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#61
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JR wrote:
Chas Wade wrote: You're right on the money here JR. The pinks aren't the fighters a steelhead can be. About 1 in 40 will take you into the backing, ... 1 in 40? Where have you been fishing? It's a rare summer fish on the Deschutes that won't take you into the backing. I admit fish in some other OR rivers are less train-like, but 1 in 40? Chas, ignore the above. The thought managed just now to find its way into what I optimistically call my brain that you were talking about the pinks, and not the steelhead. JR -shaking his own steel head |
#62
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Warren wrote:
How do you explain pinks? They can slam a fly, pick it up on a dead drift and just "hold" the fly or can simply be foul hooked. I hated how often fish were foul hooked and it was something that disturbed me. Drifting a heavy fly through shallow water would often snag a male on the hump. Do you suppose it would help to tie on a mono weedguard like on bass and pike flies? It might cut down on fair hookups too, but it doesn't sound like that would be too much of a problem. Kevin, green with envy |
#63
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Warren wrote:
I hated how often fish were foul hooked and it was something that disturbed me. Drifting a heavy fly through shallow water would often snag a male on the hump. Now I know how you hooked those few dark pinks on Sunday -- the ones that weren't taking. :-) -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#64
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JR wrote:
JR wrote: Chas, ignore the above. The thought managed just now to find its way into what I optimistically call my brain that you were talking about the pinks, and not the steelhead. JR -shaking his own steel head My guess is that you're a programmer. Being one, I can sympathize with folks who manage to see another meaning in what was written. Chas http://home.comcast.net/~chas.wade/w...ome.html-.html |
#65
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Kevin Vang wrote:
Do you suppose it would help to tie on a mono weedguard like on bass and pike flies? It might cut down on fair hookups too, but it doesn't sound like that would be too much of a problem. Kevin, green with envy An interesting idea Kevin. I haven't had much luck with those weed guards in weeds, and I have had trouble with them getting mangled by the pike after a fish or two. We were landing 20 or more fish without retying the fly, and I doubt the weedguard would help past the first couple fish. I also should add that we weren't snagging many fish. You can get the drift working for you and the fly will pass through a school of 100 fish with one following it out of the pod to strike it in the open. It's a real kick to watch. Chas http://home.comcast.net/~chas.wade/w...ome.html-.html |
#66
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![]() "Warren" wrote I also noticed something that I haven't seen before happen. It seemed like in certain areas flocks of fishermen would congregate on a nice run and fan out for some combat fishing. The water would be totally open upstream and downstream for as far as you could see, but people would still group together like that. We would just keep on going and find a nice place to ourselves. I still don't understand why that was happening since there are fish all over the river. Not that it matters, but I've noticed this for years, and it IS getting more and more obvious in fly fishing. I have some theories G Preface: I am a loner, and have backpacked, hunted and fished alone for all my life, starting well before I was old enough to drive myself to the Sierra to hike alone for a week. I'm not a hermit, and I don't "avoid" others, nor do I dislike being around them, but I don't seek them out, either. I've been aware of being "different" in this respect since my teen years and before .... that is probably why I've thought about the "whys" of why people "gang fish" or "gang hunt" and the very, very obvious trend the last 15 years towards "foursomes" in fly fishing Briefly, the theories (1) Many people, naturally, have a deep "fear" ( can't think of a better word ) of being alone. In past cultures, time alone was far more common and more people became comfortable with that aloneness. But this is far more pronounced in our modern age where many people have had the damn TV or a radio or a frickin cell phone on nearly every waking moment that they have not had other humans in sight. ( why do they "need" the cell phone or walkie talkie?.. often it ain't information sharing, it's to avoid being alone ) I think our "technoculture" is increasing the level of "aloneness fear" in many people by very simply never allowing them to practice aloneness. (3) More, percentage wise, people are being raised in crowded conditions, with little or any time really alone. Yesterday I watched the 10 year old neighbor kid BB gun hunting the counside around here and thought about how few youngsters today EVER get that far from a crowd and he was only about 1/2 mile from home, but alone (3) A LOT of people getting into fly fishing the last decade or so have no, zero, other real outdoors experience, none. From many, mowing the lawn is a wilderness experience, and big cities are not too crowded. If you or I head into the backcountry ... alone .... then step off the trail with the intention of going miles cross country, alone, we will experience, if only briefly, the emotional attachment the human being has for the security of other humans and the "man made" ....regardless of our outdoors experience level. For all of us, to some degree, manmade = secure, Nature = scary I KNOW it "sounds stupid" to anyone with real outdoors experience, but I see people on the stream that seem so uncomfortable outdoors that I bet they are afraid to enter the "wilderness" between "gang fishers," alone. Heah, think of the guys that think they need a damn gun to leave the paved road, before you poo poo the idea G (4) common ones that have affected all fishermen and hunters at one time "he's catching let's move over there" "I don't know the area but everyone seems to be over there, that must be good" and the very human "monkey see, monkey do" |
#67
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Oh and one more thingG
If, after you "just continued and found a nice place to yourselves" I had come along, alone, I'd have wondered why you were all in the same damn area G Everything depends on perspective. The picture of everyone in the boat looks pretty claustrophobic to me :-) |
#68
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![]() "nope" wrote in message This was your first trip into the Wild Rivers area? Not my first trip, but it was my first on that trail and my first into the canyon in several years. Watch out for the poison ivy both along the Rio and on the Red. Thanks! It's a good thing I had long pants on. We are looking forward to the Juan and seeing your pictures. bruce h |
#69
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![]() "rw" wrote I fish alone at least 90% of the time, very often in wilderness. One of the things I really like about the claves is the chance to fish with other people for a change. Yes, I know ... recently you posted a TR about a place that required a decent walk and commented that you never see others there. I think many people avoid these places, NOT because of the work, but rather because of fear ... subtle fear, but fear, nonetheless. I spent a lot of "people watching" time in Jellystone this summer and it was very obvious that the vast majority of people started to feel uncomfortable the first step off pavement, and very uncomfortable where the "human track" ended, even if it was in sight of the car. One weird thing I noticed was several times as many early morning joggers running the roads near Madison Junction camp, as running the trail along the Madison ... there has to be a reason ... these joggers aren't afraid of exercise, why the road? And, I've read and envy your posts about cross country sking alone, too. One of my legs points nearly 90 degrees from the other and I can't track in skis ... simply can't ... can't walk in snoeshoes without getting tangled either :-(( I tried getting bindings specially fitted but never succeeded .... At this point, I'm WAY too obese and old, anyway, but never getting to really "do" winter mountaineering is one of my regrets. I envy you your location and health. I may try a "clave" someday, but, maybe not G |
#70
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Larry L wrote:
Oh and one more thingG If, after you "just continued and found a nice place to yourselves" I had come along, alone, I'd have wondered why you were all in the same damn area G Everything depends on perspective. The picture of everyone in the boat looks pretty claustrophobic to me :-) I fish alone at least 90% of the time, very often in wilderness. One of the things I really like about the claves is the chance to fish with other people for a change. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
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