Sunday, July 20, 2008


I should have known better. You always pay for saying something stupid, and it was just a few post ago when I said words no self respecting carp flyfisherman should utter. "Carp fishing with a flyrod is easy." Yep, that came back and bit me right in the ass this weekend. Fortunately, the total butt whipping I received at the hands of the carp was tempered great by some outstanding company. I was lucky enough to fish not only with my dad, who is an excellent carp angler and companion, but the legendary Mr. P. Actually, he is more of a myth than a legend, as no real photos of Mr. P exist on the web...instead there is just word of mouth from people who say in a hushed whisper..."He's real...I've fished with him." This is as close as I came to actually getting a picture of the famous carp angler:



As I mentioned, the fishing was rough. My venerable "super" worm was rendered useless by no wind and ultra calm, clear water. The fish ran from it before the worm even reached the bottom. Thankfully Mr. P was there with his infamous Carp Carrot, which went a long way towards saving the weekend. So did this guy:



In fact, this turned out to be the weekend of Mirror Carp. That in itself added a special flare to the fishing. I know Mr. P landed at least one mirror, my dad got at least one, and I landed 3 that I remember. The fish above weighed in at 13.5 lbs, just a hare bigger than Mr. P's fish (also above) and took the honors as the big fish of the trip. I should say big fish landed. I was in big fish hell today, which is really a strange place to be. I couldn't seem to find any fish under 10 lbs, and had shots at some real monsters throughout the day. At one point I had a great fish right up to the net. As I lifted his head I could see the worm BARELY hooked in his lips. I thought to myself "you better take a shot with the net." Of course, the fish turned back down, made a short run and the hook pulled! At another stop, I found several large fish tailing on a gravel bar in between two massive weed beds. It was fun, but tough to close the deal. I hooked 4 fish, and tried to hold each one from the weed beds. In all 4 cases I had to put a new fly on the end of my tippet after the carp reminded me that BIG FISH > 1X TIPPET. Mr. P had a good look at a monster fish as well, but couldn't get a hook up and my dad had two casts at a tailer that I am positive was over 30lbs. The fish was about a rod length away, and I had 2-3 minutes to check him out. I think the reason my dad didn't hook was was that he was afraid to hook him.





Great fishing with Mr. P and my dad. They are both excellent anglers, and we had a great time fishing, eating, driving, and just hanging out. We never did manage to get a picture of a "triple" but there were plenty of laughs and a good time was had by all.

Till next time Mr. P and the Reel John Montana!

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Just got back from a day and a half of fishing with my dad. Elia made the drive with me and we stayed in my parents RV. Elia had a great time with Grandma (I think my mom is exhausted) and I had a lot of fun fishing with Dad. Too tired for a full on report, but in short...the fishing was great. I caught somewhere between 40-50 carp total, my dad landed 15-20. He got big fish of the trip honors with an 18 lb pig...his biggest ever fish on a fly rod! I landed 2 fish over 16 lbs, and one at 15...most of the fish were typical 7-9 lbers. As usual, some stunning takes, and some takes so subtle you had to be on your game to hook them. Great fun...here are some pictures!






Love the shot of my dad trying to net his fish for the "double" photo. Keep in mind that I had to set the camera, hit the button and run back to get my fish out of the net for the photo. All dad had to do was hang onto his fish! He dropped it and scrambled up stabbing after it with the net. Pretty funny. He nailed it though! Gotta give him credit for that. The next photo went a little better.

Congrats on that 18 lber dad...beautiful fish!

Saturday, July 05, 2008

The San Juan Worm. Until Zen Piscator talked me into using it, I hadn't even thought about that fly much. It just wasn't on my radar. Now, it is far and away my go to fly. This is how I tie it...of note, I use a huge tungsten bead to get the fly to sink. I'd rather risk spooking the fish throwing rocks than deal with the frustration of trying to predict a random path to give your fly time to sink to the fish. I'm also partial to these hooks now...for info on that, contact Matt Klara of Sexy Loops...he hooked me up with these hooks and I'm a huge fan. They've replaced all my scud hooks.

All you need:

Putting the Bead through the Chenile:

Putting the Bead/Chenile on the hook:

Securing thread behind the Bead/Chenile:

I pull the chenile back, and criss cross the thread forward, securing behind the Bead:

Whip finish, and that is it. I'm too lazy for head cement, though it would help. Here are the hooks...I dig them. Contact Matt, link on the sidebar:

Friday, July 04, 2008

JJ wanted to catch a carp today. He kept telling me..."Catch a carp, Yes!" Hard to resist that so Elia, JJ and I headed out. Unfortunately we did not bring one to hand, but we did spend some quality time walking around a couple of ponds. I hooked up twice, with one take being so perfect I almost couldn't believe it. The fish had 1/3 of his body out of the water, working the bottom of the shallows. I crept up, hid behind a tree with a kid clinging to each leg and dropped a carp wooley to the side of the carp's head. The second the fly touched down, the fish leapt sideways and ate it. I set up well on him, but he ran through several loose branches floating in the shallows. While untangling all of the tree limbs, he ended up getting loose.

Another highlight of the day was the running commentary from Elia. She made it clear that I need to be watching for 4 things: Frogs, Turtles, Carp and Golden Dorado. We saw two out of four. In addition to that laundry list, I was treated to a 20 minute story about the big carp she caught Tuesday. Apparently the big fish shook so hard when she picked him up he knocked her in the water. She caught him anyway, and took him home and put him in a big bottle with water in it so he could swim around. It seems the fish is at Elia's house...not my house. Near as I can tell Elia has a house a few blocks away.

All in all...a nice morning.

Saturday, June 28, 2008


Some days just seem to come together...No work, no effort and yet everything kind of falls into place. Today was definitely one of those days. I'm not sure what it was, maybe the combination of high, cool water starting to drop and warm. Maybe the sudden change in clarity (not 100%, but a drastic improvement). Maybe just something in the air but whatever it was I can say something I never really thought I'd say.

Carp fishing with a flyrod is easy.

I stopped counting today when I hit 30 fish, and it was about 1pm. I fished until 430, and even though I changed locations (and broke the cardinal rule...don't leave fish to find fish!) I still put another 15 or so carp in the net. Call it 40 fish total, all between 7-14 lbs...all but one that is. More on that in a minute.

There were so many fish around that when I was fighting my first fish of the day another carp was chasing him down the entire time. I got my fish in close enough to net, took a stab and came up with both of them! One with my fly firmly in its lip, one dumb enough to get too close to me and a net.

Horrible picture, but you get the point.

About 4 out of every 5 fish I was was actively spawning. Every 5th fish, was actively tailing. I walked along the shallows and the water is still high enough that the shallows used to be the bank. In every little opening in the grass, I'd either see one tail waiving, or 3-4 fish rolling in a frenzy. The spawning carp were so intent on doing their thing that I was literally nudging them aside with my feet. The tailing carp were so intent on doing their thing that I could walk right up to them, and was fishing about 6 feet of leader out of my guides...no flyline through the guides at all. I simply dapped the fly in front of a tailer, watch for some excitement and set the hook.




In case the vids don't work:

Fishing to a Tailer

Stepping on Carp



The only thing that prevented me from landing 100 carp today is that it takes so long to fight and land them! Each fish was hot, I saw my backing quite a few times, but after a while I was really laying into them and trying to stop them from running. I put my 7 wt through its paces today, which made me more than a little uncomfortable as I've actually broken that rod twice. I really missed my 9 ft 9 inch 6 wt today. Most fish were 7-9 lbs, with the biggest common carp topping at at just over 14 lbs. It bottomed out my weigh net, but barely and I didn't bother to put the digital on the fish.

If you noticed, I said the biggest common carp was 14 lbs. I fished an area home to a monster grass carp known by many of us as General Sherman. You are not supposed to target grass carp out here, but in the murk you are often casting at shadows, and today one of those shadows turned out to be none other than the good General. I cast at a dark shape that was so big I was reasonably sure it was just a submerged log. Then I saw a white circle open up underwater...it seemed to be size of a bucket. The circle slammed shut right about the time my San Juan Worm should have been in the vicinity, so I set the hook.

I knew I was in trouble right away. General Sherman threw water 20 ft away in a splash I've only seen rivaled when my dad does a cannonball into his swimming pool. I was in a very, very bad position. I was standing precariously on a steep slope of rip rap which ran for hundreds of yards in one direction. In the other direction was a deep bank lined by willow trees. At the current water height, the water directly under the trees was around 5 ft deep. Absolutely nowhere to beach or land this fish.

I duked it out with the General for a good 10-15 minutes. The fish didn't make any notable runs, in fact he basically stayed at about 30 ft away, but I could get him no closer than that, and he didn't seem to want to go any farther away. Eventually, he tired and kind of floated to the surface. I finally got a really good look at him, and after glancing down the bank in both directions again...I swore out loud. I was totally, completely, utterly screwed.

I got the General's head up and headed in my direction. I knelt on one knee in the water on top of a boulder, with the other leg straight down into the depths perched on top of another fortunately placed boulder. The water surrounding me was about 6 or 7 feet deep...that comes into play later. When his head got within reach I made a stab with the net that would have made Wendy Berrell proud and bingo! I had General Sherman's head in the net. Unfortunately...that was all that fit. Literally. The good General is so big that his head and mouth were at the bottom of my net, and his pectoral fins were just inside the hoop. 70% of that fish's body was still outside my net. In a panic (I never scored well on those spatial exams or I probably would have realized that only 1/4 of that fish was going in my net) I jammed my fly rod in my teeth and scooped at the beasts tail with my right hand. At first, I tried to tail him like a salmon, but I couldn't get my hand around the base of his tail...it was way too broad. Instead, I pulled the fish toward me and kind of hugged his tail to my body. So there I was, kneeling on a boulder with one foot precariously placed below me for support. A huge fish barely in the net, and the majority of the fish pressed up against my chest. I tried to lift him and of course he started to fall out of the net. I stopped that idea, and instead tried to lift with my whole body. It worked much better, but this fish was HEAVY. I managed to get most of him out of the water, and then took two crablike steps toward the bank with the willow trees. I figured I could maybe find somewhere there to at least get a picture of the beast. I took a third step, and things got hectic in a hurry.

Apparently, the General had had just about enough of being lugged around by a fisherman. He started shaking his head and flapping his huge tail. That would have been fine except I was holding onto that tail. He slammed me a few times, and I lost my balance and slipped off the rip rap and fell sideways into the water. I somehow managed to hang onto the fish by squeezing his tail to my chest but I dropped the net by instict when I reached for something to break my fall (very smart...I tried to grab the ground that was under 6 ft of water to keep myself dry!) General Sherman tried to make a run for it and started swimming for all he was worth. I still had him pinned to my chest and as I spluttered up to the surface that fish started beating me with his tail again and I felt like I was in one of those old fashioned weight loss machines that jiggles you with a rubber belt. It only lasted about a second, because there was no way I could hold onto that tail. And just like that...poof...he was gone.

I crawled to the bank, dumped most of the water out of my waders, then realized my net was somewhere down there. I spotted it easily though (lucky) but had to get wet again to pick it up. I sat on a boulder, relived that whole debacle in my mind, and despite not getting a picture of the General...I still smiled.

I did take this one picture sometime during the battle. It sucks...the fish could be 12 inches long, no scale, and no possible way at all to know that this was absolutely the fish of a lifetime. Honest estimate after holding/fighting that fish like an MMA fighter: 55 inches long...at least 50 lbs...maybe 60. Biggest freshwater fish I've ever touched.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Quite a few days of fishing with Justin. I was worried about conditions the weeks leading up to the trip, but I never doubted that we would have a good time. As it turned out, the conditions didn't detract from the fishing nearly as much as I had thought they might. I'm too tired for more than just the highlights right now, but here are a few moments from day one through day 4.

Day one...Trout on BIG dry flies:

There is nothing like the salmonfly hatches of the west. Justin had fished the big D with me before during this hatch, and this time was no different. We chucked monster flies up underneath every tree we could find and were rewarded with plenty of spectacular action. The redsides on the D fight as hard as any trout, and watching them smack a fly on the surface is just the kind of visual candy J and I are always looking for. Quite a day of trout fishing.



Day two...Carp, any way we could get 'em:

The carping was not easy. The water was high everywhere, and muddy in most places. We stalked around as well as we could and with a little luck and some clear water, stumbled into some nice fish. Justin literally busted a knuckle on one hot fish, and I put the hurt on a big tailer that ended up tipping the scale at 22 lbs.




Day three...more carp, what did you expect?

Day three found us stalking some bigger flats, and surrounded by hundreds of spawning carp. The fish were thick, and too busy getting down to be thinking about eating. We stayed patient, kept moving and picked out the singles from the herds. Justin put it all together on a really nice fish with a 50 ft cast that plopped the fly right into the zone. He then followed up that great cast with a hook set on a nearly imperceptible take. To top the day off J hooked and landed a 15 lb beast that prompted me to tell him "The next time you come to OR, bring more backing."






Day four...despite the lure of big trout on dry flies, we "settle" for huge carp on nymphs:

We really did think about going back to the D, but it wasn't a very long discussion! Day 4 brought even higher water, but we found the fish yet again. At one point Justin was hooked up to a big fish (turned out to be 16.5 lbs). I was standing next to him with the net and flipped the fly out on a smaller fish and hooked up. I landed the fish while J continued to fight his big daddy. I kept the fish in the net planning a picture of a double, and like a dope I flipped another fly out one handed and hooked ANOTHER carp. Three carp between 2 guys is a little too much to handle, but we did managed to land two of them! Highlights of this day included multiple doubles, and we each landed beautiful mirror carp.




All in all, a spectacular trip. I loved showing Justin some of my favorite spots, and can't wait for him to get back out here again. Always a pleasure to fish with you J!

Great 4 days of fishing with Justin! Full report later, but suffice it to say that the trip was a success.


Sunday, June 08, 2008

Rough day. I headed out today primarily on a scouting mission before Justin arrives to chase some carp. I wanted to take a look at just how bad the water was and figure out if we could still scrape something together. To get an idea just how bad it was today...I called Justin and had him look into changing his ticket and coming out in July.

Conditions were horrible. The water is ridiculously high and muddy, and even the areas of the flats that are often dry were covered by 5 ft of water. I drove all over and checked everything I could think of and it was rough. I fell in at one point, slipped off a boulder I was using as a platform to vainly search for carp. Ended up neck deep in cold water. I tore holes in my waders because I got stuck in some blackberry bushes...those same bushes ripped my already many times repaired net into pieces.

But at the end of the day...I was still fishing. I did find a tiny bit of clear water, and lo and behold there were some carp around. They were spawning, but when you haven't seen a fish all day, you take what you can get. I snuck into position, made some fruitless casts and then spotted a single fish milling around on the outskirts. I put the worm on him and BANG! My day turned around. It was only a 7 lb fish, but it felt good. Minutes later another single guy cruised within site, this one ate the worm as well.

I was heading back to the car and like most fisherman, was just looking for an excuse to make one last cast. I found it in the shape of a big, dark shadow cruising the edge of the shallow water. I made a 25 ft cast, dropped a two fly rig about 2 ft in front of the slow moving shape. It kept moving for approximately 2 ft...and then stopped. I almost felt bad for the fish, the take was so perfect, even in the slightly deeper water. It just stopped, right on top of my fly. I set the hook before the fish had time to realize its mistake, and had a real battle on my hands. I swear, my 7 wt Albright doesn't have the butt of my 6 wt st croix. The big fish made a run for a logjam and I couldn't stop it, but managed to turn it instead. She dove into a weedbank, and I had to give her line and let her swim out. My fly line reappeared on the other side of the weeds moments later, draped in salad. Eventually, I got her within distance of my tiny little net and managed to steer her head into the opening. The rest of her wouldn't fit. She weighed out at just a hare over 21 lbs.

I felt really good after letting that big fish swim off. So good that I actually stuck to my little mental promise that fisherman always make. I cut off my flies, reeled up the rod and headed home. Not bad for a last cast.

Justin will be here this weekend, and while I don't expect conditions to improve, and I'm convinced we'll have a tough time finding any consistent carp fishing...I know we'll have a good time. We will likely resort to trout fishing (the horror!) but I do love the big D. I imagine we'll poke around for carp and sooner or later we'll stumble across a few. Hopefully we can find some big ones and find them in an eating mood.

See you soon J!

Friday, May 16, 2008


That's a lot of backing. In case the video doesn't load.


The carp were in full on spawn mode today. I saw HUNDREDS of fish, all zooming around chasing each other, leaping from the water and in general making a ruckus. Spawning carp are tough to catch, but I've found that if you look for single fish, you can still put together a nice day. I focussed on finding fish away from large groups, and really tried to feed the fly to them because they were pretty passive...I only had one fish light up on my fly all day, the rest only ate if you fed it right to them. Fortunately, I'm not exaggerating when I say I saw hundreds of fish...the numbers were in my favor and I managed to land about 25 before the day was over.




I fished a two fly rig most of the day, not something I usually do but the fish were so passive I wanted to make sure they had a couple of options every time I had a shot. I put a heavy worm on the front to get the set down, and size 12 rubber legged hare's ear on the back. I'd say overall the split was about 60/40 in favor of the worm, but the difference could come down to the fact that even with a double rig I really only fish one fly. I was putting the worm as close as possible to the fish, but they definitely at the hare's ear when they saw that first. I think I could have had success with either fly solo, but the double rig worked and I only changed it out when I broke a few fish off.


Yep, I broke off two fish today. Generally speaking the 1X leader usally holds well, but I was fishing near some large rock piles, and I had two fish (both easily 20 lber...one that was just a massive fish) run right through the middle of a minefield of jagged rocks. On both occasions they cut right through the leader, about 3 feet up from the fly. I had exactly 3 leaders with me today, they all came in handy!

The big fish of the day was this 22 lber. I spotted her from about 60 feet away, and snuck to within about 25 ft before making the first cast. I couldn't see anything to indicate a take on the first cast, so I took about 4-5 more careful steps toward the fish and made another cast. This time her head turned sharply to the left, right where I knew my flies were sitting in the cobble. It turns out she ate the hare's ear...I knew she was on the back fly and was pretty nervous. Matt had sent me some sample hooks that were heavy duty, and the perfect size for the hare's ear I like. I tied both of them up, but lost them both when the two fish cut me off in the rocks! I was down to my last hare's ear, and this one was tied on my usual cheap hook. I played the fish gently, and managed to get her in the net with the hook still intact.

All in all, a great way to spend your 33rd birthday. My lovely wife told me I could fish Saturday as well, but I feel good. I landed plenty of carp, stored up some great visuals and I'm looking forward to the weekend with the kids!