31 October 2021

Wet weekend tying

It's a very wet weekend...




17 October 2021

Getting started with Trout Spey

Trout Spey (or micro spey) is a type of fishery that has become more and more popular the past 5 years. It's basically a down sized double handed rod that steelhead fishermen use but for trout. Generally 10 to 12ft long, these down sized double handed rods are getting more and more momentum. One does need to figure out how this whole spey game works.

Trout spey rods are classified as #2 to #4 weight line rods. For fishing with spiders and small streamers the really ultra light trout (#2 and #3 weight) spey rods come in play, while the larger streamer fishing rigs are a bit heavier (#4 weight). Back in 2017 I asked Robert Sherill, a bamboo rod maker from Texas, to build me an ultra light (#2) Trout spey rod (graphite). It's still unfished (or even cast!). This ultra light Trout spey fishing using spiders (and the occasional small streamer) is what I want to try soon.

Now to continue the confusion, the line weights on spey rods are *not* the same as we know with regular single handed fly rods. The rule of thumb with spey line weight is to add three line weights to get the equivalent line weight of the regular fly line. So a #2 Trout spey line is equivalent of a 2 + 3 = 5 weight regular fly line. And a #4 Trout spey line weighs the same as a regular 7 weight fly line.

These ultra light double handed rods have become popular for fall fishing for browns using (big) streamers on large rivers like the Missouri river in Montana. These streamers are fished deep down using heavy sink tips on the so called Skagit heads. This isn't the streamer fishing as we know (casting and stripping the line in to impart movement to the streamer) but swinging the streamer by the current at a downstream angle. With spey rods it's not fished upstream. If this fishing streamers deep down during the fall months isn't exactly your type of fishing, the alternative is swinging soft hackles just below the surface, also downstream at an angle.

Joe Rotter from Red's Fly Shop is a guy who explains many aspects of fly fishing extremely well. Here's a good first entry video about how a Trout spey rig looks like and what comes with it.



A nice article about starting with trout spey at Fly Fisherman website.

15 October 2021

Quack

A ‘Sunrise’ Quack I tied the other evening. I couldn’t figure out where I left the red floss 🤔

Leonard Quackenbush, a member of the Beaverkill Trout Club liked the Royal Coachman but the fragile fan wing wasn't to his liking. Rube Cross tied this hair wing version in 1930 on request of Quackenbush. Later a more robust version of this fly became known as the Royal Wulff.



14 October 2021

Streamer fishing masterclass

I have no idea why Kelly isn't asking money for this (long!) video, it's a true streamer fishing masterclass for free!

Kelly Galloup is the owner of the lodge and fly shop Slide-Inn on the banks of the Madison river in Montana. He moved from Michigan after a life as a guide and dry fly expert. But the past 20+ years the world knows Kelly as the streamer expert.


Here's a post about how to tie Kelly's signature fly, the Zoo Cougar.
Here is another long video Kelly talks about fishing streamers.
Kelly has many videos out, this is one I also liked.
Fish sinking lines in rivers, but don't false cast and start stripping right away once the line lands on the water.


08 October 2021

Me on a podcast

Here's something that's new to me, a podcast talking about some weird hobby called fly fishing.
Pete Tyjas runs a glossy quarterly magazine called Fly Culture. Besides running a magazine Pete also hosts a podcast with many interesting people from the fly fishing community.



Making of the Dette fly frame (I)

Some years ago I acquired 11 traditional Catskill dry flies tied by the Dettes (by Winnie and Mary I'm told by the original owner). Recently I sent the flies to a professional framer to get the flies framed. We have been thinking about the set up of the frame.

Part II of the story
Part III (final) of the story





















































03 October 2021

Able Mable (II)

It has been a while I tied...



02 October 2021

The mystery of the Catskill dry fly hallmark

Rube Cross wrote the book ‘Tying American Trout Lures’ in 1936, later combined with his second book ‘Fur, Feathers and Steel’ published as ‘The Complete Fly Tier’.

In this book Rube describes the typical Catskill dry fly hallmark of the tiny piece of bare shank behind the hook eye. Many debated about the reason for the 'clean neck'. Was it to accommodate the turle knot or for a better balance of the fly on the water? And was Rube Cross the originator? 

So what makes a dry fly a Catskill dry fly? Catskill legend Harry Darbee wrote in his book 'Catskill Fly Tier' what in his view defines a Catskill dry fly.

We have to go back to the Catskill history to figure out how the typical Catskill dry fly became to be. Theodore Gordon was, besides being a fly fisherman, a journalist and was the American correspondent for the London based newspaper Fishing Gazette as early as 1890 (source: Tying Catskill style Dry Flies, Mike Valla). Britain was the center of fly fishing back then, so Gordon was acquainted with the latest techniques on fly fishing and tying.

After reading the book 'Floating flies and how to dress them' (1886, click here to download the book) by the British angler and author Frederic Halford, Gordon got in touch with Halford. The corresponding between the two anglers resulted in 1890 in Halford sending Gordon 48 dry flies.

However these flies were tied with the slower English chalk streams in mind. Gordon adapted the English dry flies to suit the faster waters of the Catskills. The Quill Gordon, Gordon's trademark pattern, with a rooster hackle and wood duck wing started the Catskill (and modern) dry fly tradition.

So at one time this bare shank behind the hook eye became the hallmark of Catskill dry flies. Gordon's flies don't seem to have the bare shank, but Herman Christian who was a close friend of Gordon seems he tied his flies with a bare shank.

Christian by the way never saw Theodore Gordon tie a fly. In an interview in 1950 in the Angler's Club bulletin (New York) Herman Christian denies that Gordon taught Rube Cross to tieRoy Steenrod, the only person known to have learned to tie flies from Gordon, tied his flies alternated with and without a bare shank. Cross tied most of his flies with a bare shank but sometimes even he tied flies without them.

So somewhere around the time of Steenrod, Christian and Cross this idea of bare shank was introduced. The search continues...



Update 26 Jan 2022:
Another picture from someone who went through two old Wheatley swing-leaf boxes from the period of the 1910s-1950s. 

"One was a brown japanned box from Gordon's time. Every fly that had tippet residue was tied with a Turle knot..."



















































































Update 18 Jan 2022:
In this article about Theodore Gordon by John McDonald mentions about "Bits of leader gut still clung to some flies, snipped close to the hook eyes and revealing that Gordon used a Turle knot...".

The big news today is a Quill Gordon tied by Roy Steenrod was shown with what appears to be the remnants of a turle knot behind the hook eye. It's probably the first time the world has seen such evidence of the reason behind the 'clean neck'.




































01 October 2021

The endless hours of making an illustration

Illustrations of wildlife looks so amazing but what is even more amazing is the time that needs to be put into making it.