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#1
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Best Yellowstone/Montana Books in preparation for the July Clave.
Looking for a list of the better Montana/Yellowstone Flyfishing books. I
have one that turned out to be a good primer last time up (the Montana Angling Guide - Fotherrill/Sterling) that is a wealth of information, but looking for another book or two to supplement it. Basically looking for something with detailed information on the streams, holes, and especially the hatches. I'm finding it hard to get good information on the local hatches so good accurate hatch charts with local pattern information would be nice. They don't seem to pay much attention to the hatches in Yellowstone/Montana, and maybe that's why, but witnessed a good variety of hatches last time out and would like to be prepared this time around. Any and all information would be awesome!! Mike |
#2
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Best Yellowstone/Montana Books in preparation for the July Clave.
Craig Matthews' "Fly Fishing the Madison" and "The Yellowstone Fly
Fishing Guide" are pretty good - and if you don't like them you can go into his shop and complain when you're there. g -- Charlie... www.chocphoto.com |
#3
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Best Yellowstone/Montana Books in preparation for the July Clave.
On Sun, 12 Feb 2006 10:49:52 -0500, "Mike Makela"
ten.tsacmoc@alekamm wrote: Any and all information would be awesome!! River Journals by Frank Amato Publications. Books on the Madison, Henry's Fork and the Yellowstone. Don't know whether they are still in print. If you can't find them, let me know. Dave |
#4
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Best Yellowstone/Montana Books in preparation for the July Clave.
"Mike Makela" ten.tsacmoc@alekamm wrote be nice. They don't seem to pay much attention to the hatches in Yellowstone/Montana, and maybe that's why, but witnessed a good variety of hatches last time out and would like to be prepared this time around. Mike, I don't know who "they" are, but "hatches" are the focus of everyone I know that spends much time in the Greater Yellowstone area. But, "Yellowstone/Montana" is a lot of area, both in surface area and equally important, in altitude changes and it's nearly impossible to produce a hatch chart for the entire zone that would have any meaning beyond " lots of bugs over nearly the whole season." As a single example, Salmonflies start hatching on the HFork around Ashton in mid-may and the last Salmonflies you will likely encounter continue until late July on the Yellowstone in the Park. In the middle they will appear on the Madison, Gallatin and other rivers. But, on any given water their emergence is short and far more people leave never having experienced good Salmonfly activity than have ... If you want the best 'feel' for what fishing the hatches of the Greater Yellowstone Area can be like, there is no better resource then the DVD "Fly Fishing Yellowstone Hatches" available from Blue Ribbon Flies http://www.blueribbonflies.com/ The DVD is based on a book "Fishing Yellowstone Hatches" by Jurachek and Matthews if you'd rather read than watch, but I guarantee the DVD will make you a lot more eager to find the bugs G ... and I suggest it. If you want a list of all Park waters with access routes and fishing information "The Yellowstone Fly Fishing Guide" covers every creek and lake and it too is written by the people at Blue Ribbon "Western Mayfly Hatches" by Hafele and Hughes is an excellent source but it covers an area even larger ... it is probably too 'scientific' for a one trip visitor Their older book "Western Hatches" is also very good, and covers all types of bugs, but for the Mayflies the new one is great. I've fished the Jellystone area since '71 off and on, and the last 5 years for several months each summer. I can't remember the last time I fished an "attractor" pattern ... hatches are the game, for me. But, I don't expect to 'master' the Jellystone hatch knowledge available, ever. Unlike most visiting anglers that rush from spot to spot to get more 'been there, done that' points, I fish the same places over and over, hoping to gain a greater sense on intimacy and deeper knowledge. Yet, I'm still surprised and caught unprepared often. If you DO rush from spot to spot ...look HARD before you tie on a fly, what worked great at RiverA may be useless at RiverB an hour away by car. This may account for your impression that hatches aren't taken seriously ... "place collectors" probably tend to fish flies that attract more than imitate. The DVD will give you an idea of 'most likely' and 'most famous' times/places and bugs but there is a LOT of fly fishing within a couple hours of West Yellowstone and the exact same late July day that one water will be starting to slow for the summer doldrums another water, not that far away, will just be getting into shape for it's early fishing. Add the fact that weather fluctuations can move hatches two weeks or more one way or the other on the calendar and you'll begin to see how impossible it is to name a few patterns for a short time in a huge region. |
#5
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Best Yellowstone/Montana Books in preparation for the July Clave.
Mike Makela wrote:
Looking for a list of the better Montana/Yellowstone Flyfishing books. I have one that turned out to be a good primer last time up (the Montana Angling Guide - Fotherrill/Sterling) that is a wealth of information, but looking for another book or two to supplement it. Basically looking for something with detailed information on the streams, holes, and especially the hatches. I'm finding it hard to get good information on the local hatches so good accurate hatch charts with local pattern information would be nice. They don't seem to pay much attention to the hatches in Yellowstone/Montana, and maybe that's why, but witnessed a good variety of hatches last time out and would like to be prepared this time around. Any and all information would be awesome!! Mike Although there's not alot of hatch info, the two books by Holt, Montana Fly Fishing Guide East and West, detail MANY of waters and from my experience, the info is good. Good reference to find out of the way spots. The East version covers the waters around Yellowstone Park. Willi |
#6
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Best Yellowstone/Montana Books in preparation for the July Clave.
I second that. Holt's books are great.
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#7
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Best Yellowstone/Montana Books in preparation for the July Clave.
Willi wrote:
Although there's not alot of hatch info, the two books by Holt, Montana Fly Fishing Guide East and West, detail MANY of waters and from my experience, the info is good. Good reference to find out of the way spots. The East version covers the waters around Yellowstone Park. I have his earlier book, "Knee Deep in Montana's Trout Streams," which is OK but has no maps. How are the maps and the access info in "Montana Fly Fishing Guide, East"? |
#8
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Best Yellowstone/Montana Books in preparation for the July Clave.
Here is the link to the fishing page of the FWP for Montana. I include
it because you can find the streams and lakes in region 3 and 5 and get an idea of what's there to fish for. Some of the rivers and streams have maps, but they aren't very detailed. http://fwp.mt.gov/fishing/default.html Here is the hatch chart provided by Dan Bailey's. http://www.dan-bailey.com/hatchchart.htm But it's hard to find detailed hatch information because, well, because. Two years ago was a warm, dry winter and hatches started much earlier in the year. Last year was a much better snow year which changed the timing of the hatches and what was hatching. Blue Ribbon Flies is a great resource, but there quite a few fly shops in Bozeman, Livingston, West Yellowstone and Ennis.If you dig up their websites, most of them have current fishing reports. I'd suggest watching those reports to get an idea of what's hatching and give the shops a call to see what patterns are working. |
#9
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Best Yellowstone/Montana Books in preparation for the July Clave.
"Charlie Choc" wrote in message oups.com... Craig Matthews' "Fly Fishing the Madison" and "The Yellowstone Fly Fishing Guide" are pretty good - and if you don't like them you can go into his shop and complain when you're there. g -- Charlie... www.chocphoto.com Thanks Charlie, I know you have the Fothergill book (clave raffle prize from someone..), how does it match up? |
#10
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Best Yellowstone/Montana Books in preparation for the July Clave.
"Dave LaCourse" wrote in message ... On Sun, 12 Feb 2006 10:49:52 -0500, "Mike Makela" ten.tsacmoc@alekamm wrote: Any and all information would be awesome!! River Journals by Frank Amato Publications. Books on the Madison, Henry's Fork and the Yellowstone. Don't know whether they are still in print. If you can't find them, let me know. Dave Thanks Dave!! How's things in New England? We got socked last night, and looks like New England got blasted too.. |
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