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Tuesday, February 26, 2008

A New Season Starts!

Friday night your heart will start to race! You’ll pull out that 4 weight rod and check the leader and tippet! Prepare those nymphs for easy access the following morning… lay out your wool socks, fleece pants and gloves! Because you know that within a few short hours those favorite Wisconsin streams will be calling your name. March 1st is the Wisconsin “Catch and Release” opener!!! With a weather forecast in the low 30’s, I’m sure Saturday will mark the first day of fishing this season for many of us!

Purchase your 2008 Wisconsin Fishing License & Trout Stamp at:
https://www4.wildlifelicense.com/wi/start.php

Quote of the Day

I held the tiny nymph on my fingertip, a mere speck I duplicated with a clumsy fake. As I cast it into the fast moving current, I too became a speck, held by the expanse of beauty that surrounded me, engulfed by a sense of peace as enormous as the nymph had been small. Amongst the mighty scheme of things, I felt I had a place.
-Chiyo Sagara

Monday, February 25, 2008

Quote of the Day

They say you forget your troubles on a trout stream, but that's not it. What happens is that you begin to see where your troubles fit into the grand scheme of things, and suddenly they're just not such a big deal anymore.
-John Gierach

Fly Fishing in the Movies

The Quiet Man **Recently Added

How could I forget a favorite classic! A friend reminded me of The Quiet Man. A story about returning to your roots, starting over, falling in love and fly fishing! John Wayne and Maureen O’Hara star in this tale of Sean Thornton, The tall American who returns home to Ireland. He not only finds childhood memories but confrontation from his neighbor Will Danaher, who is determined to keep his sister Mary Kate from marrying Thornton. The plot thickens when Michaleen Oge Flynn, Father Peter Lonergan and Rev. Dr. Cyril Playfair devise a plan to get Danaher to give his permission. A plan that soon backfires! It is Father Peter Lonergan we see casting a fly rod for that prized salmon in the village river. If you haven’t seen The Quiet Man it is well worth the time… and for those of you who have, will never forget that Irish tune… “There was a wild colonial boy… Jack Duggan was his name… He was born and bred in Ireland… In a town called Castlemane…”


A River Runs Through It

We’ve probably all seen it! The story of Norm and Paul MaClean, two brother rebelling against their father who teaches them “To him, all good things, trout as well as eternal salvation, comes by grace and grace comes by art and art does not come easy”. Although each brother takes a different path for their future, fly fishing is the passion that still links them together.

Catch and Release

The title is a bit deceiving. Little fly fishing is seen in this romantic drama. Gray mourns the death of her fiancé who she soon discovers had a separate life from the one she shared with him. She finds herself depending on his friends while falling for the one she least expected. Although a great chick flick!!! The amount of fly fishing is at a minimum

Quote of the Day

The finest gift you can give to any fisherman is to put a good fish back, and who knows if the fish that you caught isn't someone else's gift to you?
-Lee Wulff

Ethanol - Good or Bad Idea?

Consumers are being told Ethanol drives economic development! Providing cleaner air in America and offering a cost effective solution to gasoline. Ethanol is made primarily from corn and other agricultural products and is combined with unleaded gasoline and used as a motor fuel, decreasing fuel’s cost while increasing the fuel’s octane rating. You might be thinking “This sounds great”. Hundreds of new jobs will be created in the area of an ethanol plant, a new demand for crops will help our farmers, ethanol is made in America and it is environmentally friendly! Or…. Is it?

An Ethanol plant in NE will produce 44 million gallons of ethanol a year, with the capability of using as much as 515 million gallons of water annually. The two plants in the area have been approved for drawing as much as 1 billion gallons of water annually. Keep in mind, the 250+ residents who live in the area use about 10 million gallons of water each year. NE’s 16 operating ethanol plants make a little under 1 billion gallons of the fuel, using three gallons of water to produce each gallon of ethanol, that’s 3 billion gallons of water annually. Think something’s wrong with these numbers? Let’s go on…

How does ethanol really affect our land? Organizations like Duck’s Unlimited, Pheasants Forever, Trout Unlimited, etc. are dedicated to conserving and protecting our wetlands, waterfowl, cold water fisheries and other wildlife through habitat improvements, public awareness, etc. A report was released by Ducks Unlimited officials showing 600,000 acres of land enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program will expire in MN by 2010. One-third of ND’s CRP contracts will expire by 2010 and 4.5 million acres of CRP in IA, ND, SD and MT will expire within the next 5 yeas. The concern is great for how much land will actually be re-enrolled with the increasing demand for corn production. 400,000 acres of CRP grasslands have already been plowed up in ND, shocking wildlife representatives. These are some of the most productive duck-rearing areas in North America. For those of you who are not familiar with what the CRP is, let’s take a closer look. The Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) was created to provide technical and financial assistance to eligible farmers/ranchers to address soil, water and related natural resource concerns on their lands in an environmentally beneficial and cost-effective manner. The program encourages environmental enhancement which protects the Nation’s ability to produce food and fiber, reduces sedimentation in streams and lakes, improves water quality, establishes wildlife habitat and enhances forest and wetland resources. Below is an analysis by the USDA regarding CRP:

  • CRP reduces the annual cropland soil loss by about 450 million tons -- enough to fill approximately 37.5 million dump trucks.
  • CRP has restored 2 million acres of wetlands and adjacent buffers.
  • CRP has protected 170 thousand miles of streams.
  • CRP sequesters 48 million tons of carbon dioxide annually.
  • CRP produces 15 million pheasants annually.
  • CRP produces 2.2 million ducks per year in the Prairie Pothole Region.

How does Ethanol help us economically? Supply and Demand… the price of corn has jumped from $2-a-bushel to above $5 in 2008, a historic high. Not only has this affected livestock farmers who need corn for feed, but also the packaged-food companies who recently sent a letter to senators with their concerns about ethanol and how it would affect their ability to produce competitively available, affordable food. This includes Coca Cola Co., PepsiCo Inc., Kellogg Co., Nestle USA, Dean Foods Co. and H.J. Heinz Co. So far as the price for fuel… you are driving up the price of a product when adding an ingredient that is pricier than the product itself.

I can’t say I am an expert on Ethanol but after doing a little research what I found concerned me. Of course being an angler my concerns for ethanol encompass the danger to the Trout on my local streams as well as inflation in food prices. These plants will have an affect that may cause a huge loss of CRP contracts, a future filled with drought, erosion, high water temperatures, chemicals applied to the ground, loss in wildlife and waterfowl habitats and much more. Ethanol plants will not only affect the angler and hunter but also every individual who purchases food! After researching on your own, please get involved with the fight against ethanol!

Quote of the Day


He who catches a trout has in the rough, mortal hand of him one of nature's poems, a creature of a comeliness so rare, so strange, so patrician, as to touch the heart of the captor with pity and with praise.
-Ben Hur Lampman

Quote of the Day

There he stands, draped in more equipment than a telephone lineman, trying to outwit an organism with a brain no bigger that a breadcrumb, and getting licked in the process.
-Paul O'Neil

Quote of the Day

There is no more graceful and healthful accomplishment for a lady that fly fishing, and there is no reason why a lady should not in every respect, rival a gentleman in the gentle art.
-W.C. Prime

Quote of the Day


One moment your holding a dripping, sparkling fish, the next you're looking at the water seeing an image of yourself and no one else. For a moment, you know precisely who you are.
-Ken Marsh

Quote of the Day

Fly Fishing is such great fun, I have often felt that it really ought to be done in bed. Not that high frolic is the only thing that pursuit of fish and the pursuit of females have in common; these ancient sports have more going for them than just that. As I'll now try to tell why. First off, just as both diversions are best conducted in decent privacy, away from distracting crowds, so too the most gratifying results are best obtained by subtlety rather than by force, by seduction rather than rape. Again, just as both pastimes quickly pall when the conquest is too easy, so too the lures used in the wooing, whether jewels or jassids, must be presented with the utmost skill and grace.
-Robert Traver

Quote of the Day

Last Sunday I fished up a certain river most of the day and through my supernal skill and encyclopedic knowledge of angling was able to take a dozen brook trout. If I had kept them I would have had the makings of a nice can of sardines.
-Sparse Grey Hackle

Reading the Water

Trout have three basic needs. 1.Shelter, 2.Protection, 3.Adequate Food. Ask yourself where does the water best meet 1 or all of these needs. Observing current patterns can help you pinpoint the location of underwater objects (Shelter), the sign of a current pushing against a bank can indicate an undercut, and the seam between the fast and slow water can be a great feeding spot. Spend time learning how to read the water and your surroundings.

Riffles
are a great place to start. Always work your way up the river so you don't scare the fish.

Bushes covering the water offer a low shadow for trout to hide in. A key spot for fly fishing is standing in the center of a river casting towards the bank where a tree or bush is casting a shadow. Try to stay in faster water but no whitewater.

Water Temperature plays a key role. The headwaters (upper zone) are normally very cold with a low flow and a narrow streambed. These waters serve as a spawning and rearing area but to small to support large trout. This is sometimes a great place for Brook Trout.

The middle zone has cool water and is the most productive portion of the stream. You will find a higher population of adult trout due to the insect crop.

The lower zone is the larger part of the river with the streambed flattening. The water is warmer with a slower current and silty bottom. Few trout are supported here but occasionally some of the largest.

A good sign there is a hatch developing/in progress is when the swallows are in the air!

What are they eating??

Splashing Rise:
Emerging insects breaking through the surface film. You will see the Trout completely clear the water. Use Skitter caddisfly imitations or a dead-drift emerger.

Sipping Rise:
The flies are resting on the water surface. The Trout will suck the insect. The perfect time for that dry fly.

Head & Tale Rise:
Insects stuck in the surface film. You will see the Trout's head and dorsal fin and tail as it rolls. Cast your fly up current from the last rise and let it drift naturally past the line.

Tailing:
Immature insects or other food from the bottom of the stream. Trout won't usually take a dry fly.

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