What a morning! Snow Falling, B.W.O's Emerging; Fish Rising. The overcast conditions must have given the fish a "covering" and a sense of protection. It felt like we were fishing into an "extended" night. We found lots of feeding fish taking nymphs early on and then emergers and dry flies. The old gray RS2 was the best fly.
Ironically, I had told my client before hand that he would probably not have many opportunities on the Dream Stream because it has been fishing tough lately. Glad I was wrong. It just fished well as he hooked fish after fish. If we had a typical sunny day, we both had the feeling the fish would have been far more selective.
Glad we went. We almost rescheduled the trip due to the weather. As is often the case, it is better to "just go," knowing that snow, rain and overcast, can often provide spectacular fishing.
We wish we had a photo of the big rainbow my client caught but it made one last jump out of my clients hands, back in the river, before I could snap the picture. It was a "slab." We did get a picture of this respectable Brown, capturing some of the magic of the morning, even as the brim of his hat captured some of the falling snow.
Friday, October 23, 2015
Sunday, October 18, 2015
Looking For Big Fish in All the Wrong Places: Big Fish Continue to Rise on Dream Stream
This time of year, on the dream stream, the crowds go after the big Browns that run up out of 11 mile reservoir. Most fly fishers are chucking heavily weighted nymphs and fishing down to the monsters that are laying low. While sight fishing, we are looking "down," and this is exciting, but maybe we should try looking "up."
This morning, once again there was a heavy Trico hatch that brought the fish up on top. I put aside my nymphing rod and fished to large rising Rainbows, Cutthroats and Cut-bows. I landed several heavy fish over 20 inches. It felt "right" to fish on top since that was where they were and they were actually eating. It also felt right to match the hatch and make a nice delicate dry fly presentation to fish I could see actively feeding. Dry fly fishing captures (for me) the essence of fly fishing and often embraces a different etiquette. Sometimes, I just get tired of chucking lead and weighted flies to fish that are preoccupied.
It is also common knowledge that there are a lot of little dinks that are rising. Yes, most of the rising fish are small, but in their midst you will sometimes hear a "slurp and a gulp" that is NOT made by a small fish. Cast to those gulpers and you may be rewarded for looking for the big fish in all the right places.
I may sound like a "dry fly purest," but I am not. I get excited chasing BIG Browns, or, for that matter, any big fish laying low. However, right now, it just seems that there are more anglers than Big Browns in the river. It looks like every section of river has 50 anglers to one fish. It gets and looks to be a bit ridiculous. Sometimes I picture those big Browns "ducking" every time we throw our weighted nymphing rigs over them.
What do we do? Can we close off the river during the spawning runs? This is probably not going to happen even though many would support it. Perhaps, when we do find big fish, we can at least learn to observe what they are doing. Are they feeding? Are they actively spawning? We can consider their beauty.
Whether the fish are rising or laying low, we could at least "go easy" on them. How many fish does it take to satisfy? Do we have to keep on casting and casting; dredging and dredging, hour after hour? Even while dry fly fishing during a trico hatch, how many fish does a angler have to hook before enough is enough?
Even as I ask these questions I am aware that this approaching cold front bringing rain and snow might bring a surge of big fish up the drainage. Who knows? And maybe the cold will keep some of the crowds away but I doubt it. We can always look. We can look up and we can look down and hopefully, regardless of what we find, we can find that place inside of us that can be more easily satisfied.
Tuesday, October 13, 2015
A Thin Place: Enchanting Ireland
“My fiftieth year had
come and gone, I sat a solitary man, an open book, an empty cup, upon the
marble table top.” Yeats.
Sitting in an Irish pub in Galway, Ireland, I thought of
Yeats, sitting in pubs writing poetry and contemplating life. It was in this
enchanted land, where Yeats spoke of fishing.
He says;
“I went out to the hazel wood,
because a fire was
inside my head,
And cut and pealed a
hazel wand,
and hooked a berry to
a thread,
And when white moths were on the wing,
And moth-like stars were flickering out,
I dropped the berry in a stream
And caught a little silver trout.”
Yeats is fly-fishing. If you get hung up in literalism, and
want to argue he is not really fly-fishing and matching the hatch because he has
hooked a berry to a thread, then you are missing the point. I hope, quite simply and more importantly, that regardless of his fly fishing techniques, we can understand that he is more than fly-fishing.
We know he is more than fly-fishing because
as we learn from this enchanting poem, the trout turns in to a glimmering girl
and calls him by name. Again if you get caught up in literal interpretations or come from a strict "religious" back ground, you will be disappointed, that the fish did not turn into a tablet with the ten commandments etched in stone. I personally prefer the "glimmering girl," but if you need to hang on to that stone table, go ahead.
The poet then decides that, “Though I am old with wandering, through hollow lands and hilly lands,
I will find out where she has gone.”
As we read these words, we see a different set of spiritual values in
the poet. He is not merely seeking a trout; nor a young woman for that matter. He is seeking “some-thing” else and
he will seek this “though he is old with
wandering.” Many fly fishers never realize, that it is
"some-thing" else they seek, while they fish.
As I sat, considering my own life and culture I realized
that most often it seems to move at a cadence that is too fast to seriously
probe the depths of the interior, poetic and mythological life. As I write, I
realize that many of us do not have the time to even ponder several lines of
poetry. We live in a different culture, demanding immediate gratification and
information. As fly fishers, we often just want to know what fly works and
where. Never mind this poetic nonsense. Spiritually, we also, often want the simple, quick answers.
Sitting solitary in this Irish pub, without rush, I feel how
this place, perhaps, this whole culture is more of a “thin place” than back
home. Celtic spirituality speaks of “Thin Places,” those special places, often
geographic, where, if we can find the right cadence and enter, we might be more
vulnerable to the spiritual/poetic interior life. Even the hotel we stayed at set the tone of a
different set of values. Across the hall
from our room, the words “Yeats Suite,” were on the door. I wonder what
percentage of the people of our culture ever heard of Yeats or could even recite
a single line of poetry.
It seems that much of the culture I come from in America is
flat, void of depth, musing, and life. My culture feels “thick” with bland, rationality,
literalism and is lacking myth, poetry, and magic. In America, even the Christian church, often
only parrots the shallow “answers,” rather than deeply pondering the questions.
In Ireland, people speak of a whole other enchanting world
of fairies and Hawthorne trees. These stories are so powerful that they have
arrested housing and road developments, because some still fear the
consequences of messing around with the spiritual world. Apparently, in Ireland, you don’t mess around
with a Hawthorne tree and the little fairies. Roads have been diverted to go around certain Hawthorne trees out of
respect to the "little people."
While touring down a
narrow road along the green hillside the bus driver speaks of a leprechaun, he
spied on the side of the road. He slows down to a stop. Caught up in the enchanting
moment, I could not stop my rational mind from searching the area, quite
extensively, I must confess, looking for “some-thing.” I ask myself, what this is inside of me;
perhaps all of us, that even as rational, adults, hopes to “believe” in more
than the concrete, world around us.
Besides stories of enchanting fairies, trees and
leprechauns, there is the story of the “Salmon of knowledge.” Legend has it that whoever catches this fish
gains wisdom and becomes (not a millionaire, a manager or a CEO), but rather the
greatest poet in the land. The old stories in Ireland still reflect what they
value. How sad that in corporate America, and even often in our personal development, poetry
and myth are, for the most part, not of value. We do not have a defining story.
How sad that poetry and myth are
not valued (let alone understood), in churches across the country. Could
corporations and churches ever function at the slower cadence needed that would
allow entrance into another world. Could
we slow down enough to deeply contemplate the meanings of whatever stories,
myths, and poetry we still might posses? How sad that Jesus spoke in poetry, parables,
symbols, and paradox and we often fail to understand. How sad that the defining
story here, is to consume and buy things. What a tragedy that we lost our story that
helps define who we are and explains our deep inner experiences of life, including those while we fly fish.
Yet, we do have some wonderful fly-fishing here and that art
with the slower pace it demands, offers us some hope. While fly-fishing with its own unique
cadence, I think there are times we can possibly experience a “thin place” on
our rivers. We can start by slowing down our cast to a slower cadence and
regaining power, grace and art.
As I walked the Dream Stream, yesterday I thought about my
trip to Ireland and our different cultures. As I walked I slowed down my pace,
carefully searching the water. It was
then that I saw a Brown, just down along a particular bend, big enough, to
easily swallow a few leprechauns. Perhaps
some of you saw the same fish. And,
perhaps some of you, also, saw the leprechaun.
Regardless, at least you are looking and enchanted by the
possibility. It is a start and a
possible way out of our flat culture and the flat culture of our churches.
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