Jump to content
Fly Fusion Forums

tgo

Members
  • Posts

    369
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    3

Posts posted by tgo

  1. I used this method (sort of) last year for a bit, mostly in the faster deep stuff, but in most situations I wouldn't use it. I do love how the split slides off when you snag as opposed to losing the fly, it does get it down nice and fast too. I also liked it because it was easy to cast with more weight at the end of the leader. I never used 3x the depth though, can't imagine it would be easy if you're fishing 6' of water.

  2. Everytime somebody dies in Mexico alot of people are quick to slam the authorities there, apparently accidents can't happen in Mexico it has to be the fault of some Mexican. I understand that the authorities are corrupt and often fail to follow-up with a proper investigation (by our standards). But to assume that they must have been pushed in by a Mexican is offensive. I would be willing to bet that most of the poeple who die in Mexico are either drunk, linked to drug deals or do stupid things.

  3. NEVER play dead with a black bear he'll eat you, fight him off if slowly moving away doesn't work and he attacks you. Grizzly will MAYBE leave you alone after an attack, intent is not to eat you really. Sometyimes they come back later I think. A grizzly will kick your ass in most instances, so get down in a ball and cover your head and face face is what I've been told. I'm no expert but I've been told by those who are thats what I should d differently with each kind of bear. Definately fight off a cougar if you can, make yourself look big and mean again if slowly trying to exit the situation doesnn't work. Don't turn your back, and like Taeke said the last thing you do with any of these animals is run.

     

     

    Thanks for explaining this, Taeke.

    First time I visited I was told that seeing a bear would not happen too often and my chance of seeing one when visiting three weeks would be zero.

    Well, I guess they never have dealt with a flyfisher, because on all my visits I encountered bears.

    At least four every visit, but I never got in trouble. I just leave the area when a bear shows up and make lots of noise when travelling in the woods.

  4. agreed. if you fish these mountains/foothills long enough you will have a allot of bear stories and a few cougar stories too. now that the fly fad has hit full boar, every jackass city boy with a rod wants to play hillbilly! STAY ON THE BOW. its allot safer for the bears. if you just cant stop yourself from entering the woods, let em know your there. its NOT your backyard! STAY OUT!!

     

    A little overboard don't you think? I bet you'd expect to see a black bear on Dogpound Creek eh? Anybody carry bear spray on Dogpound here? Anybody makes tons of noise on Dogpound? If yes I bet you don't catch many fish there then.

     

    All we know is the man suffered injuries to his leg, maybe he was trying to fight it off with his fishing rod and thats why it got chewed up. Maybe he was fighting off the bear, fell over and the bear bit his leg, who the hell knows. Yeah people have to learn to AVOID encounters and know WHAT TO DO when you do encounter one, be able to recognize different bears and act accordingly, take into consideration cubs if they are around etc. Thats a good message, but don't insult a stranger when you don't know the full story.

  5. There's more black bears around that area than most people realize, at least thats what has been told to me by locals.

    Earlier this summer I was fishing around Bottrell and came around a corner and saw a bear up in a tree. I was shocked, but reached for me camera to take a picture as the bear hadn't noticed me yet. I looked back at the bear after finding the camera and he is staring right at me and beginning to climb down the tree. I slowly exited his view then hauled ass back to the car. I told the guy who runs the campground and he said he hears about 25 sightings a year, he didn't even sound remotely concerned.

    Its so natural to be really quiet on that creek since the fish can spook so easily, beiong really quiet and alone around bears is not a good thing though. Before this year I fished dogpound if I wanted to get out of the city and not have to worry about bears because I was fishing alone.

    Hope this guy is alright and recovers quickly.

  6. Three nymphs when nymphing, depending on depth, wind and hot fly maybe switch to two. Hopper-dropper setup unless fishing close to logjams and tight spots or if there is an obvious hatch.

     

     

     

    When fishin cuttie streams, sz 14 dry and small nymph dropper. Deadly.

    Bow River usually three nymphs or hopper dropper. Beyaaaah! :catch:

  7. I voted yes because I believe those who say it has reduced the pressure on these streams. I didn't fish the Elk drainage before the regs, I was usually happy with Southern Alberta for convenience and being a broke-ass student I didn't want to pay more to fish. The three days mkm and I spent on the Elk, Michel, and Wigwam we didn't once see another walk-and-wade fisherman, and we covered a ton of water along easy access points, except for the Wigwam of course. We had some of best dry-fly fishing we've ever had, during which we had the river to ourselves save for a few drift boats on the Elk. I don't know what it was like before the changes, or that CW licences are in part responsible for the quality of these fisheries, but I was certainly happy with my experience and was glad to pay 20 bucks for it.

×
×
  • Create New...