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toolman

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Posts posted by toolman

  1. Rhithrogena morrisoni. There sure have been lots of them emerging on some stretches of the lower Bow this year.

    March Browns were a minor species on the Bow until 2012, when their populations exploded. Fishies love em'. The Duns start coming off typically in mid too late morning. The spinner falls start in the late afternoon and continue into the early evening. This years spinners falls have been terrific, which is not typical of March Browns as the spinner falls are usually brief. I've been having success with a #12 Adams (not a parachute) with dry floatant for the duns, but no floatant for the spinners as they sit lower on the water. Look for rising fish in the tail outs of pools with good riffle water at the head. That's where the trout will line up for a March Brown dinner.

    • Like 1
  2. It casts really well, but it only lasted a season before it cracked and would no longer float.

     

    Cracks at the tip of a fly line are often caused by back casts hitting the rocks on the beach or bushes etc. Any cracks in the fly line will expose the core of the line, which will wick water causing the line to start to sink. I would suggest cutting the tip of the line back a foot or two if it has cracks and tying a new loop. Then seal with knot sense. Also, lines need to be kept clean to keep them floating high.

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  3. I've had a reel with dacron degrade in only a couple of seasons. I was kind of surprised when I could break it with my hands. So if you think you might need it, check it where it meets the end of the fly line. This is where my dacron degraded and I had to cut about 15' of it off before it was up to break strength. For trout fishing, I never see my backing as I really put the pressure on the fish right away and don't let them go very far, so the dacron is just there to fill in the spool.

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  4. There was a guy who stopped posting here, that I would rate as one of the most knowledgeable and experienced anglers I have had the pleasure of fishing with.... "MissinTheBow".

    It's unfortunate that the site lost some of the expert contributors and the sense of "community" it once had. A consequence of too many big ego's and "haters" starting crap years ago and the site owners/admins, at the time, allowing it to happen.

  5. Lots of great advice from many anglers, some who I know to be experts. My personal advice/experience on rod action. is about matching a casters natural casting tempo to the natural tempo of the rod and the level of casting experience. Slow tempo casters = slower, deeper flexing rods and faster tempo casters (like myself), enjoy what many anglers would consider very fast rods such as the Hardy Zenith 9'6" 6wt. (beautiful rod in my opinion). How the rod is lined will have an influence on the rod tempo as well. Line a rod lightly and it will have a slightly faster tempo and if you over-line then you will have a slightly slower tempo. The type of line taper will also influence the "feel" of the rod. Using a given line weight/line length, there will be a noticeable difference when casting a WF, DT or Spey tapers on your rod.

    As Eagleflyfisher mentioned about casting faster rods, they can be considered somewhat unforgiving and may require more focus, better casting technique and time to get used to, but, I feel, that they offer several advantages such as, higher line speeds to bust the omnipresent wind on open waters like the Bow or on lakes. These stiffer rods also track very well, with less side deflection, leading to improved accuracy when shooting at tight targets at distance.

    As for presentation, I feel that the action of the rod has little effect on how softly you can land a fly. I can land a fly soft or hard with any rod. It is all in the casting technique and the leader set up.

    As for fast rods breaking off fish on finer tippets, I have landed many trout on my single hand and two hand spey rods using Frog Hair 5x fluro tippets, so don't see it as a consideration in respect to rod action choices. Consider that Atlantic Salmon anglers often land 30 lb'ers on 8lb. tippet using 15' 10 wt. Spey rods, so how you fight the fish and the leader/tippet set up can be critical to your landing success, but that should be a topic for another discussion.

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  6. At this time of year, (actually any time of year), I often swing articulated leeches in black and peacock leeches, typically on type 3 tips. As water temps continue to improve weekly and numerous hatches start to fire up, I like to swing Backswimmers, caddis emerger patterns. wet fly's, leeches etc.on tapered leaders ranging from 10' -15'. I think the presentation is always the most important part of the equation. The magic combination of the type of leader and/or sink tip, casting angle, swing speed, depth, action on the fly, stripping etc.

    • Like 2
  7. Hi guys,

     

    I was recently laid-off from a camp job, and have move in with my grandmother here in Calgary. I thought what the heck good time to pursue my lifelong dream of becoming a fishing guide. (this was my carreer plan 5 years ago but landed a sweet camp job that derailed my dream lol!) I'm in need to learn boat rowing, some casting (I m an OK caster but could use some pointers) and set up techniques asap. I called a few guiding co's that I found and I got lucky and found an outfit that requires a guide this season! I dont have a bunch of guiding experience (worked at a pike/walleye lodge as an assistant, dock hand 5 summers ago) Id be willing to row someones boat as they fish in exchange for the experience I will gain as well as seeing how you set up for different situations, rising fish, nimphing, etc.

     

    Thanks!

    I think you're on the right track. Pursue your dreams. Here's what you need to do...

    Get out on the river fishing year round, at least 200 times a year for a few years and offer to row anyones boat spring/summer/fall. Failure will be your master instructor. The Bow will teach you many valuable lessons beyond mere fishing.

    And one more thing.... you need to be able to spell "nimphing" correctly.... It's on the "Guide Test".

    • Like 5
  8. Great perspective Dave.

     

    It's interesting that some people have such an emotional reaction to a photo of a brown that is a little skinny, but otherwise, seems in very good health. I'm sure many people feel pressured into silence by a few online anglers accusing them of being unethical if they fish in October/November, or if they fish in the winter, or if they use nymphs, or fish the Highwood Confluence in March/early April, or use spin tackle, or a two handed spey rod, or post a photo on a fishing forum, or use a jet boat....

    Often, these same folks will complain to anyone who will listen, that "SOMEONE" should "DO SOMETHING" about their latest urgent crisis.

    Well, I think you know the kind of folks I'm talking about....

     

    On occasion, I have caught post spawn Browns in the winter that looked like the one in the photo that Dave posted, yet on the same afternoon, caught half dozen other Browns from the same pool that were fat and feisty. On yet another day on the water during run off in 2006, I was catching many healthy adult Browns on a section of river, but downstream a few hundred yards at another pool, the Browns were starving in the high flows. I have seen this many times over many years of fishing the Bow.

    As conditions change on each section of water, the fish will adapt. Some fare better than others.

     

    And consider what the starving, travel weary, post spawn Rainbows look like when they return to the Bow in May/early June. They all look very bad. Then they face the high, turbid flows of run off, followed by peak fishing pressure. Then come the low flows of late July/August as the irrigation canal diverts a disproportional amount of water that nature intended to send to the Bow fishies and the additional impact of the many upstream Dams that start to hoard water for power generation and municipal use, at a time when the water temps are dangerously high and oxygen saturation is dangerously low. Especially during the drought years like we had a dozen years ago.

     

    Yet, we fish away and our fishery survives. No, it actually thrives. This is the resilient Blue Ribbon Bow that I know...

    I really don't hear any "Canary in the Coal Mine" in regards to these issues,

    but it sure seems like some folks are trying real hard to make the "Fat Lady Sing", their song....

    It's a familiar refrain....

  9. It can't do any harm to the fishery you say?

    Well, consider that there will be more than double the fishing pressure on the trout populations downstream of the Deerfoot Extender Bridge.

    And only one boat launch will be available near the city at Policemans, because nobody will be using the Glenmore or Fish Creek launches.

    I bet it won't be long before the fish around Policemans and downstream too Cottonwood are going to look like the cutty's from the Livingstone at the end of every season...Scarr faced.

    And Brent, you mentioned that we should all pressure TU to "Do Something"... What do you propose they do?

    Re-stock the river?

     

    Here is a link to a terrific article: http://afgmag.com/the-second-step-post-flood-bow-river-browns/

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  10. Yay... Reason may yet prevail, but unfortunatly it's too late.

    Sapro may have delivered the final death blow, but there was another major event that occured a year earlier, that likely had a major influence on creating the right conditions for the collapse and demise of our Brown trout...

    The Trans Alta water Diversion in the summer/fall of 2011.

    It would be foolish to believe that there would be no negative impacts to the aquatic environment, from the millions of cubic meters of silt, coating the Bow rivers stream bed and extended high, turbid flow rates, post runoff. I have seen major changes in the hatch cycles of many aquatic inverts since then and so have many other anglers who pay attention to these details.

    I brought these concerns up with SRD back in 2011, but they said that they were not the lead agency on it as it originated in a federal park, (Huh,er what?) ...but they would forward my entomological concerns to Fisheries Canada. That was a WTF moment for sure...

    After the Sapro outbreak, SRD was likely under pressure to "do something" . Thus the ridiculous reg change.

    Rick is correct, since the last Fisheries Regulations review was almost 15 years ago, we may have to wait a very, very long time, before we see these waters opened to fall fishing again, if ever.

    I feel that the general fishing community at large could have been given proper notice of the public consultation meetings and online surveys to get a broader discussion going within the angling community. And how about giving us some data, fish counts, redd counts, etc. Good old fashioned scientific data that SRD says it is using to justifies these changes. Maybe some folks don't want us to see...

    Maybe a "dry fly only" change in the regs would have been at least a reasonable compromise that would have had the same outcome the PETA crowd were looking for... "to give the trout a rest" :argggg:

    • Like 2
  11. So I guess we should reopen all the rainbow trout streams, since the science is so conclusive

     

    Yes. that's exactly what I said. Open all Highwood tributary streams that are 8' wide, to fish Rainbows on the redds,,,,, hahaha

    All kidding aside, it is good to see that we have people engaged and concerned for our rivers.

     

    Sapro.... http://esrd.alberta.ca/fish-wildlife/wildlife-diseases/documents/SaprolegniosisFactSheet-MAR-2010.pdf

     

    SRD info. http://esrd.alberta.ca/fish-wildlife/fisheries-management/prairies-area-fisheries-management/lower-bow-river-sport-angling-regulation-review.aspx

  12. Yes I think it is likely that the Whitefish also went through their natural cycle and then conditions changed. Poachers whacking it hard may have contributed somewhat as well. Natural cycles are common in nature with all species of life. For example, Canadian Snowshoe hares run at about a 40 year cycle with peaks followed by complete collapses in the populations across the country. Canadian lynx that rely on them for food also follow their cycle with peaks and collapses in population. Fisheries are no different. From the fish survey done last August, it appears that the river is fine, minus some Brown trout.

    They will come back eventually when the conditions they require to thrive are right. No need for panic, only patience.

     

    If the science showed, even anecdotally, that a river closure for two months would contribute in some measurably signigicant way to the Brown trout recovery, I would totally support it. Personally, I would never target a spawning area while fishing and I mostly avoid wading in the fall. But that's my own personal ethics. I do however try and promote awareness in the fall to fellow anglers about watching out for reds when they wade. As do many fine sportsman on the water.

     

    I guess we are having that townhall meeting right now.... hahaha

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