Monthly Archives: January 2009

Join my FLW Fantasty Fishing Group – Win Free Prizes!

I have re-opened my FLW Fantasy Fishing group from last year & inviting you to play FLW Fantasy Fishing where you can become an instant millionaire! Other guaranteed prizes include six $100,000 winners and 1,800 other prizes like a Chevy Silverado, Ranger Boats and more. Don't worry, if you've never played fantasy sports before, FLW Fantasy Fishing will help pick a team for you when you sign up. This year, should be bigger and better, as I intend to send out prizes for every tournament to highest finishers of our group that don't win FLW prizes. Prizes will be compromised of gifts from my sponsors. So tackle, sunglasses, hats, and other gear will be up for grabs

Here is the details to sign up:
Please go to http://www.fantasyfishing.com/?ref=1046 to sign-up or learn more. After you have completed the sign-up process, click "Join a League" in the Game Tracker and enter the following information to become part of RichLindgren.com's League:

League Id: 11590
Password: bassin

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Best regards,
The Commissioner
RichLindgren.com
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Ice Fishing

It has been a while since I have last written.  Even longer has been the last time I went out fishing or what it at least feels like. However, yesterday I got a chance to go out for the first time this year to do some ice fishing. We drilled holes at about the 100 foot depth range. Although the weather was good with no wind and a bright sun, the bite was slow.  I caught a few herring which were quickly released since they were not in season. I also raised a giant whitefish to the hole.  However, the whitefish straightened my hook and shook off.  A couple of my buddies landed lake trout that were good eater size.  A few of my other buddies also got some herring and a whitefish.  We were all pretty much fishing the same way that has worked in previous outings. Basically, two techniques were used:  the first was drop shotting live minnows and the second was ripping spoons. Drop shotting worked much better then the spoons did.  Although we did not catch as many fish as we all would have liked, I know for sure we can’t wait to get back out there for some redemption.

 ‘Till next time: May your hook sets be Massive and your fish be Monsters!-Peter Natev

Post from: Bounty Fishing Blog

Jan 24, Fly Fishing in Colorado – Frozen Rainbows!

Fly fishing in Colorado in January!

Jan 24, Fly Fishing Event

Find a Fly Fishing Event

Sculpins and Bull Trout Fly Fishing in Squamish



Winter in Squamish means its time to go catch bulls...bull trout that is. Bull trout are often referred to as Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma) in these parts. Bulls and Dollys are almost impossible to distinguish visually from one another, however, some would argue that a bull trout has a flattened head compared to a Dolly. Maybe that is the case, but it is also kown that fisheries biologists rely on Genetics to distinguish the two populations. Genetic analysis has confirmed that the species of char that lives in the Squamish River watershed is in fact bull trout, Salvelinus confluentus.

Bull trout eat just about anything and they are very aggressive. They are Sharks!

Foods for Bull Trout in the Squamish
  • sculpins (Cottids)
  • salmon eggs
  • salmon fry and smolts
  • salmon flesh
  • small fishes
  • leeches
  • insects - mayfly, caddis, stoneflies
Winter is a time between the spawn and fry emergence leaving no eggs and no fry available to bull trout. What remains of big food items are sculpins and the Squamish system is full of them.

Sculpins are a small fish in the family Cottidae often referred to as Cottids. When CN spilled 40,000 liters of caustic soda into the Cheakamus River in August of 2005 it wiped out over 90% of the total fish population. More than half of the fish killed were cottids! Here is the full report: MoE Impact Assessment Report for 2005 CN Spill.

So how big were the sculpins killed in the spill? On average the sculpins killed were 3 inches long (76.9mm)! Makes you think about your fly selection when targeting these brutes!



The fly fishing for bull trout has been fairly descent the past few weeks. The trout are actively feeding on sculpin patters swung in slow to moderate speed water close to the bottom. Tailouts and runs between 1-4 ft in depth seem to be holding more fish. The water temperature of the river continues to hover around 2 to 3 degrees Celcius so midday fishing is best. Good luck out there!

Tight lines,

Clint Goyette


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Secret Squirrel

It's 17th January today, but you won't get to read this for a while yet. I had a good day yesterday you see, the change in the weather has brought the pike out to play and I was fortunate enough to be there to get some of them. I had five pike in all, an 11 pounder, a 13 pounder, a 16.05, a 16.07 and a nice 19lb 10oz fish. All were very fat and fit and interestingly all gave terrific screaming runs. Pike that run off with the bait in that fashion are usually in the company of other pike - that's why they run, they don't want anyone else snaffling their prize.


I missed out a bit though. Four of the fish, and a missed run, were all in the same swim. I fished there for a while and decided to move on, try a couple more spots and then go back to the same place later in the day. I caught nothing in the other spots but when I returned to the hot swim there was someone in it! Pretty unlucky since there were only two other boats out and it's a very big lake. Binocular syndrome methinks!

That's the reason for the secret squirrel. I know the pike are feeding but you don't yet and until the word gets out I'm not going to tell you. With luck I'll get a few more fish and squeeze a couple of reports into this one. Surface temperature was 5.5 degrees

One Week Later
Well its been a cold wet week and the lake's a different place just now. The surface temperature has fallen to 5.3 degrees and the level has risen considerably - by over two feet!

I was able to get there for two days this week, staying overnight in torrential rain followed by snow! The promised high winds didn't materialise however and in fact it was quite pleasant out on the lake. Day one went ok with four fish in the boat, the biggest going a little over sixteen pounds. Interestingly they all came from different swims and from widely varying depths, 25-50ft. The fish that came up from deepest water was bubbling and gurgling away on the surface just before I netted it - obviously venting air from its swimbladder through the pneumatic duct that pike have.

Day two was much more difficult with only a solitary twelve pounder to show for my efforts. I had another bait (half a bluey) grabbed by a pike just as I attempted to reel it in but I didn't hook the fish and it wouldn't be tempted by another bait.

Might get one more session in before the end of the month if the weather holds out.

Up For a Fall
A week later and I now know that I set myself up for a fall with this secret squirrell nonsense. We blanked! The cold weather and copious quantities of snow water seem to have put the fish right off the feed and despite fishing lots of good quality swims neither Joe nor I could attract a bite.

Question is, is this really an opportunity in disguise? If the fish aren't on their usual marks then they are obviously somewhere else and it just might be that they are in a big concentration somewhere. I won't get back to the lake for a while now but the snow and very cold weather are due to continue so I can't see much improving anyway.

Maybe a change of direction is called for!

All Cheakamus Steelhead to be Released

Please note that as of January 9th, 2009 ALL Cheakamus River steelhead must be released. This is an in-season regulation change that covers that fact that there might be adipose clipped hatchery fish returning this year. These hatchery steelhead are part of the Recovery Program on the Cheakamus River due to the 2005 CN Caustic Soda spill.

Visit this link for more information:
http://www.env.gov.bc.ca/fw/fish/regulations/changes/region2.html

Tight lines,

Clint

The Big Freeze

More than a month without a blog entry - says it all really doesn't it? Sub-zero temperatures have gripped the country for almost all of that time and the pike have been SO hard to catch even in the deep water. That's not all mind, the flu bug took it's toll on me, then there were the Christmas and New Year festivities to get over as well so we haven't been fishing much.

Joe and I have been out a few times but only had a few low doubles for our trouble, Joe getting the biggest at 16lbs 7oz on a deadbait. The surface temperature of the big lake has been dropping steadily, 6.5 degrees one week, 6 degrees the next and just 5 degrees a week later with ice forming in the sheltered areas. Meanwhile the conditions have been very still with only a gentle breeze and often, bright sunshine for most of the day. Ordinarily I wouldn't mind the sun but it's been very noticeable that the fish have all come very late in the day when the sun was low in the sky or even absent from it. We stayed out until well after dark one evening to see if they were coming on the feed at night - they didn't!

The few runs we've had have all had something else in common too - they were all in deep water. Not a single bait has been picked up in less than forty feet and some were quite a bit deeper than that. So what's been going on?

When times are good I can usually find the pike using the echo sounder. They show up as nice big arches, usually a foot or two off the bottom and usually, they are close to shoals of bait fish. Find a big shoal of bait fish and there's almost bound to be a pike or two nearby. Just lately though the bait fish have been absent. Those shoals that I have found have been small and tight and always in deep water and it's been a rare event to pick up an obvious pike on the sounder. I suspect the prey fish have been away somewhere very deep and in a big lake where most of the water is very deep, that presents a headache in terms of location. It also means that the pike are going to have a lot more water to hide in, difficult water to fish too since anchoring up over 100ft or more presents its own problems.

Things have changed this week though. We had a stormy weekend with strong southerly winds and a big rise in temperature to over ten degrees. There's been a lot of rain too and this combination is certain to have had an effect. The water is unlikely to have warmed up very much but as it would have been very close to 4 degrees by the time the winds came, there's just a chance that the lake will have turned over, bringing the deep layers to the surface.

The prey fish are the key, I'm sure of that, and if the change in conditions has moved the prey fish, it will have moved the pike. Let's see how I get on next time out.

THE ROD

The man largely responsible for my introduction to the world of fly-fishing was none other than Paul Bean, an Atlantic salmon fly tier of great renown and whose exquisite patterns, veritable works of a lost piscatorial art, grace the walls of such dignitaries and sportsmen as Prince Philip, Robert Redford, and ex-president George Bush. 

These are not your normal, everyday, store bought flies.

What makes both Paul and his flies unique and sought after, is that they are painstaking artistic recreations of old British Atlantic Salmon patterns from centuries ago, and that he is probably one of the few human beings alive that possesses this self-taught knowledge, based on years of archival research.  The flies are fully functional, of course, and you can fish with them, but most of them cost a small fortune and lie protected behind glass in ornate frames on a wall,  perhaps accompagnied with one of his wife Maureen`s beautiful watercolors of a Matapedia fishing scene.  The tying of these patterns is an all-consuming task, a labor of love that can sometimes take hundred of hours before Paul is satisfied with the end result. Needless to say, he only cranks out a few of these every year and these are quickly scooped up by collectors across the globe.

I was doubly fortunate through geography that Paul lived near us in the bucolic Eastern Townships in southern Quebec and that he had also been a good friend of my father since the post-war days, when they had some business together. It was Paul who made my first fly rod, a fast action eight weight hexagonal split bamboo, a dark burnished magohany that was gloriously varnished, with a half wells cork grip and a cherry wood reel seat with garnished german silver fittings.  It was his first attempt at making a bamboo rod and it was presented to me by my father as a gift to me for my thirteenth birthday, probably in the hope that I would stay out of trouble and learn something about the life lessons of nature in the process. These were the best times of my life and with that rod were laid out my first flies on the waters closest to my home.

With the rod came a few courses of instruction and Paul proved to be a patient teacher despite the inadequacies of his new pupil. The gospel according to Paul, at least in regards to basic casting mechanics, involved locking the elbow to the side of the body and moving the rod from a ten to one position on a imaginary clock, counting down the cast - one, two, three, one. It was the classic metronome method, old school, austere, and Presbyterian  in its approach; yet, in retrospect, it was a lesson in basic fundamentals  that worked well enough and was not to rigid as to preclude incorporating one’s own personal physical style to the formula. 

There were three types of casts we practiced - single and double hauls, as well as the roll cast, useful in tight quarters where a backcast is out of the question or when fishing a short or sinking line. Distance was less important than accuracy and stealth. Twenty-feet was all you needed was a mainstay of Paul’s casting catechism.  A drag free drift when fishing dry flies was paramount to success and the drift on a shorter cast line was much easier to mend and control than a long one.  Cast three or four times over the the same water and shuffle two steps downstream without kicking up too much of the riverbed! Repeat the process. It was all pretty traditional stuff.

 But when it came to fishing his approach was anything but conventional, at least in those days when nobody admitted to fishing for anything other than trout or salmon with a fly - such an endeavor would be heresy to the purists at a time when the sport was still highly elitist and limited in its scope of vision as to the possibilities of fishing with flies. Paul, on the other hand, a forward thinker, was an advocate of fishing for other species as well, such as bass, pike, and musky on the fly. He ultimately believed that all fish could be caught on a fly and backed it up by doing it, from flyfishing for Shad on the St-John’s to catching giant largemouth bass on Memphremagog.

Interspersed with the casting lessons, were discourses on fish conservation, habitat, old fishing trips, stories of great fish and salmon camps, life lessons of the Great Depression and War, anectotes about his great friend and legendary salmon guide Richard Adams, reel maker Stan Bogden, and almost anything else regarding the fishing life and the human condition. Paul could talk about anything. On these hot summer afternoons, as he told me all these things, mostly in dribs and drabs, imperfect thoughts that wafted uncertainly skyward like the flight of ephemera, time seemed to stand still and we were the at the epicenter of the Universe. He was a great mentor and shared his knowledge of the sport with selflessness, honesty, and passion, as it should.

One afternoon, as we were practicing on the lawn behind the library of the Bishop’s University in Lennoxville, Paul recounted something to me that was beyond my comprehension at the time and that I had always remembered, and had somewhat nagged at me ever since. It seemed that there was a period in his life where he had given up fishing for a few years, following some difficult yet unspoken tragedy in his life where either some great personal or financial loss had been incurred, or he had suffered some other existential crisis leading to a period of depression. He never told me straight up what it was and had muttered something about not being able to hook or land a fish, losing his patience and passion, no longer enjoying it and eventually walking away from the sport for a few years before finally getting back on the water. Up until that that time in his life, he had only fished for salmon and trout, but when he started fishing again he began experimenting with other species that were to be found in waters closer to home.

It was my uncle Mort that got him tying bass flies and then eventually, after much cajoling about the poor quality of Paul’s bass flies - which nevertheless got hammered on a daily basis - he succeeded in getting him to join him for some smallmouth bass fishing on Lake Massawippi.  Paul loved it. A solid friendship developed between them, at one point they even bought a property with a large lake and stocked it with bass and trout and fished almost every night after work. As best remembered, while most of my family thought that Mort was lazy and shiftless and would never amount to anything , the truth of the matter is that were it not for him, Paul may never have begun tying his amazing flies.

And as he shared his thoughts about the times and events and ups and downs of his life with me,  the small bits and pieces of the jugsaw puzzle that is everyman’s existence began to take shape, amidst poorly cast lines that landed in spaghetti loops at my feet on hot and lazy summer afternoons where time stood still during our long walks along the river. Along the way he would identify insects using their latin names, but my thoughts kept returning to that period in his life when he no longer fished. It was something that my soft adolescent brain could not understand - why would anyone stop fishing if they didn’t have to or were required not to do so by law. There are so many reasons why people fish - the real question is why more or all people do not!

That summer seemed to last a lifetime and after that I saw Paul less frequently as I went away to school for a few years, although we had fished together twice since and had dinner and a few beers out on the porch of his house one summer evening in North Hatley after I had returned from my studies at McGill. Again, for a few years we lost touch and when I last heard, much to my sorrow, he had passed away after a lengthy illness.

It was a few years back, after a period of personal upheaval, trials, and loss, and where a sudden responsibility had fallen upon me, I experienced one of those weird seasons where nothing seemed to feel natural, my patience was lacking, and where a large proportion of the fish hooked were lost through either error or bad luck. My timing was off and couldn’t manage a decent cast, had no confidence in the flies tied at the end of my tippet, had a hard time spotting feeding fish and never managed to hook or fight them properly, or so it seemed.

Something essential was missing and I had great difficulties coming to grips with the situation. After a season of that nonsense, my patience at it’s limit, fishing trips became less frequent, and then one day just stopped altogether for about a year or so. After a twenty-five year quest for the Holy Grail of fishing, that wonderful bamboo rod was placed in it cylindrical aluminum tube and stored in a basement closet.

It was during this time that was slowly realized that which Paul had been unable to express to a child who was certainly too young to understand at the time; and that how most of a man’s life, like a fish in a stream, was such as slippery thing to come to grips with and give meaning to, even though it all boiled down to a few simple basics, like locking your elbow to the side and counting down the cast. One-Two-Three-One. Then shuffling forward a few feet without mucking things up too much. Repeat.

Last April, the old rod that Paul built for me was found in a closet and with it, on the rivers closest to my home, fishing became fun once again. ARI VINEBERG

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