Category Archives: humor

I may have to side with the Fundamentalist’s just once

Genetically engineered piss-water I never thought about the perils of genetically manipulated beef, with my meager BBQ skills I usually eat briquette of “beef like substance”. Charcoal is a spice – get enough black on that haunch and the genetics are the least of your worries.

I’m fine with modified grains – and anything else derived from stem cell research, figuring whatever plague we unleash would be tame compared to what we’d already done to the environment, and it might even weed a few of us conspicuous capitalists off the landscape – lessening the burden somewhat.

But a fellow has to draw the line somewhere’s …

The current flap over a new sewage treatment plant for the Provo River may be our call to arms, not in the traditional sense – but if the manager has his way, they’ll be adding trout to the outflow to test water quality:

Matthews has his own idea for demonstrating the water’s high quality. He wants to build a 10-foot fish tank in the sewer plant to hold a couple of trout from one of the nearby fishing holes. The district will run treated effluent through it.

“If there’s a problem,” he said, “we’ll see it in our own plant.”

The old “canary in a coal mine” ploy – but what if a half dozen fertile fish were to escape after a couple seasons of inhaling pooty water?

It could stimulate catch and release fishing out of self defense, then again, they could be the next Invasive Species – intermingling and inter-breeding with native fish so everything tastes like warm Pampers.

Suddenly I’m waffling on the science front, brown trout are fine – but I don’t want all of them that way…

Finally, the cane rod we all can afford

Dust off your ascot and meerschaum, admittance to the “cane fraternity” is only pennies away. Then again, it may take a few decades for you to really appreciate the simplicity and elegance, giving you time to gather the appropriate accoutrements.

Don't laugh to hard

At $39.95 for the base model, comes with #8 line and appears to have as much tip flex as an axe handle. A little on the drab side, but the addition of a large arbor reel stuffed with day-glo backing should add measurably to the appeal.

Old School might be best left to History

I’ve always been fascinated by “Old School” perhaps too much so. A friend from Alaska had narrated a tale that stuck with me; how hunting with a rifle was almost too easy, so he switched to bow and arrow, closer to the hunter-gatherer ethic, but also proved easy. So he resolves to make a loin cloth and a spear, carefully hardening the tip in a fire, then stealthing through the brush intent on dinner.

As he comes out of the brush a large moose is within range, and he lets fly with the spear – which smacks the moose in the side, bouncing off the now startled animal, who proceeds to “tree” the ersatz Indian for a goodly part of the day. Loincloths ain’t much for mosquito protection, so the fellow donates three or four pints of blood waiting for the enraged moose to lose interest.

The Big 5 dry flies of all time I’m a slow learner myself, so I figured it may be fun to go “Old School” on them Brownliner trash fish near my house. I’m not keen to throw spears or donate blood, but using some of the old flies and tackle seemed like a hoot.

The flies were the easy part, as “genuine” old school flies are available from Big 5; Yellow Sally, Parmachene Belle, Coachmen, White Miller, McGinty, all machine tied on straight eyed hooks at least two sizes bigger than optimum.

The loincloth angle was genius, but enthusiasm lost to embarrassment as I surveyed the vast expanse of “lily white” flesh, likely to blind passing motorists and prey alike.

Catgut would be tough to come by, so I allowed the use of contemporary fly line and monofilament leader. All the old bamboo rods I had stashed away were oddities, likely to splinter on usage, but wedged in a dark corner was the first flyrod I had used in anger, a Fenwick Feralite 8’6″ for #5 line, a wonderful rod created at the zenith of fiberglass. I was set, I dripped .. primitive.

Lust overtook me as I knotted on a Yellow Sally, it was labeled a dry fly by Big 5, but I resolved to make it work. It hit the water like a Boeing 707, managing to float for 4 inches before succumbing to the weight of the round wire #8 hook. I’m possessed by tradition, quartering down and across, working through the brushy area – knowing these fish were easy meat and hadn’t seen a wet fly in at least 50 years.

Sacramento Pikeminnow and Carp intermingled with Bluegill and the occasional Bass, none known for selectivity, all favoring the impossible lie – sandwiched between the sunken shopping cart and castoff living room furniture.  In no time I’m firmly imbedded in a rubber tire – the take was none too delicate, so I knew it was a steel belted radial.

The Coachman was next, I went garish on the first fly – figuring to go sedate on the second. A couple of casts later I see my first boil, a fleeing fish scared witless by the fly, it went south in a hurry and I buried the next cast into the brush, scratch the Coachman.

Two more flies later and I’m starting to think this is harder than I figured, I’m fishless and surrounded by fish that are either giggling or fleeing in panic. Shaken, I tied on a Pheasant Tail nymph and quickly hit three fish, two Bluegill and a Squawfish. I’m tempted to leave it on, but science got the better of wisdom, and I’m throwing a White Miller, tinsel and all.

The water is clear enough to see fish and the fly, and from all indications their having nothing to do with it. I figured the McGinty might sink a little faster and Bumblebees being natural might induce some passion – but even the Bluegill turned their nose up as it lumbered past.

I’m well into “the spear bounced off the hide” part of the adventure and can’t help but wonder how many fishermen Big 5 killed in their infancy. Poor bastards – if they’d just gone farther down the aisle they might have found the Montana nymph, and the story would’ve ended on a positive note.

Smaller sizes might’ve helped – smaller ego would’ve helped more…

We got steaks and rods, who brought the frontal lobe

redmoon My mistake was volunteering to help out a fellow fisherman, looking at me with them big puppy eyes, the stare you only see at the pet store window, capable of inflicting guilt and shame without hint of malice.

So I took the pager, figuring it was going to be an easy shift, and as I had no weekend plans for something finer – I could curry a little favor in the process.

Later I saw Ray in the hallway, “Yea, Me’n Fred are going to Gunfire Lake. We gonna have his boat, and some steaks …and we didn’t invite you ’cause you always turn us down.”

I couldn’t help but smile, “Ray, it’s the self-preservation instinct that prevents me from accepting when you and Fred do anything, like my dad, I recognize a ‘fishless fishing trip’ when I sees it..”

Then we had over 700 lightning fires bust during my shift, and after 40 hours without sleep I’m thinking I got the raw end of the deal. I drag myself into work yesterday wearing that pained expression that says, “bad trade”, hoping for a little sympathy.

There’s Fred in the hallway, with a grin from ear to ear. I’m expecting the “we kilt ’em” version, figuring fair play dictates I endure the recitation of deeds; how big, how many, and which fingers were removed by the largest of their quarry.

Fred starts the recital off key, ” ..well, the ramp ran out before the water started, so we had a little trouble with the trailer and the mud, but after we got out there, we saw that “hatch” thing you was talking about, fish were gobbling them on the surface, and Ray got bit on the fly rod a couple times but lost them.”

“We fished until about 11PM and it got real dark as there was no moon, so we decides to head back the 1/2 mile to the ramp, but couldn’t find it in the dark. I had to go slow ’cause all them tree stumps in the water, and we couldn’t see nothing.”

“A couple hours later, around 1AM, we see’s this campfire but we knew they was drunk and figured not to surprise them, so we opted to spend the night in the boat. Me and Ray only had shorts and tee shirts and it was damn cold, must’ve got down to 40 or so.”

“I had Ray cut the Bimini top off the boat with his knife so we had something to cover us – and I wrapped paper towels on my arms hoping that would work, but they kept coming off.”

This tale of woe is quickly lifting my spirits, I may not have got much sleep but it’s plain neither did they. A crowd of sportsmen have gathered, as nothing’s quite as compelling as shared outdoor misery. Just then Ray comes through the door, and I ask, “how’d that shared communal warmth thing work, Ray?”

A voice from the back of the pack asks, “where’d they go?” – another faceless angler responds, “Indian Valley Reservoir, over by BrokeBack Mountain.”

Fred perks up instantly, “we didn’t do no spooning, we’d have died before that..”

Nothing like a pack of wolves to cull the infirm at the first sign of weakness..

Cell Phone Priest

Just smack 'em with it It’s guaranteed to take the fishing world by storm, a multipurpose gadget we’ll all find indispensable, combining the services of a “priest”, an agreed upon measuring standard, and a digital forum allowing you to torment the fellows back at the office.

…the Singlebarbed “Catch and Release” version substitutes a landing net for the weighted blunt end – not out of any sense of Purism, rather we catch so damn few fish we don’t need it.

Billed as the “longest cell phone in the world” – and just the kind of accouterment to redefine your angling experience. If the testosterone doesn’t flow ample enough simply just tuck it into your wader leg and vie for Alpha Male in the parking lot.

The handy digital display will verify fish length in centimeters, millimeters, or yards, and can snap that hero pose with the built in 7 mega-pixel camera.

Pollute your coworker’s email with a press of a button, but if you called in sick, remember to omit the boss’s address, else you’ve got some ‘splaining to do…

It’s not a Kiss and Tell, more like a Curse and Tell

SMJ's Parachute Mayfly Singlebarbed’s Chief Correspondent of Harsh Language and Hard Luck Stories, “San Mateo Joe”, reports back from last week’s Upper Sacramento foray.

Joe tells it better than I ever could:

I had good luck and a good time on the Upper Sac, with one exception: day one, on my first trip down to the river, the dry felt on my wading boots came into contact with some dry pine needles that were covering the rocks, and down on my fat ass I went. I suffered no damage, but the Orvis fly rod I was carrying snapped neatly above the cork. (There’s no “R” on the cork, so Orvis has agreed to repair or replace it, free of charge.) I wasn’t carrying an extra rod, so I peeled a bunch of line off the reel, and after putting the reel into the top of my waders, I managed to do a decent job of covering the river with the long end of the stick. My brother then showed up and lent me his backup rod – a telescoping contraption he usually takes whenever he goes backpacking. I ended up catching lots of fish, all on a parachute mayfly pattern – probably the best evening I’ve ever had on the Upper Sac. 

Singlebarbed shakes up them snooty types

A few days later I headed over to the McCloud with a friend of mine. I’d never been there before, and I must say it’s a beautiful river. We camped at Ah Di Nah, and fished the river below the campground that night. There were large stoneflies everywhere, but I didn’t see any fish coming up for them, so I tied on a size 18 mayfly cripple. Hooked seven, landed four. My buddy who was fishing nymphs got skunked. The next morning we went down to the Nature Conservancy. It was a beautiful day, but tough fishing. I only managed five hookups; two to hand. Both took an ostrich herl soft hackle. My buddy’s a much better nymph fisherman than I am, and proved it by out-fishing me four to one. We checked the log at the end of the day, and most reported getting skunked, so I didn’t feel too bad.

Hope you enjoy the attached photo. The Conservancy looked like it could use a little class.

SMJ's Ostrich Herl Soft Hackle

Proof that Singlebarbed readers are of superior stock, not by birthright – merely ingenuity forged in the cold bosom of Mercury, adversity, and greasy filling station breakfasts. In our book, “SMJ” stands for “Suddenly MacGyver Junior” – but the scorch marks on the surrounding trees suggest his show is for mature audiences, or at least those episodes where he breaks another rod…

Joe was gracious enough to include the flies that worked, that little soft hackle caddis looks like a dandy.

The Spinners in Spain fall mainly on the Plain

Fly tying under the Klieg Microscope It’ll be a spectacle akin to a Mafia Trial – dapper gentlemen holding the camera at bay with a folded newspaper or jacket pulled over the head to avoid embarrassment.

Fly tiers will become reticent and temperamental, shielding their work from the prying lens of HDTV, adopting large amorphous sunglasses to evade the paparazzi, and expounding the virtue of modesty.

A Pullman, Washington television studio has started filming a fly tying series in High Definition TV:

“The first time we worked in high definition, the show’s talent noticed the difference immediately,” said Don Peters, senior planning engineer for KWSU Media. “They couldn’t believe the detail they were seeing on the screen. We were able to show the individual fibers of the flies and really capture a richness of details that is so important to the avid fly fisherman.”

To the artist that means every misplaced rib, lumpy abdomen, anemic wing, and errant tuft of dander will be showcased prominently – they’ll be blushing profusely and backpedaling desperately to get out of the stark glare of the Kleig lights.

The rest of us will be completely ignorant of the artist’s inner turmoil, wondering why all the best tiers stutter so damn much… No more wiping your nose with a shirt sleeve, from now on it’s a speech coach and pancake makeup for you.

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This small booklet explains it all, just three easy payments of …

Almost human, but the chasm is still quite wide It’s in my nature to be easily amused. Ever wonder about those television shows hawking vast fortunes you make through the miracle of the Internet? How with no work on your part, and reselling other folk’s products, you can make billions?

I keep running across these sites as they scavenge content from my site and other “real” human authors.

It’s simplicity itself, set a “robot” script to grab anything containing the words “trout” or “fishing” and your web site sprouts many dozens of articles daily – all without effort.

“Vast fortunes” don’t exist in fishing, so of all the choices available why go with a small niche – when “Dick Cheney” or “Jeffery Daumer” would yield millions of eager eyeballs?

Chalk it up to “a fool and his money…”

Sometimes the results are funny, as the robot does what it’s asked, but not as well as you could..

Extreme Fishing

What’s extreme fishing?

Only refinance mortgage refinance most exciting, most thrilling, most fun water sport ever created – that’s what!

a) Extreme fishing is fishing with a shot accident compensation claim adrenaline!
b) Extreme fishing is regular fishing on steroids!

Trout and salmon fishing in small water (such as streams and rivers) is extreme fishing!

Ice fishing is extreme fishing!

…(snip)…

Fly-fishing

Fly-fishing is used mainly for salmon and trout, and sometimes for pike, bass, and carp.

Fly-fishing involves tying artificial flies onto a hook with thread, fur, line car insurance and other materials, in sizes and colors to match naturally occurring food Chardonnay to excite a fish.

…(snip)…

Noodling isn’t the only way of catching fish by hand. In Britain, a more sedate version of hand fishing is “trout tickling.” This is the art of rubbing the underbelly of a trout with your fingers. The trout goes into a trance state after a minute or Refinance adjustable rate mortgage and can then be flipped onto the nearest bit of dry land.

That’s some that you have to know about Extreme Fishing.

I’ve replaced the hyperlinks with italics and shortened the blog entry considerably, but it was fun plagiarizing them for a change. Now that I understand what extreme fishing is – I can call my mortgage guy right away.

The “Chardonnay” bit is a well known guide secret – we feed it to you in large quantities, you pass out – and wake to us congratulating you on your 65th large fish brought to net. Six bucks worth of grape yields tenfold on the tip.

He got me on the “three types of Beef” post. I figured it was, dead, living, and massaged, but no:

The 3 Types Of Beef

Alright vegetarians, avert your eyes and cover those ears. Antidepressants is a topic that could create nightmares for all the granola crunchers out there.

Oh, My… who would’a thunk it?

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An Alder sapling and some Bacon Rind

Carp on a dog biscuit, that's Old School On rare occasion my heart warms at the simplicity of it all, images of barefoot kids with alder branches and bent bobby pins – outfishing us carbon fiber augmented, Gore-tex lined, ballistic nylon equipped, and chemically sharpened City Swells – blissfully unaware of the trappings of “Power Angling” in favor of idling on the river bank with some leftover bacon rind.

Them days is long gone, but occasionally I’m allowed to be maudlin and silly.

Briefly the vision was restored upon seeing the underlying caption of the above picture, some fellow catching a monstrous Carp on a dog biscuit. I was hopeful as there wasn’t any gear present, no vendor label featured prominently on a rakish “curly-brim” – no Sage, Simm’s, or outward signs of the angling dilettante..

I’ve been misled before and checked arm position to “enhance” the photo – no fish eye lens detected, and the stern expression was okay – as his Mom might have said, “that’s wonderful Bob, You clean it.”

Nope, he’s a professional – and I’m still searching for that freckled kid with the fish twice as big as anything I’ve seen. Ma could be reading all them health conscious sites on the Internet, and Bacon’s been banned outright.

Tell me it ain’t so…

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It’s high enough not to get wet, it’s an elegant solution to an age old problem

Other than presentation, fly fishermen are rarely concerned with delicate and the “feed bag” should counter the lost time of the evening meal. Any dry fly fiend recognizes the awkwardness of dining while the hatch is ramping up, and Yum Brands has been listening – “multi-tasking professionals” are us – and for an extra half dollar, they’ll add the drink to the bag as well..

Gear up, strap on – and let cholesterol sort ’em out. Just remember to pause long enough to tell the fellow next to you what fly you’re using, speaking with your mouth full can confuse the poor chap unnecessarily.

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