anewsletter - Feb. 2010 pub.pub
Transcription
anewsletter - Feb. 2010 pub.pub
FLY LINE THE www.rainlandflycasters. homestead.com NEWSLETTER OF THE RAINLAND FLY CASTERS PRESIDENT’S HACKLES February 2010 The main run of hatchery steelhead is winding down, but the good news is that the natives will follow close behind. The Rainland Fly Casters Board of Directors met on Thursday the 4th of February. We have some club members who have stepped up to take over doing various club functions. They are Burt Went (conservation director), Butch Pinson (program director), Dick Magathan (banquet-auction), and Jim Ackerman (outings coordinator). I want to thank all of them. We need your help too. If you have an interest in helping out in any of these areas, please contact the member who heads up the group. The board voted to purchase new hats from the Bent Needle. Dick Magathan says they will cost $15.00 and they look fantastic. Tom Scoggins has purchased more tungsten beads heads. They will cost $3.00 for a pack of 25. These bead heads went fast at the last club meeting so get yours early. RFC is donating $100.00 to each of the following organizations – Columbia Land Trust, Western Rivers Conservancy, Wild Steelhead Coalition, The Nature Conservancy, The Native Fish Society, Water Watch and Trout Unlimited. Walt Weber has contacted NCLC about the clubs $5,000.00 donation for the Necanicum River Project that fell through. Neal Maine is working to get our money returned to the club. Steve Wascher is still looking for an interested person to come learn about taking over the club newsletter. He has most of the newsletter in a format so that the next person to take over will have all they need at their finger tips. A poet once said, “ Some fishermen fish all their lives before they realize it isn’t the fish they’re after”. I attended the carcass distribution on the Lewis and Clark River. A reporter was there from The Astorian, and a photographer was with her. The day was sunny and we had fun doing the work. What a beautiful river. While there, I discovered the perfect torture for a fly fisherman. Take him to great fly water and then don’t let him fish it all day. - Dave Johnson - PAGE TWO BOOK REVIEW A Good Life Wasted or Twenty Years As A Fishing Guide by Dave Ames is his story, his search to find what was important in his life and the interesting people he got to know along the way. The three main characters in the story are Dave, Kingfish and Heidi. All are unique, independent sorts with their own stories. Dave’s first job had all the benefits – his own desk, secretary, a regular paycheck, health insurance, life insurance and a retirement plan. Before his first day was over, Dave quit his job, grabbed his fishing gear and headed for the mountains of Montana. He “formed a congregation of one in the Church of the Reduced Humanist. It’s a simple faith: Reduce the world to its fundamental order, then everything else follows according to the Laws of Science, everything except Free Will.” Kingfish was an Indian fishing guide and got Dave his first guiding job on the Apikuni River. His father was white and his mother was a Blackfoot Indian. He was discriminated by the whites and the Indians. His story involved too much alcohol, trying to fit in and doing what he loved in a place that was sacred to him. He was one that never let the bully go unchallenged. Heidi was the Montana girl with the dysfunctional family. She shared the same interests of Dave and Kingfish. She loved the outdoors and could handle herself in that setting. She ended up falling in love with both men. The book mentions many of the positives and negatives involved in guiding dudes on one of the more productive rivers in Montana. Dave Ames, like David James Duncan in his book The River Why, gives his river a name. A name that describes his river without giving a clear location of its whereabouts. I can respect ambiguity to keep fishing demand down but by guiding people for over twenty years to this area of Montana, I would suggest that the word is out. With the draw of good fishing and beautiful country, people will come and in large numbers. My hope is that Dave Ames and David James Duncan, through their guiding and writing, will turn on more people to nature and to the special places. Hopefully, the writers’ love of their rivers will rub off on their readers, and maybe just maybe, these readers will become stewards of THEIR homewaters. GOOD NEWS Most of the positions have been filled for 2010 thanks to several members that have stepped forward. See the impressive list of volunteers on page 7. PAGE THREE FEBRUARY MYSTERY WATER The winners of the January mystery water contest were Kyle Smith and Bob May. It was Black Lake. If you haven’t had a chance to fish Black Lake, plan to attend our May Club Picnic at the lake (more info as we get closer to the date). The January winners received two of Dave Johnson’s optic flies. This month, the mystery water is a flashback to an earlier club outing. The mystery water guess deadline is February 16th – Good Luck! RIVER RAGE ? I haven’t done much steelheading this season; other stuff has kept me busy. So I made an effort to ignore the rain and wind , the high water levels, the crowds and finally get my line wet. I found a nice secluded place among some old growth. It was a peaceful place. Before long, a bearded fisherman strolled upstream towards me. He stopped and looked directly at me then he gazed across to the opposite bank. He had a look of wonder, like he was trying to solve some enigma. He would cast a couple of times and then moved closer. When he was twenty yards away, he squinted his eyes, tilted his head and tried to solve that puzzle in his head then he moved closer. Now, I enjoy fishing with friends and sharing a location if I have my space. This guy wasn’t going to let it happen. He reminded me of a turkey buzzard moving ever closer to the carcass and, I guess, I was the carcass. He didn’t bother to communicate, just kept moving closer casting his line so that he now was in my space. His upstream cast was in my drift. I decided to leave. I see this kind of behavior when I clam for razors. When people see a digger drop a clam into his net and sees that net full of clams, it isn’t long before other diggers start moving in around him to get some of the action. I do it. I guess it‘s human nature. Yet, even clam diggers make an attempt not to cross in front of another digger. I wasn’t having any luck, there were no fish on the bank for this fisherman to lust over and I know he saw me fishing. As our rivers and streams become more popular, I guess we will have to adjust. When a frustrated driver looses his temper, we call it road rage. When a fisherman looses his temper, we could call it river rage. Whatever we call it, we must restrain our first impulses. All fishermen must educate themselves to a code of etiquette that respects each other’s space. Otherwise, we might read in the newspapers of fishermen fencing with their rods over a section of river. PAGE FOUR FLY OF THE MONTH (featuring Jim Ackerman) BLACK AND PURPLE Hook: 2/0 through 10 salmon hook Tag: flat silver tinsel Rib: flat silver tinsel Body: purple floss Wing: black marabou or bear hair or ? Hackle: purple hackle Thread: red Fish this fly with a sink tip on the swing, hold on tight, good clear water fly. BABINE SPECIAL Hook: Tiemco 7999 size 2-10 Thread: fluorescent orange Tail: white hackle fibers or polar bear hair Body: fluorescent chenille to form two eggs separated by red hackle Hackle: white Fish this fly by itself or as a dropper along the bottom. I usually fish behind a pink or black weighted leech, 18 to 24 inches. PAGE FIVE TWO-EGG SPERM FLY Hook: Tiemco 7999, 2-10 Thread: fluorescent orange Tag: flat silver tinsel Body: two eggs made with glow-bug yarn separated by silver flat tinsel Wing: white marabou Fish this fly low, close to the bottom by itself or as a trailer. FUCHSIA LEECH Hook: 2/0 through 8 Thread: color to match body Weight: barbell eyes, 15 to 20 wraps lead or tungsten wire Tail: rabbit strip, silver flashabou Body: rabbit strip fuchsia Head: hot pink sparkle chenille Fish this fly deep or with a trailer on the swing or directly downstream. The winners of the February mystery water will receive two of Jim’s flies. Jim is one of our newer members, lived many years up in Alaska and is one of our RFC board members. He likes our winter and spring Saturday fly tying workshops and is looking forward to our first one in 2010. If you are interested in a workshop, let the board know ASAP – thanks. PAGE SIX FEBRUARY PRESENTER Chris Hoover and Chuck Cameron will be telling us a bit about bamboo rod building at our February 18th regular meeting. There will be a powerpoint presentation, including a snippet from Trout Grass. They will be addressing the history of bamboo, theory of the taper, features unique to bamboo, tools for constructing a rod and they will bring refinished rods and books on the subject. See ya there! LISTENING TO THE LAND PROGRAM SERIES On January 20th at the Seaside Library, Joe Sheehan (Oregon Fish and Wildlife) and Doug Ray (Carex Consulting and a RFC member) talked about the Nietzel Project on the Necanicum River. The talk was part of the “Listening to the Land“ series sponsored by the Necanicum Watershed Council and the North Coast Land Conservancy (NCLC). The project is an off-channel wetland complex in a pasture along the river. You can see it from the highway; it’s about a mile from the Cannon Beach junction on the way to Portland. It’s designed to provide salmon habitat for smolts so they can escape from the velocity of winter flows. On January 23rd, we toured the project and planted native trees to help establish important riparian habitat around the channel. We had a good attendance and we were finished in a couple of hours. Katie Voelke, NCLC director and past RFC presenter, brought her son Gus to help with the plantings (middle photo). PAGE SEVEN 2010 RAINLAND FLY CASTERS NEW MEMBERSHIP RENEWAL FORM Name ______________________ Address ___________________ City, St, Zip ________________ Phone ________ Email ____________ MEMBERSHIP TYPE: (Please circle the type desired) Individual $25.00 Student $12.00 Family $35.00 (# in family ___ ) Life 10x current dues Bring this form and your dues to the next club meeting. If not, mail to: RAINLAND FLY CASTERS P.O. BOX 1045 ASTORIA, OREGON 97103 Your membership benefits are monthly club programs, raffles, clinics, use of our book and video library and special discounts. Now is a great time to join or renew your membership. Please check the box below if you wish to be a FFF member for 2009 and have paid the dues. President Dave Johnson 360-642-1327 flytyking@gmail.com Vice President– Jason Crisifulli 360-665-4903 Secretary/Webmaster– Kyle Smith 50-325-8549 kssmith@76@gmail.com Treasurer – Tom Scoggins 503-325-6358 tvscoggins@q.com Ghillie/Banquet Chairman Dick Magathan 503-325-2765 rmagathan@msn.com 1 Yr. Director/Program Coordinator Jim Ackerman 360-642-3038 flyfishinjim@centurytel.net 2 Yr. Director– Chuck Cameron 360-665-4903 3 Yr. Director-Chris Hoover 605-393-5335 Salmon Carcass Program/Litter Patrol Bob May 503-861-2838 Program Director – Butch Pinson 503-717-0791 nancysmail@pinsonpa.com Conservation Director – Burt Went 503-368-4648 orewent@nehalemtel.net Newsletter Editor – Steve Wascher 503-738-8673 wasch@seasurf.net THE FLY LINE PO Box 1045 Astoria, Or. 97103 UPCOMING PROGRAMS AND EVENTS February 10-14 – Sportsmen’s Show Portland Expo Center- more info at www.otshows.com. March 12-13 – The NW Fly Tyer & Fly Fishing Expo – Linn County Fairground and Expo Center in Albany – more info at www.nwflytyerexpo.com. March 18 – Building Bamboo Rods (see page 6). NOTE: March 31 – Deadline for 2010 RFC membership dues. MEETING LOCATION AND TIME Club Meetings are held at the American Legion, 1132 Exchange, Astoria at 6:30 p.m. on the third Thursday of every month. Before the meetings, join the program presenter and fellow members at Andrew and Steve’s Café for dinner and fish stories. Will eat at 6:00 p.m. Fish stories usually start at 5:30 p.m. SUPPORT OUR MEMBER OWNED FLY SHOPS: Chuck Cameron’s Fly Shop Seaview (360) 642-2589 River City Fly Shop Beaverton (503) 579-5176