Please Sign In

Please enter a valid username and password
  • Log in with Facebook
» Not a member? Take a moment to register
» Forgot Username or Password

Why Register?
Signing up could earn you gear (click here to learn how)! It also keeps offensive content off our site.

Fishing

Record Shark: How Jason Johnston Caught What May Be The Largest Mako Ever

Earlier this week, Jason Johnston reeled in one of the largest sharks ever caught with a...
[Read More]

2013 Father's Day Gift Guide

Father's Day is almost here. Is your pops one of those guys that has everything, or when...
[Read More]
  • June 18, 2007

    Testing Startup Drag With A Motorcycle

    0

    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.

    Reel_test_still181

    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 ]

  • June 18, 2007

    Smokies: Summer Trout Forecast

    0

    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 ]

  • June 15, 2007

    A Fish Porn Intervention

    5

    By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter

    fish chile by helicopterA 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 ]

  • June 15, 2007

    Hatchery Fish Can't Replace Wild Salmon, Says Judge

    0

    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. ...

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19217787/ [ Read Full Post ]

  • June 14, 2007

    Goodbye To An Old Man Of The Sea

    0

    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 ]

  • June 14, 2007

    Louisiana: Find Clear Water For Big Redfish

    1

    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).

    Bigred

    [ Read Full Post ]

  • June 14, 2007

    Florida: Tough Wind In The Keys

    0

    By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter

    By Captain Drew Delashmit

    Three words can sum up this past week; wind, wind and wind. High pressure sitting off the southeast coast has been driving winds out of the east at 25-35 mph for the past eight days. The good numbers of tarpon that were here have scattered and many have temporarily headed for deeper water.

    However, with enough pushes of the push pole and enough water passing under the skiff there are clusters of fish to be found. These fish have been both laid up in basins and traveling in the Atlantic fish lanes. I have had the most success throwing chartreuse, tan or a combination of the two rabbit strip flies.

    Although this weather pattern is predicted to persist for the next several days, hopefully the fish will accept the rough conditions and push back into the shallows. [ Read Full Post ]

  • June 14, 2007

    Florida: Hammerhead Ate My Tarpon (with pic)

    2

    By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter

    By Al Keller

    Just won the Professional Tarpon Tournament Series (PTTS) in Boca Grande on Sunday! The fish was 144lbs.

    I had the winning fish last Sunday on for about an hour and a 15' hammerhead chased it down in the last couple of minutes and ate it. Check out the photo below. You can see more pics on this website.

    I am in Fernandina Beach now for the FLW Redfish event. Fishing-wise, it’s prime time for tarpon now, which should last for several more weeks, especially in the 10,000 Islands. Wind can make sightfishing tricky, so getting an early start and working falling tides is the key. Staple tarpon patterns, like tarpon bunnies and so forth, are the ticket. Make a good cast and retrieve, and they will eat.

    Pic4l

    [ Read Full Post ]

  • June 14, 2007

    Front Range: Fish Midges In Stillwater

    0

    By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter

    By Tad Howard

    As for the current fishing conditions. It seems like the smaller waters on the West Slope are still high but clearing faster than the Front Range.

    Stillwater fishing has been exceptional with incredible midge hatches as well as the first callibaetis and damsels of the year. Colorado ponds-reservoirs offer incredible action when the rivers of early June are less consistent due to runoff. Static midge setups have been most productive on our guide trips in stillwaters over the last 2 weeks, although some fish have been chasing streamers and eating scuds. [ Read Full Post ]

  • June 14, 2007

    Washington: Cod And Cutthroats

    0

    By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter

    By Matt McCulloch

    Ling cod action remains spotty but some nice ones are being taken on live flounders and pogies. These critters love to hide in the structure, (e.g., jetties, wrecks, and rocks). Work these structures in 15-50ft of water.

    Sea-run cutthroats: Action is good. Fish the outgoing tides, casting Decievers, candlefish, and other bait fish patterns. Poppers have been taking some nice fish as well.

    Salmon season is opening! [ Read Full Post ]

  • June 14, 2007

    Oregon: Stonefies On The Deschutes

    0

    By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter

    By Tyler Palmerton

    Target: Deschutes. I’m planning to spend the next week or so guiding the Deschutes, below Warm Springs. We should see the start of the salmonfly hatch. The Deschutes is one of the few rivers in the country where the salmonfly hatch can solidly coincide with the golden stonefly hatch. It will be crowded. Flows are right where they should be @ 4,000 cfs. Also, I hear the summer steelhead have shown up already in the East Fork of the Lewis, in Washington state, near Daybreak Park. The North Fork of the Lewis also has steelhead in it now, but the East Fork is more conducive to flyfishing. [ Read Full Post ]

  • June 14, 2007

    Wisconsin: Timber Coulee and Kickapoo Rivers "Smoking"

    1

    By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter

    By Mat Wagner

    It’s going off in Wisconsin now … caddis hatches (tan) are producing in the mornings; sulphurs midday, and more caddis, craneflies and midges by evening. Swinging nymphs in the riffles is especially effective – be sure to try orange, sulphur-looking patterns. And woolly buggers are also doing the job. Timber Coulee and the West Fork of the Kickapoo are both smoking. Approach fish with stealth, on the Kickapoo, the station report at LaFarge is 2.73 CFS. [ Read Full Post ]

  • June 14, 2007

    Colorado: Stable Flows On The San Juan

    0

    By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter

    By John Flick

    Fishing is great here. The San Juan has been stable at around 1100 cfs, and the dry fly fishing was incredible today! This last cold period (and high moisture) has really helped prolong our season. We are wet and all looks good! Rio, Animas, etc. should come in around mid June, like normal. Creeks will start fishing around the third week of June, depending on weather between now and then. We got a short window on the Animas when it got cold and had 5 days of great float fishing with streamers. Shaping up for a great season, but don't look for anything to be too great, other than the Juan, before mid June. [ Read Full Post ]

  • June 14, 2007

    Northern California: Find Hot Hatches Now

    0

    By Tim Romano & Kirk Deeter

    By Michael Caranci

    The trout fishing in Northern California has been great all spring and into these early parts of summer. We had such a dry winter, and such low snowpack this year, that water conditions on all of our rivers are ideal right now, and there have been some great hatches: salmonflies and golden stoneflies on Hat Creek, the McCloud, the Upper Sacramento, and the Pit River, the Green Drakes just started coming off on Hat Creek, and the PMD spinnerfall on Fall River has been epic. Of course, the Lower Sacramento is almost always a sure bet with nymphs out of drift boats all day long, but the evening dry fly fishing is starting to pick up for the summer, too. Fish everywhere seem hungry and larger than average.

    Check out this pic taken on Hat Creek recently; the fish ate a salmonfly dry.

    Salmonfly_eater [ Read Full Post ]