Category Archives: Fly Fishing

You know the best fishing starts here

The best fishing starts here

 Lack of water drove me to Google Earth, but despite my search it didn’t oblige me with a big red arrow emblazoned with “Big Carp Here.” Instead I traced big water to little water, little to rivulet, then rivulet to irrigation ditch.

Satellite imagery showed a bridge and that’s enough to gain access to the creek bed legally, so I lumped my gear into the front seat and dead reckoned my way through garlic, corn, and bell peppers.

I should’ve brought my machete – as the slot containing the creek was a dense tangle of blackberry vines, brush, and traditional flora, buttressed by English Walnut trees and alders. 

Bridges mean legal access

It was deep, green, and from the vantage of the ancient bridge I could see a pod of patrolling fish; Pikeminnow roam in packs, a dead giveaway when the fish are too distant to identify.

I geared up and headed upstream, wary of poison oak and the potential for snakes, following the indistinct trace of a game trail through the brambles.

Agent Orange would have been beneficial

The water was too deep to wade so I was bound by terrestrial means – which was not at all friendly. I managed to get close enough to the water to observe and saw plenty of fish; smallmouth and largemouth bass, Pikeminnow, and hardhead – but saw no carp, although the water suggested they were present as well.

The traditional Trico spinners were out and quite a few fish were on the surface eating them, most were small – and I couldn’t get near them with anything other than a roll cast, so dry flies were not an option. 

At least it\'s not brown

I flipped Hare’s Ear’s under the far bank and was intercepted by a 9″ Pikeminnow, confirming their presence. I keep heading upstream slowly and after an hour of threading my way through thorns I managed to get a couple hundred yards above the bridge.

I’ve got free space over the water only, and practiced some side arm casting. It’s a “Pikeminnow raceway” and there’s a school of enormous fish nervously pacing between the pool below and the pool above. Half of the fish would go better than 5 lbs, and the largest I see is closer to 9 lbs.

The fish are about 4 feet below the surface and I figured the Algae Carpkiller can make that depth without fuss. A couple of nice bass rushed over to intercept, but thought better at the last moment.

I was hoping for more desperate and hungry fish – but realized painfully that it wasn’t going to be easy, a conundrum wrapped in a riddle – and like every other stream uniqueness would apply.

A 16″ fish detached itself from the stream of larger fish and inhaled the fly, it screams off down the creek with me straining to hold the rod out past the encroaching blackberries.

I managed to get everything untangled from the thorns and grasping flora  – then went face first into an enormous spiderweb occupied by some meat eating, eight legged, fast mover…

The human body isn’t meant to move like I did – ending in a satisfying spray of spider-guts compliments of the Singlebarbed Spider-killing Curly-brim.

Between my pirouette on the bank and the fish – we managed to scare hell out of the entire watershed. I returned the fish undamaged, then faded into the thicket behind me.

I tried downstream and was greeted by the “Good Fishing Starts Here” sign, No Trespassing compliments of ravenous canine. Lacking any beef jerky, I knew I couldn’t negotiate my way out of any indiscretion, so I returned to the car instead.

A pseudonym for the Solano County Water Agency

The signs suggested a wildlife refuge, but when I looked it up on the Internet it turns out to be the Solano County Water Agency. If you live in Vacaville, Benecia, or Fairfield – you’re drinking this stuff.

It’s a bit of an eye opener for me as farm waste can be brutal stuff, and while the rest of you are making pucker face’s and saying “..eww” – a couple hundred thousand folks are gargling the pooty water.

Always question what the sign says – many are spurious and tacked up by landowners hoping to keep the beer-drinking Friday night crowd off public land adjoining their back forty..

No wildlife refuge here, and you may want to ask yourselves, “What’s in your spigot?”

It’s in there, both feet and some cheap cigar butts

More scouting on Sunday, also a lot more pillaging of produce. I’m trying to keep pace with the Fat of the Land boys, demonstrating that SaranWrap is for sissies – at least in two states..

I added another 25 lbs of Almonds to the drying rack, a couple of weeks in the garage and my house will be an obscene orgy of baked goods.

The Little Stinking has some water in the lower end again, so the irrigation is slowing a bit, you can contrast what they’ve pulled from the creek with this picture from August 19, 2007… 

Little Stinking 8.19.2007

… and the same stretch of river taken today. The “Horse Barn” effluent dominates what little flow is coming down the channel. 

Little Stinking 8.10.2008

It looks cleaner but it’s not, the 2007 shot was taken later in the day, versus early morning, and the creek is the same ocher-olive as seen in last year’s picture. 

The Singlebarbed fedora, sweat, selenium, and spider guts - lends it that rich patina

Don’t even think about it – that’s a years worth of selenium infused sweat mixed with yesterday’s spider guts, combining for a rich patina of raw dirt masculinity. Dogs pizzle on hydrants – and us Brownline types mark turf similar. 

Attack of the Killer tomato trucks

The fruits of the Little Stinking are evident on every onramp – and for the next month or so hitchhikers will be dodging produce as big rigs swerve onto the freeway.

You giggled at me for fishing in it, now who’s laughing? Think PREGO babe, it’s in there…

Both my feet and a lot of cigar butts Both of my feet and a lot of stale cigar butts I tossed into the creek; just when you thought it was safe and antiseptic – then I pull the rug out…

That’s OK, yesterday I was hip deep in the drinking water of Benecia, Vallejo, and Fairfield – them folks have a more pressing issue.

All them odiferous brown creeks you pass on the Interstate have a heady role in your supermarket. Small and numerous and tended lovingly by your’s truly ….

Eoin Fairgrieve and Speycast.co.uk debut

Fish and Fly is assisting the launch of www.speycast.co.uk, a web site dedicated solely to spey casting and instruction. Founder, Eoin Fairgrieve, World Team Speycasting Champion – and Loop tackle instructor, will add to the creative mix of video, online instruction, forums, and destination information – offered by the site.

Speycast logo

The site will be enhanced to include instruction in modern speycasting techniques, with articles and visual downloads by some of the world’s top casters and instructors.  The site will feature product reviews highlighting the latest speycasting tackle and clothing by leading manufacturers as well as an extensive database of speycasting instructors around the world. 

Spey casting and Czech nymphing are all the rage at the moment, with the print media unable to satiate the demand for information on either, the online migration was inevitable.

Something for you to peruse come your lunch break.

Inflation fighting award to follow

wildcreek A split bamboo rod for less than the cost of a graphite?

One of those odd finds that you stumble on quite by accident, a handsome looking rod featured in an photo, and curiosity leads you to look up the maker.

Wild Creek Rods, of Australian origin and a small entrepreneur, but the rods are handsome and the costs are very reasonable. Only four models are available, but it’s still a neat find.

$489 US for any of the rods featured ($525AU), plus postage. Seven models of graphite are also available, for about $237 US.

Every so often a really good idea isn’t

Sacred hour, the last 60 minutes before dark I see it as using turn signals in the city, all you’re really doing is giving information to the enemy…

Picture that rarified hour before dark, the lake is a sheet of glass, the fish are feeding in earnest, and tippet looks like winch cable on the surface. It’s “perfect” time, in 60 minutes either your execution is perfect, or you’re perfectly frustrated, it’s the only possible outcomes.

I’m focused on willing my 6X to be 9X, and someone to my right starts speaking:

“Yea, and remember my idiot sister with the cleft palate, well she married that loser dude you met. Yep, the short guy with the nose ring, that’s the one.”

Incredulous would be the operative word, some fellow 300 yards distant appears to have a two way radio glued to his ear, chatting with a buddy in a float tube. Conversational tones carry at least a half mile, and he’s emptying the family closet for the entire lake to hear.

“%$#*, I missed one.”

At this point, assorted Mom’s are hustling kids away from the shoreline, and I’m wondering whether my destiny will be, “%$#@, the fat guy next to me caught another ^%$# fish.”

Technology is a wonderful thing … at times. It holds much promise, but like the Atom Bomb, not everyone that can afford it should own one.

The running diatribe pauses long enough for me restore “last hour’s bliss” and I managed to fool a nice rainbow with a Pheasant tail. Sliding the fish back into the water the silence is punctuated with more blathering:

“Naw, I’m using a dry, I’ve never caught %$#& with Pheasant Tails, that what you’re using? &%@#, I missed another one.”

Well that confirms everything they’ve said about distracted drivers talking on cell phones, my discomfort is fading a bit with each announced muff – it’s irritating, but Loudmouth has his pants around his ankles for the amusement of all within earshot.

“OBAMA? %@*& him, I can’t believe you buy into that liberal &^%#*, Jesus.”

I can’t help you pal, once religion and politics dominate the conversation, you’re on your own.

… Hell, I can’t see my tippet anyways, time to call it a night.

I’d use downriggers but the Pink Lady objects

What’s really needed is some clever technical name like “Pre-emergent Taut drifting” or “Kinetic Nymphing” – something with enough action verbiage to engage the print media into reams of “how to” literature.

I figured it was trolling mostly, what with the wind blowing you in one direction and frantic paddling to counter wind drift, hoping to preserve your orientation to the bank and fly.

Kelvin used it to great effect and converted us skeptical types after only a couple hours on the water, more importantly, it produced fish during midafternoon when everyone else was thinking sandwich. 

The weeds are about six feet below me

The above picture shows the bottom of Manzanita Lake and its stunning water clarity. Them monstrous feet are submerged – and the vertical weeds are about 6 feet below me. Getting a fly in the weed is a bad thing, and the fish instinctively head for those tough stalks the moment they’re hooked, with us collectively losing a third of the fish on the initial sprint downward. 

The trick is to use tackle that keeps the fly about midway between weed and surface. This is the exclusive turf of the intermediate sink line – one of the slowest sinking lines available – or adding 5 feet of tippet and a beaded nymph on a floating line.

Sink tip lines would work as well, but the key is to keep mindful of the depth to the weeds, if you stray into the deep water the fly passes above their visual range, too shallow and your fly is toast. At the right depth, the cruising fish will oblige you. We landed about ¾ of the fish using a simple “fling and retrieve” and the balance from dry flies and nymphs during periods of insect activity. 

Brown J.Fair Wiggletail and Algae CarpKiller

Pre-emergent Taut drifting flies start with the J.Fair Wiggletail nymph (in brown above), Olive was the preferred color – which matched my most productive, the Algae CarpKiller. I had these in the box from the Little Stinking and equipped with a 4mm bead were heavy enough to drag 5 feet of 5X down to the appropriate depth.

My deteriorating eyesight has a new wrinkle for me to overcome with each trip – and the larger tippets and bigger hooks of Kinetic Nymphing  gives me a chance at threading a tippet come dusk.

Tradition is useful as long as it doesn’t interfere with the fishing, and delicate sensibilities are trod upon with gusto, it’s all part of the obsession. Unfortunately there’s more hours between bugs than with bugs and with us weekend warriors, every hour is precious.

It might have been an irate Conga soloist with a Ranger in tow, best play it cagey

I’m following in the footsteps of the Trout Underground, which has a winning combination for the extended fishing soiree … first you mention the menu, show a couple of water shots proving you were able to push yourself away from the table, then you mention dessert.

Unfortunately everything in California has sugar on it, so you have to guess which course is first. “Dessert” was the first fish landed, and it’s strangely fitting that a Brownliner’s pilgrimage to blue water starts with a Brown Trout … 

Me and Salmo Trutta renew a longstanding friendship

I’ve fished a lot of “mixed” water in the last decade, populated with both Brown and Rainbow trout – but for whatever reason I’ve haven’t seen that yellow belly and red spots since … forever.  Our first day on the lake  Browns outnumbered Rainbows, and everyone got to see a splash of yellow.

Manzanita Lake is about 5800 feet above sea level, and contains the only fish native to Lassen Park. Due to elevation and ice covering the lake, spawning occurs in late Spring, and the small feeder creek entering the lake provides precious gravel to sustain a natural population.

The above photo, a recently spawned fish that’s much skinnier than normal, almost “snakelike” – freshly spawned, more importantly, hungry as hell. After 14 hours of propelling myself around the lake, I’m not sure whose palette was the more discriminating, but at least one of us got fed. 

J. Fair's biggest fan, and another victim of the WiggleTail nymph

Our small flotilla chugged around the lake and did well; two kinds of mayflies, midges, and the breeze played havoc with all of them; nymph activity was constant and prowling fish were in evidence all day long. Hatches were morning, noon, and evening – the traditional Manzanita schedule, with Calibaetis hatching at noon and again in the evening. It’s too soon for the big noontime spinner fall, but with “two a day” hatches, it shouldn’t be too long before they’ll add to the festivities. 

Trout like Carp flies, a lot

“The Thrill that comes Once in a Lifetime” was how Ed Zern wrote it in “To Hell With Fishing”; the obscene discovery that big trout and Carp have an affinity for algae colored monstrosities. I didn’t complain much, just kept yelling “Pheasant Tail” to anyone that asked.

I was fishing dammit, and a little white lie won’t add much to the flames of Hell … the last thing I needed was some fellow accusing me of intentional invasive species release – knowing that fly had dampened both the blue and the brown.

Besides, it may have been the irate “Conga Drum” soloist with a ranger in tow.

I’ll post some flies and useful methods tomorrow, I had to get the “fish porn” out of the way, buying me enough time to see if I have any left. It’s the unwritten law of the “best friend” fly tier, “Guys, before we get in the car the flies are a buck, but once my waders are damp – dries are $9.50 each and nymphs are $14.00…”

We survived, but the Mormon Tabernacle buys it

Coin operated showers sealed our fate, and if the “Mormon Tabernacle” in the next campsite could’ve held a tune on the Conga Drums, we might not have had to show ourselves and chase their womenfolk away.

Lots of smoke in the background

Paddling around the lake for 12 hours a day doesn’t breed sophistication in dining. Black dark doesn’t assist much, but it’ll hide the worst of the culinary transgressions..

“Did you just put Toothpaste on my steak?”

“Oops, sorry – It looked like the steak sauce bottle.”

“That’s OK, put more on I’m starving .. ”

“Oh my god, you just drank the dish water!”

“I did? Was kind of bland, pass me something colder.”

I can only wonder what the neighbor’s thought – our campsite was peaceful and deserted from dawn till dark, then some land yacht squeals to a stop with 3 tubes on the roof. The unkempt and unshowered wolves emerge, take down a bison, char the edges, rend it to pieces, then start snoring.

The glottal kind, add three different pitches and even the Black Bears left us alone.

Smoke from the Butte Lightning Complex was thick, and that allowed me and the rest of “McHale’s Navy” to doctor our hooks with whatever we squirreled away in float tube pockets. “Skipper” brought some ungodly Peanut Butter protein bar that tasted better after it was run over twice by the vehicle, but despite the embedded gravel made a handsome facsimile for Power Bait.

Who invents this stuff? It's like leaden death.

After finning around the lake all day, I wasn’t about to waste my remaining larder on damn trout, I’ll take the gravel, you eat the bugs.

We’ll cover the fish stories tomorrow, right now sleep and a shower sound better.

Wherein we defile the Crown Jewel of the National Park System

Tomorrow I’ll vacate the brown water in preference of a heady “blueline” trout experience. The timing is right as the Trout Underground has abandoned its readership traditional stomping grounds to pursue high-dollar, high cholesterol, exotic locales – complete with liveried butlers, cooks, and guides-in-waiting.

That gives me an opportunity to assist all them unloved Northern California fish by laying waste to the National Park Service’s crown jewel, Manzanita Lake

Big Wings are extra tasty

Back when I was living in the area, all the fellows lounging on the fly shop’s porch would pile into a truck and fish Fall River in the morning, throw a sandwich in the car and hit Manzanita at noon, fish through the hatch, then be back on Hat Creek in time for the evening. It was the Trifecta of Dry Fly fishing, with the Preakness, the Belmont, and the Kentucky Derby, all in one daylong orgy of silicone and chicken feathers.

Both Hat Creek and Fall River have dwindled significantly from their heyday, but Manzanita Lake has held up remarkably well. Credit goes to the National Park Service, which has had a zero-kill limit on the lake for over a decade. It’s a small lake and patrolled aggressively, and with campgrounds so close – the seasonal aides are quite busy redirecting the unwary to Reflection Lake across the way.

The countless hours spent there formed the basis for all of my lake fishing theory, and can be summed into a single sentence, “They eat the Wing.”

I always oversize the wings on the dries I use in lakes by a full hook size, I can see them better – and I assume the fish can too. All of us regulars had a “double secret” experimental, and despite fishing over the same natural, none of them resembled each other.

Double Secret Calibaetis

We could agree on profile, and if the fly didn’t land correctly it was immediately lifted off the water and recast.

It makes perfect sense, lakes always have a light chop due to the ever present breeze, and like a ship – the masts appear first on the horizon, why wouldn’t a prowling fish key itself to wing and silhouette – likely it’s the first visual cue it sees in the natural.

Making sense and catching fish are not always hand in hand, which is why my compatriots are stocking up on J. Fair’s Wiggle Nymph – rather than take my advice. Conviction is a good thing, but it can lead to force feeding the wrong fly to the right fish.

I’ll be the talkative fellow in the float tube with an excuse for everything.