Tampilkan postingan dengan label 29th. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label 29th. Tampilkan semua postingan

Rabu, 18 Mei 2016

Bauer Fly Reel Tour

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Last Summer while headed up north on I-5 to meet up with Gabe on the Umpqua River I got a phone call from Barbara over at Bauer Fly Reels. The New RX was in production and some of the first finished reels where ready to ship. Barbara informed me she had some pictures of the new reel that I could use for the website. I knew Bauer Fly Reel was somewhere in southern Oregan so I ask "whereabouts are you guys located, Im driving north on I-5 getting ready to cross the Cali/Oregon border." Barbara says "You are less than 10 minutes away and we are really close off the exit. Were getting ready to go have lunch, well wait on you." Awesome! Ill be there in a few!

Front Door

Its fun to walk into a business and see reel parts on the desk instead of files. This is my kind of business!










We took in an outdoor lunch at the Caldera Brewery and Resturant. I highly recommend it for food, brew and atmosphere. 


View From the restaurant. Beautiful! Looks like Oregon
After Lunch Jon Bauer gave me the tour. The first thing I took interest in was Jons workbench. How many fly reels have been assembled here is anyones guess. Well worn from years of use it was obvious that this bench was Jons very own personal work space. Clean, neat and all in order. Having come from a mechanical career myself it was easy for me to recognize that his assortment of tools had been well chosen and precision instruments. Its kind of like a passionate and precision fly tyers bench were each tool and device has been proven over years to be the best for the job. 


Champion Race Car Driver
Passionate Fly Angler, Precision Fly Reel Designer and a Champion Race Car Driver, I personally dont think Jon has it in him to do anything in life less than perfect.

Color Options







RX (Rogue Extreme) Frames
I arrived just in time to witness some of the first RX (Rogue Extreme) Reels to exit the factory. One of the shipments being prepared was custom color order on the way to Gorge Fly Shop. I quickly understood how they could ship out a custom reel in the same day as ordered. All the different colored parts necessary were neatly organized on shelves so when a custom order was requested the finished reel is assembled on the spot. 


CFX Drag Knobs


I see reels
After Lunch Jon and I went over to the machine shop where I could witness reels at the beginning stage of production.

Program this! Ahhhh!

CFX #4 solid backs? Maybe...Stay Tuned!
Im holding my new reel

I have great pride and passion in my fly fishing gear and its easy for me to spot others that share the same feelings. Bauer Fly Reels have always been about quality, function and attention to detail and they back that up with incredible service. Being here on this day to witness it getting done just reinforces what I have believed for many years that my pride and passion comes from the people who have shared there pride and passion. Jon and Barbara Bauer relentlessly share it everyday in every reel they make. 


BassProGreg



Greg Darling 
Gorge Fly Shop Internet Sales Manager | Product Specialist


"Fly Fish the World with Us"


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Jumat, 13 Mei 2016

Gorge Fly Shop Weekly Fishing Report December 29th

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Gorge Fly Shop Weekly Fishing Report

"Fly Fish the World with Us"


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Minggu, 08 Mei 2016

Columbia Gorge Fishing Report September 29th

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Fishing Report
Andrews first fish on his new Burkheimer 7134

#Fishtember

Fishing is most likely fabulous wherever you happen to be, I mean it is Fishtember

Chinook Salmon are really thick everywhere right now and crowds reflect that.  Most of the rivers are full of people as well as fish, but putting a few miles on your wading boots will get you into some good water with relative solitude.  The bite has been good, but catching them on a fly rod is still a frustrating proposition.  It’s not that it cant be done, but the bite is so inconsistent that targeting them is not something that everyone wants to put that much effort into. 

Rob fishing at Harris (the rock wall)

Summer Steelhead are in the rivers in good numbers now.  The Chinook are pushing them around and fishing can be tough some days, but overall, fishing has been great.  Dry line fishing is the prime technique on the Deschutes, while fishermen on the Klickitattend to fish more with sink tips.  The clarity on the Deschutes is great.   

The Hood Riveris still awfully low and colored up.  Very little to no pressure lately and not much in terms of action from the few locals that hit it up.  Remember, targeting Chinook Salmon is not allowed on the Hood this time of year.  Wait for some steady rains to bring the level up and some cold weather to clear it up and it might fish well later this fall. 

Lost Lake, Trillium Lake and Timothy Lake have all been fishing really well.  Trout are up in the water column and eating dries when hatches are prevalent.  The big trout are always eating an olive woolly bugger. 
                                                                                          
Smallmouth Bass fishing has been good.  Fish are really active and eating a variety of lures, flies and baits.  Finding good numbers of fish without a boat is tough.  Make friends with people that own bass boats.    

Rob swinging Fall Canyon on the Deschutes


As always, we are happy to talk fishing any time.  Give us a call if you have any specific questions on local rivers, gear, and tactics, or if you just want some encouragement to get out of the office.  



"Fly Fish the World with Us"


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Senin, 04 April 2016

Columbia Gorge Fishing Reports June 29th

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Fishing Report
Sweeet Release!
Some like it hot, hot, hot… A heat wave plagues our region.  Rivers are scary low, bathwater warm and summer is just starting.  The Columbia was reported to be 76 degrees in the backwaters and hovering around 70 all the way down to Astoria in the main channel.

Water temp at the Dalles Dam:
http://waterdata.usgs.gov/usa/nwis/uv?14105700

Water temp at Bonneville Dam: 
http://www.fpc.org/tempgraphssl/NETFullYear_tempgraph.aspx

Water temp at Astoria:
http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/physocean.html?id=9439040

The Deschutes was at 74 degrees on Friday, over 74 on Saturday, but the worst part is that it only cooled down to 69.5 on Saturday night.  http://www.nwrfc.noaa.gov/station/flowplot/hydroPlot.php?id=MODO3&pe=TW&v=1435429823

American Shad are starting to stall out a bit.  We will probably not hit 2 million fish this year, and the fish are still reported to be pretty deep and hard to find, but anglers have reported that up near Rufus, the fish are in shallower water and easier to catch. 

Carp fishing is really the best thing going when the water temps are this warm.  Find them tailing early in the day, and they have been on the bite pretty consistently throughout the day.  “The Hook” is a good spot near Hood River, Government Cove near Cascade Locks, and in Ashes Lakenear Stevenson have great places with lots of fish stacked up.  I like really any bonefish fly, but dark and drab colors seem to work better.   

Rainbow Trout fishing on the Deschutes River has been good, but I would highly recommend not fishing the lower river (below Sherar’s Falls), as water temps on the lower end of the river have been far too warm for the ensured survival of fish (74 on Friday).  I went on Tuesday evening (June 23) and the water was nearing 70.  I saw several trout sitting in shallow water that appeared to be struggling.  They were not moving out of the way as I walked near them.  I could have reached down and picked up a fat 16” trout that would not move as I waded.  I will not be returning to the Deschutes below Maupin until this heat wave has waned.  Again, water temps over 70 are fatal to trout, steelhead and salmon, especially over long periods of time.  This is not only bad for the adult fish, the juvenile fish from the last two years’ record salmon runs are in jeopardy. 

Chinook fishing has been decent below Bonneville Dam.  Numbers are great for summer fish.  Summer Chinook are traditionally headed for the uppermost tributaries of the Columbia, Snake and Salmon Rivers, but we can catch them as they go through the area.  Check the Regulations before you go out bank fishing for salmon around here as many areas are closed to fishing right now. 

The Sockeye Salmon run is approaching record numbers, but the odds are stacked against you as sockeye are definitely not into taking flies.  Sockeye are headed for the uppermost reaches of the Columbia River Basin.

Summer steelhead numbers are starting to pick up, however, water temps and levels are not looking good.  There are not a lot of rivers that have fish, low water temps and enough flow to fish… The Cowlitz Riverhas been flowing around 3000 cfs (typically 6000), but water temps on the Cowlitz have been topping out in the low 60s in the lower reaches of the river…  The Klickitat Riveris very low (835 cfs), but still fishable (typically 1500 cfs).  The water temp was 67 degrees on Friday and the clarity was not terrible.  It tends to muddy up in hot water, but the clarity cycles up and down during the day.  I would not hesitate to fish it this week, but try to get out in the mornings as temps might push over seventy in the afternoons this week. 

The Hood River actually bumped up from under 300 cfs to over 440 as the heat wave started really melting the little bit of glacier that we have left to feed the river.  It is very muddy as of Sunday morning (June 28), but you can get some trout fishing in if you really want to.  It’s the same story here too; try to get your fishing done in the morning before water temperatures reach their maximum in the late afternoon.  The trout are not picky in the river.  They will eat just about any well-presented fly, dry or wet.  You just have to get it in front of them.  Clarity should be better early in the day.  The East Fork Hood River is open for trout fishing, as well as the main branch of the river.  The West Fork Hood River is always closed to fishing, except for the 100 yards or so between the confluence of the East Fork and Punchbowl Falls

Smallmouth Bass have been hitting topwater poppers on the Columbia River and John Day River. There are lots of fish to be caught, but moving around is key.  They are either in the area or not and you might have to try multiple spots before you find fish.  Try stripping a big baitfish pattern really quickly over rocky areas for the best chance at catching a big one. 

Rainbow, Cutthroat, Brown and Brook Trout fishing should be great this week in the evenings as the Hexagenia Mayfly hatch is primed to get going.  Bigger lakes have better hatches.  Timothy Lake has a great hatch.  MerrillLake in Washington is well-known for the Hex hatch.  GooseLake near Trout Lake, WAshould also be a solid choice.  The bugs hatch at night, so showing up at the lake at 7:00 pm or 4:00 am is not a bad idea. 

Eagle Creek near Bonneville Dam is a great place to spend the day fishing for cutthroat trout.  Much like the Hood River, the fish are small and hungry, but the scenery is beautiful, and the water is cold.  It is a little bit easier to wade than the Hood, but you are in a canyon and there are not many spots to get on or off the trail down to the river.  Once you are on the creek, it is fairly easy to get around.  


As always, we are happy to talk fishing any time.  Give us a call if you have any specific questions on local rivers, gear, and tactics, or if you just want some encouragement to get out of the office.  


"Fly Fish the World with Us"


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Kamis, 31 Maret 2016

Columbia Gorge Fishing Report October 6th

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Its that time of year again... cool mornings followed by late burn offs as the days get shorter and warmer temps become fewer and fewer. 

Fishing Report

Fishing continues to be stellar across the region as we leave Fishtember and enter into Fishtober. 

Chinook Salmon are still thick throughout the region, but brighter fish will soon become outnumbered by colored up pre-spawn fish.  This clears out a bit of room for steelhead in the runs as the salmon move towards shallower spawning areas.  We are still a few weeks away from the bulk of spawning activity, but the salmon are getting ready.  We have nearly surpassed the record runs of the past few years.  1.24 million total Chinook for the year is an all time record and 865,000 Fall Chinook is a close second to the epic run of 953,000 in 2013 with a few weeks to go!  These are numbers going through Bonneville Dam, so the run was much bigger as commercial fishermen and lower Columbia tributaries account for a good number of fish too.  While we lost a significant number of our early season spring and summer salmon due to hot and low rivers, the fall numbers are hopefully making up for it and will produce strong runs in the next few years. 

This also marks the time of year that Chinook start to “bed up” on their spawning gravel, otherwise known as redds.  Please respect the incredibly long and difficult journey that these fish have made and avoid walking through spawning areas or fishing at spawning salmon.  They have made it this far, so let’s allow them to spawn and die in peace so that we can have more salmon in a couple of years.  If you see dark colored salmon in shallow water, they are likely trying to spawn.  A spawning Chinook does not put up much of a fight and you are taking away the last reserves of energy that it has left for its final act.  If you see someone fishing at spawning salmon, please respectfully say something and suggest that they move on to better water.  We don’t need any confrontation, just education.  Thank you so much and fish on!

Coho Salmon are soon to follow the Chinook and are expected to also produce large numbers here in the Gorge, although they are way behind last year’s numbers so far...  The “ocean abundance” (total run) last year was predicted at 950,000 and this year s predicted to be down 20% at 777,000.  http://wdfw.wa.gov/news/mar0215a/  Coho are typically more dependent on rains to get moving, so I expect that the lateness of the run is due to the lack of rain than anything, but we shall wait and see…

Coho are a bit more fun on the fly and are a little easier to catch.  While most of the fish stay below Bonneville, we do get great opportunities here, mostly on the lower Klickitat.  Give it two weeks and the numbers should start to jump up to good, catchable numbers. 

Summer Steelhead are in the rivers in good numbers now.  Dry line fishing is the prime technique on the Deschutes, while guys on the Klickitat tend to fish more with sink tips and bigger flies.  The clarity on the Deschutes is still great.  The reports are varied, but overall, people are reporting good fishing throughout the region.

The Hood Riveris still awfully low and colored up.  There are a few die-hards that fish the run at the mouth when the Columbia is low enough to provide good flow down there, but there has been little to report in the way of catching steelhead.  (The Columbia has been too high and that run is under water and not moving much lately).  What they have told me is that a number of anglers are intentionally snagging the Chinook that are waiting to spawn in the lowest 200 yards of the river when there is any current.  Targeting Chinook in the Hood Riveris prohibited after June 15.

Lost Lake, Trillium Lake and Timothy Lake are still fishing really well.  Trout are up in the water column and eating dries when hatches are prevalent.  The big trout are always eating an olive woolly bugger.  October is one of the best months to get out on the lakes.  Several of them close at the end of the month, so get it in while you can. 
                                                                                          
Smallmouth Bass fishing has been good.  Fish are really active and eating a variety of lures, flies and baits.  Finding good numbers of fish without a boat is tough.  Advice for the month: make friends with people that own bass boats.    


As always, we are happy to talk fishing any time.  Give us a call if you have any specific questions on local rivers, gear, and tactics, or if you just want some encouragement to get out of the office.  

#columbiagorgefishingreport

"Fly Fish the World with Us"



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Sabtu, 19 Maret 2016

Fishing in the U P

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Carpn on the Flats of Lake Michigan

Although my trip was centered around smallmouth bass on the fly, when in Rome, (Michigan) one must spend some quality time pursuing freshwater bonefish, (Carp).

Back to Bassin

If you know anything about me you know I chase Bass! Ive spent half a lifetime pursuing these freshwater pugnacious species in any body of water from farm ponds to great lakes, from creeks to rivers and every puddle in between. Its in my blood and I make no apologies for it!

In the last few years while living in trout country Ive slowly slipped away from the bronze family. Trout angling has been good for me. It has broadened my skills and allowed me to build a solid respect for the coldwater species.

On a cold winter day while sifting through the hundreds of Columbia River bass photos obtained throughout the years of guiding and fishing the big water an overwhelming need to get back to the bronze kind had finally surfaced. I felt this day coming long ago. It was just a matter of time until the right opportunity surfaced.

Good Company, Good Times
I found that opportunity in an email. Schultz Outfitters newsletter hit my inbox and while scanning the highlights there it was, the SO annual Upper Peninsula (U.P.)  Smallmouth trip and by the time I called Schultzy there was one spot remaining. You know that spot was meant for me!

Ive always wanted to fish in the U.P. I dont know why I never did. Ive fished all around it into Ontario and the great lakes but for some reason the U.P. was never a destination. I think the reason is, in that region, there is so much water that it takes a lifetime to explore.


The trip was everything you look for in a group event. Great fishing, scenery, lodging, guides, friends and food. Plenty of everything and best of all plenty of smallmouth. Early one morning I watched a black bear swim across the river right outside the lodge that overlooks the river. Plenty of wildlife and of course plenty of mosquitoes too! Bring your deet!

Like Topwater?

About 99% of the fishing is topwater divers, poppers and assorted foam bugs fished from drift boats with non stop casting to every undercut, tree root, boulder and grass line looking for that classic bass attack. Ive got to tell you there is nothing that stirs the adrenaline like watching the water move when your bug hits the surface.

No shortage of quality fish

Equipment

20" Brute

James Cook  20" Smallie
My Sage Bass II Series of rods did the bulk of the work for me. The Largemouth size handles the big hair bugs with ease and the shorter length really helps the accuracy of putting those big bugs under the trees. My Smallmouth size was pure magic with the popping bugs and foam critters. I also used a Sage Method 890-4 for some of the subsurface minnow work. This rod can really deliver the distance. Reels are not a huge deal in this game. Once hooked up you need to be concerned with pulling the fish away from entanglement and not worry about getting it on the reel. The line of choice throughout the group is the S/A Mastery Textured Titan Taper. The Titan has a powerful head for big bug delivery and also has a long rear taper to make easy work of picking up a lot of line for a the next cast. To explain better, most presentations involve hitting a target and after settling, making 1-2 moves before recasting to a new spot. The long taper of this line all but eliminates the need to strip back to a casting point common with short head lines.


The fish here are quality. Sure you could find more trophies in the big lakes but they couldnt match the experience of these river dwellers. A 20" or over here will get strong recognition. I was fortunate to catch one of the two caught this week. Too many to count 19s" came to hand and I didnt hear a single complaint about too many dinks.

About that Carp photo at the start of this article...

Release!
As if a great week of smallie fishing with a great crew of anglers and guides in a great lodge with great food and drink and yada, yada, yada wasnt enough...the next stop just a couple hours away is the flats of lake Michigan. Ive always wanted to wade in this great lake and hunt these submarine size monsters. It was everything Id ever dreamed about. The first thing I kept marveling over is the fact that I am wading in Lake Michigan with miles of flats one can walk with crystal clear water all around. Next was learning to spot the fish which is in fact the easy part. Just look for giant dark shadows that are moving. Bring out your best cast, these critters are smart. I had many refusals before I played it cool enough to have one commit. Be sure to have a good disc drag reel. My old Nautilus FW (which I can proudly say has caught more fish than most fly reels will ever see) was just fine for the bass we were hauling in but I was a bit concerned when I locked the drag down as tight as it would go and this fish was still running deep into backing until I only had maybe 20 yards to spare when I finally got it to turn. It is my advice that if you find yourself in the great lakes region dont pass up this opportunity and if you have it penciled in on your bucket list go ahead and ink it. You wont be disappointed.

A Giant THANK YOU goes out to my friends out Schultz Outfitters. These guys eat sleep and live all the great fly fishing in this area of the country. Also want to thank the guides from Tight Lines Fly Fishing Company. These guys know their water, know their fish and work hard to ensure you a great day of fishing. And a special Thanks to Schultzy for sharing a little bit of his Great Lakes carp wisdom.

This trip wont be forgotten anytime soon and I hope to have the opportunity to do it again.


BassProGreg



Greg Darling 
Gorge Fly Shop Internet Sales Manager | Product Specialist

Review: Sage Bass II Series Rods


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