Showing posts with label classsics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label classsics. Show all posts

January 12, 2011

Postmodern Soft Hackles

The postmodern take on the classic soft hackle pattern Partridge and Orange, et al.

grouse soft hackles
Clockwerk Orange:
Hook: Mustad 3906, Size 8
Thread: 6/0 UNI, Black
Body: Danville 4 Strand Rayon Floss, Orange
Thorax: Roughfisher's Seal Sub Dub, Peacock Poison
Hackle: Ruffed Grouse Body Feather
Head: 3.8mm Tungsten Bead

grouse and orange
grouse and yellow
grouse and green
Oh bliss! Bliss and heaven! Oh, it was gorgeousness and gorgeousity made flesh. It was like a bird of rarest-spun heaven metal or like silvery wine flowing in a spaceship, gravity all nonsense now. As I slooshied, I knew such lovely pictures!

January 10, 2011

Copper Johnsons

Look what I found, a bargain basement score of Holiday Copper Johns, in fancy Christmas colors. The price is always right after the holidays. I guess the price is always right if you tie them yourself....

Copper John
Copper John
Copper John
Copper John
Copper John

December 3, 2010

the challenge

I was presented with a simple task the other week, tie up some trout flies. With a bit of apprehension, I dished out my take on a few adopted trout patterns that have made their way into my day box over the years, and called it good. Classics like brassies, scuds, caddis pupa nymphs, and tungsten laced death magnets like the possie bugger are all relevant patterns no matter what species of fish you pursue. Just about any fish will take these patterns if presented properly. How do I know this? Because I've caught monster pike on size 12 scuds before, that's why. These patterns are not all that difficult to tie either, but when presented with the order of producing trout flies, the task all of a sudden seemed formidable.

Just about everyone who starts out fly tying will typically begin with tying simple patterns like hare's ear nymphs or pheasant tail nymphs, but trout flies nonetheless. I was no different, in fact many of my flies for roughfish are basically bastardized trout nymphs on steroids, tied on extra heavy hooks. So it's not the difficulty that certain patterns present either, though tying in parachute posts on size 20 midge patterns certainly are not my forté. Tying commercially, or for that matter, tying 12 dozen flies of a single pattern in a single color in a single size will pretty much curb your anxiety about using unfamiliar materials or techniques. Repetition is a handy trick for gaining confidence and consistency behind the vise. Rather, my angst was likely deep rooted in the fact that by tying a trout pattern, there was a high likelihood that I would have to follow a strict recipe and stick to it.

brassiesThe Brassie. A classic midge pattern for the ages. In copper and hot orange, laced with purple peacock herl, tied on a Mustad C67S 2X heavy 3X short size 12 scud hook.


One thing that I've observed after spending five seasons behind the vise experimenting with roughfish patterns, is that I've begun to become a bit of an impressionist when it comes to my fly development. It was a branch that started not long after learning to tie. I learned all the basics and skills necessary to guide me through filling a generic trout box, from tying elk hair caddis, to PT nymphs, to CDC emerger patterns, to PMDs and trico poly spinners. Perhaps it was boredom, or simply lacking the discipline to hone my craft and further develop more advanced tying techniques common with tying dry flies for trout. Likely, the lack of interest and proximity of solid dry fly water for trout is what helped fork that branch so early on. The absence of necessity certainly wasn't enough incentive for me to continue on with more advanced dry fly patterns, so naturally I delved deeper and deeper into the nymph underworld. As they say, "once you go nymph, you never go back".

Back to the challenge at hand; I'm not proposing that I tie up a production run of a fleet of Parachute Adams, there's still no need or interest on my part for dry flies. A good start, however, would be to perhaps look at my objectives at the vise for a bit and blast through a few nymph patterns and actually follow someone's recipe. Overcoming the urge to simplify, adapt or substitute is the easy way out, and you don't improve your tying skills by copping out. Embrace the challenge. Seize the opportunity to improve. Tie better flies.


Look for a few more traditional patterns over the coming winter season. Should be an interesting ride.

December 2, 2010

Throwing out some copper

Copper Johns.

copper johns
Tied on Mustad R90 4X heavy hooks. Ultra Wire body, Peacock Posion dubbed thorax, and either a purple peacock herl or pearl mylar wingcase. A heavy dubbed thorax was substituted for the partridge/hackle legs.

indigo
copper
Simple but deadly.

May 23, 2010

Squirrel Pelt

In a classic move in search of some squirrel hides for making dubbing, I stumble across the Squirrel Pelt. Behold Natures' glory, the Ape Drape is back and in full force. Gotta love a good Kentucky Waterfall when you see one.

Squirrel Pelt
Image courtesy of MulletJunky.com
John Montana has spoiled me in more ways than one. Not only has he exposed me to big, sight fishable carp, but he also turned me on to squirrel dubbing as well. Sure I came up with a pretty bitchin' substitute, but it just wasn't the same. Now I'm lusting after violent tailers and spikey squirrel dub. I'm damaged goods.

fox squirrel
I'll be picking up a few squirrel skins from Coffin Creek Furs. High on the list are the #3 Grade gray squirrel skins at $0.80 a piece. This is the brownliner's seal, and they come a dime a dozen. It's damn near open season on these critters. I'm gonna stock up on them sumbitches and get busy dyeing; rust, olive, black, yellow, blue. I'll be picking up some Pine and Fox Squirrel skins too; I'm gonna run the whole gamut. I've got a bunch of different concoctions cooking up in my head and it's about to get heavy. Think spectral. Alchemy in progress.

Look out there little fella, cause this roughfisher is a gunnin' for you.

January 12, 2010

Classics: Tom Dickson Interview

Recent acquisitions of the roughfish bible Fishing for Buffalo, by Tom Dickson and Rob Buffler, have generated a series of blog posts and fishing message board threads hitting the interwebs. Already hallowed by legions of hardcore roughfish anglers everywhere, a third edition of the book was reprinted in 2009 by the University of Minnesota Press. Roughfisher.com was selected to receive a copy of the new printing for review, but even more fortunate, we were able to sit down with co-author Tom Dickson for an exclusive interview. Not worthy of drifting off into the annals of cyberspace to collect virtual dust, roughfisher.com would like to dig back into the archives and share our interview with Mr. Dickson from June of 2009, discussing the finer points of being a roughfisherman. Enjoy:


the roughfisher Jolly Roger

[roughfisher] Fishing for Buffalo is considered the bible for many of us roughfisherman, and has long been out of print. For many newcomers to the sport, finding copies of the book have been becoming harder and harder to come by, even amongst online marketplaces like amazon and ebay. It was a relief to many when a second printing was announced by the University of Minnesota Press. How did the genesis for a second printing come about?

[Dickson] University of Minnesota Press had long wanted to reprint Fishing for Buffalo, which had been out of print since the early 1990s. From what I understand, it decided to print the new edition to piggyback off media attention coming from The Great Minnesota Fish Book.

[roughfisher] Roughfish are typically referred to in a negative connotation; the common carp often overshadowing other roughfish species due to their appearance and reputation. Overcoming the tradition of assumption and ignorance passed down from generation to generation can be a daunting task to the roughfisher. Any advice on how to help dispel the misconceptions associated with these oft maligned fish?

[Dickson] I worked as an information officer with the Minnesota DNR for 14 years and had what many might consider the best opportunities anyone could have to influence public attitudes toward roughfish. Among my duties was to write articles for the Minnesota Conservation Volunteer, coordinate the fishing regulations, and put out a newspaper called Fish & Wildlife Today. I think I had very little effect, because the public bias against roughfish is so deeply held. Still, I think roughfish anglers can make incremental gains. Sites like roughfisher.com and roughfish.com are helping spread the word that there is a world of great fishing out there in addition to that provided by walleyes, bass, and crappies.

[roughfisher] With the recent press in the Wall Street Journal and sudden influx of urban fly fishing blogs, there has been a lot of buzz lately in the fly fishing community with regards to “brownlining”. Have you noticed any increase in fly anglers pursuing non-traditional species like roughfish? What is your thought on this trend and shift away from traditional coldwater fisheries?

[Dickson] I’ve noticed some increase but not a lot. In Montana, where I now live, a June catfishing tournament on the warmwater Milk River (which flows southeast from Alberta) has drawn 60 teams. That’s unheard of in this trout-obsessed state. As for brownlining, I’m intrigued in the concept, which isn’t especially new (Ian Frasier has been writing about urban fishing for decades). I like the idea of people learning to fish in whatever environment they are in, whether it’s pristine or polluted. And I like the attention being paid to carp, catfish, and other species that can survive in degraded rivers and streams. But a few things trouble me about brownlining. One is the misconception that all urban waters are trashed, when in fact many are quite clean, the Mississippi in the Twin Cities being one example. That’s due to the Clean Water Act and other measures taken in the 1980s and ‘90s. I’m also concerned that by embracing the new gonzo Road Warrior, post-apocalypse attitude toward fishing in degraded, even toxic waters, anglers stop becoming advocates for clean water. Much of brownlining is driven by the fact that people no longer need to—or even want to—eat fish. I think that’s a shame.

[roughfisher] Do you believe this shift is due to depleting coldwater fish stocks and the degradation of our rivers and streams, a case of tough economic conditions and the need to fish locally, or a subgroup of adventurous anglers looking for the next frontier to pioneer? Or all three?

[Dickson] I don’t think coldwater stocks are being degraded, at least not in Montana and Minnesota. And many coolwater rivers are cleaner than they’ve been in decades, again thanks to the Clean Water Act. When I was a kid, raw sewage flowed into the Mississippi River in the Twin Cities and the river contained only carp and fathead minnows. Today I would eat any fish from that river, and I think at last count biologists had tallied, what, 40 species there?

I think the brownliners are picking up where Fishing for Buffalo left off. Rob Buffler and I sort of introduced the idea of “embracing the unembracable.” That didn’t really catch on when the book came out in 1989, but a younger generation of angler now considers that cool. I think in large part it has to do with rejecting Dad’s and Uncle Ed’s fishing ethic.

[roughfisher] When did you get your start fly fishing?

[Dickson] When I graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1982 I lucked out and landed a job with a hunting and fishing magazine in Minneapolis called Fins and Feathers. An editor there, Shawn Perich (now a writer and publisher in Hovland, Minnesota), taught me the basics of fly fishing. A few years later, I met Rob Buffler, who was then and continues to be the most gifted fly angler I know. We fished a lot in the late 1980s for trout in southeastern Minnesota, and I learned a lot from him. He now lives in Alberta and is director of the Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative. I fished with him last October on the Bow River and he continues to amaze me with his fly fishing prowess.

[roughfisher] When did you catch your first roughfish?

[Dickson] It was in 1987. I was fishing for trout in a deep pool in the Middle Branch of the Whitewater River. The fish was a dandy white sucker

[roughfisher] Can you tell us about the defining moment when you decided to intentionally pursue roughfish on the fly?

[Dickson] It wasn’t so much a defining moment as a gradual realization by me and Rob in the later 1980s that we could continue to fly fish even after trout fishing shut down in midsummer due to warm temperatures. We just wanted to keep fishing, but once trout streams hit 72 degrees or so, the fish become lethargic. So we shifted gears and moved to the Mississippi and other cool-water rivers and began trying for channel cats, which you can fly fish for pretty much the same as for brown trout.

[roughfisher] Do you have any particular favorite fly patterns for roughfish that you’re willing to share?

[Dickson] I have done best over the years with a black Woolly Bugger.

[roughfisher] The Achilles Heel: Is there an elusive species of roughfish that isn’t on your lifelist yet?

[Dickson] I’ve never caught a gar on a fly. I’d love to do that someday. I’d also like to catch a shovelnose sturgeon. I think sturgeon are pretty cool.

[roughfisher] Discuss your most embarrassing moment while roughfishing; feel free to be candid.

[Dickson] In 1992 I caught what was then the world record bowfin, fly rod 4-pound tippet category. No one had ever entered a fish in that category, so I won by default. I received a giant jacket patch from the Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame in Hayward, Wisconsin and sewed it on the back of my fly vest. One day I was fishing steelhead on the Brule in Wisconsin and a fellow angler sidled up and asked about the patch. Was it a steelhead? He asked. I replied that no it was a “dogfish,” and he burst out laughing. I was sort of embarrassed by that. But then again, I had a world record and he didn’t.

[roughfisher] What’s next for you? Any new fishing projects in the works?

[Dickson] I’ve been pretty busy this year promoting The Great Minnesota Fish Book. That’s been real fun. There’s been talk of me doing a similar book for Wisconsin. We’ll have to see.

[roughfisher] What’s your favorite roughfish and why?

[Dickson] That would be the carp. It’s big, strong, and abundant. I can’t tell you how many anglers I’ve met over the years who, when they hear I fish for carp, admit that one of the greatest thrills of their angling life was tying into a big hoselips. I mean, for most spin-anglers, there’s really no need to use their drag on most game fish. A carp is a fish that requires a good drag.

Another is the American eel, and only because its spawning migration is so impossibly bizarre. I’ve never caught one, though I did eat one once. A friend brought it up from the Mississippi when I lived on St. Paul’s West Side. I grilled it. Delicious.


Thanks again to Tom for sharing his time and thoughts with us!


Tom Dickson has been editor of Montana Outdoors since 2002, and previously served as an Information Officer for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources for 14 years. The award winning author has written for Fly Fisherman, National Wildlife, Sporting Classics and other publications, the author of The Great Minnesota Fish Book, and co author of the underground classic, Fishing for Buffalo. Tom resides in Helena, Montana.


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