My Fly Mug

August 12, 2009

Liz’s father who is largely responsible for starting my fly fishing journey recently dropped off a mug that has several flies painted on it. I dig it very much and have added it to my tying bench where it will hold something useful I’m sure. I can always put coffee in it as well! Thanks Jeff, its very cool.

Tomorrow I will be seeing for the first time what a section of stream that I drive by on occasion holds between its banks, this is private land and I’ve been thinking about calling this guy for a while now. I finally did and the landowner on the other end was more than willing to allow me access to his property and the stream, he gave me a place to park and granted access from two points on his property. I asked for his name and if he would be around tomorrow so I could introduce myself and meet him in person.

Private Section of Stream

Trout StreamI stopped by the bridge just upstream of the water I was granted access to and took a water temp and samples from the riffle to give me an idea of what I might find tomorrow. First thing I noticed was a lack of any Mayfly nymphs other than Ephemerella Rotunda/Invaria, I might find some hatching Light Hendricksons tomorrow. I caught my first Caddisfly pupa today, looked exactly like some of the pictures I’ve seen, pretty interesting, other than that the riffle contents were to be expected mostly free-living caddis larva, scuds, and the Ephemerella nymphs. The water temp was kind of interesting, only 54 degrees at noon over my lunch, on most other streams the temp would be in the higher 50’s. It might take this stream longer to warm, might find bugs hatching a little later tomorrow than I’ve been seeing.

Ephemerella Invaria Caddis PupaCaddis Larva

I need to continue to work on these situations, there is plenty of water even closer to my doorstep to fish if I can continue to build relationships with landowners. I have two other streams that I have been granted access by landowners but I have yet to fish in those locations, tomorrow will be the 1st private section of Southeast Minnesota trout streams I’ve fished. Wish me luck, if it is as good as I’m hoping it might be I will have a wonderful new place to visit close to home and if it turns out to be a bust then at least I won’t wonder about it every time I drive by.

One Year Down

June 1, 2009

Having Fun!

So as of June 1st I have been offically fly fishing for a year. I went out a few times prior to June 1st, 2008 but I was hooked right around the start of June and although I didn’t start the Winona Fly Factory until September, June holds the marker for me. I’ve learned a few things this year, funny how the more you learn the more you realize you don’t know shit, but I know I’ve been getting better so here is to another year of fly fishing in Southeast Minnesota! 

As a point of interest, the new rod I’ve been showing off is to replace the Cabela’s Prestige 7′6″ 4wt. that I’ve been fishing this entire time. Now if you read this regularly then you know how much that rod was worked. I used it almost daily last summer and froze the crap out of it during the winter season and I couldn’t have asked for more. I hate the thing now, I know it feels like casting with a broomstick but there is something to be said for a 50-60 dollar rod/reel combo that held up as well as it did. So to celebrate a year I figured a new rod was in order. 

This beauty cost a fair penny and I can thank my mother for help purchasing my second fly rod (she bought the 1st one too for a Christmas present). She sent me a gift certificate that significantly cut the cost of this rod down to something I could manage and damn does it feel great. I’m currently using the Eastfork Reel with a 4wt line so I’m over weighting the rod a bit but it casts so well. I feel my accuracy and feeling improving greatly, like buying a quality musical instrument, the right fly rod can really help. I chose an 8′6″ rod for alittle more length now knowing the areas I fish, I wanted more distance with my roll cast and the 3wt was a great choice as it feels even more fun to catch Minnesota trout. The rod is a 4pc which makes it more packable, a feature I really wanted. The rod loads smoothly and shoots line very well, snake guides and all. I am pleased and confident this rod with serve me well.

Something to think about. This is my life now, I used to fanatically play guitar. I own a Gibson Les Paul Standard, beautiful, but since this journey started, of which I am convinced I have little control over, it along with other things have been set aside. I choose between free time spent tying flies/fishing and all the other things I used to do. For me right now this is an easy decision as it occupies my brain a significant amount of the time. I will return to those things for that I am sure but for now… I believe slight tendencies towards OCD and loving the beautiful things I’ve seen has kept quick the pace at which I’m attempting to devour this adventure.  I’m fortunate to have Liz who puts up with alot of crap that comes along with loving a fishing bum, you other guys know what I’m talking about. In conclusion I should note that I am fishing as this is being automatically posted, I’ll be back with pictures and probably a story too. Peace

 p.s. Thank you, to everyone who has contirbuted to this over the past year. I’ve been given gear, I’ve been given information, friendship, ideas and a damn good time so if you’ve affected me thank you, especially Elizabeth Oliver.

-the Winona Fly Factory

The Mighty…

April 15, 2009

Stopped by another stream near by and took these the other day.

The Mississippi River

The Mississippi River

The Mississippi River

Trout Pale Ale

We spent saturday brewing an English style pale ale for our first go at brewing beer. I decided Old George was the name I wanted for the beer in honor of the big trout I’ve been chasing. Liz’s brother came down to help us through the process and drink a few with us during. It was surprisingly simple, I can see how it could be very complex if one so chose. I have interest in continuing this side hobby. We brewed for four hours discussing the process as it went, I asked plenty of questions to help the next time. The wort which is the grains, malt (in our case), hops and water boiled then chilled and combined with yeast. It now sits in the basement fermenting for two weeks before we transfer for another two weeks and then we can bottle the beer. This will sit for atleast another three weeks before it is ready for drinking. This was a good day spent not trout fishing.

New Page: The Naturals

April 11, 2009

I’m working on collecting all the images I’ve taken of all the insects that I’ve seen in the trout streams in S.E. Minnesota. I hope this to become a good reference for fly tyers and bug enthusiasts, I will be updating it as I find more throughout the year. 

The Naturals

Streamside Trash

April 1, 2009

Imagine this with a tire in it.

We’ve all seen it. I’m sure we’ve all left something behind. I’m not one for boy scouts anymore but the one thing that stuck with me was the whole leave no trace, leave only foot prints and take only pictures thing.

When I go to a stream I do so usually in a 1995 Ford F-150. She’s got almost 250k on her and runs great but she doesn’t get great gas milage. As a result of my non-eco friendly friend and my desire to make up for it I will be collecting trash from the streams I visit this summer with an end goal to fill the back end of my pick-up. I have a topper so trash won’t blow out. Recently I began collecting….Humans.

I love going to trout streams, with or without my stick. This, in my opinion, is one of the most beautiful places in the state and it could be better but I know we all know this. Do you leave trash behind? I think its bad enough that my lost leader and tippet won’t bio-degrade for a good 500 years, I would never leave anything on purpose. I am just writing this to encourage those of you who see it, but don’t create it, to help pick it up. It won’t be as easy for someone to leave a bunch of trash behind if the stream looks pristine, unlike my coffee table which self-perpetuates a mess.

Professor F.F. is Back

February 20, 2009

I was invited back to speak with students from Winona Senior High’s Fish and Wildlife class. I did my previous presentation with alittle bit of new information that I have added since the last time I gave my trout dork speech. This time, however, I found I had to fight alittle to get students to respond but they came around towards the end when I got into tying. 

I discussed trout in Minnesota ranging from species, location, and behavior including spawning and feeding. We also discussed habitat, conservation and my desire to start volunteering for the MPCA which I plan to begin spring/summer. 

I tied two flies for the students explaining how each would be fished under different situations. The PT nymph because of its wide range of application. I explained how it is fished is related to the behavior of the trout and the habitat in which they live, understanding both will enhance your fly fishing. I also tied a size 20 Midge Larva to explain how trout will take such a small meal when that meal comes in large quantities and requires few calories to acquire, but that at the same time (as I learned with the Marabou Leech) when the fish are holding and there is no single food item they are keyed into, that fishing something larger providing more incentive to a holding trout may be better, maximize calorie intake while minimizing output. 

I hope I left a few with something they will want to look back on, if anything perhaps they will think about the area they live in a slightly different way, I know when I began to fly fish I began looking at this place in a different, better way. 

Winter Fishing Gear

February 9, 2009

Winter fishing has taught me that what you choose to wear can greatly affect the outcome of your day. Recently it has been a bit warmer and I am finding that my cold cold gear is a bit warm. For the hiking I have been doing, reducing layers and sticking to a good regiment of moving will keep you warm on the water. Here is what I have been using for a lower outer layer.

Bonfire Snowboard Pants:

Bonfire Snowboard Pants

These pants are excellent as long as your willing to not go in the water. I wear a pair of water resistant boots with these, not snowboard boots. These pants are water proof, breathable, warm and light. On colder days, 15 degrees and lower with wind, I wear these pants and a thermal under ware base layer and thats all I need. I would suggest looking into other sport areas to come up with new ideas for winter gear. I also use a snowboard coat both of which I got used and were much cheaper than some alternative fly fishing specific gear. Check used retail outlets and or ebay.

Decided to get the dog out. Traded the rod and reel for a camera, had a great day and got some good photo’s. This is a place I call Dinosaur Land. This is one of my summer runs, I love it here. Seeing it in the winter was excellent, saw Midge rising about 2pm but no rising trout. Beautiful Day.