MEETINGS & EVENTS
September 11, 2007 – Southern Cross Outfitters – Chip
Drozenski will present his Patagonia trip of a lifetime to our
club. His slide show will cover floating and wading, big and
small water, spring creeks, lakes, and lagoons of Argentina. He
does this trip all-inclusive for $400/day! For the cost of
floating out West for a week, you could fish some of the wildest
water in the world.
All are welcome.
Leonard Recreation Center,
6324 Ballinger Road, Greensboro, NC 27410, 7:00 p.m.
map and directions
October 9, 2007 – 1st Annual Tie-Fest – Call me or
email me to sign up as a tier at david.dow@nmfn.com or 294-2876.
Come participate and learn with several of our club’s best
tiers. They will each be tying their specialty fly. Tiers will
be able to pick up tips and new patterns, and non-tiers will be
fascinated at how easily many of their go-to flies are created.
Tiers, please bring 1/2 dozen flies to auction. WE WILL HAVE
SEVERAL DOOR PRIZES THIS EVENING.
All are welcome.
Leonard Recreation Center,
6324 Ballinger Road, Greensboro, NC 27410, 7:00 p.m.
map and directions
November 13, 2007 - TBA. All are welcome.
Leonard Recreation Center,
6324 Ballinger Road, Greensboro, NC 27410, 7:00 p.m.
map and directions
December 11, 2007 – Christmas Social. Food and
beverages will be provided. We will have several raffles and
swap our best fishing stories of the year.
All are welcome.
Leonard Recreation Center,
6324 Ballinger Road, Greensboro, NC 27410, 7:00 p.m.
map and directions
====================================================
Election of Officers
At our September meeting, we will nominate and elect officers and
one board member. The offices to be filled are President, Vice
President, Treasurer/Secretary. Currently, the offices are
filled as follows:
- President: Jack Patterson
- Vice President: Vacant
- Treasurer/Secretary: Neal Mitchell
- Board of Directors: Cindy Spicer (past president),
Lorraine Rothrock, Laura Kinnerly, and David Dow
Please give some consideration to whom you might wish to vote for
to serve the organization. More importantly, please consider
running for office so that you can have you voice heard in managing
the club's business and direction. Thanks so much.
Jack
====================================================
No Fly Zone
Slob Fishing, the sport of bums.

I'm approaching the age that Colette delicately described as "agggh!
… halfway to 90," so lately I've been looking over my Life List, the
catalog of things I want to get done before I start wearing diapers
again. No. 1 is Golden Years stuff and thus can wait—"Replenish
yourself by taking the time to reread all of (somebody, but first
double-check: Have I ever read all of anybody?)." No. 2 may have to be
scrapped because the government's Department of Lying About Atlantis
continues to ignore my calls and e-mails. Then I come to No. 3, which
pulls me into its net: "Learn to catch trout."
That one's challenging, since I bite at fishing. During my first
stint living in New Mexico (1994-1996), I caught the fly-fishing bug
big-time and made all the usual rookie mistakes. I bought an expensive
fly rod that I didn't know how to use and started waving it around
like a ratchet-elbowed goofball. One day I borrowed a pair of waders
that didn't fit, stepped into a spring-runoff stream that was moving
dangerously fast, got knocked down by rapids, got wrapped around a
submerged log like a Gumby man, and almost drowned.
This time I decided to slow things down—a lot—which means my fly
rod has stayed in its deadly scabbard while I've worked a slower
apprenticeship using fishing methods that are easier for beginners.
The big difference is that, instead of using flies and a fly rod, I'm
using spinners and bait with a spinning rod, tactics that fly-fishing
purists tend to refer to as Slob Fishing. (I do, too, but I say the
term with pride.) What I especially like about spinners (shiny, tricky
little guys with skirts and propellers that whir, flash, and pop as
you reel them through streams and lakes) and bait (salmon eggs, worms,
and, lowest of all, psychedelic-colored sparkle-glop called PowerBait)
is that, with your mechanically zesty spinning reel, you can cast them
safely from the shoreline. So there's no chance of wandering into
deadly riverine suck-holes. They also work really well, which is
another reason purists frown. Slob-Fishing tools are mostly used by
people who fish for meat, not for catch-and-release sport.
My fly-fishing friends are tolerating this ghastly lapse (barely)
because they assume that I'll eventually grow up and join them in the
manly, ethical art of fly fishing. Which I will, eventually, but my
dirty secret is that whatever happens, I'm going to keep up with my
Slob-Fishing studies on the side. And I won't always practice catch
and release. When the purists say, with anguish, "Sometimes, rarely, I
choose to catch and kill a trout," I'll reply: "Sometimes, quite often
actually, I choose to catch and kill a whole stringer of trout. Then I
slap them on the grill. Yum!"
This makes me sound like a resource-wasting jerk, but when you look
at the reality of contemporary trout fishing, you'll see that a lot of
gill guilt is misplaced. The truth is, bait fishing is an inevitable
fact of life, and state governments compensate for it with robust
hatchery-and-stocking programs. In 2000-2001, for example, New Mexico
raised and released 1.8 million trout, mostly full-grown rainbows and
rainbow fingerlings, and you don't have to look far to see the
evidence. At every body of water I fished last spring, I was able to
find tire tracks where the stock trucks had backed up, dumping their
silvery loads. Bait guys keep careful watch on stocking schedules and
plan their trips accordingly. A trout-purist friend calls this system
an elaborate, aquatic food-stamp program, and he basically approves of
it—as long as the bait people stay in their place. And their place is
state-managed lakes, where fly fishermen don't go anyway.
I got clued in to trout fishing's dual nature when I went through a
bait-fishing tutorial with my next-door neighbor Eloy, an old-school
semiretiree who fishes for stocker trout with combat determination. I
tiptoed down this path for a good cause: I wanted to gear up for a
visit by my friend Ross, a 10-year-old kid from New York whom I'd
promised to take fishing. Ross is too young for streams, and he can't
fly-cast anyway (a soul mate!), so I knew that bait was the way to go.
Eloy took me to a state lake about two hours north of Santa Fe,
kicking off the day with his jaunty cry of "Sometimes you catch,
sometimes you don't catch!" We caught, though it was trickier than I'd
imagined. The basic method: You use a weighted rig that keeps two
hooks floating just off the bottom. You load these up with salmon eggs
or PowerBait and chuck a cast. Then you wait. Eventually the trout
cruise by and start lipping what to them must look like tasty
gumballs. The difficult part is that they don't strike hard, so you
have to be ready to set the hook in a twitch.
Eloy had it down. He kept reeling in fish while I missed tap after
tap. I eventually caught two, one of which hooked itself when I was
off taking a wee-wee break. Eloy congratulated me patronizingly for
"not giving up" and gave me his stringer of fish. They were all nearly
identical rainbows—they must have graduated from the same stockery
class. They looked natty and uniform on the grill.
Cut to two months later, and I set out on a weekend camping and
fishing trip with Ross and his dad, Michael. I took them to Lake Eloy,
and I won't keep you in suspense: We didn't catch nuthin'. In
retrospect, I can see my crucial mistake: I still didn't know what I
was doing. For some reason it was a PowerBait day—I later learned that
PowerBaiters on both sides of us caught their limits—but I went with
salmon eggs. (Who knew? And why didn't I just use both at once?) That,
and we got there too late—9 a.m., by which time morning heat was
pushing fish away from the shoreline.
Eloy knew all this, as he informed me later, rather cacklingly.
He'd been in place by 6 a.m. at a different lake and caught his limit
in 30 minutes using PowerBait. When I related my morning's goofs, he
looked at me like I was brain damaged. I slunk away, feeling like less
than a man. Eloy must have sensed that he'd thrashed my soul, because
he showed up shortly after, offering me his entire catch. Who says
bait fishermen don't have class?
Alex Heard, editorial director of Outside magazine
Reprinted from Slate magazine
====================================================