www.natgreeneflyfishers.org                                               Email:  info@natgreeneflyfishers.org

 

Nat Greene Flyfishers    November 2008

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NAT GREENE CALENDAR

MEETINGS & EVENTS

November 11, 2008 - Monthly meeting.  Topic TBA -- Ideas are needed. What do you want to see or learn more about?.  All are welcome.  Leonard Recreation Center, 6324 Ballinger Road, Greensboro, NC 27410, 7:00 p.m.   map and directions

December 9, 2008 - Annual Holiday Social. Food and beverages will be provided. Like last year, we will have a running loop of fishing pictures from club members highlighting the fish that they fooled into eating their mix of beads, glue, and feathers during 2008.  All are welcome.  Leonard Recreation Center, 6324 Ballinger Road, Greensboro, NC 27410, 7:00 p.m.   map and directions  
Club members, please email David Dow pictures of fish, people, or scenery from your outings this year at
addow@bellsouth.net

March 7, 2009 - Nat Greene Flyfisher's Spring Banquet and Seminar, with very Special Guest Speaker Bob Clouser.  This year's event will be held at the Heritage Hill Banquet Facility located at 5435 N. Church St. in Greensboro NC (directions).  9:00am-2:00pm (seminar), 6:30pm-11:00pm (banquet).  All are welcome. 

Membership: Everyone accepted  Dues: None! 

Door Prizes at every meeting!

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Bob Clouser to Appear at 2009 Annual Spring Banquet

Bob Clouser has been booked as the special guest speaker at Nat Greene Flyfisher's Spring Banquet and Seminar on Saturday, March 7, 2009 at the Heritage Hill Banquet Facility on N. Church Street (directions).  Our banquet is a family friendly event which includes dinner, cash bar, silent auctions, door prizes, and raffle items for the fly fisher and non-fisher alike.  The technical seminar will be held from 9:00 am to 2:00 pm.  The evening banquet will be held from 6:00 pm to 10:30 pm and will feature a presentation geared towards a general audience including non-fishing spouses and young fly fishers.   This years banquet will be catered by Brady Lutz with The Right Touch Catering .

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Some Recommended Reading

 It’s that time of year again.  Whether you realize it or not, the holiday season is nearly upon us.  I know that fly fishermen have endless lists of things they need, or at least think they need.  We unfortunately often concentrate on acquiring more gear and neglect the learning side of our sport.  I suggest you adopt one of my favorite habits, which is to read more about fly fishing. One of my favorite pastimes in the winter is to sit by the fire and re-read my collection of fishing books.  It’s funny how an idea pops into my head and I can instinctively reach for the just right volume to explore the subject.  I treasure time spent with my books.  In that vein I offer a list of books you might enjoy, over the winter or all year long.  These suggestions are eminently suitable for dropping hints when someone finally asks you what you want for Christmas.  These are some of my favorites and I hope you will enjoy them as well.

 An inexpensive but highly practical fly tying book for the trout fisherman is Dave Hughes’ Essential Trout Flies (Stackpole Books).  Dave groups his flies by type and shows how a few patterns can cover many fishing situations.  Dave is not a fastidious tyer and he offers hope for those of us with multiple thumbs.

 Two books that have been around a while but which I still regard as required reading are Through the Fish’s Eye by Mark Sosin and John Clark (Outdoor Life/Harper and Row) and Practical Fishing Knots by Lefty Kreh and Mark Sosin (The Lyons Press).  The former gives the fisherman great information on how fish react to their environment and, hence, your presentation.  The latter tells you how to tie strong knots to hold onto your prize once you have finally duped him into eating your fly.  Easy leader formulas are also provided.  An angler’s education is incomplete without having read these important books.

 Bob Clouser has written two excellent books (both published by Stackpole Books) for the smallmouth fanatic.  Fly fishing for Smallmouth is well written and has terrific color photographs.  Bob imparts wisdom gained from years on the water.  His Clouser’s Flies is devoted to tying his unique patterns, which to describe as departures from the norm is to understate the case.   His patterns are based on what the fish like instead of pretty creations tied to catch a fisherman.  I can vouch for the effectiveness of most of his patterns (I have not fished them all) and have caught fish in both fresh and saltwater on them. 

 If you are considering traveling out West, I recommend Craig Matthews’ Western Fly Fishing Guide (The Lyons Press).  Having fished the Yellowstone area for over twenty years before this book was published, I can vouch for the authenticity and utility of this book.  My only problem is that I took many years of trial and error to reach the same conclusions that Craig did.  Do yourself a favor and absorb Craig’s wisdom.  This book is a necessity for the first timer and veteran alike to digest before heading for the sagebrush.

 Thinking of Yellowstone Park in particular?  If so, The Yellowstone Fly Fishing Guide (Lyons-Burford) is a must.  This excellent guide to fishing in the park is co-authored by Craig Matthews and Clayton Molinero.  It tells where to go for what species of fish and whether to expect ursine company.  I enjoy exploring streams within two walking hours of road access so my copy has been well used.  A fine service for the visiting angler.

 Many in the club like to chase bass with the fly rod.  Personally, I find these critters more of a mystery than trout and harder to catch.   Gaining insight into how they perceive, and hence, react to their world is key.  To that end I highly recommend Keith Jones’ Knowing Bass (The Lyons Press).  There are strong emphases on physiology and physical science which gave me great insight into bass behavior.  I prefer blue/white Clouser minnows for stripers over red/white, for example, based on Jones’ explanation of the absorption of color according to water depth. 

 Bruce James is among the most prolific of our local authors.  He has written excellent guides for arranging warmwater float trips, like the James River Guide and The New River Guide (both from Ecopress).  I have spent a lot of time with fly rod in hand on the James and value his advice.   Bruce writes from experience; benefit from it.

 If you chase fish in saltwater, or think you would like to, read Mike Starke’s Saltwater Fly Fishing (Burford Books).  This is loaded with practical advice, from tying to casting to boat handling.  Mike has spent a lot of time chasing fish in North Carolina and he practically guides you for false albacore.  He has positively influenced my approach to tying saltwater flies.  I re-read his book at least once a year.  The most useful saltwater fly fishing book I have had the pleasure to encounter.

 Insightful reading for the saltwater fly fisherman is The Fisherman’s Ocean, by David Ross (Stackpole Books).  Ross is a marine biologist from Wood’s Hole Oceanographic Institute on Cape Cod.  Like Jones, he gives you biological insight but also discusses the influence of currents and geology on where fish are likely to lay along beaches that I have not found anywhere else.  He took me by the hand into a new world.  Very informative and interesting reading. 

 I eagerly anticipate the spawning runs of stripers and shad in eastern North Carolina each spring.  In fact, I think the Roanoke River in the spring offers the best fly fishing in the state I enjoy all year.  If you share my passion, I encourage you to read The Founding Fish by John McFee (Farrar, Strauss and Giroux).  The fish is the American shad, a critter locally overshadowed by the Hickory shad, but its story is intertwined with American history and doesn’t let you go.  Striper enthusiasts may enjoy On The Run, by David DiBenedetto (Perennial Currents).    DiBenedetto chases stripers during their autumnal southward migration from Maine to the Outer Banks.  I had to smile at his admission that after sampling the entire east coast, the most and biggest fish he caught were taken off North Carolina.  

Finally, my overall “Best in Fly Fishing” award goes to Lefty’s Little Library series, edited by Lefty Kreh and published by Odysseus Editions, Inc.  This twenty-four volume series is out of print but worth the effort to pursue through used book sellers or on-line.  Each volume is dedicated to a specific aspect of fly fishing and packed with solid, practical advice.  A few have been published individually.  This series should open your eyes as to what can be taken on a fly and how you can apply new knowledge to capturing local alternative species.  An extraordinary monument of practical advice to make everyone a better fly fisherman, this series contains the wisdom of many lifetimes of fishing. 

 Okay, if you buy every one of my recommendations your spouse won’t get that Lexus you promised.  I hear you.  Just keep your expectations reasonable and pick out a choice few.  Although nothing tops time on the water, fly fishing can be enjoyed immensely in an armchair.  And sitting next to a sweet-smelling wood fire can’t be beat.  I wish everyone a happy holiday season and a wonderful, entertaining reading season.  Let these skillful writers take your dreams to fishy places.  Tight lines and good reading.

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North Carolina Dancing Trout

The weekend of July 25 was a relief for two reasons.  My wife Molly received a clean bill of health from her cardiologist and to celebrate she suggested we take up a friend’s offer to spend the weekend at Beech Mountain.  We are fortunate to have several friends with second homes in the mountains.  Any invitation to join them is gratefully accepted.  So we hit the road on Friday afternoon to arrive in time for cocktails.  We enjoyed good conversation followed by a wonderful meal out on the deck.  This particular house is perched on the side of the mountain and due to the hillside’s pitch, it felt as if we were dining in a tree house.  Birds and squirrels went about their business only feet away.  Between their chatter and a nearby plunging mountain creek, I could feel my tension melting away.  I’m sure the merlot had nothing to do with it.

 I awoke Saturday morning to the sound of raindrops.  That was OK with me because trout love a gray sky and a low pressure front.  After breakfast I headed down the mountain on that precipitous goat trail they call a road.  My tires squealed around several hairpin turns and I wasn’t even exceeding the speed limit.  By the time I reached the bottom my brakes reeked of burning pads and I made a mental note to check them in the near future.

 The metropolis of Banner Elk is dominated by Lees McRae College.  Several buildings front the main street but what lies to its rear held my interest.  Elk Creek spills out of a popular duck pond through a rocky gorge producing some wonderful plunge pools.  The water that fills the pond comes from two sources, one of which is fed by limestone springs making the creek one of a handful of limestone streams open to public trout fishing in the state.  Water coursing through soft limestone dissolves the rock yielding high concentrations of carbonate ion.  This salt raises the alkalinity of the water and eventually results in a prolific food chain.  Elk Creek is the only stream I have found in North Carolina that has a full complement of mayflies hatching throughout the spring and summer.  So the possibility of matching the hatch is always there.

 I parked by the waterfall and hiked ten minutes before entering the creek.  When I step into a creek, I pause for a few minutes to allow the fish to forget the disturbance and go back about their business.  I use this time to soak my leader and pick out a fly to start with.  This time Nature was easy on me because freshly cast nymphal skins lay on a rock at my feet. Their previous owners came from the family Siphlonuridae, which most fishermen identify as the genus Isonychia.  As a trained entomologist I won’t identify anything without a microscope and reference text but as a fisherman I knew instantly what fly to use.  These insects produce a large gray-bodied mayfly sometimes called a Gray Drake, in size 12 to 10.  To me, this meant tie on a #12 Adams.

 In several years of fishing this stream I have typically done “OK,” hooking a few here and there.  Today was different.  I soon learned the fish were looking up and slashed at the Adams with vigor.  It was hard to see the fish in the murky water.   Generally I only glimpsed them at the last second as a black streak against a tannin-stained background as they zoomed toward the surface to intercept the fly.  I cast with very little line out of the rod tip and was occupied directing the fly into a specific drift or lie.  The fish could be found most anywhere so covering the water while staying out of sight was the method of choice.  Unfortunately, I forgot my knee pads and paid for it.  I tried to select the most comfortable spots to kneel down but it was a lost cause.  After two hours my aching knees became a clock ticking down to lunch time and a much needed break. 

 I was about to quit but decided to try one more pool.  The entire near bank was shaded by several massive hemlocks.  A small waterfall spilled into the pool that ran alongside a large, rectangular flat rock.   I dropped the Adams into that current. Before I could react, a small brown took the fly and kept on coming.  He leapt about a foot and a half and somehow managed to come down smack in the center of that rock.  He landed belly down, looked around and jumped again, throwing the barbless hook.  He did not improve his situation though, and landed in the same spot, still high and dry.  It was as if he was dancing to some strange aquatic beat, without water.  He seemed to ask ‘just where did the water go?’ and leapt yet again.  This time he landed closer to the edge and wriggled the rest of the way, slipping headfirst into the creek.  I laughed aloud thinking nothing was going to top those antics and broke for lunch.

 I ate lunch accompanied by the roar of the waterfall where the duck pond plunges to the original river bed.  I examined my tackle and declared my sole #12 Adams at the point of collapse.  I tried to fluff up the hackle but managed to strip off some of the body instead.  It pained me but I stuffed everything into the car and headed for the nearest fly shop, the Foscoe Fishing Company in Foscoe, a blip on Rt. 105 between Tynecastle and Boone.  I stumbled across multiple fishing seminars in the parking lot, including one guy straightening bamboo culms under a shelter in the pouring rain.  I grabbed three parachute Adams and fled. 

 I re-visited a spot on the upper Watauga a literal stone’s throw from the fly shop.  The spot used to demarcate stocked from wild trout water but a new sign indicated the entire area was no longer hatchery supported.  The water, in fact, was low and uninviting but that hadn’t stopped me before.  My first cast put the injured Adams into a sycamore that wouldn’t give it back.  Now I had to fish with a fly I didn’t tie.  I mumbled a few untoward things about whoever put the thing together and cast it anyway.  A fish immediately ate it.  Small rainbows and browns, not more than five or six inches went out of their way to impale themselves on it.  I approached the first real pool crouching along the right bank, gradually covering the water as I went.  No response.  I finally threw the fly into a white water chute dumping into the head of the pool.  The fly floated briefly before a fish larger than anything I had seen all day rolled on the fly.  I struck back and we both missed.  It had to be a brown by the burnished gold flank shown as it turned.  Like most wild browns, it did not rise again.  I marked the spot for future reference and considered my alternatives.  The rain I ran through in the fly shop lot had intensified. My hip boots leaked, my pants and feet were soaked, and rain began to drip down my back.  I had enough fun for one day.

 Sunday morning arrived with a blue sky and blueberry pancakes.  We parted ways with our guests and headed to another friend’s home near Boone.  Molly would visit, I would fish.  The stream is called Rocky Creek and is private water.  That doesn’t mean it’s stocked, it just means the public isn’t invited.  Truth be told, the fish are small but the beauty of the place makes up for it.  I get to fish it once or twice a year so having the water basically to myself is a treat.  I don’t generally like private water because it conjures up thoughts of public water fenced off for a privileged few.  But Rocky Creek is usually not more than three feet across and has only native trout; it couldn’t stand more than a few fishermen a year anyway, less if an angler kept his fish.

 I started with the same Adams dry and never looked back.  The creek was loaded with fish although most were smaller than the seven inch limit.  I could see many as they took the fly.  There was a lot of crawling under laurel and deadfall as well as climbing wet, moss-covered rocks, which is an excellent way to break a bone if you’re not careful.  One pool combined both obstacles.  I was carefully making my way along a narrow pool on a series of ledges gouged from eons of stones tumbling down the creek in high water.  All of the ridges left behind were slick with moss.  Halfway up the pool, I ran into a beech tree that had recently fallen across the stream at right angles.  I peered through the limbs to view some promising water with a small, foaming chute at its head.  I couldn’t make a roll cast because of the tree and side casts were out.  The only thing left was a normal high back cast followed by dropping the fly into the narrow run.  The first cast was met with a massive swirl, way out of character for the two foot wide run.  I struck back to air.  Out of disgust I picked the fly off the water and threw it back in there.  Suddenly I was connected to a veritable monster, with deep pink bands along its sides.  I passed the rod hand over hand through the branches and eventually landed the fish.  It was an absolutely gorgeous rainbow, about twelve inches long with a dark green back to complement the pink sides.  The darn commercial fly wasn’t barbless and I had to fashion a disgorger from a twig to unhook the fish.  It panted in the shallows before drifting downstream to deeper water.

 My final noteworthy fish was a nice brown, about eleven inches.  I could see it finning in a small run downstream of two rocks that funneled the current and its food to the fish.  This sort of situation makes my nervous because I can see everything.  It also means I usually make some stupid mistake and spook the fish.  I was on my knees, downstream and to the right of the fish.  I stripped off a few feet of line and made a tentative roll cast, which was too short.  The fish must have felt the fly land because it instinctively turned around and grabbed the fly.  I soon held the black-spotted beauty in my hand and slipped him back into the creek.  He flexed his gill plates for a moment and slid into the shade unseen.

 This weekend re-affirmed the beauty of simple gifts.  Molly’s heart was fine and she was good “for another hundred thousand miles.”  We enjoyed the company of friends amid the sounds of birds and a rushing creek.   And I got down to basics on small streams. Short casts, a standard dry fly and staying low, out of sight did the trick.  I don’t do much mountain trout fishing but the surprises I found this weekend might change that.  Getting re-introduced to Elk Creek was a plus.  Those wild mountain trout were gorgeous.  But enjoying all of this in the depths of July was a shocker.  The gray skies and light rains brought the fish out to feed.  I still shake my head when I think of all those people standing in the fly shop parking lot, in the rain, watching someone tie flies when the fish were hitting a few feet away.  I guess everyone has their priorities.  Next time one of mine will be to remember my knee pads.

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NAT GREENE FLYFISHERS CLUB OFFICERS

President

Charles Tuttle

(336) 286-3649

tuttlecw@triad.rr.com

 

Vice-President

Jeff Wayman (VP)

Wayview@triad.rr.com

 

Treasurer

Neal Mitchell

(336) 643-5001

(336) 706-1123 cell

nealmitjr@att.net

 

Board of Directors

Jeff Willett

jwillett1@hotmail.com

 

Bill Heafner

WHHLaw@asheboro.com

 

Laura Kennerly

(336) 605-8020 ext. 7
lkennerly@engconcepts.com

 

Past President

Lynn Roloff

ldroloff@att.net

 

Program Chairperson

David Dow

(336) 294-2876

oakislandbum@gmail.com

 

Trip Coordinator

Lorraine Rothrock

(336) 288-9976

(336) 707-3761 cell

samsngriffs@earthlink.net

 

Banquet Chairperson

Laura Kennerly

lkennerly@engconcepts.com

 

Website & Newsletter

Mark Grunenwald

admin@natgreeneflyfishers.org