flies and streamers producing wild rainbows up to six pounds.
One of our most successful streamer patterns this season has been the bonefish slider saltwater pattern. Fished with a 250 grain streamer express line with 2x to 3x tippet this fly pattern as enticed big rainbows as well as striped bass in the same water. Just last week I had two... [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
After spending the morning chasing trout on the Yellowstone in Livingston, Montana, Mark and I began the three-hour drive to Wisdom. Although we were pretty tired, our energy level shot back up when we stumbled upon the Wise River. We stopped in the local fly shop to pick up patterns for the Big Hole and learned that the Wise is very overlooked and underrated. Fishing it would give us a break from the wide rivers and let us switch into stealth-mode on a tight white water stream.
Frank Stanchfield at Troutfitters told us that while most of the trout in the Wise are small, you can get a nice surprise from bigger cutthroats and brookies if you work hard enough. The road into the stretch he recommended seemed not often traveled, and the landscape screamed "grizzly country." We attacked with tiny parachute Adams' and started raising fish fast, but getting a perfect drift in seams between the rapids was tough and sticking the hook in the mouths of these little guys wasn't easy.
With forty more miles to Wisdom, we only stayed a few hours. The bigger... [ Read Full Post ]
By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter
Editor's Note: Joe Cermele (in the first photo below) is an associate editor at Salt Water Sportsman, one of our sister publications. He's writing an article on this trip for Field & Stream's print magazine, and we conned him into sending us regular updates for this blog from the road.
What do you get when you send two East Coast trout bums to Montana to fish as many rivers as they can for seven days on $300 a day for food, flies, fuel and lodging? I can tell you as I type this at 11 p.m. from a motel room in Wisdom, Montana, that you get the road trip of a lifetime, but for the price of feeling like you haven't slept in weeks. My good friend Mark Wizeman and I are headed into day three of this trek, and we'll get up...again...before first light to get on the river and intercept the first risers of the day. Tomorrow it's the Big Hole, and as we have for the last few days, we'll end up fishing until dark en route to our next location. Draining, but well worth it.
Day one found us in West Yellowstone, where we fished the Upper Madison... [ Read Full Post ]
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.
[ Read Full Post ]
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.
[ Read Full Post ]
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?
[ Read Full Post ]
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 ]