A while back I was contacted by Scott Hunter, a young entrepreneur with a line of rock climbing bags and packs about the possibility of him incorporating my illustrations in a new product line of T-shirts and Hoodies. Well, after a few phone calls that convinced me of Scott’s good character and business savvy, I agreed to his plan and I’m proud to say that the products are now available AND THEY LOOK GREAT!
We narrowed the illustrations down to four…my Snake River Cutthroat, the Cherokee Rainbow, the SoHo Brown and the Brookie.
The 100% organic t-shirts are made using 4.5oz. premium ring-spun organic American cotton, earth friendly dyes, and each design comes in a variety of colors that really complement the individual trout. The water-based ink prints appear bold and will not fade as the shirt ages and the tags are removable for lasting comfort, and all shirts are preshrunk.
The hoodies are made with material that’s woven using pill-resistant Air Jet yarns, with just the right blend of cotton and poly fiber to keep it comfortable but sturdy. The manufacturing is focused on building a shirt to last, with double needle stitching on the hood, pocket, neckline, shoulders, armholes, cuffs and bottom band. Each 80/20 shirt has a two-ply hood for added comfort. And like the t-shirts, each design comes in a variety of colors.
So there you have it. Check out the Vedavoo website and place your orders!
Here’s a link to the VEDAVOO website. Link to the Shopping page and as you scroll around you'll see the trout. Or you can visit my main web site to view details and ordering information. Clearwater Memories Vedavoo Page.
HAPPY SHOPPING!
Friday, April 1, 2011
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Sight Fishing
By definition, sight fishing requires the need for pretty good eyesight. Unfortunately, mine is not – especially when it comes to the subject at hand. Having fished the streams of the Ozarks for so many years…streams where the fish really stand out because of the whitish, flint rock stream base, I have a hard time seeing the fish here in the southeast. Back in the Ozarks any casual observer, even my wife, sees them at first glance. Not so on my new home waters.
Back in the day if the fishing was poor I could narrow down the reasons.
The question, “Do you think there are any fish in here?” was never stated. We knew without a doubt the answer to that question…why they weren’t biting was the mystery. But here in the Blue Ridge, with such an assortment of rock sizes in so many shades of brown, blue, red and black, spotting fish is a problem for me and an unproductive day usually elicits the above referenced question. All too often I never really know if I’m casting over barren water or not.
Fishing with Ryan can be frustrating as he stands next to me pointing at fish I can’t see. “He’s right there Alan. Cast a little to the left and you’ll get him.” So I cast a little to the left (of what?) and nothing happens. I wonder if there is a fish there or not, and I’m certain that Mr. Harman is just trying to make me look bad. After all, “The fish is right there! Any fool can see it! Why can’t you catch it! You’re either blind or haven’t got a clue in what you are doing!” Of course being the gentleman he is, he would never talk like that…but I know he’s thinking it. And he’s right on all counts.
Phrases like, “There must be five fish in there…all nice ones.” never pass my lips, but Ryan says it all the time. And then he goes on to catch a few of them. He can be such a show-off. I can only hope that given enough days on these waters I might be able to spot them too and attain just a bit of “show-off” potential myself. In the meantime, I’ll just continue casting to phantom fish…that is, until I find a fishing partner that’s older than I am…someone that suffers from presbyopia, floaters, dry eyes, cataracts, glaucoma, retinal disorders and conjunctivitis – all at the same time.
When I find that old codger I’ll know just what to say…”Can’t you see them? There’s three nice rainbows – no, one’s a brook – right in front of you!” That or I’ll start fishing exclusively for the Incredibly Nervous Neon Trout…the Palomino.
On hands and knees you peek over the streamside brush to check out the pool. Rising above the weeds, what do you see in the water but a large butter yellow neon trout shouting, “Look at me!”
We’ve all been there and seen that. The Palomino trout…the most nervous fish in the stream. Everyone sees him and no one can pass up the chance to catch him. Your average rainbow in your average stream might go for days undetected (even by the likes of Ryan) and unexposed to the contents of your fly box. Not the Palomino. Everyone tries everything in an attempt to land him. I’m certain that these poor trout have seen thousands of more flies than their less conspicuous cousins. On a heavily fished stream I doubt that he gets any rest at all.
In pangs of hunger he nervously views everything that drifts by, so nervous that he won’t even glance sideways for fear of being tempted…hoping that just a few times a day one of the morsels in the current will be edible. Reminds me of Don Knott’s first character of note, “The Nervous Man,” as seen on the Steve Allen Show way back when I could see the television. If a Palomino could take on a human role, that would be it.
Back in the day if the fishing was poor I could narrow down the reasons.
The question, “Do you think there are any fish in here?” was never stated. We knew without a doubt the answer to that question…why they weren’t biting was the mystery. But here in the Blue Ridge, with such an assortment of rock sizes in so many shades of brown, blue, red and black, spotting fish is a problem for me and an unproductive day usually elicits the above referenced question. All too often I never really know if I’m casting over barren water or not.
Fishing with Ryan can be frustrating as he stands next to me pointing at fish I can’t see. “He’s right there Alan. Cast a little to the left and you’ll get him.” So I cast a little to the left (of what?) and nothing happens. I wonder if there is a fish there or not, and I’m certain that Mr. Harman is just trying to make me look bad. After all, “The fish is right there! Any fool can see it! Why can’t you catch it! You’re either blind or haven’t got a clue in what you are doing!” Of course being the gentleman he is, he would never talk like that…but I know he’s thinking it. And he’s right on all counts.
Phrases like, “There must be five fish in there…all nice ones.” never pass my lips, but Ryan says it all the time. And then he goes on to catch a few of them. He can be such a show-off. I can only hope that given enough days on these waters I might be able to spot them too and attain just a bit of “show-off” potential myself. In the meantime, I’ll just continue casting to phantom fish…that is, until I find a fishing partner that’s older than I am…someone that suffers from presbyopia, floaters, dry eyes, cataracts, glaucoma, retinal disorders and conjunctivitis – all at the same time.
When I find that old codger I’ll know just what to say…”Can’t you see them? There’s three nice rainbows – no, one’s a brook – right in front of you!” That or I’ll start fishing exclusively for the Incredibly Nervous Neon Trout…the Palomino.
On hands and knees you peek over the streamside brush to check out the pool. Rising above the weeds, what do you see in the water but a large butter yellow neon trout shouting, “Look at me!”
We’ve all been there and seen that. The Palomino trout…the most nervous fish in the stream. Everyone sees him and no one can pass up the chance to catch him. Your average rainbow in your average stream might go for days undetected (even by the likes of Ryan) and unexposed to the contents of your fly box. Not the Palomino. Everyone tries everything in an attempt to land him. I’m certain that these poor trout have seen thousands of more flies than their less conspicuous cousins. On a heavily fished stream I doubt that he gets any rest at all.
In pangs of hunger he nervously views everything that drifts by, so nervous that he won’t even glance sideways for fear of being tempted…hoping that just a few times a day one of the morsels in the current will be edible. Reminds me of Don Knott’s first character of note, “The Nervous Man,” as seen on the Steve Allen Show way back when I could see the television. If a Palomino could take on a human role, that would be it.
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Woe is me
My apologies to one and all. To all of you that have been longing in to see picures of giant trout caught by your humble correspondent...sorry. To those that have logged in to read my amazingly insightful theorizing on the sport we love...double sorry. And to the few that jump on here to catch a glimpse of my latest illustrations...triple sorry. But I've been busy.
Busy learning my way around TU and doing all I can to get the Veterans Service Program off the ground. Yes, I've found time to go fishing - twice. Skunked both times. On Christmas, I and my son-in-law Chad took grandson Grant for a boat ride on one of the little lakes at Callaway Gardens. With great hopes of catching a few of the monster trout they stock each winter, we didnt get a bite. Then two weekends ago Shirley and I met up with our Arkansas friends, Luann and Jerry, for a long-planned day of fishing Nacoochee Bend on the Chattahoochee River in north Georgia. Same story...no hoochee coochee on the Chattahoochee. And I blame it all on John Bass and Billy Davis.
The two of them teamed up to get me a fantastic Christmas present - a large, make that very large - Fisknat landing net. The thing is beautiful, and each time I've looked at it I've envisioned landing the fish it was made for. Prior to both of these recent outings - since receiving the net - I spent countless hours daydreaming of the fish it would land, just knowing that with my superior skill level and this marvelous new gift it was fait accompli. Well, not only will I not take that particular net on my next outing...I wont be taking a net at all. Maybe then I can catch something. Kidding of course. I can't wait to fill that big ol' net with a fish that does it justice. If he hasn't filled his tummy on parr, maybe I'll catch one like this...
Busy learning my way around TU and doing all I can to get the Veterans Service Program off the ground. Yes, I've found time to go fishing - twice. Skunked both times. On Christmas, I and my son-in-law Chad took grandson Grant for a boat ride on one of the little lakes at Callaway Gardens. With great hopes of catching a few of the monster trout they stock each winter, we didnt get a bite. Then two weekends ago Shirley and I met up with our Arkansas friends, Luann and Jerry, for a long-planned day of fishing Nacoochee Bend on the Chattahoochee River in north Georgia. Same story...no hoochee coochee on the Chattahoochee. And I blame it all on John Bass and Billy Davis.
The two of them teamed up to get me a fantastic Christmas present - a large, make that very large - Fisknat landing net. The thing is beautiful, and each time I've looked at it I've envisioned landing the fish it was made for. Prior to both of these recent outings - since receiving the net - I spent countless hours daydreaming of the fish it would land, just knowing that with my superior skill level and this marvelous new gift it was fait accompli. Well, not only will I not take that particular net on my next outing...I wont be taking a net at all. Maybe then I can catch something. Kidding of course. I can't wait to fill that big ol' net with a fish that does it justice. If he hasn't filled his tummy on parr, maybe I'll catch one like this...
I know, this one is a little "cartoonish" but hey...It was a fun way to spend a Sunday afternoon! Attitude. It's all about attitude.
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
TU's Veterans Service Program Dinner
To introduce the Veterans Service Program and to kick off our fundraising, Trout Unlimited is hosting a dinner in Washington, DC on March 3, 2001. As you can read in the announcement, the objective of this program is to expand and deepen TU’s grassroots involvement with veteran rehabilitation projects in watersheds across the country. Trout Unlimited has been actively involved with Project Healing Waters since its beginning, just as it has with other important organizations, but with the inception of this program we hope to expand our involvement exponentially.
Today there are more than 3,250,000 veterans in the United States with a service connected disability, and of those, nearly 1,000,000 are from the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan. With your help we will engage our network of volunteers to introduce the therapeutic value of the sport we love to veterans nationwide. We will be teaching the basics of fly casting and fly tying, and providing an introduction to our conservation work…leading to many on-stream outings throughout the country.
If you are unable to attend but wish to support the program with a contribution please let me know.
Saturday, December 18, 2010
My Friend
I thought I’d better get fully up to speed regarding the latest happenings at Project Healing Waters this evening, so I logged onto their site’s homepage, and what do I see but a story about one of my favorite people on the planet.
Back in March of ‘09, before I was even aware of Project Healing Waters, I weaseled my way into a fishing trip with my boss and his son to Big Cedar Creek up in Virginia. As we were walking upstream we passed some folks fishing along one of the prettier stretches of the creek. There was a guy fishing from a wheelchair and there was a film crew recording the action. I thought no more about it as we went on our way. Little did I know that the guy in the wheelchair and the guy supervising the filming would have such an impact on my life.
The guy in the wheel chair was John Bass, and the fellow doing the filming was Curtis Fleming. Regular readers of this blog know them well, and I have been honored to know them even better. In fact, just last week I encouraged everyone to vote for Curtis and his show Fly Rod Chronicles for the Sportsman Channel awards, and the week before that, my posting entitled “Thanks” talked a lot about John.
But this isn’t about my friend Curtis, it’s about John. John Bass has just received the Patriot Award, Project Healing Waters’ highest honor, for his sustained support of PHW’s mission and activities, and no one – I mean no one – is more deserving. Congratulations John!
Here’s a link to the story… http://www.projecthealingwaters.org/html/announcements/bass.html
Check out the smile on John’s face as our leader, Ed Nicholson, makes the presentation. I have rarely seen John without that same smile…especially when one of the vets he has introduced our sport to is landing a big one.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
NEW JOB at TU!
I am pleased and proud to announce that I have accepted the position of Veterans Service Partnership Coordinator with Trout Unlimited. I will officially start the position on January 3rd. This once in a lifetime opportunity will allow me to put my passion for our nation's heroes to good use as TU seeks to further its involvement and participation with disabled veterans across the nation. Please wish me luck, but more importantly, do something good for a veteran today! We owe them more than we can ever repay.
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
FLY ROD CHRONICLES
HOLY COW! My good buddy Curtis Fleming and his show, Fly Rod Chronicles, have advanced to finals of the 2010 Sportsman Channel Viewer Choice Awards for Best Fishing Show and Favorite Personality. Final round voting has started...so help me make Curtis' head explode by going to the link below and casting your vote! He deserves it... REALLY!
http://www.votesportsman.com/
http://www.votesportsman.com/
Saturday, December 4, 2010
The Demise of Elbert Shostack

The man was a fine fisherman. Whether casting stink bait at catfish; daredevil’s at muskies or delicately depositing a size 22 Quill Gordon in the feeding lane of a wary brown trout, Elbert Shostack had few equals. Today Elbert Shostack is a babbling idiot, and this is his story.
Elbert’s path to insanity began early in life. The only son of Elizabeth and Oscar was born into a world of big sisters. He had six of them, and in no time at all he hated all of The Six. Oh, how he wished for a little brother, but it wasn’t to be. Pray as he might, mom and dad were finished with procreation. After all, with six beautiful and talented daughters, why keep going?
Oscar was an actuary for the Allied Insurance Company, and his idea of a good time was sitting in his easy chair and humming along with Mitch Miller, as Mitch and his bouncing ball led the national sing-along throughout the sixties. Other than that, Oscar’s recreational needs were quite simple...entertaining The Six with Ogden Nash limericks and ridiculously stupid and unending knock-knock jokes as they worshiped at his feet...and spending his weekends building them doll houses. Elbert was lonely.
Sure, his mom doted on him, but as for his dad, Elbert made the conscious decision in 1962 to exchange him for Ted Trueblood. And the rest as they say is history. The chance discovery of a Field & Stream magazine accomplished through a brief friendship with Ricky Peters led to Elbert’s glory...and his downfall.
One of the neighborhood kids, Ricky had all the makings of a good friend until Elbert’s mom got a look at him. Ricky was known to go home only when starvation was imminent, meaning that either the catfish weren’t biting or the squirrel hunting was bad. Ricky’s skills as a 15 year old woodsman were legendary amongst his peers, and as he patiently explained to the younger Elbert, those skills were acquired through the study of Field & Stream and the writings of one Mr. Ted Trueblood. The problem was that Ricky’s only exposure to water came from wading the creek. Ricky didn’t bath, and the scabs and sores covering his appendages were enough to insure that he and Elbert’s friendship would be short-lived.
And so with the introductions made, Elbert’s discipleship to the guru of the great outdoors began. After convincing the old man that a monthly allowance in cash could easily be replaced by a subscription to the magazine, Elbert began his studies. The studies included everything from chasing Chukars through the sagebrush of Idaho to trout fishing the country’s hallowed waters, and as Elbert grew older and opportunities to put his book learning to use came more frequently, he found that in many if not all ways, he was indeed an honors student. Especially regarding trout fishing.
A solitary childhood led to his entry into adulthood, where he discovered to his family’s disappointment that he had no need of female companionship. Or anyone’s companionship for that matter. As others his age were planning families and establishing lucrative careers, Elbert stuck to his study of the classics. Earning advanced degrees in Stream Reading, Bug Identification, Line Mending and the Double Haul did not impress his family, and the constant cajoling phone calls from The Six did nothing but drive him further away.
And further away he went. There was no river too far, no hunt too extreme, no woodland challenge that he was not up to. The legend began in whispers around back country elk camps and traversed from the banks of the Mirimichi to the shores of Coeur d'Alene. Soon he was taking on the life of the gypsy...not so much from wanderlust, but more from the desire to escape the writers and fly fishing groupies that hounded his every move. The occasional article or TV spot recounting his exploits, though always questionably sourced, only served to fuel the legend and drive him further into the wilderness. Until one day on the Middle Fork of the Salmon, when his world turned upside down.
Elbert had packed in alone, arriving just after sunset. The outpost cabin used by fire patrols was well stocked and furnished...not that he’d be taking advantage of their provisions...he was there for the bed and nothing else. Well, he might use the cook stove and supply of wood for his customary fresh trout breakfast. Sleep came easy, but not before some reflection on his circumstances.
Elbert was in his early sixties by now. He had “been there and done that” like few before him. He thought of his long gone and distant mentor, Trueblood, and the adventures that he’d led him on. He thought of what many called missed opportunities...the lack of family and the nagging guilt that The Six had labored for years to burden him with...unsuccessfully. He smiled. Not just at the thought of solitude, but that he was experiencing the solitude in the Frank Church/River of No Return Wilderness, the magical wilderness that Trueblood had lobbied so hard to have established.
_______________________
Note: What follows is based on the one rambling interview the wizened and gray haired recluse granted me from his room at the Idaho Hospital for the Piscatorially Insane, so its accuracy is suspect and cannot be independently verified. The only thing known for certain is that Elbert Shostack never recovered.
_______________________
A trout, a crazed hen Cutthroat with supernatural powers - perhaps demonic powers - came to Elbert in a dream...or so he thought.
“I was casting one of them Wulff flies. A big heavy floater, when out of the depths comes the biggest damn trout I ever saw. With total abandon she charges the fly and danged if she didn’t jump clean out of the water and over the fly...puttin’ on a regular porpoise show. She clears the fly, circles around and stops dead in the water, and with a pair of bifocals stares at it...up close and personal.
“I reckon I was shocked, but nearly as much as I was when she reared up out of the water and points a pectoral fin straight at me and starts talkin’. Said she’d been waiting years for me and that now that I was here she was going to see to it that I never bothered a trout again.
“Well, I wasn’t going to take no crap from a fish, so I asked her to please get her self back in the water and we’ll get on with it. With that she slips back down under the deadfall and dares me to try her."
At this point in the story it must be said that Elbert was a prideful man. No, not an ego thing...otherwise he wouldn’t have hid himself for so many years...it was a pride sort of thing. Whether talking to trout or talking to himself, Elbert always had to win the argument. And to be challenged by a fish, well...
“So there I was, waist deep in the prettiest plunge pool you ever saw...talking to a trout. And not just any trout, but one to challenge the record books. A trout that had just dared me to catch her.”
Elbert had just seen that she wasn’t going to take the Wulff, so as he rummaged through his fly box looking for the biggest and ugliest thing he had, he was thinking tactics. He thought: big trout, big fly...it had always worked before. But obviously this was going to be different. To catch a fish that talks; a fish that even knew his name; a fish that had just shown him supernatural powers, was going to take all of the skills that he had acquired over the years. Elbert secured the largest and ugliest fly in his box, Howell’s Big Nasty, to his 3x tippet.
The cast was perfect. The drift carried it straight to the deadfall, and his nemesis, with no hesitation at all, took the fly and the battle was on. From one end of the pool to the other, she did all she could to defeat the fisherman. One powerful run led to two, then three. Wishing that he had a fighting butt on the 5 weight Sage, Elbert was weakening. As the fish hung in the current with his side to Elbert, there seemed to be little chance of moving her, but Elbert gave it his all. The Sage had to be near the breaking point, and the tippet, well even a 3x can only take so much.
Then the big fish started to move. Standing there at waters edge with his rod bent double, inch by inch Elbert was bringing her in. But as he reached for his net the fish went back to her supernatural ways. Suddenly the fish came up on her tail and started crabbing backwards across the pool. Just as Elbert was about to be pulled in he was hit squarely in the middle of his forehead by the fly. The long shanked hook, though obviously not firmly secured in the fish’s mouth just moments ago, was now firmly secured as a fashion statement in Elbert’s brow...right between his eyes.
The big fish laughed. She not only laughed...she insulted. She made fun of his skill, his technique and his name. She ridiculed his reputation as an angler and speculated that if he didn’t get off his ass and give it one more try he would forever be known as the guy that never learned a thing from Ted Trueblood.
Elbert was shakin’ mad. Sitting cross-eyed on the bank he watched the blood inch toward the tip of his nose and plotted his revenge. “No damned trout is gonna...”
Composing himself, Elbert rose to his feet with determination. He checked his line for abrasions and securely fastened a new fly to the line. With trembling hands he spent little time in selecting it. After all, the fish now seemed willing to take just about anything he presented.
And she did. With her normal gusto she slammed the offering and headed for the snag. But this time, rather than the head shaking frenzy of before, she just sulked. Then with a burst of energy she looked like she was trying to turn herself inside out. First spinning to the left then the right, and finally a series of frantic figure eights that turned the water to froth. The line went slack. How she did it without fingers Elbert couldn’t say, but when the water settled down and the fish rose slowly to the surface, there on her snout sat the fly...unattached to the tippet. The fish had untied the knot.
Then she slowly circled the pool with her head out of the water bouncing the fly like a miniature soccer ball on her nose. At the end of the lap she stopped in front of Elbert, flipped the fly high into the air and gobbled it down just before it hit the water.
From this point on the interview became a bit deranged. As he recounted the rest of the story his words made less and less sense. There were other battles with the fish...battles that apparently included the fish speaking at various times as each of The Six. There were battles with the fish imitating Mitch Miller and encouraging Elbert to sing along. There was even an attempt at seduction. The fish even managed to coach Elbert in Trueblood’s own voice, followed apparently by more ridicule. But Elbert never caught the fish.
According to a press report, Elbert Shostack was found a week later setting on the steps of the fire cabin. His face bloodied, his waders torn and his hands clutching what had been a fine fly rod, he mumbled something about a large fish and a story about Mitch Miller.
Somewhere deep in the Idaho mountains a large fish swims...or maybe not. A fish that bested the best of us...maybe. And somewhere in a lonely hospital room sits a defeated man. He stares blankly at a mirror and dreams of who knows what. He raises a wrinkled hand, a hand that had held many a fine fish, and brushes the long gray bangs from his forehead...revealing three of the prettiest flies you ever saw...and cries.
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Mike's Simple Shrimp
Here is the next fly in the series I did for the book Fly Fishing the Mid Atlantic. Each fly print will be 8 X 10 and printed on 100# Bristol Archival Paper, and will sell for $20 with FREE shipping.
This second one is Mike's Simple Shrimp.
(That border you see around the fly is there only to show how it will look when matted.)
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Thanks
It’s amazing that a trip that started out so badly could end up so well. Ten miles from Lebanon my windshield wipers lost their minds. What had been a monotonous swish, swish, swish became a violent struggle for dominance as each blade sought to overpower the other in a death match that ended with them wedged together in a teepee right before my eyes. Well, at least it wasn’t a pouring rain. The final ten miles involved periodic stops to clear the view but eventually I arrived for my third adventure on Big Cedar Creek.
John Bass had invited me to join him, Billy Davis and Shawn Dejean for three days of fishing on that marvelous piece of water in southwest Virginia. We were joined by John’s intrepid guide, Bill Nuckols, and one of our old buddies, John Flannigan. I arrived just after noon on Friday.
The guys were already fishing when I pulled up to the stream. John and Bill were plying the depths of the Sycamore Hole to no avail while Billy, who had been assigned to Shawn, was trying to teach the finer points of fly fishing to that crazy Cajun. “Billy, You got any more bait? I just lost mine in that there tree!” If you’ve ever seen the TV series, Swamp People, you’ve heard the accent. Shawn and John Bass go back a long ways, to circumstances that are still not clear to me, but just know that Shawn would have been much more at home catching thirteen foot gators than he was on a trout stream.
Another unexpected treat was the opportunity to meet Phil Balisle, (see photo below) a retired Admiral and current EVP of DRS Technologies and supporter of Project Healing Waters, who was down for a day of angling from his home in DC. Phil was kind enough to impart some of his extensive Big Cedar knowledge, which served me very well in the coming days.
I thought I had prepared well for the weekend. Remembering that the stones were just a bit slippery from my previous trips there, I had attached some lugs to the felt soles of an old pair of wading boots. The verdict is still out on the wisdom of that exercise, because as I had walked downstream to one of the lower pools for my first venture into the water, I immediately slipped and went in up to my chest. Off to a good start. Since I was there anyway, and fighting the temptation to go back to the car, I cast out my crawdad imitation and got an immediate strike. A few minutes later I beached one of the larger trout that I’ve ever caught. That guy completely wore me out…had me wishing for a fighting butt on my rod as he fought for survival in the swift current. He would have easily gone eight pounds.
OK…now I’ll go back to the car. One fish like that is enough to make my day…heck, it’s enough to make an entire season! Seeing that my line was tangled, I slung it back into the current to get it straightened and what happens, but the fishes twin brother jumps on it. Another five minutes of two fisted fighting and he too was in the net. Thus began the most amazing three days of fishing that I have ever experienced.
Saturday morning was cold. The temperature gauge in the car told me that it was 26 degrees when I arrived at the stream. Not a problem. Although I swore off winter fishing forever last year after a day on Duke’s Creek in the north Georgia mountains, after the two fish I caught yesterday I wasn’t about to lay out today.
As I dug into my gear bag I realized that there was a problem. Everything…gloves included…was frozen solid. Yes, there was a perfectly good heater in the Super 8, but my gear did not experience it for even a minute. I managed to get into the waders and the boots, but the gloves were a problem. Thirty minutes later, after running the car nearly out of gas, they were wearable. Note to self: Share the overnight heat with your gear.
I won’t bore you with a play by play of the days fishing (well, I will in a minute), but let me say that the day was magical. By three o’clock I had caught seven trout …all between eight and ten pounds. All except one were caught on a brownish Woolly that had two ostrich herl “pincers” trailing off the tail…what they called the “crawdad” pattern.
Late in the day I met up with John Bass and Bill Nuckles at the low water bridge. As long time followers of the blog know, John is the Regional Manager for Project Healing Waters and is somewhat limited in the waters that he can fish. John is wheel chair bound. He was casting downstream from the bridge. We shot the breeze for a few minutes and I mentioned to Bill that it was time for me to tie on the Nub Worm. I told him that on every outing I do my best to land a fish or two with it to honor its creator, my oldest and bestest buddy, Jerry “The Mad Cheese Scientist” Felts. Bill, who happens to be a bit of a purest when it comes to trout flies laughed when I showed him Jerry’s creation.
The Nub Worm |
I walked a few steps down the bridge and cast it upstream. Billy Davis, who was standing on the bank, told me that there was a nice fish in the area. Indeed there was. The trout gave his best imitation of a Great White slamming a hapless seal and took off for the headwaters of the creek with the Nub Worm firmly implanted in his massive jaw. We later measured his run and it was nothing less than 150 feet. He plowed through the water in a perfectly straight line, throwing a size-able wake behind him before stopping for a few head shakes and a top water pirouette or two.
By now, Bill had seen what was happening and came running with his net. With one expert stab…the fish was mine. Bill, who has landed many a trout on Big Cedar, estimated his weight at 12 pounds and snapped a photo of the proud angler before releasing the beauty for another day. It was the largest trout I have ever caught.
WOW |
Billy Davis with a nice Big Cedar Rainbow |
It is only fitting that it was Thanksgiving weekend. On Wednesday Shirley and I enjoyed the grandkids…along with a great meal prepared by our daughters. Thanks were given. And as Shirley had to work on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, she allowed me to have an unforgettable weekend away from home with the guys. Thanks were given. And as John Bass, through his friendship and generosity, had made the entire thing possible, thanks were given again.
And as God had blessed me with three unbelievable days to enjoy His creation and a ridiculous number of His creatures…just saying thanks seems so insufficient.
(Oh, and one other thing…that crusty old guide Bill Nuckols, asked me to tie up a few Nub Worms and mail them to him.)
Friday, November 19, 2010
Playin' Hooky
I got a call from Ryan asking if I could help out on Thursday. He had arranged to take some vets up to the West Fork of the French Broad for a day of fishing and as the plans were finalized he realized that he was short handed in the “guide” category. Told him I’d have to get back with him on that one.
Thursdays are work days around here, and business being slow as it is, taking off for a day of fishing is frowned upon. I pondered Tim’s reaction to my pending request. Ryan knows that a weekend outing will find me there with bells on, but a workday...its iffy.
Tim said OK, but he made it clear that he wasn’t doing it for me or Ryan...he was doing it for the vets. “Thanks Tim, I owe you one.”
After loading the car and scraping the windshield to remove a thin layer of frost I headed out on the ten minute drive to Davidson River Outfitters – our rendezvous point for the days activities. I was early of course and spent the time rummaging through their fly inventory as if I might actually buy something. The clerk was new to me and was unaware that a purchase was highly unlikely. I inspected their selection of fly boxes; I perused their waders and used their bathroom. I was getting antsy.
Finally I thought I’d better go back out to the car and get my gear ready. As I had already decided that I’d be using my 2 wt., I grabbed it from its bag and went to my vest to get the reel. No reel. Damn, where is it!
Then I remembered that I’d put it in my wader bag after the last outing. But where was the wader bag?
I had brought an extra rod and reel (my 5 wt.) just in case we needed it for one of the vets, so that would have taken care of the reel problem, but the REAL problem was that I had to have the waders. Back to the house.
Twenty minutes later I was back at the shop just in time to greet the vets. There was Nancy and Harry...both in wheel chairs...and Jamie, the absolute best crutches wielding, rock hopper you’ve ever seen. Off to the creek we went.
The water was down a few feet but as pretty as ever. The guy at the shop had told me that it hadn’t been fished for at least a week, and I later learned that he had told Ryan that it wasn’t fishing well at all. Huh? Wasn’t fishing well a week ago? Any creek, lake, river or pond that I’ve experienced can have good days and bad. Heck, they usually have good hours and bad, so I wasn’t worried at all. What happened a week ago was of no concern. At least we wouldn’t hear, “You should have been here last week!” Today was gonna be gang busters...I just knew it.
We rigged Harry and Nancy up with a couple of ten foot Project Healing Waters TFO’s. Those ten footers are a great help to beginning fly casters, especially if they are wheel chair bound, and they began slinging weighted nymphs into the pool right at the end of the meadow. Then Ryan insisted that I walk downstream to see if there were any other spots that were accessible for the chairs. I took my rod with me of course.
The West Fork is a small stream even when running normal, so I was quite pleased with my decision to go with the two weight, and fishing downstream is right up my alley. Tying on a marabou, I gingerly entered the stream being careful to make no waves. I saw a few 10 to 15 inch rainbows working and cast well ahead and upstream of them, hoping that on the swing they’d find the marabou right at eye level. They did. They ignored it. A few casts later one of them looked its direction, but that’s all. I tied on a small midge dropper and headed on downstream. Two casts later I lost the entire rig in a tree. Was it gonna be one of those days? Naw, keep fishing Alan, and when in doubt go to the old standbys. I tied on a bright yellow woolly.
I spit on it, I dunked it, I cussed it...and it wouldn’t sink. What the heck, I didn’t want to spend any more time tying on another fly, so in frustration I cast it out and down and what do you know, the second it hit the water a fish slammed it...or so I thought. I felt nothing as I lifted the rod. A couple of casts later...the same thing...big splash...lift rod...nothing. So they liked it. But why weren’t they taking it? I tied on a dropper, hoping that as the bright yellow, high floating attractant got their attention, maybe they would inhale the dropper.
Sneaking into the head of the next pool I tested my theory. The third cast brought the same reaction that I’d seen in the last pool, but this time I felt the weight of a nice fish. A few minutes later he was in the net. He had hit the wooly. I snapped his portrait and decided that I’d better get back to Ryan and report on the lack of wheelchair access that I’d found.
“How’d you guys do?” I asked. Ryan reported that Harry had caught a good one and that Nancy had blanked.
I told him that they were hitting on top downstream, and true to form, Ryan said that they were hitting emergers. You see, Ryan is one of those guys that looks at fly fishing a little differently than me. He can name any bug, tie up an exact replica and catch more trout with it than I ever will. He’s a scientist on the stream. I’m just a fisherman.
“Emergers, hey? Well I’d hate to see what these guys emerge into,” I said as I showed him the bright yellow fluffy thing that they were hitting. Ryan just shook his head in disgust. “I should have known,” he said.
I’ll never out fish the man; after all he has the trophies and reputation to back up his theories, but I like to do it my way. I firmly believe that confidence is just about as important as having an honorary degree in entomology and my confidence (and 50 years of experience with this particular fly) usually gets me a fish or two.
As the day progressed everyone but Nancy managed a few more fish. This was only fitting, because on the last two outings Nancy had out fished everyone...both in numbers and in size. Everyone is entitled to an off day. She did however manage to land a nice rock. How she was able to hook and bring to net that nearly round and featureless chunk is unknown. But it made her day! Such is the way of fishing with our wounded warriors. It’s not the fish (but they do help), it’s just getting out there with your fellows and enjoying the quite...the solitude...the beauty. It soothes.
I beat Shirley home. As I was relaxing on the couch the phone rang. “Open the garage door and help me get these groceries in.” As I was opening the tailgate to secure the vittles she asked, “Did you catch any fish?”
“Sure did.” I replied.
“Did they get cold?”
“Not at all, those fish are used to the cold water.”
“I meant the vets! Shut up and get those bags into the house, smart ass. You’re going to work tomorrow!”
Reality sucks.
Monday, November 15, 2010
Anderson's Bird of Prey
Beginning today I will be posting and offering for sale, the fly illustrations that I did for Beau Beasley’s soon to be released book, Fly Fishing the Mid Atlantic. Each fly print will be 8 X 10 and printed on 100# Bristol Archival Paper, and will sell for $20 with FREE shipping.
Starting in alphabetical order, this first one is Anderson’s Bird of Prey. A popular caddis pupa/emerger pattern, the Bird of Prey was designed by Rick Anderson. Your local fly shop probably has a few on hand, but they’ll be a lot smaller than this one – and they won’t be ready for framing.
(That border you see around the fly is there only to show how it will look when matted.)
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Shame, shame shame
Those of you that have been following my blog are aware that my boss is running for the NC House of Representatives. And as I have been helping him in that effort there has been absolutely no time available to wet a line and precious little time to devote to my artwork. Virtually every waking moment has been spent on politics and I've just about had enough of it. What a dirty enterprise it is.
I remember the days when individuals considering a run for elected office were fearful of the skeletons in their closets. I’m sure that that fear eliminated many potential candidates, and for some of them that was probably a good thing. I long for those days when a youthful indiscretion or a period of financial hardship was all that potential candidates had to fear. Times have changed.
Today’s candidates must fear much more. They must fear the lies that are told; the total fabrications and half truths that are pulled out of context from anything they have written or spoken in the past. All of us have seen this total disregard for the truth on display at the national level, but now it has reached the state and even local level.
The "win at all costs" philosophy has become the norm and it makes one wonder why anyone, no matter how noble their motives, would ever submit themselves to this stuff. On Tuesday night, November the 2nd, I'm going to take a very long shower.
I remember the days when individuals considering a run for elected office were fearful of the skeletons in their closets. I’m sure that that fear eliminated many potential candidates, and for some of them that was probably a good thing. I long for those days when a youthful indiscretion or a period of financial hardship was all that potential candidates had to fear. Times have changed.
Today’s candidates must fear much more. They must fear the lies that are told; the total fabrications and half truths that are pulled out of context from anything they have written or spoken in the past. All of us have seen this total disregard for the truth on display at the national level, but now it has reached the state and even local level.
The "win at all costs" philosophy has become the norm and it makes one wonder why anyone, no matter how noble their motives, would ever submit themselves to this stuff. On Tuesday night, November the 2nd, I'm going to take a very long shower.
Friday, October 8, 2010
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Pssst...Hey buddy, wanna buy a trout?
“There should have been around 600 pounds in the (pond), and there was virtually none,” Eason said. She thinks the theft probably occurred Tuesday.
The abduction was well-planned. Eason figures a truck was used to commandeer the large quantity of fish, but that required getting into the facility, which is fenced. The gate showed no sign of forced entry and the lock was not damaged.
“How they got them out is beyond us,” Eason said.
With increasing regularity, on my visits to local streams I have found the same situation. A beautiful stretch of water...a clear fall day, and stretches of water that in the past have been quite productive. What else could explain my having gone fishless? They too, must have been abducted.
Try as I might, there is no other explanation. I have good if not great tackle, a fine assortment of flies and over fifty years of experience. Yet no fish to show for my efforts. I’m left to believe that the miscreants responsible for the theft at Sunburst have depleted our local waters and have lowered their standards and begun to target farm raised trout to meet the burgeoning demand.
It couldn't be anything else.
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