Tag Archive | Trout

Fish Philosophy

As a grunt is typically unrefined, so is his philosophy. Do not doubt for one second however that he has one. He does.

My fish philosophy is simple. It’s rather a collection of thoughts and a few principles I try to go by. They are by no means the letter of the law or a platform for me to preach on. As such, the collection below constitutes my developing fish philosophy in no particular order. (Dry fly purist trout fishermen beware.)

-If you are not having fun you are not fishing.
-If fly fishing was easy everyone would do it.
-Respect the water. Leave no trace.
-Respect the fish. Catch and release. Or, waste not want not.
-Tie your own flies. It’s more rewarding. If you don’t- at least you’re not bait fishing.
-More than trout take flies.
-Life is full of problems, fish trough it.
-Fly fishing is one part art, one part science.
-Photograph your quarry quickly. Ensure the fish survival. Let them recoup and then release.
-Get on the water as much as you can. Travel and find new places. Pieces of heaven are found here on earth.

See you on the high ground,
AirborneAngler

Today’s topic of Fish Philosophy is a prompt of the Everyday in May challenge. For more info click here. For all AirborneAngler Everyday in May posts click here.

Inspiration

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See you on the high ground,
AirborneAngler

Today’s topic of Inspiration is a prompt of the Everyday in May challenge. For more info click here. For all AirborneAngler Everyday in May posts click here.

Deadman’s Cast with @TimFishmanEmery

Anglers attttttennnntion! Take your seats folks and welcome to another Deadman’s Cast interview. This week we are excited to have Fishing Pro Tim Emery, twitter handle @TimFishmanEmery, on the grill this week. Settle in as we fish filet Fishman into a fish taco- peeking into the ‘what if’ scenario if today he cast his last cast.

AirborneAngler (AA): Tim, welcome, thank you for agreeing to meet up with the troopers on AirborneAngler and surprise- you’re dead!

TimFishmanEmery (TE): O Shit’ that was fast! I was just staring at the water and now I am dead?

AA: Yup, happens that easy around here. So, we haven’t decided how to polish you off just yet. I want to get a feel for the kind of angler you are. But I will let you decide on the body of water you get waxed at. So, where are you on your final day on the water?

TE: I have known this for years! I am driving down a river looking for rising fish. Not sure which river, more then likely the Eagle River near Vail, CO. All of the sudden I see a rise and veer off the road. Bye, Bye!

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AA: That’s a possibility. But maybe knowing how, when, and where you picked up fly fishing can help us determine your fate. Tell us all how you got into chunking mock-up variants of fish food.

TE: Vail, 1995- I met a guy who’s good friend was a fly fisherman. He was a fly fisherman. I spent the summer chasing them around. Didn’t catch my first fish until October that year. Man I thought these guys were great fisherman, turns out they didn’t really know what they were doing. I spent the next winter teaching my self how to fly fish. The next spring I met a guy who owned a fly guide service, I told him I could fish. (I was a ski teacher at the time) he figured I knew what I was talking about. Boy was he wrong, he took me to do a corporate event for training, once we were done he looked at me and said “I hired you to guide and you don’t know how to F@#king cast! I said, F@#king teach me” He did and the rest is history. 18 years later, all I want to do is fly fish anytime I can. Even when driving a car off a cliff!

AA: Sounds like you’ve already had one near death experience. But here, we won’t let any raging mad employer have the privilege. Nope this is your fault. We’re going with the veering car and rising fish. So on your decent into the drink your laser beam focus sees a rising fish go full gusto and leap from the water. What species is it specifically and why?

TE: Trout, doesn’t matter what kind. Why? Because the only other fish in the mountains are White Fish and they leave a shitty slime on you. Plus, trout love to eat flies!

AA: Still in a slow motion, almost parachute decent, do you:
a) continue drooling?
b) reach over into the passenger seat for your rod case and rig up?
c) snap out of it and start a Hail Mary or other prayer of choice?
d) ride it out and use the vehicle as a pontoon boat and fish the rest of the day down river?

TE: B and D. I can rig in 8 sec. and use the car as a boat. If there is one fish rising there must be more.

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AA: I like your logic. How long do your people wait to call for and send out a search party? Who makes that phone call?

TE: My wife would make the call, she gets a call every morning and night from me, I have 2 small kids they are more important then anything to me. If I don’t call, they will be the first ones in the search party. Good to be loved!

AA: Yes, indeed. Glad to see your a family man. Well, the search party finally locates your final resting place. Your local flyshop commissions a memorial at the location. What is it of and how does the inscription read?

TE: It’s already been planned! (no really) I want a big boulder in the middle of the South Platte River in Denver. I have put a lot of time in to creating an urban fishery in Denver. I spent 5 years working with Denver Trout Unlimited to create and run The South Platte Pro-Am Carp Slam! This tournament has raised over $100,000 for the river. Yes, we use Carp to bring awareness to the Trout. This was hard for Trout Unlimited to understand at first but now they are on board! By the way, have you caught Carp on the fly yet?

AA: No, I haven’t but recently the Texas Hill Country Mixed Bag tourney I’m in has me putting them in the crosshairs. Carp Slam sounds like quite an accomplishment and like you deserve a momument! That’s pretty awesome. While I can’t build you your momunment I can give you an AirborneAngler award. It reads: “Attention to orders! The department of Fly Anglers hereby hypothetically postumously awards the Airmoble Vehicular Assault award, with V device for Valor, to Tim Emery for his actions during the battle of Rising Road Trout on Eagle River. During Tim’s decent he was relentless in his actions to rig up and take the fight to the fish. Never did he surrender his reel or rod. His actions bring great credit uopn himself, the flies he flung, and the fly fishing community. Awarded the 17th Day of May 2012. Signed by my hand, AirborneAngler, Fly Angler of the Texas Hill Country.”

Tim, thanks for joining us today on Deadman’s Cast.

You can follow the Fishman before the afterlife on Facebook, Twitter at @TimFishmanEmery and/or catch his podcasts at www.FishExplorer.com. He’ll friend anyone with fish in their profle. Tim would also like to give a shout out to www.hogislandboatworks.com. He says they have a new skiff coming out that will be a great boat for sight fishing carp and other fish. Until next time- I am signing off.

See you on the high ground,
AirborneAngler

Deadman’s Cast Interviews

Deadman’s Cast with MOTroutHunter

20120427-171628.jpgOrig. Photo (c) 2012 Timothy Lee, used with permission.

In-coming!!! Hit the deck it’s time for another AirborneAngler interview! Our guest comes to us not far from the reporting sounds of rifles and gun fire. This week we have Walt Fulps as he checks in to check fire for Deadman’s Cast. Living not far from Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri- the twitter dubbed @MOTroutHunter guides and lives on the water.

AirborneAngler (AA): Walt, thank you for making time for the Airborne. I do appreciate it, but this is still Deadman’s Cast. So, I am still going to hypothetically pen and ink you into the after life. How do you feel about that?

Walt Fulps (WF): Uh…

AA: Great, glad you’re excited. Now, your twitter profile states you’re a fly fishing guide, instructor, writer, and taxidermist. What is the most interesting thing you’ve taxidermied? Is that the word?

WF: Probably not in the dictionary, but there definitely needs to be an active verb for the practice, doesn’t there? I’ve done quite a few cool things over the years – elk, mountain goat, bighorns, etc. The most interesting would have to be an armadillo. Never doing that again. What a pain. I still get the occasional phone call from someone asking for strange mounts, like a squirrel rowing a tiny canoe, or a raccoon kicking back drinking a beer. It sounds like a great idea, until I quote them a price. For most folks, taxidermy is too expensive to use as as a mediocre punch line.

AA: Interesting. I suddenly really want a squirrel rowing a canoe. When I need one I will let you know. Now, I fished some of your home waters and it was a great time- but I didn’t see any canoeing squirrels. If I let you choose the body of water you go out on would it be a Missouri body of water? Or a stream bed somewhere else?

WF: To be honest, I’m not all that picky. My perfect trout stream, of course, has to give me at least a fairly decent chance at catching some trout. But the #1 thing I enjoy is the scenery, the wildlife, and being ALONE. It’s hard to fine privacy on Missouri trout streams sometime. So, I’d probably head to rugged terrain with a ton of wadable streams. The Smokies, the Rockies, Northern California, maybe someplace WAAY up north somewhere. And preferably someplace I’ve never been and know very little about. I really dig trying to figure a place out.

AA: Ok, let’s say we toss you up into North Cal and get you on a good trout stream all alone. Nothing but you and the Sierra Nevada’s and the bears. Being in the state of the Golden Bears- lets say you run into one and it eats you whole. This happens just after catching the trout of a life time! What was your go-to/favorite fly that landed you your dream fish?

WF: Loaded question! While I’m not a fan of fishing a big hatch (I’m weird that way, I guess), I certainly do enjoy fishing dries and terrestrials. I’m especially fond of throwing great big terrestrials like a Dave’s Hopper. In fact, fishing a big grasshopper pattern during the summer is probably my overall favorite style of fishing, and I bet I’ve caught 1/3 of my REALLY big fish just that way. But, since it may not be summertime when the bear eats me… Streamer fishing can be great fun when the fish are feeding aggressively, but it takes me away from what I feel is the more delicate nature of fly fishing. So, I’m probably nymphing, and I’m probably fishing a two-fly rig (is that allowed?).

AA: Its your funeral so of course it is.

WF: Well then, my lead fly is going the more obvious, often obnoxiously obvious, fly – something like an egg pattern, a bright yellow wooly worm, or maybe big ugly nymph. My trailer fly will be a more subtle pattern meant to reproduce food the trout are eating everyday. So, let’s say a size 12 Gold-ribbed Hare’s Ear with rubber legs trailed by a size 20 black midge larvae. Of course, adjust the specific fly selection to the specific river of my demise!

AA: So, then what’s your take on fly fishing as a whole? Do only those who dry fly upstream make it into the pearly gates? Or does throwing wet streamers send you straight to hell?

WF: Oh, heck no. Catch the freaking fish! Everybody has their preferences. I’m most commonly nymphing upstream, mending, working a clean drift, swinging out, and picking it up slowly. That said, I’ll throw streamers, dries, emergers, whatever I think will get the job done. I know plenty of hyper-purists out there that are shooting themselves in the foot, and I’ve had some funny interactions with them. For example, there was the client who refused to fish an egg fly, even though that was THE hot fly the week of his trip. So, I bumped him down to an obvious nymph (a big stonefly, if I remember right), which he also shunned. He ultimately ignored my advice and fished small nymphs like zebra midges and #18 copper johns most of the day with very little luck. When we ran out of time and started heading back toward the truck, I decided I’d fish along behind him with the yellow egg fly I’d pitched to him earlier in the day. I caught three fish during our 20-minute walk back downstream, which was more fish than he’d caught all day. After I hooked fish #2, I asked again if he’d like to try an egg fly, but he declined. “No thanks. I’m just happy to be on the river on such a beautiful day.” Glad he had the right attitude, but I have a sneaking suspicion he added egg flies to his box before his next fishing trip.
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AA: Just happy to be on the river? Yeah, he lied. Probably fishing them now. Well, after several hours of eating you whole the bear in question keels over and dies. Serves him right. However the park ranger who found the bear can clearly see something (You!) inside. After an autopsy they find you inside. What do you want done with your remains?
a) cremated and ashes spread over the water?
b) cremated with the bear as you are now one and spread over the water?
c) sent home close casket and private service?
d) have taxidermy work done on you and the bear posed in your final moments?

WF: I would never wish that kind of taxidermy job on any of my colleagues! It’s bad enough when someone drags his deer two miles down a dry creek bed to his truck and then expects to me magically repair the resultant bald spots on his mount. That said, I don’t care what they do with me, but I would love for my friends to get together and have a bear BBQ in my honor with a keg or two of home brew from the Public House Brewery right here in Rolla. It bears noting (pun only partially intended) that it must be Kansas City BBQ – plenty of molasses in the sauce!

AA: Fair enough, I would be interested in bear brisket- bring it on! Lastly, on hearing of your demise the local fly shop, guide customers, and readers erect a MOTroutHunter memorial in your name. Three parts, what is it of? What does the inscription say? And where do they place it?

WF: I’ve actually toyed around with an idea for some time – a sculpture that looks roughly like a fisherman casting a fly rod, cobbled together from pieces of driftwood. THAT would be cool. I wish I could say I truly have a favorite trout stream where I’d like it displayed, but I’ve gotten to the point that I appreciate most trout streams to equal degrees for their various qualities. So, I’d say maybe near the Roubidoux Creek in Waynesville, MO, where I first learned to fly-fish. But, then again, I’d be just as happy if it was erected where that Forest Ranger found the bear. And the inscription, of course, would read “Sometimes you eat the barr. Sometimes the barr eats you.”

AA: If I start collecting drift wood I will send it your way for that explicit purpose. That’s an awesome idea and you need to do that! Please invite me to the christening if you do. Well Walt, I wanted to thank you for sharing time with us on the AirborneAngler. I’ve prepared a closing Fly Fishing citation for you, it reads: “Attention to orders! The Department of Fly Anglers has awarded the Golden Bead-headed Bear Boxing (GB3) award to Walt Fulps, MOTroutHunter, for bringing a bear to hand in the California Sierra Nevada’s during a lifetime ending campaign of trout hunting. His dedication to isolated streams and eating the barr, even when it eats you, has displayed exemplary fortitude in the quest of executing the perfect cast in perfect places. His dedication and perseverance bring great credit upon himself, the flies he flung, and the fly fishing community. Awarded the 2nd Day of May 2012. Signed by my hand, AirborneAngler, Fly Angler of the Texas Hill Country.”

You can follow Walt before the afterlife on Facebook, Twitter at @MOTroutHunter and/or set up a guided trip, or request a taxidermied-canoe-rowing squirrel on missouritrouthunter.com. Until next time- I am signing off.

See you on the high ground,
AirborneAngler

Deadman’s Cast Interviews

It’s the Little Things

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I’ve been wanting to draw a Parachute Adams for the whole Airborne theme I’ve got going on. Surprise right? But trying to get the photo for inspiration using an iPhone to shoot the picture was almost challenging. Shifting auto focus nearly got the best of me. Almost.

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After a few shots and the steadiness of hand required to lay down and arm a trip wired claymore land mine, I got the shot I wanted. Or at least a shot could deal with anyways. As tough-guy as that may sound with explosives and all, the irony is the song that was playing in my head. As I was drawing this small fly instead of U2’s, “The Sweetest Things”, the cadence remix in my head ringing over and over was ‘its the little things’. All in the same tone. I know you can hear the chorus. Real macho right?

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Anyways, sometimes it is the little things in life we take for granted. The smallest things can bring us such great joy. Just like a size 18 (I’m totally guessing because it’s not the size 6-10 streamers I throw a lot of) Parachute Adams can bring in a good sized trout. Who’d’ve thunk right? And that my friends is the sweetest thing.

See you on the high ground,
AirborneAngler

PS
Don’t judge. Ooh oh oh the sweetest things.

Shady Brown

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Hey there fish fans. Here is some new fish art for you straight from… from, well, uh. The drawing is from me. However, because I cannot recall or site where I obtained the photo I saved on my iPad camera roll- I’ve had to take a snapshot/screen shot to use it here on the blog. So below, is a photo of my camera roll.

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If you can identify where the photo is from let me know so I can give credit where credit is due. It’s truly an amazing photo and provided some motivation to get to the sketch pad. On a side note, it was an awkward two handed movement to open, shrink, rotate and press the lock screen and main buttons to get the snapshot. Pretty much all at the same time. I am kind of proud of that. So without further ado, here is Shady Brown.

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So, there you have it fish heads. I hope you like it as much as I do. If not, and you think you can do better- you should. Do it. Doooooooo it.

Until then- see you on the high ground,
AirborneAngler

Ink Blots: Defining Terminal Angler Syndrome

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Study the photo in this post. What do you see? Your instant answer may determine whether or not Terminal Angler Syndrome (fly shop clinically refered to as TAS) is present in your cranial housing group. In a recent observation on my drive to work one morning, I have concluded absolutely that TAS is extremely persistent in my system. This paratrooper has got it bad folks.

Terminal Angler Syndrome, or TAS, is the insistent need for brain functions to revolve around fly fishing. Having observed the groups of wild flowers on our beautiful Texas highways in full bloom- the setting appeared to me much like the ink blot cards psychiatrist use to psyco-analyze their subjects in case studies. I have documented all this for my fellow anglers to learn how to cope with the symptoms of TAS.

So, what did I see? Did you say brook trout too?!?! If so, we have TAS something fierce. The only known treatment to ease these severe symptoms involves a fish injected mono-hydro-dual-oxy solution of which to retrieve pisci organisms from and make contact with the bare hand. The mechanism to achieve this medication can only be obtained with a fly rod and fly of your choice.

Living with TAS isn’t easy. But for those of us that do, it doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy life and lead normal lives. Treatments are available. Speak to your local flyshop to see if fly fishing is for you and what you can do to ease these symptoms. In addition to treatment support groups are available. Search twitter hash tag #fishchat Tuesdays 8-9 Central to speak with others living lives with TAS.

Brown Trout Fish Art

Originally posted on 02 March 2012 at Lines In The Dirt.

I am always impressed with the FlyArt fellow Austinite Shawn cranks out here on Lines in the Dirt. In fact, I even told him I didn’t like his talent ‘in a good way’. I get jealous, inspired, and awed all at the same time. So being inspired I’ve attempted to play with Autodesk Sketchbook Pro as he does and tried to see what I could do. But I cheated some as you can see and added a water drop overlay from my iPhone PhotoStudio app.

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What I’ve come up with is my best attempt (and new phone background) at the sexy brown trout I’ve been seeing in all the Vimeo clips and pics online. Do the math on that and you’ve got it- I have yet to catch one. I’ve caught 1 Brookie and plenty of Rainbows but the Brown Trout is still on my MIA list. I am, however, only a first year angler. Accordingly, this consumes my thoughts and has manifested itself here. I hope to find myself in a chance contact fight with one for a quick catch, pic, and release someday.

Until then, I’ll see you on the high ground.

-AirborneAngler

About the AirborneAngler: You can follow this career infantryman and fly thrower on Twitter at @AirborneAngler, or read his fly fishing folly reports/freelance blogging at TexasRiverBum.com.