SEPTEMBER DFC-6pg-06

Transcription

SEPTEMBER DFC-6pg-06
SEPTEMBER
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Presidents Message- September 2006
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Cinda Howard
There’s a lot going on this month and there should be something for everyone.
On the 16th and 17th we will have an educational outing to Canyon Creek. This will be for anyone
that wants to either learn to fish small streams or just improve their skills. We will cover bugs, flies, technique, and approach. Bring a small streams rod (between 7 and 8 foot), flies (caddis, stimulators,
grasshoppers, pheasant tail nymphs, hare’s ear nymphs, prince nymphs, buggers), 5 or 6x leaders, and
strike indicators. Waders are optional, it should still be warm enough to wet wade. We will meet on the
stream at 8:00 a.m. See Canyon Creek map below ▼
AUGUST MEETING:
Wednesday,
SEPTEMBER 13, 2006
PIZZA and Chit-Chat at 6:00 PM
Meeting- 7:00 PM
American Legion Post #2
2125 S. Industrial Park Ave.
in Tempe
A truly happy person is one who
can enjoy the scenery on a detour.
On the 23rd we
will be meeting at
the Salt River for
yet another educational outing. This
will be a primer for
the San Juan outing
in October. If you
are planning on
going to the San
Juan or you would
just like to learn
Canyon Creek
how to effectively
fish big water, this is
an outing for you. It
will cover equipment, rigging, and
technique. Bring a
9’ 4, 5, or 6 weight
rod, various flies, 5x
leaders, strike indicators, and split shot. Meet at the upstream lot (east) at Blue Point Bridge at 7:00 a.m.
Don’t forget that it is now $6 to park.
>>>See article on page 5 by Doug Walker for more info, “PLUS!!” San Juan set-ups by Bill Thyng.
If you have any questions about any of the above outings, you can call me at (480) 217-5089. Hope to see
you soon! CINDA
DFC SEPTEMBER PROGRAM....
Desert Fly Casters Supports
BARBLESS HOOKS
CATCH & RELEASE
The September speaker is Skip Dixon from Lees Ferry Anglers Guides and Fly Shop. He
will be presenting on the fantastic fishing at Lees Ferry and telling us all his secrets of
success there! Please come join us for a great presentation on some of the best moving water in Arizona!!!
MEMBERSHIP CORNER
For those that have returned the member questionnaire THANK YOU. If you have not returned the form yet,
please complete it and return it as soon as you can. When I get the data collected I will present it at one of
the meetings.
New Members August 2006: Glen Knight • Mike Mueller
Hope to see you at one of our upcoming outings. There is one planned for Sept, Oct and Nov. Check the
newsletter for details.
Any questions about your membership see me at the meeting, give me a call or e-mail me.
Charlie Rosser at: 480-586-7163
LEAVE ONLY FOOTPRINTS BEHIND WHEN WALKING THE PATHWAYS OF OUR ARIZONA ENVIRONMENT
Desert Fly Casters
MEXICO REVISITED
Puerto Penasco (Rocky Point) is
Arizona’s beach, and a great place to begin
your saltwater fly fishing adventures. Going
with the club can make this short drive (4-5
hours) easier and more enjoyable than you
may have imagined. If your only fly fishing
experience has been Arizona trout and bass,
this is an opportunity to build on your
knowledge. November 3-5 will be the club
outing in Puerto Penasco.
Many Desert Fly Casters have salt water
experience that can help you with gear, flies,
casting, reading the water, tides, new knots,
leaders, etc. Although saltwater may be different than dry fly fishing Canyon Creek,
you may have just enough gear to get by, and
still have a great time. There is usually plenty of extra gear floating around. You don’t
even need waders for this trip. Minimum
gear a strong 6 weight rod, (an 8 weight
would be better) swim trunks, sun glasses,
Tevas, a floating line will do, but the more
sinking lines you have the better. Any reel
will do, the fish here do not make long runs,
although there are some small bone fish. If
you own a pontoon boat this is a great place
to use it, again some members have extras
and would be glad to have someone use the
equipment. Your fly box should have
clousers, deceivers, and shrimp patterns.
White with a chartreuse back is one of my
most productive flies. Hook sizes from 6 up
to a 2 will all catch fish. Other good colors
are white on white and tan on white, also use
lots of flash. We can show you how to tie
these patterns at the Friday evening social.
by Vince Deadmond
Make plans to go, make reservations
soon. Puerto Penasco is growing fast, but
the hotels, condos, and RV parks are filling
up even faster. Some RV parks are selling
out and building condos on the beach.
Expect to hear no vacancy if you wait too
long. The club has secured 10 spaces at the
Playa De Oro RV Park. Some people make
arrangements for condos or hotel accommodations, again I strongly urge you to make
arrangements early. Playa De Oro is $20 per
night per space. They have enough room for
your RV, camper, or tent. They have
restrooms and showers that are nice, and
they have a coffee shop that ends up being
the central meeting place.
The club has the recreation room at Playa
De Oro for Friday evening November the 3.
We plan to have a social, bring something to
cook on the grill, and a side dish to share.
After we fill our faces, we can talk about
how to fish, where to fish, what kind of fish
was that, what ever questions you may have
about fishing Puerto Penasco.
Doc has made arrangements to have the
Saturday evening banquet at the Baja
Cantina. Prime rib dinner, fun, fish tales,
and the raffle pays for the dinner, so buy
plenty of raffle tickets. T shirts will again be
available.
What you really want to know about is
the fish. November fishing in Rocky Point is
usually at its best. The usual catch includes
Cabrilla, Trigger, Pompano, Sea Trout,
Parrot Fish. All of these fish will put a bow
in your rod, and even the small Cabrilla will
surprise you with how hard they pull.
Flounder can be caught, and even the occasional bone fish will show up. Needle fish
are also quite common. You have your best
chance at catching Sea Trout at sun rise and
sun set. They school and you can catch fish
after fish if you hit a school. This can be
done from the shore or in your tube.
Pompano are another fish that schools and
when you catch one you will usually catch
more. These guys will take large poppers,
sometimes you will have three fish trying to
crash you popper. Trigger are usually deeper and will give you the best tug of war for
the size of fish.
I am looking forward to seeing you on
the water in Puerto Penasco. Make your
plans and sign the sign-up sheet at the
September meeting. This would be a good
time to plan who is driving, where you are
staying, when you are returning, and other
travel arrangements. If you are planning to
use one of the clubs 10 sights, at the RV Park
I need a $30 deposit at the September meeting to hold your spot.
November 3-4-5 Rocky Point....Hosted by Doc Nickel
...any questions see Doc at the September club meeting.
Desert Fly Casters
Gearing up for
the Rocky Point Trip
by Mark Lucht
The annual Desert Fly
Casters annual trip to
Rocky Point is fast
approaching, so it time to
think about the gear you
need to get ready.
Rods -- 6 to 8 weight flyrod with the 8 being the
best choice.
Reels – A good Salt Water
reel. The Orvis Battenkill
Mid Arbor is nice and is
only about $120.
Fly Lines – A fast sinking
line. Preferably T-8 or
about 300 grains.
Leaders – 6 to 8 foot leaders are the preferred length.
I prefer FlouroCarbon.
You can buy the store
bought leaders if you want.
My preference is just 6 to 8
feet of straight Flouro.
Flys – Clousers and
Deceivers in assorted
colors on hooks sized
1 through 3.
We typically fish along
the shore from our pontoon
boats and some use float
tubes. If you are fishing
from a boat you probably
wont need waders. You
can also fish the surf in
front of the campground by
what looks like an old boat
ramp.
You will need to bring
your passport or birth certificate and drivers license.
You also will need to get
Mexican Insurance for your
vehicle and trailer if
pulling one.
Desert Fly Casters
This is the first of a 3 part series on fishing some of the best fly fishing waters in the western US.
The Clackamas River, Portland, Oregon
“So, if I hired us a guide to take us out
on one of the nearby rivers, you would
be willing to give it a try?” I was asking a
close friend of mine, Cindy Smith, who lives
in Portland, Oregon if she would like to try her
hand at fly fishing. Cindy had never fished
before, much less fly fished but was open to
seeing what this fly fishing stuff was all about.
The focus for this trip was a gun show in
Seattle in late July but I had planned my summer vacation to encompass the gun show with
a series of stops along the way to test several
fishable waters in the Pacific Northwest. With
all the great rivers around the Portland area
and a chance to visit with Cindy, the pieces
sort of fell into place.
I did a quick web search and came up with
Country Sport Limited Fly Fishing in downtown Portland. A couple of phone calls and
some reference checks later and Cindy and I
were booked to fish the Clackamas River
which is located just outside of Portland proper on July 17th. I had also arranged for a guide
to take me out on the Deschutes River on the
following Wednesday but that is a subject of
another article.
We met Nick Rowell, our guide, at a 7Eleven in Oregon City at about 7:30 in the
morning. Nick’s truck was easy to spot, who
else but a fishing guide is sitting in a 7-Eleven
parking lot first thing in the morning with all
sorts of rods and fishing equipment in the back
of their truck. Nick led us to McIver State Park
which is only 45 minutes from Portland where
we parked and changed into waders and rigged
up rods and reels. After negotiating down a
river bank of slippery mud and large rocks, we
arrive at a beautiful section of river, a picture
perfect setting for casting!! Nick checked my
leader, tied on a small caddis and then went
over to help Cindy get rigged. Nick indicated
that the river was full of rainbows and it didn’t
take long before I had one on the line!! Is life
great or what? After a while I moved myself
downstream where it looked like a good spot
for fish to hang out. Before long I had added
two more nice trout to the take. During this
time, Cindy who had never had a rod in her
hands until that day, had landed a nice rainbow
herself. “A cute little fish” she later remarked.
Coming up on mid day, Nick offered to go
after lunch and bring it back relieving us of the
risk of breaking a leg by trying to get up and
back down the river so we graciously accepted.
I decided to tie on a classic dry fly, the Adams,
which I had tied back in Phoenix before I left.
I rigged my leader with the Adams while
Cindy took a break. After a few minutes of
casting with nothing at all the surface of the
water literally exploded!! “Did you see that?” I
asked Cindy. No, she didn’t but that didn’t take
away from the excitement of seeing a trout try
and devour a fly that I had tied myself. Way
cool.
After lunch I asked Nick if I couldn’t try
for some of the steelhead that lay in a pool
upstream of where we were. Steelhead are
essentially a race of sea-run, or anadromous,
rainbow trout which have distinct dark spots
on the dorsal fin and a square-shaped tail fin
and often have a pink or reddish stripe along
the sides and a reddish gill cover. Typically,
steelhead range from 5 to 15 pounds and in
some places, they can reach weights of 30-plus
pounds with lengths of 45 inches, depending
on how many years the fish spends in the
by Doug Walker
ocean. By mid July, steelhead had started to
move into the Clackamas River and a few were
around. For my attempt, Nick tied on of all
things, a black wooly bugger. I maneuvered
out into the pool and positioned myself on a
large bounder in the stream in a little less than
chest deep water. “Cast toward that rock and
keep a fairly tight line on the drift” Nick
instructed. So, I stood there: cast, strip line in,
repeat. After a while I felt a sharp jerk on the
line! One just tasted it commented Nick. Keep
going. After numerous attempts and several fly
changes later my line took a hard hit and my
pole was definitely showing the weight of a
nice steelhead on the other end. But before I
could literally react and attempt to set the hook
it was gone. “He definitely had it but spit it
out” said Nick. All I could do was hold up my
hands in defeat to Cindy who was watching it
all from across the stream.
After a little while longer, we decided to
call it a day and carefully headed back
upstream and to the parking area. Nick
explained that a good day is when you get even
a single steelhead on the take and I had two.
Cindy had landed her first fish, on a fly rod no
less; I had landed several nice rainbows and
hooked up two steelheads. While it would have
been great to actually get one on the reel and
spend 30 or so glorious minutes landing a
beauty, I had a wonderful time. Besides, I need
to leave something for the next adventure.
Next month: stalking trophy rainbow trout on
the Deschutes River.
Cindy Smith with guide
Nick Rowell on the
Clackamas River.
Desert Fly Casters
Salt River
Educational Outing
by Doug Walker
There will be an
educational outing
on the
Salt River on
Saturday,
September 23, 2006.
The focus is to prepare folks
for the San Juan River outing
Oct 14-17. Club instructors
will be there to teach you
how to rig to your line for
nymphing, casting
techniques, how to read the
water, and a host of other
useful knowledge.
We will meet at the Blue
Point Bridge, upstream side
(east side) at 7am. You will
need a long rod (preferably
9 foot), 4, 5, or 6 weight,
5x leaders and tippet, strike
indicators, weights, and flies.
Grilled lunch will be
provided, please bring a
side dish. A cooler will be
available for use
☛
TAKE NOTE OF
BILL THYNG’S
ILLUSTRATIONS....
THESE WILL BE VERY
HELPFUL WHILE ON
THE RIVER...THANKS BILL!
Desert Fly Casters
2006 DESERT FLY CASTERS
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Outings - Outings - Outings
Cinda Howard- President
Steve Berry-Vice President
Mark Lucht- Treasurer
Dave Weaver- Secretary
OUTING
HOST
September 16-17 Canyon Creek..............Charlie Rosser
October 14-17 San Juan.........................Cinda Howard
November 3-4-5 Rocky Point........................Doc Nickel
OutingsBill Thyng
Programs
Tyler Stone
Retail
Gerry Wiemelt
Membership
Charlie Rosser
Education
Doug Walker
Any questions call
Cinda Howard at: (480) 217-5089
TU/FFF/WCC:
Rocky Minster
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Fishing is a chance to wash one’s soul with pure air, with the
rush of the brook, or with the shimmer of the sun on the blue
water...And it is discipline in the equality of man- for all men
are equal before fish.
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HERBERT HOOVER (1963)
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Mark your calendars, the Christmas Banquet is Wednesday, December 13th. We are
always looking for donations from club members so if you have something that you
want to give, you can contact Tyler Stone by e-mail at tstone@infinitywealthre.com
or see him at the next DFC meeting.....Thanks!
MAIL TO:
Desert Fly Casters
PO Box 42252
Mesa, AZ 85274-2252
☛
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