Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Friendly

It's always good to fish with friends. It's getting to be nearly a month since we fished with our friends on a local water but it was good to get out. The day we fished together the sun shone but the good old Nor'wester rolled in mid afternoon. The wind was brutal above the river, but for the most part allowed us to fish. We'd all not fished this reach of river and it was good to get out and explore. Nothing knocked our socks off but it was neat to see what we'd been missing. It's definitely on our list of waters to float next year. This blog post simply shares some neat scenes of a nice day spent fly fishing with some friends.













Monday, January 30, 2017

Fisheries Mtg in Rocky Mountain House


Dave & Amelia,
 
The Fish & Wildlife Division of Alberta Sustainable Resource Development is having a public information meeting on Wednesday, February 15, 2012, in Rocky Mountain House.  The meeting will provide an opportunity for people to view presentations on local fisheries, wildlife and enforcement matters in the Clearwater Area.  The meeting will be held at the Walking Eagle Motor Inn (4915 - Hwy 11) in Rocky Mountain House between 7 pm and 10 pm that evening.
 
Please circulate this information to others.
 
If you have any further questions, please contact me at the phone number below.
 
 
Rocky Konynenbelt
Fisheries Technician
Alberta Sustainable Resource Development - Clearwater Area
P.O. Box 1720, Rocky Mountain House AB  T4T 1B3
Tel: (403) 845-8268, Fax: (403) 845-4750
E-mail: rocklyn.konynenbelt@gov.ab.ca
 
For more information on Clearwater Fisheries Management, please visit our website at:
 
 

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Beech Spring

Amelia & I have a favourite spring creek. If you know beech forests, you understand that they are typically found in hilly, relatively steep mountainous terrain. If you know spring creeks, you know that they typically flow out of the ground in pastoral settings – or at least a ways out from the toe of the slopes that water infiltrates. So, to find a beech forest spring creek is relatively rare, but that’s what we stumbled across a few years ago as we explored a back country west coast river. Our spring creek is very spring influenced but does pick up a few ephemeral, run-off fed fingers. The kick is that for most of its run, it flows under a beech forest canopy and is quite weedy in spots. It’s not a long run either, perhaps 1.5 km of water. And there aren’t fish everywhere but there are a few nice browns, most certainly. This year we’ve fished it once a month and will likely fish it once more before we head home to Canada. On each of our visits, AJ missed one of the largest browns of our trip – likely tipping the scales near double digits. There’s a clip of video that will be on our West Coast Spring Creeks dvd (due out later this year) that shows just how amazing the fish and spring creek is. As it is, this blog post shows how amazing both the setting and fish are. The pongas, tuis, fantails, beech canopy, mosses, and a few browns… it’s a stunning little bit of water. Below, you’ll find some of hour favourite photos of this wee gem.


















Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Pop & Scoop

After almost a week of rough fishing on my part, I finally broke through yesterday. I made the perfect cast and the result was a beauty 9lb brown in my hands…not a sea runner, but a beautiful small stream resident fish with golden colors and massive fins. The best part was that Dave came through as my total hero in the moment. I like to give full credit where credit is due in life and he deserves it. Immediately after I hooked up the fish ran into a nasty bankside log jam in deep water and fast current and after digging around the log jam getting himself soaking wet he pulled it out and netted it for me. The kicker was that just as I was pulling the fishes head up to the surface  so he could net it,  the fly popped out of the fishes mouth. The fish seemed to be stunned for a half a second and in that time frame Davie managed to get under it and scoop net it for me. It was one of those, “I can’t believe that just happened” moments. I was beyond happy. My skills as a fisher had shone in that moment…great cast, perfect hook set and my best foot forward in trying to fight it and then to top it all off, we had a together moment in bringing it to the net. 

I love you babe.

Oh and as an aside…there was no fff that came out of my mouth this time....(an inside joke for my kiwi friends!) 


Friday, January 20, 2017

Those wonderful willows

If you fly fish in New Zealand, undoubtedly you'll fish a water lined with willows. New Zealand's #1 invasive species, willows have taken over some streams, yet provide some structure to other waters, and provide overhead cover, shelter, and cooling to many waters. While an introduced weed, willows certainly provide some excellent brown trout habitat. If you fish east of the divide on New Zealand's south island, you'll find willows.
Willows provide the most intimate moments with trout. The dense foliage and branching obscures you from the fish and they can literally swim right under foot if your approach is good. It's what attracts us to these waters, as we seek out exactly that kind of fly fishing - intimate moments to video and photograph. Regardless if the trout is 10" or 8 pounds, it's exciting stuff.
During low water, over hanging willows provide some of the few pockets of fish holding habitat on a stream. Below, I fruitlessly change a fly, stalling myself in order to let the fish settle out. In long, prolonged drought on this stream, 1/2 miles fish population condensed into 30m of stream. Spook one or two in order to work the only active fish and they'll infringe on its space and territorially charge them out of his feeding lie.
 In small to tiny waters, in side channels or back waters, willows can really choke thins out. But, get under that canopy and some of the best micro-niche cycling can occur. We can get in tight, find trout, and watch it swim cycles in a kitchen sized pocket of water in a pocket. And, if you wait 5 or 10 minutes for it to cycle into the only spot you can bow & arrow or dap a cast to have a controlled cast, you might have a chance. That is, unless the fish sways to the left instead of to the right where you put your fly - and now have to wait another 5 to 10 minutes for another chance. Sometimes it takes an hour to get a take from that 2 pound fish!


Once you do hook up, it's a game of keeping them out and up on the surface, turning their heads asap. Sometimes it's best to risk losing a fish up and out of the willows rather than leave them to disapear into the deep matt of willows. Better to dance with the devil you know...

Below, AJ outlasts a brown that was cycle feeding. Home base was tucked head into a willow and it would drop out to follow - feed. Every 5 minutes it dropped far enough to get a cast and drift to its nose, if th efish didn't sway oppostite to what she cast she'd have a chance before returning to home base, nose tucked in the willows. After 50 minutes of the game with an eventual refusal to one pattern, she got the take on a caddis.
Right after Amelia pulled her fish out of the willows, we spotted another brown just stream, weaving between willows as it cycle fed 20 yards of shoreline. It kept disapearing way back to the bank before apearing at the next. It finally settled in at the top of a willow branch and a left hand cast knocked in the run.

Amelia lined up on the shoreline. Across from us a 20" brown held in a seam. Upstream, a 5.5lb brown held mid river, on a classic white rock. The far shore lined with thick willow, overhanging to mid river. She couldn't get into the water for fear of spooking the opposite holding trout to the larger. Hence, she couldn't get into proper postion to cast side arm and a straight up cast wouldn't flip under the over hang. Eventually, she ignored the smaller trout, which only moved to nose into the willow on shore. Her first side arm cast under the over hang turned over and came immediately onto the fish. 


This next willowy moment came as we walked past an almost dry backwater. We walked back up the muddy flat to explore it a little. Sure enough, a deeper trough existed. Sure enough, a nice brown was cycling. I moved into position but there was only one slot in the overhanging willows to bow and arrow a dap cast. And the fish cycled 5 to 10 minutes between surfing into my zone, and it didn't always come to my direction to look at my fly. After an hour I finally had the fish to my left, 1/2 rod length away. I poked my rod tip in through the willows to my left and dapped my fly. The brown came and took my caddis but t was coming right at me and the only hook set was a pull set - and I pulled it right out of its mouth.

This nice brown was popping to the left of the down willow branch at the left in the background. Off right there was nothing but gravel. With an open back cast, it was easy to line up downstream with a left handed cast. Lay it out and up came the brown.


Exit Strategy? Great, hook it up and get the take. But... what happens next? Need to land every trout? Don't fish under a willow canopy. You know how this one turned out. In reality I almost pulled it out. A 6+ lb brown that cycled along the downed willow knew it was going right back home to snap me off.
The narrow trough upstream saw this fish doing 3 x 10 foot cycles. The hook up was going to be easy enough as the back cast was open, but the landing would prove more issues. The hook up brought on a high stick to keep the head up and the net scooped up. A nice brown just under 5lb.

A dark day and a cycling fish. The dark, oily look of the water made it essential to wait for subsurface disturbance or rises. The grand over hanging canopy allowed for casting. There would be no sighting into the water. Wait for the movement to station and make the cast.

This brown would cycle into the lower pocket then back to the pool. In between a willow obscured the sighting of the cruising trout. Hence, timing and patience would set the table. Wait it out and get a chance. Rush it and force a cast to an unseen fish around the corner and you`ll see it spook off. AJ waited it out.
Back to the dark, cloudy day and a trout popping along a downed willow opposite me. The branch hid my presence but I had to go back downstream in order to get a cast. By moving down the glare hid the fish and the rises. I had to wait to hear a popping take near me in the seam to make the cast.
A set of over hanging willow branches allowed 3 straight up casting seams to the pocket on the opposite wide. No hooks, reaches. Just a cast. AJ worked the cast in and the timing of the casts and cruiser finally lined up. Landing it in the open pool - much easier.

Waiting for the dap. Just when you think the fish will cycle, it goes above the willow. When it stations above, you move to make that cast. As you move, it moves back down - should have waited. You get above, it stays below. Now you`re upstream of the cycle and have to tip to to not be seen nor heard in slow waters. Then figure out the cast to make. Oh, and the color shirt you wear has no bearing on the outcome - we`re not believers in color spooking trout when your approach is good.
All New Zealand trout worthy of catching are 8+ lbs, right... NO!  Tiny little creeks with tough casts and approaches open the door to in your face fish and tight casts. Optics are amazing, even on wee 18 to 22 inchers.
And then there`s the ones that you simply wave good-bye to. You think you have the cycles boundaries established and take the 5 minutes to slink into position on the edges. You commit to the process. And as you stand there, the fish then decides to drop further down than it did in the 15 minutes you were watching, and swims past you. Now, it`s feeding almost in your eddy and you watch without moving - any motion will send it scurrying. And then your nose itches or your foot slides, or the fish looks at your pant leg waving in the current - ``hey, that wasn`t there 10 minutes ago - see you!``
And then you walk into an open canopy - fish away!
Open canopy + open cast + feeding trout in a pocket 20 feet upstream:

Another really fun willow creek monster.