Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Salmon Video - Check this One Out - Fly Fishing for Fall Chinook

This is a video I made several day back from a trip I took with my good buddy Ethan Nickel (owner of Ethan Nickel Outfitters) and friend Alia Hjorth (also Ethan's Fiance) in the fall of 2011. So this is not a current fishing report at all, but a video for you to sit back and enjoy of some really killer fishing we experienced.

We were targeting Fall Chinook Salmon coming right out of the tidewater. Fishing was pretty good out there, with several fish hooked up both days we fished. We were fishing with the standard Chinook Salmon tidewater outfits, with 10wts rigged with intermediate running lines and 28' shooting heads ranging from intermediate to Type II in density. We fished long leaders with 20# Mirage tippet and Clousers Minnows dressed with saltwater hooks and lighter dumbell eyes. You would cast out, count down while your fy line sank down, and then slowly stripped (long pulls more than strips) your line back. Every once in a while you would get a devastatingly crushing take, and it was fish on!! It was a blast out there!

Check out this video below:

Some Winter Steelhead Pics

Approaching landing mode.....
Mr. Steelhead showing us his boy colors.....
This hatchery hen hung out with a sea lion or seal in tidewater.....
This buck gave a really hard battle before yielding for a quick photo.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Some Cold Snap Winter Steelheading Pics



Loading the rod up for the cast....
Setting up for that next two handed cast....
Hefty Winter Steelhead Buck displaying its river colors....
Ice Crystals growing from the bedrock along the river's edge....
Cauliflower Mushroom
Cold water offers up this hen....
Misty ice fog burning off....
Frost lined ferns.....
Winter steelhead are typically more fun to play with when they have one of these.....
On tight....
Bycatch Sea Run Cutthroat trout....

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Salmon Fly Fishing Video - Check It Out!

This video is from a fishing trip Nikki and I took this past fall. We planned our trip literally almost a year ago, and somehow the dates totally panned out with really good fishing for fall Chinook Salmon. We also did some mushroom hunting for King Boletes and we scored finding them as well. All in all a wonderfully productive and relaxing three day trip at the coast with relatively nice weather too. Enjoy the video!!

Click onto video below to view:

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Carp'N the PDX Flats - Video

With the recent rains blowing the rivers out in the PDX area, I am suffering from a case of "cabin fever". I was supposed to be out on the river both yesterday and today, but the rising waters on the river I was heading to kept me off. Times like this make me dream of warm weather and how nice it would be to be fly fishing close to Portland in search of carp in the flats within driving distance of the city.

Click on the video below so you can get a taste of some warm weather fly fishing near the PDX area:

Switch Rods & Winter Steelheading


Chrome Bright "One Salt" Winter Steelhead fell to a dead drifted Glo-Bug on Switch Rod
With all of the popularity with two handed fly rods nowadays, many people are asking about switch rods. I have put up a video lower down in this post with some clips of switch rods being used for winter steelhead fly fishing. For smaller to medium sized streams with tight cover, there is not a better rod to be using while fishing for anadromous species like steelhead and salmon. The versatility of the switch rod is amazing, where you can fish a huge variety of fly lines on one rod to effectively fish with varying presentations.
Orvis Access Switch Rod and Mirage Reel with Airflo's 480 Grain Skagit Switch head
If you take the larger longer counterpart "the Spey Rod", you get the ultimate tool for swinging flies. You can cast far easily, and you can handle your line like a champ with major line mending ability. On the flip side, you have a tool that can swing flies better than any fly rod made, but you have a terrible nymphing rod, and I just feel like dead drifting flies under an indicator on a Spey rod is sacrilegious. Skagit heads with slabs of  level sinking line (like T-14) attached off of it are the norm for winter steelhead fly fishing with a Spey rod. When you want to get into nymph fishing with a Spey rod; you may get some funny looks from other anglers. The only analogy I can come up with to compare would be trying to "Hot Dog" surf (shred and do tricks) with a long board. You just don't do it! Spey rods are simply too awkward to effectively nymph with!
Orvis Helios Switch Rod and Mirage Reel
The single handed rod for steelhead fly fishing is typically a 10' long rod and often a 7wt or 8wt for the line weight designation. If you want to swing flies effectively for winter steelhead on this setup; you will have to cast big 28' shooting heads, and the lack of back casting lanes in tight covered coastal streams can make that situation a nightmare. Those big shooting heads are about the only way you can achieve the depths of a two handed rod's sink tip line throwing abilities, but they are cumbersome to cast at the least. If you want to dead drift flies under a strike indicator like a Thingamabobber, then you can fish an Orvis Salmon/Steelhead Taper with a long belly and long rear taper. That can turn over your flies, and you can handle your line relatively well from far distances. The problem is that you have to be good at casting your single handed fly rod, and many anglers only get to fish here and there; so getting good enough to proficiently cast over 40' is often lacking. The average every day angler has trouble casting over 40' on a single handed fly rod, and many spots you want to probe your flies through require an over 40' cast. This is where "Switch Rods" are an amazing compromise for those looking to get into the ultimate outfit for fly fishing for winter steelhead, or year round steelheading for that matter.
Click on Video Below:
Switch rods can fish really well for both the swinging and nymphing/dead drifting presentations for steelhead fly fishing. They can function with a variety of fly line tapers on them, and they often throw many fly line tapers with ease. On my own personal switch rods, I throw Skagit Switch heads, Skagit Intermediate heads, Orvis Switch lines, a Speydicator, Orvis Salmon/Steelhead Tapers, 28' Shooting heads, and even a few more tapers not mentioned. I typically go steelhead fishing with two spools for my Mirage reel; with one spool holding a Skagit Switch Head, and the other spool strung with a Orvis Switch Line. I can go back and forth between swinging flies with a Skagit Head attached to varying lengths and densities of T-8 to T-14, or I can nymph/dead drift flies under a Thingamabobber with my Orvis Switch Line. The rod can fish like a Spey rod while I am swinging flies, and I can fish it either like a single handed rod or a hybridized spey/single handed rod for my nymph/dead drift fishing. I have taken my 6wt switch rod out rigged with an 8wt Salmon/Steelhead Taper (single hand fly line), and it fishes really well. It does not "spey fish" as well as the Switch Line, but you always will have pros and cons with every fly line to rod match up. I can even throw those 28' single handed shooting heads  (while fishing for Fall salmon or rockfishing in the saltwater), and the switch rod does a great job handling them.
Switch Rods make fly fishing in tight cover with little back cast room very enjoyable!
 Years ago when I had a fly shop, I would suggest people get a 10' 7wt or 8wt, and then a Spey Rod as a second rod. Now I am bold to tell someone to start with a switch rod as your first steelhead outfit, and then build up your extra spool/fly line arsenal to fit the niches of your fishing presentations. You can then have a rod that swings flies and nymphs very well with the given conditions; so you can effectively be "In the Zone" where the CHROMERS are hanging out!

Tight Lines to All!!!