Sunday, March 8, 2009

Fish Will Be Jumping Into This One



Progress report from Larry - bottom is on, and looking mighty fine. This is a one-off design based on some design principals he and I settled on after many hours in the shop and on the phone, and hundreds of emails back and forth about what would make the perfect dory for fly fishing. This one is long, wide, and carries it's width further back into the tail than either of our current boats, accommodating a rear passenger/angler.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Utah Legislature Upholds River Access


In an admittedly surprising turn of events, the Utah Legislature today voted down a bill which would have severely limited public access to Utah's waterways. This is great news to anyone who cares about Utah's rivers and streams.

If you were not familiar with HB 187, it’s a piece of legislation in response to last years Supreme Court ruling that gave anglers access to virtually all bodies of moving water in the state. This Bill, would have negated the ruling and more critically removed waters that generations have had the opportunity to fish.

Today's positive outcome is due in no small part to the tireless organizing efforts of anglers, boaters, business owners and many others who spread the word about this ill conceived bill, and brought others into the fray to make calls to their representatives and to the Governor. Your voice was heard by the right people, and the bill was shot down.

From one river rat to many, many more - my sincerest thank you to everyone who got involved.

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Taking Shape


Strong work Larry. Starting to look like a boat.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

New Beginnings


Spring is slowly coming to the southeast.

Ok, I am lying. It is cold and rainy today, and it's still January.

But it is a time of new beginnings. I have been on this little experiment in the southeast since August and while there's been some fun times and superb experiences, I am excited that in 3 months I will be coming home to the west. Ky and I are both looking for jobs (anyone out there hiring?) and hoping to land in Utah. But wherever we land it will be adjacent to or west of the Continental Divide.

Larry and I finally have a shop up and running (well, Larry has it running) in Salt Lake, and a new boat is now underway. I can't wait to get my hands dirty again.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Lake Erie Steelhead - 12/08

Home for the holidays found Ky and I at her parents' house on Lake Erie. After waiting out sub zero temps, freezing rain and snow, and blown out rivers painfully slow to clear, we managed to duck out and find some solitude on one of the lakes beautiful tributary streams for a few hours chasing steelhead.


Ky got right down to buisness and put the wood to a couple spectatular fish, the first releasing itself at arms length after a long battle. The second - this beautiful bright hen - was brought to hand after another lengthy fight.





I farmed a big buck myself, spectacularly striped and definitely larger than the fish I ended up bringing to hand - a big healthy buck.





I was hoping to find some of the larger tributaries in shape so I could swing flies with the long rod, but conditions never cooperated. So we ended up embracing the local methods, employing a dead drift nymph to catch these migratory fish in one of the lake's more intimate tributaries.

These lake-run rainbow trout were introduced to the great lakes decades ago, and their numbers are heavily dependent on stocking by the Ohio and Pennsylvania fish and wildlife programs. Descendants of ocean going Steelhead originally imported from the west coast, these fish have become naturalized to the great lakes ecosystems and provide a great sport fishery with huge numbers of 10-20 lb fish caught each year in the fall-spring.

Thanks to Ky for these beautiful pics! Sorry mine were a bit out of focus.

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Salmon River Steelhead - 10/08


Pacific steelhead and salmon are in a crisis - not because we do not understand the causes for their declines. Instead, we know perfectly well what needs to be done but have insisted on following management practices that we know are harmful: excessive harvest, inadequate escapements, hatchery introductions, land use practices that are both unsustainable and detrimental to steelhead, and so on. We have further compounded the crisis by focusing our money and efforts on the stocks that are at the highest risk, while largely ignoring other stocks less at risk, all the while continuing to apply management regimes known to be harmful.

In my angling lifetime, we have learned how to effectively fish for steelhead during winter, spring, summer and fall. During that same angling lifetime, we have also greatly diminished our angling opportunity. Preserving that opportunity means rescuing whats left of wild runs and unbroken rivers. It will involve a colossal fight. Are we up for it?

Peter W. Soverell
Edmonds, WA
January 2006

From "A Passion for Steelhead." Dec Hogan, 2006


My own quest for steelhead began several years ago on Oregon's North Umpqua River, where my friend Ritch and I plied the swollen and off-color currents for a fish that neither of had ever seen or even knew much about. We both had come many miles in hopes of that chance encounter with this special fish, a fish that had traveled much further in its own quest. We left Oregon without even seeing much less hooking a steelhead, and this could easily have been the end. But that trip changed me. I became obsessed with steelhead: their humble beginnings in their natal rivers; their early lives as resident trout and their transformation to a brawny ocean fish; their shadowy life in the oceans, which may take them as far as Japan and Russia; and most of all, their incredible spawning escapement to the rivers and streams of their birth.
I've spent the years last few years seeking out and absorbing everything I could about steelhead, their life, their range, their rivers, and their habits, and the tackle and techniques used in catching them. Trips followed to more rivers - The Deschutes, the John Day, the Grande Ronde. And I quickly became entranced not only by this incredible fish, but by the places it inhabited. Still, I continued to come back empty handed. Sure, I wanted to catch a steelhead, but the catching is a lot more than a chance at a free meal, more like a chance at a brief interaction with one of the most powerful life forces on the planet, a creature that would otherwise slip by unnoticed and unknown in the currents.


Luckily I had some incredible resources at my disposal. Local steelhead fanatics like Steve Schmidt and his crew at Western Rivers Flyfisher in Salt Lake filled my head with stories of fishing the great rivers: The Skeena and it's tributaries, The Dean, The Salmon and Clearwater, and others. They introduced me to Dec Hogan, fabled northwest steelhead guru and now a Salt Lake local, who shared with us his love for this fish, the rivers they inhabit, and the beautiful, traditional flies that transfix the steelhead, and us. Steve and his crew also sold me my first Spey rod, a 14' for 8 wt rod, and held my hand while I struggled to learn to cast it. All the while, I felt I was gaining the understanding and outlook I had lacked in my previous outings, which would make that first steelhead that much more special. And I was right.




So, just as I have for the last several years when the leaves begin to change in the fall, I packed my bags and headed for steelhead country. This time, to Idaho's Salmon River near the town of North Fork, only 6 hrs from Salt Lake. And again I was accompanied by my friend Ritchy who had been there at the beginning. Steelhead fishing, especially with a fly rod, is not for everyone. Long hours, days, years in the water withoug hooking a fish can turn off even the most dedicated angler. But Ritchy, like myself, is always just happy to be out on the water. Catching a steelhead would be merely the icing. Just knowing they were there was enough to justify the price of admission.

On our first day on the water, Ritch and I both achieved something that had eluded us in all previous outings for steelhead. We had steelhead rolling on and biting at our flies. In the first run I fished on the Salmon, on probably the 10th cast, I rolled a steelhead near the surface on a green butt spey fly I had tied for the trip. From then on, I was fishing with a new found determination. I tried to make every cast, every mend, every motion count. And we continued to get enough action to keep us on the edges of our seats. We fished floating lines with surface and subsurface flies for the first four days on the river, and we continued to move fish. But still no hookups save a pair of beautiful Bull Trout I hand landed in the first couple days. Of course, I had already been more successful in these four days than in my previous three years of steelhead fishing.
I was ecstatic! And yet, I knew that I could hook a fish, and I was determined to do so.

The nights got progressively colder as we camped on the banks of the Salmon, and the water temps began to drop. The river was still within ideal temps for fishing floating lines and unweighted flies, but I couldn't help but think that switching to sinking lines and deep swimming flies might improve our chances of actually hooking a fish. So, on our last day on the Salmon, Ritchy and I switched over to sink tips and I tied on an Ed Ward-inspired green and black Intruder.


We had fished a run the day before that just screamed steelhead. I had moved at least one fish as I swung flies through the run. As we rested at the bottom of the run after fishing through, another pair of anglers moved into the top of the run and one of them proceeded to hook and land a large hatchery steelhead, which was unceremoniously thrown up on the bank, no doubt destined for the smoker. I was a little put off because we were about to fish back through the run, and I was convinced one of us would have hooked that fish, but we moved on knowing that we had found a run that definitely held fish.


So we returned to that run on our last day on the river, and as I followed Ritchy through the run, it all came together. My fly suddenly stopped mid-swing, and my fly line came alive with a bolt of electricity. I slowly dropped the loop of flyline I held in my hand, and the line came taut to a fish. I knew right away that this was not a Bull Trout. I had hooked my first steelhead. I calmly muttered "fish on" and Ritchy turned around to see my fly rod bent and pulsing. He scrambled down to the boat to grab the camera as I suppressed my urges to start doing back flips. I still had to land the fish, after all.


The real McCoy - a glorious wild Salmon River steelhead. This is what we must save.

"To hold and cradle a living, breathing animal so vibrant and alive is both an honor and a privilege never to be taken for granted." Dec Hogan, A Passion For Steelhead

"Even the small ones are larger than life." Dec Hogan, A Passion for Steelhead

At long last I got my first glimpse of a steelhead in the water, and instantly my eyes were drawn to a distinguishing feature - the intact adipose fin, indicating that this fish was of wild origin, a native fish. I was literally brought to my knees. With her tail in my hand, the barbless fly dropped easily from the corner of her mouth. And as quickly as it had begun, the encounter ended with the fish being released back into the currents, to continue on in it's epic journey, hopefully to find a mate and produce a new generation.

A reverent silence quickly gave way to whoops and high fives. Smiling from ear to ear, I collapsed onto the bank to savor the experience. All roads had lead to this run, this fish. I was overwhelmed. Putting together and executing a plan, and hooking a fish on the last day of the trip was like a fairy tale. And what more, a wild fish. One of only a handful that had made the journey all those thousands of miles, past countless obstacles, dams, and other fishermen.

What seemed like an unreal day only got more sublime as Ritchy, with dark falling on our final day on the river, hooked a fish as well. With our boat beached at the takeout and darkness quickly setting in, I heard Ritchy utter my name from behind me in the run. I turned to see his rod bent and pulsing. I couldn't believe my eyes. This time, I ran down the bank to grab the camera, and returned to see Ritchy's line still tight to the fish, which with some coaxing finally came to hand. I snapped a few pictures in the falling light, and we shared looks of utter disbelief. The fish was of hatchery origin, it's adipose fin clipped before releasing. But the fish was no less beautiful. We were free to keep her, but the thought of killing his first fly-caught steelhead was out of the question for Ritchy, and I shared his sentiment. The fish was released back to the currents.



Some might view fly fishing for steelhead as a selfish persuit, but I truly believe that in order to save these fish, we must continue to interact with them, and continue to allow ourselves to fall under their spell. If no one fished for steelhead or salmon, we could easily wipe out their remaining stocks without thinking twice. Instead, it is the anglers who spend their days on the rivers persuing them, and their nights dreaming about that next chance encounter, that will make ir break the future of these species. It's up to us to ensure that our future includes wild runs of steelhead and salmon, not only for the sanity of people like me, but for the health of our planet. I can't help but wonder, as Mr. Soverell penned in the afterword to Dec Hogan's beautiful book "A Passion for Steelhead," if we are up for it? I hope so.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Highlands






Fall in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Highlands, North Carolina.