FishingBanter

FishingBanter (http://www.fishingbanter.com/index.php)
-   Fly Fishing (http://www.fishingbanter.com/forumdisplay.php?f=6)
-   -   something about flyfishing (http://www.fishingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=24427)

rw December 4th, 2006 11:29 PM

something about flyfishing
 
Since returning from Alaska in early September I haven't wet a line,
aside from a short and rather desultory (with regard to fishing, at
least) camper trip to Kelly Creek in northern Idaho. (Great trip
otherwise.) I was, frankly, fished out. The Alaska trip with Willi and
Bruiser and Danl and Bevin was outstanding -- even epic -- but I'd had
enough. I had no real interest in fishing for the first time in many years.

Fall trout fishing in central Idaho can be wonderful, especially in the
high lakes. But there were other things to do -- primarily elk hunting,
which turned out to be unsuccessful but personally rewarding
nonetheless. Then there was politics. Politics in a tiny and somewhat
crazy town like Stanley, Idaho can be all-consuming if you let it be.
September and November were a non-stop whirl of socializing and going to
meetings and hunting and bar hopping. No time for fishing, but my heart
wasn't in it anyway.

Now I'm back in the Menlo Park, California, planning for my camper trip
to Mexico in January, and I'm getting the fishing jones again. I'll fish
in Mexico, of course, but that isn't what I really need. I crave cold
water fly fishing for trout, especially for eager, easy cutthroat coming
up through 12 feet of crystalline water to take a big ugly on the
surface. That's just about my favorite thing in the whole world.

My life is blessed in many ways. My health is good, I have no worries
about money, I have many friends, some of whom I've met through ROFF. In
spite of my good fortune, I'm starting to feel uneasy because I want,
right now, more than just about anything, to go trout fishing on a cold,
clear, familiar, freestone mountain stream. It won't happen until late
June at the earliest.

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.

asadi December 5th, 2006 11:10 AM

something about flyfishing
 

"rw"
planning for my camper trip
to Mexico in January, and I'm getting the fishing jones again. I'll fish
in Mexico, of course, but that isn't what I really need.


You can['t always get what you want...
But if you try sometimes....

You might give large mouth bass fishing a shot just for kicks and giggles...
Mexico has some very productive lakes and there's worse things to do.

john



Tom Nakashima December 5th, 2006 06:22 PM

something about flyfishing
 

"rw" wrote in message
ink.net...
Since returning from Alaska in early September I haven't wet a line, aside
from a short and rather desultory (with regard to fishing, at least)
camper trip to Kelly Creek in northern Idaho. (Great trip otherwise.) I
was, frankly, fished out. The Alaska trip with Willi and Bruiser and Danl
and Bevin was outstanding -- even epic -- but I'd had enough. I had no
real interest in fishing for the first time in many years.

Fall trout fishing in central Idaho can be wonderful, especially in the
high lakes. But there were other things to do -- primarily elk hunting,
which turned out to be unsuccessful but personally rewarding nonetheless.
Then there was politics. Politics in a tiny and somewhat crazy town like
Stanley, Idaho can be all-consuming if you let it be. September and
November were a non-stop whirl of socializing and going to meetings and
hunting and bar hopping. No time for fishing, but my heart wasn't in it
anyway.

Now I'm back in the Menlo Park, California, planning for my camper trip to
Mexico in January, and I'm getting the fishing jones again. I'll fish in
Mexico, of course, but that isn't what I really need. I crave cold water
fly fishing for trout, especially for eager, easy cutthroat coming up
through 12 feet of crystalline water to take a big ugly on the surface.
That's just about my favorite thing in the whole world.

My life is blessed in many ways. My health is good, I have no worries
about money, I have many friends, some of whom I've met through ROFF. In
spite of my good fortune, I'm starting to feel uneasy because I want,
right now, more than just about anything, to go trout fishing on a cold,
clear, familiar, freestone mountain stream. It won't happen until late
June at the earliest.

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.


You sound a little depressed.
I can't say I've been fished out since my Alaska adventure this past July,
but I do miss it, so we booked another trip back there for '07.
Where in Menlo Park? I work at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center off
Sand Hill Rd.
If you get too bored, we can share some casting techniques, I'm probably not
too far away.
I may also head up to the Trinity for the Steelhead run, during the Xmas
shutdown....the fishing's been good up there from my connections.
-tom



rw December 5th, 2006 07:41 PM

something about flyfishing
 
Tom Nakashima wrote:

You sound a little depressed.


I'm not depressed, but I'm bored. I always get bored in California.
Stanley, Idaho is a far more interesting place to live, even in the
winter. I suspect that the large majority of people wouldn't feel that
way, but I do.

I can't say I've been fished out since my Alaska adventure this past July,
but I do miss it, so we booked another trip back there for '07.
Where in Menlo Park? I work at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center off
Sand Hill Rd.


I live in the Willows neighborhood, just north of the Palo Alto border
at San Francisquito Creek and east of Middlefield Road. I know where
SLAC is, of course.

If you get too bored, we can share some casting techniques, I'm probably not
too far away.
I may also head up to the Trinity for the Steelhead run, during the Xmas
shutdown....the fishing's been good up there from my connections.


I afraid I don't have all my flyfishing gear along, aside from a couple
of sal****er rigs for Mexico. I could conceivably join you at the
Trinity if I could borrow a pair of waders and boots. I've never really
had good fishing in California, so I tend to avoid it.

If you want to get together for sushi I'm game.

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.

Larry L December 5th, 2006 08:25 PM

something about flyfishing
 

"rw" wrote


I always get bored in California. Stanley, Idaho is a far more interesting
place to live, even in the winter. I suspect that the large majority of
people wouldn't feel that way, but I do.


I find California far more boring than Montahoming, too. That may be
because I'm here in boring old Winter, there in fishing season, but I felt
the same way years back when I'd travel there for mostly non-fishing
reasons.





. I've never really

had good fishing in California, so I tend to avoid it.



When I first read your post, I scanned my brain for places to suggest to you
.... then decided there was no place I wanted to go fish in California,
either



a I'm starting to feel uneasy because I want,
right now, more than just about anything, to go trout fishing on a cold,
clear, familiar, freestone mountain stream. It won't happen until late
June at the earliest.



I think we all fish for different reasons, and, yes, each of us for
different reasons at different times. For me, the 'main' reason comes
close to spiritual ... quiet personal interaction with Nature in relatively
unspoiled places, and solitude. When I get uneasy and "need to fish"
far from those places and legal times, I can often find similar psychic
refueling from simple rod-less walks along remote section of river, or along
the beach, or at a wildlife refuge. Fishing is often just an excuse to "go
there" .... and there are other excuses, out of season ... "I need to" being
a fine excuse .. we deserve it.


Menlo Park, California



Whoa, Flash back. About 1970 ( I remember which dog is involved and
her rough age at the time ) I went for a long walk into the large marshland
the used to exist at the end of San Antonio Rd in the East Palo Alto area.
I took a young Golden with me and we scared a mama Mallard and her brood in
one of the sloughs.

She quacked an alarm, the chicks dove, and she went off pretending to be
crippled.

Jenny and I hid behind some bushes to see what would happen after the
intruder was "gone." Soon mama came back and quacked up a storm until
her entire brood was swimming in her wake again.

The whole thing was so cute to watch that ( and I've sufffered guilt over
this for 35 years ) I decided to scare them again to watch the process
repeat.

I stepped out, mom raised the alarm, chicks dove .... and a HUGE swirl and
then another and another boiled around the spots where they went under.
I waited a long time but only about half the chicks ever reappeared.
Thirty five years ago there were still big Stripers in those sloughs at high
tide and I can only guess that one had duckling for lunch. (Where's Sandy
with a wiggling duckling tie? )



I also used to sometimes hunt the very south end of the Bay back then and it
was like a wilderness out there, the city lights far too far away to reduce
the sense of uneasy danger on cold, windy, December mornings. It was
common to see seals, tens of thousands of waterfowl, and big fish herding
and chasing bait.

Life is very short, and a lifetime really shouldn't be enough to see change
in the environment. But in mine I've witnessed the massive degrading of
many, too many, small habitats. ( I used to wade around with a net and
catch crabs in the Chesapeake Bay, near Easton, too, they were thick ... is
that still possible, right coasters ? )

I wonder what our great-great grandkids will do, where they will go, for the
refueling that only Nature provides .. at least for me.



Tom Nakashima December 5th, 2006 09:59 PM

something about flyfishing
 

"rw" wrote in message
ink.net...

I afraid I don't have all my flyfishing gear along, aside from a couple of
sal****er rigs for Mexico. I could conceivably join you at the Trinity if
I could borrow a pair of waders and boots. I've never really had good
fishing in California, so I tend to avoid it.


I'm not much for fishing California either, with the exception of the
Steelhead run up on the Trinity in the winter, but I hate crowds.
I just spoke with my friend Greg who guides up on the Trinity. The fishing
has been great which started two
weeks before Tx-giving, but so are the crowds, especially around the Steel
Bridge, Junction City area.
I'll see what my schedule is like over the holidays, we're off from Dec.
20th - Jan. 1. I do have a spare TFO 8wt 4pc.
and a Orvis 6wt 2pc. with a J Ryall 6wt reel floating line. Waders, I only
have one pair for now.

Other than that, my next scheduled fishing trip is back with PapaBear in
July...I suppose I got spoiled up in Alaska.
The International Sportsman Show is coming up Jan, 11-14
http://www.sportsexpos.com/index.cfm...cationnumber=4
I'm thinking of Argentina, or Costa Rica for '08.

If you want to get together for sushi I'm game.

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.




rw December 5th, 2006 10:08 PM

something about flyfishing
 
Larry L wrote:

Life is very short, and a lifetime really shouldn't be enough to see change
in the environment. But in mine I've witnessed the massive degrading of
many, too many, small habitats.


The San Francisco Bay is one of the most horrible examples of wetlands
destruction, as for that matter so is the entire California Central
Valley. I've heard, but not observed, that the reclamation of the salt
ponds in the SF Bay is going well. That at least is a ray of hope.

I used to work at NASA Ames, and my office was in the building farthest
toward the bay, right up against the wetlands. There was a pretty good
variety of wildlife: burrowing owls (right next to the building in a
pile of construction dirt that never got removed), gopher snakes,
tortoises, hares, ducks, hawks, and the occasional golden eagle.

( I used to wade around with a net and
catch crabs in the Chesapeake Bay, near Easton, too, they were thick ... is
that still possible, right coasters ? )


That a funny coincidence. I grew up in Baltimore and my grandparents had
a modest summer place on the bay, just south of Baltimore. I had a small
dory-like rowboat that I used for crabbing. I'd lay out a trot line with
floats and droppers with chicken bait (necks and backs). I'd leave the
bait for awhile and then slowly bring up the droppers. The crabs would
follow along and could easily be netted. It was usually no problem to
get a basket of crabs. I'd also catch white and yellow perch, and the
occasional small striper, eel, or the exceedingly ugly oyster fish. Once
I caught a gar.

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.

rb608 December 5th, 2006 10:50 PM

something about flyfishing
 
Larry L wrote:
( I used to wade around with a net and
catch crabs in the Chesapeake Bay, near Easton, too, they were thick ... is
that still possible, right coasters ? )


Like a lot of places, possible? Yes. As easy as it used to be? No.
The Bay (that's the Chesapeake Bay around here) is alive, but of very
questionable health. I'm not able to quote statistics, but based on my
lifetime here, it's as bad as it's ever been overall. Some places show
improvement, but I'm not enthusiastic about it ever improving
significantly from here. Among overfishing, runoff, development, and
all of the other bad actors, there's just too much pressure toward
degradation. Hell, my favorite place on the Bay, the quiet little
seafood town of Crisfield, now sports (I **** you not) several
multi-story condominium complexes right on the shoreline, with more in
the works. Word is, the other towns like Deale Island, etc. are
going through the same upscaling. It's unbelieveable.

That said, it is still possible to find a salt marsh and paddle around;
but the crabs are far less plentiful these days.

Joe F.


Wolfgang December 5th, 2006 11:06 PM

something about flyfishing
 

rb608 wrote:
Larry L wrote:
( I used to wade around with a net and
catch crabs in the Chesapeake Bay, near Easton, too, they were thick ... is
that still possible, right coasters ? )


Like a lot of places, possible? Yes. As easy as it used to be? No.
The Bay (that's the Chesapeake Bay around here) is alive, but of very
questionable health. I'm not able to quote statistics, but based on my
lifetime here, it's as bad as it's ever been overall. Some places show
improvement, but I'm not enthusiastic about it ever improving
significantly from here. Among overfishing, runoff, development, and
all of the other bad actors, there's just too much pressure toward
degradation. Hell, my favorite place on the Bay, the quiet little
seafood town of Crisfield, now sports (I **** you not) several
multi-story condominium complexes right on the shoreline, with more in
the works. Word is, the other towns like Deale Island, etc. are
going through the same upscaling. It's unbelieveable.

That said, it is still possible to find a salt marsh and paddle around;
but the crabs are far less plentiful these days.


Pretty much the same story here in the upper Great Lakes region. The
once bountiful yellow perch, smelt, lake trout and whitefish are all
but gone.

Pretty much the same story around the world.

The GOOD news is that there are no environmental problems......it's all
just scare tactics from a bunch of hysterical reactionaries whose only
goal in life is to impede progress by whatever means, fair or foul,
they can find. :)

Wolfgang
and good news is better than bad news, right?


rb608 December 6th, 2006 01:09 AM

something about flyfishing
 
"Wolfgang" wrote in message
Pretty much the same story here in the upper Great Lakes region. The
once bountiful yellow perch, smelt, lake trout and whitefish are all
but gone.


Makes me think of the Stan Rogers song, "Tiny Fish for Japan".

Joe F.



Tom Nakashima December 6th, 2006 03:36 PM

something about flyfishing
 

"Larry L" wrote in message
...

. I've never really

had good fishing in California, so I tend to avoid it.


I've found some of the best fly fishing in California is in the Eastern
Sierras. There are a lot of beautiful streams and lakes, but you have to
hike in to get to them. Most of your average fly-fisherman are not willing
to work to get there. Some of the lakes and streams aren't marked on a Topo
map in the Eastern Sierra's so it's only by word of mouth. Some are clearly
marked on the map, but when you get there, there's nothing. Some we've
stumbled upon by accident. We have hiked into places where the fishing was
outstanding and the fish would take anything we threw at them, of course the
best thing is not another person in sight.
fwiw,
-tom



Wolfgang December 6th, 2006 06:01 PM

something about flyfishing
 

"rb608" wrote in message
news:XKodh.1012$4p2.433@trndny07...
"Wolfgang" wrote in message
Pretty much the same story here in the upper Great Lakes region. The
once bountiful yellow perch, smelt, lake trout and whitefish are all
but gone.


Makes me think of the Stan Rogers song, "Tiny Fish for Japan".


Don't know that one. I watch for it. Thanks.

Wolfgang



Larry L December 6th, 2006 06:16 PM

something about flyfishing
 

"Tom Nakashima" wrote


I've found some of the best fly fishing in California is in the Eastern
Sierras. There are a lot of beautiful streams and lakes, but you have to
hike in to get to them.





So as to not give there rest of the world the wrong impression.
California contains some of Nature's very best efforts, including fishing
holes. But, in early December it's hard to point to any fishing that I
thought might appeal to rw.

Actually, I 'think' the upper Sac is now open year round? Once you're
away from I-5 and the railroad it's lovely and can be very good fishing.

As an ex-mountaineer let me point out that the Sierra is probably THE most
off-trail friendly mountain range in the world. With good topos and some
route finding skills nearly anyplace is accessible without such pleasure
robbing features as huge talus fields, scree, miles of downed forest etc,
often nearly pavement like routes on exposed, smooth, granite can be found.

We have lots of people ( send your money to Planned Parenthood ... less
people is the only hope for the future and I like prevention better than
Bush and Ben Laden control tactics ) and that means crowds exist. I've
been lucky in that I've always worked weekends ( my clients time off for
them to visit their mutts ) and hunted and fished mid-week when solitude can
be found even close to big cities.


Opps, getting sidetracked ( retired guy hazard ) .... anyway, world, ....
California has much great natural beauty to offer, come visit, leave your
money .... and, ah, leave G



rw December 6th, 2006 06:25 PM

something about flyfishing
 
Larry L wrote:
"Tom Nakashima" wrote


I've found some of the best fly fishing in California is in the Eastern
Sierras. There are a lot of beautiful streams and lakes, but you have to
hike in to get to them.






So as to not give there rest of the world the wrong impression.
California contains some of Nature's very best efforts, including fishing
holes. But, in early December it's hard to point to any fishing that I
thought might appeal to rw.


I don't want to give the wrong impression, either. I'm not intending to
dis' California fishing. It just that I've never experienced good
flyfishing in California, and not entirely from lack of trying. I'm not
saying it doesn't exist, but I will say that you'll at least have to
drive a pretty long way from the Bay Area. Since I live in the Rocky
Mountain West in late winter, spring, summer, and most of fall, and
since I usually take a tropical vacation in the winter that includes
sal****er fishing and one major trip in the summer to somewhere like
Alaska, I've decided to give it a rest when I'm in California.

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.

Tom Nakashima December 6th, 2006 07:46 PM

something about flyfishing
 

"rw" wrote in message
ink.net...

I don't want to give the wrong impression, either. I'm not intending to
dis' California fishing. It just that I've never experienced good
flyfishing in California, and not entirely from lack of trying. I'm not
saying it doesn't exist, but I will say that you'll at least have to drive
a pretty long way from the Bay Area. Since I live in the Rocky Mountain
West in late winter, spring, summer, and most of fall, and since I usually
take a tropical vacation in the winter that includes sal****er fishing and
one major trip in the summer to somewhere like Alaska, I've decided to
give it a rest when I'm in California.

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.


I'll have to agree, I used to fish a lot in California, the Eastern Sierra's
and Northern Cal...McCloud/Shasta/Trinity area, and the Sac River, but it
doesn't interest me as much since fishing Alaska. The drive from the Bay
Area can wear you out.

We did find a good eatery in Weaverville at the La Grange in the Trinity
area. Besides the good food and great selection of beer and wine, all the
steelhead fisherman hang there in the bar area and swap stories. We've met
many from the Bay Area and Southern Cal. My friend enjoys chatting with
them, but I prefer meeting the local anglers who know the river well.
They're usually pretty quiet not to give to much info, but after a few
beers, they spill all the beans, including fly patterns and secret fishing
holes. Not bad for the price of a few pitchers of brew.
fwiw,
-tom












Calif Bill December 6th, 2006 08:18 PM

something about flyfishing
 

"Steve" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 06 Dec 2006 18:16:52 GMT, "Larry L"
wrote:


Well Larry, you were doing fine with the anti-California stuff.
What compelled you to screw it up with this?

So as to not give there rest of the world the wrong impression.
California contains some of Nature's very best efforts, including fishing
holes.


For those not in California please note that we have no rivers, lakes,
or bays. We could fall into the ocean at any moment. The pot growers
shoot fisherman. Our fish, the ones that we do not have from the
waters we do not have, are full of mercury and meth-lab toxins.
Go to Montana. The streets there are paved in trout scales.


Amen!



Larry L December 6th, 2006 10:27 PM

something about flyfishing
 

"Steve" wrote


For those not in California please note that we have no rivers, lakes,
or bays. We could fall into the ocean at any moment. The pot growers
shoot fisherman. Our fish, the ones that we do not have from the
waters we do not have, are full of mercury and meth-lab toxins.
Go to Montana. The streets there are paved in trout scales.



As a summer 'resident' of Montahoming I feel compelled to point out that
while you are right about the pot growers and mercury poisoning in
Arnoldland ..... Montahoming is worse in many ways, man eating grizzlies
behind every tree, for instance, and crowds that make California look
deserted .... I've seen 100 cars at Raynolds ... no joke :- (


..... Colorado is the place to be, honest .... or Maine or North Carolina or
Texas ( they breed bass there to be extra stupid and easy to catch ... )



Wayne Harrison December 6th, 2006 11:08 PM

something about flyfishing
 

"Larry L" wrote

.... Colorado is the place to be, honest .... or Maine or North Carolina
or Texas ( they breed bass there to be extra stupid and easy to catch
... )

been to colorado, maine, and texas; and lots of other places.

but me and god (if god is not a tar heel, then why is the sky carolina
blue) prefer the old north state.

wayno





rb608 December 6th, 2006 11:27 PM

something about flyfishing
 
"Wolfgang" wrote in message
...
"rb608" wrote in message
Makes me think of the Stan Rogers song, "Tiny Fish for Japan".


Don't know that one. I watch for it. Thanks.


It's a cut on the "From Fresh Water" album. Most excellent album if you're
into Stan Rogers at all. The "White Squall" opening cut gives me chills
every time I hear it.

Joe F.



RalphH December 7th, 2006 05:49 AM

something about flyfishing
 



"rb608" wrote in message
news:XKodh.1012$4p2.433@trndny07...
"Wolfgang" wrote in message
Pretty much the same story here in the upper Great Lakes region. The
once bountiful yellow perch, smelt, lake trout and whitefish are all
but gone.


Makes me think of the Stan Rogers song, "Tiny Fish for Japan".

Joe F.

I know Stan Rogers but I don't know that one... love the "Live in Halifax"
CD

All the Yellow Perch have moved to British Columbia - we hate them
--
Some of my angling snaps:
http://gallery.fishbc.com/gallery/vi...bumName=RalphH



Wolfgang December 7th, 2006 01:23 PM

something about flyfishing
 

"rb608" wrote in message
news:mlIdh.6902$Gp2.6706@trndny06...
"Wolfgang" wrote in message
...
"rb608" wrote in message
Makes me think of the Stan Rogers song, "Tiny Fish for Japan".


Don't know that one. I watch for it. Thanks.


It's a cut on the "From Fresh Water" album. Most excellent album if
you're into Stan Rogers at all. The "White Squall" opening cut gives me
chills every time I hear it.


Thanks again, Joe.

Wolfgang



Wolfgang December 7th, 2006 11:23 PM

something about flyfishing
 

RalphH wrote:
"rb608" wrote in message
news:XKodh.1012$4p2.433@trndny07...
"Wolfgang" wrote in message
Pretty much the same story here in the upper Great Lakes region. The
once bountiful yellow perch, smelt, lake trout and whitefish are all
but gone.


Makes me think of the Stan Rogers song, "Tiny Fish for Japan".

Joe F.

I know Stan Rogers but I don't know that one... love the "Live in Halifax"
CD


Hm......

I'm no music buff......but I've got a copy of a live recording of a
Stan Rogers performance called "Home in Halifax." Different
stuff?.....or just a bit of confusion about the title?

All the Yellow Perch have moved to British Columbia - we hate them


Serve 'em up breaded, deep fried and free at all the local watering
holes on Friday nights. It worked here.

Wolfgang
she said, "kick his balls boys....."


rb608 December 8th, 2006 12:18 AM

something about flyfishing
 
"Wolfgang" wrote in message
RalphH wrote:
All the Yellow Perch have moved to British Columbia - we hate them


Serve 'em up breaded, deep fried and free at all the local watering
holes on Friday nights. It worked here.


There's your regional differences for you. The demise of the yellow perch
around here is sorely lamented. Time was, a fella could take a bucket o'
minnows out on the tidal Gunpowder River in the springtime & catch his fill
before lunch. Word was they were good eatin', though I was never a big
panfish fan. Nowadays, though, there are size limits, catch limits, closed
seasons. Most here see the demise of the abundance of yellow perch as
symptomatic.

Joe F.



Dawn Moe December 8th, 2006 01:48 AM

something about flyfishing
 

"rb608" wrote in message
news:Ib2eh.3160$QD3.2329@trndny01...
"Wolfgang" wrote in message
RalphH wrote:
All the Yellow Perch have moved to British Columbia - we hate them


Serve 'em up breaded, deep fried and free at all the local watering
holes on Friday nights. It worked here.


There's your regional differences for you. The demise of the yellow perch
around here is sorely lamented. Time was, a fella could take a bucket o'
minnows out on the tidal Gunpowder River in the springtime & catch his
fill before lunch. Word was they were good eatin', though I was never a
big panfish fan. Nowadays, though, there are size limits, catch limits,
closed seasons. Most here see the demise of the abundance of yellow perch
as symptomatic.

Joe F.

No size limit on yellow perch here in W. MI. Catch limit of 50. This rarely
happens anymore. Tasty little buggers though.
It seems every VFW, Eagles, Moose lodge, etc. has perch dinners around here.

Jeremy Moe



Wolfgang December 8th, 2006 01:56 AM

something about flyfishing
 

rb608 wrote:
"Wolfgang" wrote in message
RalphH wrote:
All the Yellow Perch have moved to British Columbia - we hate them


Serve 'em up breaded, deep fried and free at all the local watering
holes on Friday nights. It worked here.


There's your regional differences for you. The demise of the yellow perch
around here is sorely lamented. Time was, a fella could take a bucket o'
minnows out on the tidal Gunpowder River in the springtime & catch his fill
before lunch. Word was they were good eatin', though I was never a big
panfish fan. Nowadays, though, there are size limits, catch limits, closed
seasons. Most here see the demise of the abundance of yellow perch as
symptomatic.


When I was a small boy I would often walk the mile or so down to the
harbor in Kenosha with my brothers and my sister, each of us armed with
a long two section cane pole early on a summer's morning. We would
stop at a bait shop at the corner of 6th Avenue and 50th street and get
a couple dozen minnows for a dime or a quarter, and then head out onto
the pier and take up stations among the hundred or more other folks
lining both sides, out beyond where the ships were moored......out
where the concrete was broken and presented inescapable and
unforgetable views of a watery hell just waiting to swallow a small
boy......um.....but I digress. :(

We would catch perch in the ttwelve to fifteen inch size range until we
ran out of bait.....half an hour or so.....and then cut up one of the
smaller perch into hook size bits and fish some more.

The morning would invariably end with a long death-march homeward, one
or more small children crying.....tired and cranky from carrying all
those heavy fish.

Those days are gone forever.....I'm much taller now.....and I can swim.
:)

Alas, the perch are gone too. Daily catch limits in those days were
obscene.....a hundred?.....two hundred?.....I don't remember for sure.
Commercial fishing boats hauled them in by the ton. They were so
common that they were literally given away for free at the local bars
to hungry factory workers as they left work in the afternoon......as
long as they kept buying nickel beers. They drank a lot of beer.

For generations (including the first half of mine) perch was THE staple
at the Friday night fish fry offered by virtually every restaurant (and
Catholic Church basement) in the region. You can still get perch
today.....but it's Canadian.....and it'll cost you about twice as much
as the cod (which is also disappearing) or haddock (which is nowhere
near as plentiful as it once was) or tilapia or.....

You can also get whitefish......but it's Canadian....or lake
trout....but it's.....well, you know.

But, as cheerful and zealous as the profligate rape of the resource
was, I think the damage done by both "sport" and commercial fishing
pales by comparison with what was done to the lake itself. People
don't fish all that much for perch anymore.....but they haven't come
back.

Personally, I would never turn up my nose at a properly fried perch,
but I like bluegill and their close cousins much better. And there's
billions of them left around here.....and they're easy.....and they are
SO much fun on a fly rod! :)

Wolfgang


Dawn Moe December 8th, 2006 04:28 AM

something about flyfishing
 

Personally, I would never turn up my nose at a properly fried perch,
but I like bluegill and their close cousins much better. And there's
billions of them left around here.....and they're easy.....and they are
SO much fun on a fly rod! :)

Wolfgang


We live about two minutes from a small lake filled with bluegills. No better
way to teach a small child to fish than to put them on top of a million
'gills that will eat anything offered. My son loves to fish bluegills. His
dad gets tired of cleaning them, but they too fry up into a pretty good
meal. And Wolfgang is right, bluegills are by far the most fun, and I would
argue that they put up a pretty impresive fight for their size.

Jeremy Moe



RalphH December 8th, 2006 04:49 AM

something about flyfishing
 
"Home in Halifax" ... that's the one. St Mary's Lake on Saltspring Island
British Columbia once had some great smallmouth bass and cutthroat trout.
It's now loaded with perch. The bass fishing is still ok but the perch have
over populated the lake in 5 years. Okanagan Lake - lots of perch ditto for
Pinaus Lake. Pinaus used to be a great spot for trout - not anymore. We have
a plague of illegally introduced fish from back east - Largemouth, Perch and
even Pike. No one's ever been caught - where do they get all those fish?

--
Some of my angling snaps:

http://gallery.fishbc.com/gallery/vi...bumName=RalphH




All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:27 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2006 FishingBanter