Fishing Collectables

Labels: Canada Post, Salmon fly patterns, stamp collecting, steelhead fly
"A man's got to believe in something. I believe I'll go fishing." -- H.D. Thoreau

Labels: Canada Post, Salmon fly patterns, stamp collecting, steelhead fly


Labels: entomology, fly fishing, mayfly, Stan Hudac, Take the A Train
So there I was trailing behind my wife, being introduced around and then abandoned to my own resources in a back eddy of the main party. There were several others like me, rising sporadically to feed as a tray of canapés drifted by but mostly staying still, doing our best to blend inconspicuously with the background.Labels: seasonal festivities, Who likes to Fish
I see from my web site stats that I have a few visitors from Australia. Drop me a line and say G’day and maybe give me the low-down on those Barramundi. Now that’s a fish!
Australian Fishing ShowsLabels: Australian Fishing Shows, Fish’O Mania, Steve and Bushy, World Fishing Network
A long time ago when I lived in Kelowna, British Columbia I got up early one Christmas morning and drove up into the foothills to take a few casts for winter trout. It was pre-children so my wife and I had only one obligation that day, Christmas dinner at the Teel’s. They were wonderful people, the parents of my fishing buddy and friend, Paul. The morning was glorious. As I drove the winding road to the higher elevations, patches of snow showed here and there along the creek becoming thicker and more persistent. My plan was to spend an hour or two and be home before my wife woke up and got started on the Christmas day bustle. It is hard to describe the beauty of a mountain creek on a still day. It is even harder to describe the pleasure of being able to enjoy it on a whim. Labels: British Columbia, Kamloops Rainbows, Kamloops Trout, Kelowna, new fly fisher

Labels: art, computer science, Geoff Johnston, Jonathan Harris
Thinking back, I am still able to picture the bobber and its slow, slow drift. An intensity of concentration filled me that day as I studied its motion for clues as to what might be happening under the surface. I still get that razor sharp focus when trying to place a fly to a difficult rise or having seen a salmon stir in the depths of a pool. Time stops and every detail leaps into vivid clarity.
You know what is funny? The other thing that has stuck with me is that even now, after all of these years, I can still barely contain my impatience to get on the water at the end of the trip to a fishing spot. And I still delay until the last possible moment the decision to reel in and leave.
Ah, what the heck...just one more cast.
Labels: Brook Trout Fishing, Popular Mechanics, red and white bobber
I am a firm believer in the adage that knowledge is power.Labels: Brook Trout, Brook Trout Fishing, locate fish, natural history, Nova Scotia, Salvelinus Fontinalis, The Tent Dwellers

Herters was educational, inspiring and for the most part, hopelessly out of reach to a kid.
Growing up in a place where most fishing was done off the town wharf for Pollock and Tommy Cod using big Red Devil (Devel) lures, the site of these gold-plated #18 hooks in their white cardboard box –complete with the Herters logo-Labels: Cabela’s Master Catalogue., Herters, Herters catalogue

Labels: Brook Trout, Brook Trout Fishing, Hand Tied Leader, Ian Gall

Labels: aquaculture, Atlantic Salmon, fish farming, sea lice
Labels: Global warming, natural history

Labels: Antigonish, Atlantic Salmon, Fall Salmon Fishing in Nova Scotia, fishing picture, West River

Labels: Beavers, Medway River, Simple Water System, wildlife related problem

Labels: moose pictures, orphaned skunk, skunk kittens

Labels: compass, GPS, Sackville River, Sackville Rivers Association, Topographic Maps
Well its dark and cold and time to start the struggle against my usual winter blues. I’ve been thinking a lot about salmon flies lately, so will get set-up to tie a handful of Blue charms. This is one of my favorite flies to tie, probably because it is one of my favorites to fish. In the last couple of years I’ve been tying it in all sizes from # 16 to # 4 but the one that works best for me on any given day is a sparse #12 with a couple of strands of crystal flash in the wing. I first saw the flash added to conventional flies during a trip Gander a few years ago. It changed our trip from average to outstanding. Since then, if I’m tying up a handful of whatever pattern I’ll always add a bit of flash to two or three of them. I did some research on the Blue Charm out of curiosity, to see where it came from and who originated it but so far am no wiser. It is one of those patterns that just seems to have always been around in one form or another. I did an experiment last year where I tied a couple of Blue Charms in every colour of floss I had in my kit. I followed the recipe exactly but changed the body colour. Another variation is tying the classic pattern but with different coloured tags. The resultant flies are very pretty but I have not used them enough to announce a new killer Salmon pattern. I can say with confidence that a Blue Charm tied with a red body and two strands of crystal flash in the wing is a phenomenal trout fly for fast water. That aside, the idea behind changing the body colour was simple. I was fishing not long ago on a local river when a fellow hollered across the stream to his buddy, who was fast into a grilse, “ What are they taking?” The reply was, “Anything yellow”. I could digress into a great fishing story here but I’ll stick to the point. Part of the lore of salmon fishing is the colour preference different runs on different rivers have. It is part of the precious local knowledge that strangers usually have to learn the hard way. They don’t call salmon, “ The Fish of a Thousand Casts” for nothing. I have in the back of my mind the rivers and their colours and can rhyme off an ever-increasing list: The Medway - orange, the St Mary’s – green, the Phillip –yellow and so on. The colours sometimes change from spring to fall, from year to year and even from grilse to salmon. Heck, it may not even be true but I try to match the preferred colour for the river, run and season when putting my first fly through a pool. Now, with that in mind, another thing I think is that certain fly patterns work better than others just because of the way they are designed and built. The Blue Charm is one of these. Putting these separate trains of thought together, it makes sense to me that a fly design that is proven but tied in the particular, preferred colours of the run you are fishing should have a pretty good chance. In my mind there will come a day when a fresh run of fish has just hit the pool. Nothing seems to work until one of us remembers that the fish on this river prefer a particular shade of chartreuse that I just happen to have because of this wacky experiment. Well, one can dream.Labels: Atlantic Salmon, Atlantic Salmon colour preference, Blue Charm, experimental flies, Tying flies
Labels: hoax, hoaxes, internet crap
Where else on earth could this email and these pictures come from without CNN having a news crew on site?Labels: new born baby moose, Newfoundland