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FraserN

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Posts posted by FraserN

  1. Amazing shots. The picture of assinaboine pass brings back a flood of memories. I don't know how many times I stood on that exact place at Marvel lake, hoping to get one of those huge Cutthroat trout on the end of my line. It was now over 20 years ago. I really need to get back there some day.

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  2. For neoprenes. Aquaseal is perfect. For small holes, clean the wader area with alcohol and apply directly on. Bigger tears require taping the back and keeping the seam level. It works very well. I fished the entire season on waders that are ready to be junked. Just kept repairing them.

  3. I agree. I am much more careful nowadays. I have gone in the river a few times, but my big fear is hurting my knees. I hurt my ankle this year but it is manageable. So many people have hurt themselves on those greasy rocks. As for winter fishing, I no longer do this because of the dangers involved, as well as the slow angling success.

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  4. A good read. It is rather fascinating: the differential mortality on fish species a severe flood event can have. On the Bow river in NW Calgary, I noticed numbers of large dead brown trout after the recent flooding. In over 20 trips I only caught 4 brown trout, which was more than some capable flyfishermen, who got none. The rainbows, on the other hand, faired well. I got more bigger (16"+)rainbows this season than in several years combined. And they all were in good shape. Being originally a California steelhead stock made these rainbows far more capable of handling the massive torrent, than the browns, which appear to have taken a very substantial reduction in numbers.

  5. I find a big rod to be not entirely appropriate for presenting small flies to small trout, especially on the Bow. I had a lot of trouble with heavier rods because I kept losing fish, especially in the fall on tiny BWOs. The rod is too stiff at 7wt. and larger, and the hook set is too hard. Sometimes, the little guys did get yanked right out of the water. Definitely overkill, although it lands small fish quickly, even on light tippets down to 6X.

  6. Some lines do this, especially floating lines. I just replaced my degraded, cracked line. I knew it was done when I tried to super glue a lot of the cracks. It held the line for a sizable Stillwater rainbow, but it made casting like a stiff cable. Just replace it and forget about line in that condition. Too much hassle to deal with.

  7. As an example. One stretch, where I fished today in Silver springs. The mid stream island is mostly gone, the river is wider and much deeper and slower. Stepping off the bank into what was normally shin deep water near shore is now waist deep for hundreds of yards downstream. The sandstone cliff above my head has lost much of its face. Sandstone boulders, some the size of small cars are jumbled just below on the bank. This place is radically changed, having lost all its inshore structure, it will take years for fishing to recover here.

  8. I have been caught in several storms over the years. The worst was on the the bow near Cochrane, where I almost got struck by lightning. I tend to stick it out and keep fishing. The latest incident was last week on the Oldman, where a nasty storm rolled in and I was trapped on a bar in mid river. I did decide to stop when the lightning flashed all around me. The water had risen from all the rain, so wading the swollen side channel to the bank was fun. I waited it out under a tree. I don't need to catch fish that bad anymore, so it is best to deal with storms by quitting for a while.

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