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#21
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On 2009-11-02 14:23:48 -0500, angler said:
On 31 Okt, 16:31, Jarmo Hurri wrote: Greetings! Next year is a special occasion snip Jarmo Hurri It feels a loooong time since I last posted on ROFF, but now I find it hard to resist. I can't spend as much time travelling around north America as Jarmo and his friends, and I already have some fishing trips for 2010 planned (Jarmo mentioned one in Sweden), but I think it is about time I did try out the fishing in the western part of the US. I've already mentioned this to a couple of friends on another forum (Vaughan Hurry among them), and it met with some interest. What I would like is the opportunity to meet some of the guys present when I visited the Penns clave and/or some of the people on this forum, so here's a question from me: Wasn't there a western clave at some point? What happened to it, or does it still occur? Anyway, even if there isn't a western clave any longer, I would still hope to do some fishing with people I've talked to/discussed with rather than me and my friends trying the area out on our own. So what are the chances of meeting up with some of you guys to do some fishing? /Roger Ohlund Hey, Roger. Good to see you posting. Come on over. I am sure the western boys and a few of the eastern ones would welcome you. I *can not*, however, pick you up in Boston and drive you to Montana. d;o) Can't say for sure that I would make it, but I'd love to fish with Dave S. and you. Hope to see you. Dave |
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On 2 Nov, 23:47, David LaCourse wrote:
On 2009-11-02 14:23:48 -0500, angler said: On 31 Okt, 16:31, Jarmo Hurri wrote: Greetings! Next year is a special occasion snip Jarmo Hurri It feels a loooong time since I last posted on ROFF, but now I find it hard to resist. I can't spend as much time travelling around north America as Jarmo and his friends, and I already have some fishing trips for 2010 planned (Jarmo mentioned one in Sweden), but I think it is about time I did try out the fishing in the western part of the US. I've already mentioned this to a couple of friends on another forum (Vaughan Hurry among them), and it met with some interest. What I would like is the opportunity to meet some of the guys present when I visited the Penns clave and/or some of the people on this forum, so here's a question from me: Wasn't there a western clave at some point? What happened to it, or does it still occur? Anyway, even if there isn't a western clave any longer, I would still hope to do some fishing with people I've talked to/discussed with rather than me and my friends trying the area out on our own. So what are the chances of meeting up with some of you guys to do some fishing? /Roger Ohlund Hey, Roger. *Good to see you posting. *Come on over. *I am sure the western boys and a few of the eastern ones would welcome you. *I *can not*, however, pick you up in Boston and drive you to Montana. *d;o) * Can't say for sure that I would make it, but I'd love to fish with Dave S. and you. Hope to see you. Dave Dave, I'm really grateful for you picking me up and driving me to Penns in 2004, damn how time flies, and no, I suppose the drive would be too long for an Audi ;-) A Volvo on the other hand........ Yes, it would be fun to meet and fish. /Roger |
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On Nov 2, 2:47*pm, David LaCourse wrote:
SNIP but I'd love to fish with Dave S. and you. Hope to see you. Dave- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Me too pirate. Dave S. |
#24
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On 2009-11-02 17:54:45 -0500, DaveS said:
On Nov 2, 2:47*pm, David LaCourse wrote: SNIP but I'd love to fish with Dave S. and you. Hope to see you. Dave- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Me too pirate. Dave S. Well, what the hell are you waiting for? Fortenberry to offer his help? Our fly tying movie star to tie all the flies? R Dean to offer new rubber waders for everyone? wayno to attend and bring a gui-tar? I'll attend as long as wayno doesn't bring a gui-tar. Dave |
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On Nov 2, 4:54*pm, DaveS wrote:
On Nov 2, 2:47*pm, David LaCourse wrote: SNIP *but I'd love to fish with Dave S. and you. Hope to see you. Dave- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Me too pirate. Dave S. Gobs of places in the Rockies in the fall: N. Platte in the Snowies, The Green above Pinedale, ponds around Independence pass in Colorado. The problem isn't finding places, it's finding places away from the catalogue yuppies. Stay completely away from Middle Park CO, the Madison, the Henry's, etc. for that reason. My best suggestion is to fly into Denver, rent a camper, buy some topo maps, and wander (ROFFians here and there will probably convoy portions with you). Turn it in in Portland and take home fantastic memories. cheers oz, been there, done that |
#26
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On Nov 2, 4:46*pm, angler wrote:
On 2 Nov, 22:38, DaveS wrote: On Nov 2, 11:23*am, angler wrote: On 31 Okt, 16:31, Jarmo Hurri wrote: Greetings! Next year is a special occasion snip Jarmo Hurri It feels a loooong time since I last posted on ROFF, but now I find it hard to resist. I can't spend as much time travelling around north America as Jarmo and his friends, and I already have some fishing trips for 2010 planned (Jarmo mentioned one in Sweden), but I think it is about time I did try out the fishing in the western part of the US. I've already mentioned this to a couple of friends on another forum (Vaughan Hurry among them), and it met with some interest. What I would like is the opportunity to meet some of the guys present when I visited the Penns clave and/or some of the people on this forum, so here's a question from me: Wasn't there a western clave at some point? What happened to it, or does it still occur? Anyway, even if there isn't a western clave any longer, I would still hope to do some fishing with people I've talked to/discussed with rather than me and my friends trying the area out on our own. So what are the chances of meeting up with some of you guys to do some fishing? /Roger Ohlund I think your chances are near certainty. Come on over. BTW looked at your profile quote from Hill the railroad baron. I think the "swedes" he was talking about is the archaic US word for a type of root vegetable, usually a type of turnip, but sometimes meaning a sweet potato variety and sometimes a kind of livestock food. It wasn't meant offensively. A mash of potato and "swede" was a common working class staple for the pioneering Irish track laying crews that pushed J'P' Hill's Northern Pacific RR across the plains to the ocean. I think Hill was saying that given tobacco, booze and turnips, he could build a railroad to hell. I would have added soy sauce for the Chinese dynamite crews, but having walked Hill's roadbed thru some of the Cascade mountains, I don't think he was making an empty boast. Dave Maybe I was fooled by the "Swedes" with a capital S, or it could have something to do with the following: "President Lincoln's Homestead Act of 1862, the political stabilization after 1865, and the enormously expanding industries of the North represented three important drawing factors on Swedish emigration to the U.S. The generous offer of the Homestead Act became a powerful magnet on land-hungry farm people. This also destined them to the so-called Homestead Triangle, especially to Minnesota, which became the Swede State of America. This was in accordance with the politics of Minnesota, where in 1867 a state immigration office was established. The Swedish Civil War colonel Hans Mattson became its first director. The result of the Swedish land-hunger was that the area of Swedish-owned farmland in America of 1920 corresponded to 2/3 of all arable land in Sweden. In some counties, such as Chicago, Isanti and Kanabec in Minnesota, the land became almost totally owned by Swedes. A string of Swedish settlements also grew up around the new railroads. The possibility of combining farmwork with jobs for the railroad or a lumber company was important for the penniless Swedes. Most of the unmarried men worked as lumberjacks or on the railroads. The railroad king James Hill is quoted: "Give me snuff, whiskey and Swedes, and I will build a railroad to hell." " /Roger- Hm.....seems clear enough to me. g. who, though perhaps not the best of readers, has never experienced much trouble in distinguishing between a turnip and a teuton. ![]() |
#27
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![]() I will try to answer all of the replies in this single post. First, on the topic of Montana / Idaho / Wyoming, you have to understand that we are looking at this from distance and based on what we read from the news. From here it has seemed that in many summers, the temperatures and water levels in that region have been dramatic. Something similar to what Fred and rw wrote: Fred So fishing in MT (w plenty of small streams- and bigger ones , Fred rivers) has been good this time of year. In other yrs July begins Fred the start of a hot dry 2 mo fire season where you are fishing for Fred already stressed fish rw July and August are prime months for the northern Rockies, but it rw all depends on the weather, which is highly variable. If the risks would be tolerable, for me the Montana / Wyoming / Idaho (and now Colorado) region would definitely be the #1 choice. The following responses only strengthened this idea: Dave I think the wide expanse of the American and Canadian West during Dave July and August, with some Roffians as guides could make for a Dave once in a lifetime experience. Perhaps flying into Salt Lake or Dave Colorado, then working your way North into Wyoming, Montana, Dave Oregon, Washington, and maybe even Eastern BC on up past 150 Mile Dave house into the Horsefly country etc. Think "road trip," no big Dave cities, big sky, your very own cowboy hats, Jo Joes, much less Dave than world class motels, real North Americans etc.., and lots of Dave challenging technical fishing, on as many beautiful small streams Dave and rivers as you would have probably seen in your lives. rw If the weather is hot fish early and late, and fish the higher rw elevations. There are plenty of tailwaters that are relatively rw insensitive to short-term weather conditions and that are managed rw for sport fishing. jeff I like July in Montana...runoff is usually over in most places and jeff there is every kind of fishing a person could want... i think jeff yellowstone park is a must see for every person on the planet... Tim Actually, a lot of the best fishing in southern Alberta is during Tim mid-late july and August. Especially small creeks, and these tned Tim to be less crowded. The fish are not huge, but repsectable, and Tim fun. Dan Once place that I think is about perfect that time of year, is Dan western Colorado. ... Colorado (flows thru Glenwood), Eagle, Dan Roaring Fork, Crystal, Frying Pan, plus Many, many, smaller creeks, Dan and if you are into hiking, there are very small creeks hiking Dan accessible that have lots of smaller brookies and cutthroats. To summarize, I think I will proceed to try to convince my friends that Western US / Canada would be our target. On the idea of seeing a lot of different areas: RDean Just to toss it out, but IMO, if you have three weeks in the US, RDean why not see a little more of it? Maybe a week in each of three RDean regions. I'd suggest the Northwest, the central/north-central RDean Atlantic, and the Gulf Coast. You'd experience a range of RDean fishing and people you'll not find anywhere else in the world... Unfortunately I like fishing so much that every day spent packing and traveling hurts. So I think that two geographical regions is the maximum; preferably just one region and the possibility to move by car (and keep all the gear "ready to be fished at any moment"). Frank A week in Arkansas on the White, North Fork and the Buffalo would Frank be a hoot. The first two are tail waters with some of the biggest Frank trout in the US. I have heard / read of these places. IIRC, these have _amazing_ fish densities. My friends might enjoy these rivers because of the larger fish. Dave Certain spots in Maine fish well in July, not so much in August. Dave The Rapid, Malagalawy, and the East Outlet of Moosehead Lake fish Dave well. Big brookies and landlocked salmon are the prey. Unfortunately, if we are traveling as a group, end of July / beginning of August is the only possible time. (Otherwise during the summer I am more flexible than the rest of the group, and during the rest of the season I am less flexible.) Dave It's tough to fish Labrador without a guide. From what I have understood, it is not only tough but very limited, because they have the rule that you need to have 1 guide per two fishermen if you are farther than 800 meters (or something similar) from a highway. For three guys that would mean two guides. -- Jarmo Hurri Remove all garbage from header email address when replying, or just use . |
#28
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On Nov 2, 2:46*pm, angler wrote:
On 2 Nov, 22:38, DaveS wrote: On Nov 2, 11:23*am, angler wrote: On 31 Okt, 16:31, Jarmo Hurri wrote: Greetings! Next year is a special occasion snip Jarmo Hurri It feels a loooong time since I last posted on ROFF, but now I find it hard to resist. I can't spend as much time travelling around north America as Jarmo and his friends, and I already have some fishing trips for 2010 planned (Jarmo mentioned one in Sweden), but I think it is about time I did try out the fishing in the western part of the US. I've already mentioned this to a couple of friends on another forum (Vaughan Hurry among them), and it met with some interest. What I would like is the opportunity to meet some of the guys present when I visited the Penns clave and/or some of the people on this forum, so here's a question from me: Wasn't there a western clave at some point? What happened to it, or does it still occur? Anyway, even if there isn't a western clave any longer, I would still hope to do some fishing with people I've talked to/discussed with rather than me and my friends trying the area out on our own. So what are the chances of meeting up with some of you guys to do some fishing? /Roger Ohlund I think your chances are near certainty. Come on over. BTW looked at your profile quote from Hill the railroad baron. I think the "swedes" he was talking about is the archaic US word for a type of root vegetable, usually a type of turnip, but sometimes meaning a sweet potato variety and sometimes a kind of livestock food. It wasn't meant offensively. A mash of potato and "swede" was a common working class staple for the pioneering Irish track laying crews that pushed J'P' Hill's Northern Pacific RR across the plains to the ocean. I think Hill was saying that given tobacco, booze and turnips, he could build a railroad to hell. I would have added soy sauce for the Chinese dynamite crews, but having walked Hill's roadbed thru some of the Cascade mountains, I don't think he was making an empty boast. Dave Maybe I was fooled by the "Swedes" with a capital S, or it could have something to do with the following: "President Lincoln's Homestead Act of 1862, the political stabilization after 1865, and the enormously expanding industries of the North represented three important drawing factors on Swedish emigration to the U.S. The generous offer of the Homestead Act became a powerful magnet on land-hungry farm people. This also destined them to the so-called Homestead Triangle, especially to Minnesota, which became the Swede State of America. This was in accordance with the politics of Minnesota, where in 1867 a state immigration office was established. The Swedish Civil War colonel Hans Mattson became its first director. The result of the Swedish land-hunger was that the area of Swedish-owned farmland in America of 1920 corresponded to 2/3 of all arable land in Sweden. In some counties, such as Chicago, Isanti and Kanabec in Minnesota, the land became almost totally owned by Swedes. A string of Swedish settlements also grew up around the new railroads. The possibility of combining farmwork with jobs for the railroad or a lumber company was important for the penniless Swedes. Most of the unmarried men worked as lumberjacks or on the railroads. The railroad king James Hill is quoted: "Give me snuff, whiskey and Swedes, and I will build a railroad to hell." " /Roger- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, either way, it is an interesting quote. I think it was mostly Chinese building East, and Irish building West, but hell, JJ Hill was the RR Baron and maybe he tended more to Swedes than I thought. However this idea for a US trip works out, I can help make it happen if it tends toward the US West. For example I can get you from Seattle or Portland out to the Bitterroot Mt's (Montana) in my van, with some fishing along the way, put up folks at my place overnight in Western Washington, or out at the place in SE Washington etc.. As per the andronomous offerings on the NW coast rivers in mid summer . . . I am not the guy who knows much about that. Maybe someone else here on Roff has something the add in that regard. Dave S. |
#29
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On Nov 2, 3:11*pm, David LaCourse wrote:
On 2009-11-02 17:54:45 -0500, DaveS said: On Nov 2, 2:47*pm, David LaCourse wrote: SNIP *but I'd love to fish with Dave S. and you. Hope to see you. Dave- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Me too pirate. Dave S. Well, what the hell are you waiting for? *Fortenberry to offer his help? *Our fly tying movie star to tie all the flies? *R Dean to offer new rubber waders for everyone? * wayno to attend and bring a gui-tar? * I'll attend as long as wayno doesn't bring a gui-tar. Dave We should get together. I could host a mini-clave in SE Washington next fall fishing the Touchet and Tucannon, which I am getting to know fairly well, or for the more cold hardy a bit of Winter steel-heading on the same waters this Winter. Ive got a camper out there and several tent sites along the river. There is also a great little 1890s hotel in Dayton, 2 great restaurants, one good bar, an a bargain of a little ski area nearby in the Blue Mtns. It does get pretty cold in Winter but there are steelhead in the river. 3 flites daily out of SeaTac to Walla Walla and back. And something like 200 wineries down there. Otherwise, during spring thru summer I am out there about half time (unless im traveling myself) so we could get together for some gentlemanly paced, uncrowded, small river fly fishing under sunny skies. Other Roffians out there should also read this as a general invite such that if you are interested in fishing the SE corner of Wa, let me know and maybe we can get together or at least we can share info. Dave |
#30
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On 3 Nov, 16:51, Jarmo Hurri wrote:
I will try to answer all of the replies in this single post. First, on the topic of Montana / Idaho / Wyoming, you have to understand that we are looking at this from distance and based on what we read from the news. From here it has seemed that in many summers, the temperatures and water levels in that region have been dramatic. Something similar to what Fred and rw wrote: Fred So fishing in MT (w plenty of small streams- and bigger ones , Fred rivers) has been good this time of year. In other yrs July begins Fred the start of a hot dry 2 mo fire season where you are fishing for Fred already stressed fish rw July and August are prime months for the northern Rockies, but it rw all depends on the weather, which is highly variable. If the risks would be tolerable, for me the Montana / Wyoming / Idaho (and now Colorado) region would definitely be the #1 choice. The following responses only strengthened this idea: Dave I think the wide expanse of the American and Canadian West during Dave July and August, with some Roffians as guides could make for a Dave once in a lifetime experience. Perhaps flying into Salt Lake or Dave Colorado, then working your way North into Wyoming, Montana, Dave Oregon, Washington, and maybe even Eastern BC on up past 150 Mile Dave house into the Horsefly country etc. *Think "road trip," no big Dave cities, big sky, your very own cowboy hats, Jo Joes, much less Dave than world class motels, real North Americans etc.., and lots of Dave challenging technical fishing, on as many beautiful small streams Dave and rivers as you would have probably seen in your lives. rw If the weather is hot fish early and late, and fish the higher rw elevations. There are plenty of tailwaters that are relatively rw insensitive to short-term weather conditions and that are managed rw for sport fishing. jeff I like July in Montana...runoff is usually over in most places and jeff there is every kind of fishing a person could want... i think jeff yellowstone park is a must see for every person on the planet... Tim Actually, a lot of the best fishing in southern Alberta is during Tim mid-late july and August. Especially small creeks, and these tned Tim to be less crowded. The fish are not huge, but repsectable, and Tim fun. Dan Once place that I think is about perfect that time of year, is Dan western Colorado. *... Colorado (flows thru Glenwood), Eagle, Dan Roaring Fork, Crystal, Frying Pan, plus Many, many, smaller creeks, Dan and if you are into hiking, there are very small creeks hiking Dan accessible that have lots of smaller brookies and cutthroats. To summarize, I think I will proceed to try to convince my friends that Western US / Canada would be our target. On the idea of seeing a lot of different areas: RDean Just to toss it out, but IMO, if you have three weeks in the US, RDean why not see a little more of it? *Maybe a week in each of three RDean regions. *I'd suggest the Northwest, the central/north-central RDean Atlantic, and the Gulf Coast. *You'd experience a range of RDean fishing and people you'll not find anywhere else in the world... Unfortunately I like fishing so much that every day spent packing and traveling hurts. So I think that two geographical regions is the maximum; preferably just one region and the possibility to move by car (and keep all the gear "ready to be fished at any moment"). Frank A week in Arkansas on the White, North Fork and the Buffalo would Frank be a hoot. The first two are tail waters with some of the biggest Frank trout in the US. I have heard / read of these places. IIRC, these have _amazing_ fish densities. My friends might enjoy these rivers because of the larger fish. Dave Certain spots in Maine fish well in July, not so much in August. Dave The Rapid, Malagalawy, and the East Outlet of Moosehead Lake fish Dave well. Big brookies and landlocked salmon are the prey. Unfortunately, if we are traveling as a group, end of July / beginning of August is the only possible time. (Otherwise during the summer I am more flexible than the rest of the group, and during the rest of the season I am less flexible.) Dave It's tough to fish Labrador without a guide. From what I have understood, it is not only tough but very limited, because they have the rule that you need to have 1 guide per two fishermen if you are farther than 800 meters (or something similar) from a highway. For three guys that would mean two guides. -- Jarmo Hurri Remove all garbage from header email address when replying, or just use . Good summary Jarmo, I agree with what you wrote with the slightly different perspective of only having about one week to spend on such an adventure. How different wouldn't it be to meet up in the west of the US, rather than the remote (read unpopulated) destinations we usually meet, I'll see if I can't get Vaughan to join. For our American friends reading this, I would be really keen on meeting up with like minded (not to say single minded ;-) ) fly- fishermen. To fish together with guys with local knowledge of an area......., - beats most scenarios. /Roger |
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