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Dangus

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Posts posted by Dangus

  1. Really? My buddy tried out his new G3 vibrams yesterday on the bow and said he was impressed. I Didn't ask, but maybe he just had really low expectations haha

    his plan was to put studs in them anyways and keep the felts for the boat  but let us know how it works out for you as I Was going to do the same thing

  2. To continue on the pick up idea. If you wiggle your rod tip while picking up the line it will come up with less of a disturbance.  Also it goes without saying, if you make a bad cast, wait for your fly to come back past the fish before picking up again. 

    • Like 1
  3. Well, as I expected, my new boots I bought in June, shrunk up like an apricot in the sun.  

    Anyone come up with a remedy for it?  

    Tried mink oil once. Didn't do much.  Might try when the boots are still slightly damp.

  4. Are you putting them down just from the gravel crunching under foot?

    long, well designed leader...minimal false casts.  Not sure if it does anything but sometimes I'll false cast away from the fish, like 90 degrees to it, and then fire it in with a change in body positioning.  If anything Eliminates some of the spray off the fly and line landing on the water around the fish. 

    Dave Jensen would say cast upstream to the side of the rising fish rather than right ahead of its nose.

    Or just wait til it's pretty dark.

     

    • Like 1
  5. I see the part on accumulative effects. One thing to consider, which is mentioned at the start of the article, is local adaptation to specific streams. Some fish adapted to live in conditions well above what "normal" rainbows existed at. Consider the artifical selection pressure heavy angling and no temperature closure has on the population.

    These fish get hammered. Only the strong survive. Given that it's still a world class fishery despite

    Mans best efforts to **** it up, it makes me wonder.

    Mind you, that depends on a large gene pool. Small, isolated cutty streams don't have that luxury, and my impression is that they'd be more susceptible.

  6. Any improvement in the fishery management by way of education, land use, policing poachers, restrictions to logging are not possible without manpower. Neither AEP or Conservation Officer law enforcement have the manpower needed. In additions voluntary closures as we have in place to little to curb fishing habits. Just because we wear a floppy hat, wear waders, attempt CnR and carry a thermometer does not override the fact the we need to stop fishing in the afternoons! The only recourse is to have a mandatory fish closure. There are many questions relating to hoot-owl closures that allow fishing from midnight to 2 PM. Fish that are stressed do not suddenly revive one the stress is removed.

    The only answer is a full closure - 24 hours per day for whatever time is needed.

     

    It was not too ago when we had a seasonal closure on the Bow River - Nov 1 to May 30 if I remember correctly. The Bow River was truly a world class fishery at that time. We cannot claim the same now.

    Care to offer some literature that explains the trout stress response ( and it's apparent persistence)? I have only heard people beak about this, I've not come across an article.

    I appreciate your sentiment, but your hyperbole kills the mood.

  7. The grain window is like that to let you know what will adequately load or over load the rod. If you're using heavier tips and bigger flies, or like to feel more flex to time your cast, maybe err on the heavier side of the window.

    I think I've seen guys on spey pages chatter about liking the heavier heads on that rod.

     

    Bcube will call me out on this, but...t14 in the fall? Seems a little wild. How late in the season are you going? Usually type 6 handles it all...even in winter. I filed the 14 away and just fish 6 with a change the weight of the fly and my casting angle. Your arms might thank you at the end of the day!

    • Like 1
  8. I can turn over 6-7" streamers on a 6 weight switch with a 350 head. Generally not breaking the 50-60 foot mark though...not that you need to. I've broken the rod once, so I'm flirting with disaster.

    7 spey is a lot of gun for the bow. switch is generally lighter.

    A 6/7 spey would work for most situations you listed other than chinook maybe, but I'd rather have a 4/5/6 for trout.

    I use the same 6 for summer steelhead.

    A fish won't be satisfying on a big 6/7 until its well into the 20s.

    A bit of a ramble but I guess my message is even my 6 switch is still a little heavy for the bow. I'd go for lighter rod and tie flies smarter (sparse, synthetics etc), then get a separate rod for atlantics and steelhead.

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