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(continued
from
07/18 The
Fly Fishing Shop Insider) How To Select Glasses for Sight Fishing Being able to place the fly in the perfect relation to the fish, demands that the angler be able to see the fish while the presentation is being made. Polarized glasses help eliminate surface glare so the angler |
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can see into the depths. Gray lenses allow the most accurate colors to be seen by the eye. However the best lens colors for spotting fish are brown tones. This is because they provide just the right amount of color distortion to help visually separate fish from the colors of the environments that they live in. The most popular all around fish spotting color is tan. Copper and dark brown are good for bright days. Yellow to amber shades are good for dark days. To understand polarization you first need to
understand glare. Normally, light waves move randomly. However,
when light reflects off a surface, it is concentrated - "polarized" - at a
specific plane or direction, which intensifies the light into reflective
glare. Light reflected from a smooth shiny surface, such as water, a wet
road, or snow causes glare. Wherever there are horizontal surfaces
producing glare, the use of polarizing lenses is recommended.
Non-Polarized sunglasses reduce visible light, but have little
or no effect on reflected glare. Only polarized lenses eliminate glare.
Polarized lenses are constructed of a sheet of polyvinyl alcohol film (PVA),
sandwiched between, or cast into, two pieces of lens material, either
glass, plastic (CR-39), polycarbonate or toriacetate. The PVA film
molecule alignment is such that it allows only vertical light waves to
pass through the lens (somewhat like a venetian blind), thus eliminating
glare.
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If you can see fish, you can catch more of them. If you can see the river bottom, you can avoid wading into holes or tripping over rocks. You can avoid hitting things with your boat. Polarized glasses protect your eyes from UV and stray hooks. Besides people wearing sun glasses look cool. To Top |
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BE A WINNER WITH A VERY
COOL FLY ROD, WIN A WINSTON LTX !!! |
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Up-to-Date
INFORMATION on Local
Lakes at
a glance. |
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Davis
Lake located about 20 miles south east of LaPine
is one of the best "fly fishing only"
lakes in the Pacific Northwest. This 3000 acre
natural lake has the perfect food chain to produce
very large rainbow trout that feed in shallow
water. Callibaetis mayflies, caddis, damsels,
dragons and chubs are the staple diet of these fast
growing fish. Even though the water in Central
Oregon is lower than normal this year Davis Lake
continues to produce great fishing. Click for more info. |
| Damsel Flies are a super hatch in many lakes with weedy bottoms. This predatory specie provides consistent dry fly fishing from June through August. Female damsels lay eggs by going under water and boring holes in plant stalks. When they re-surface the males pick them from the water and carry them to safety. This activity puts them in range of feeding trout. The whole scene provides the opportunity for some fabulas dry fly fishing. Click for more info. |
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The Scott Rod Company hosted a dealer meeting at Antone Ranch last Thursday and Friday. They unveiled their newest rod the "S3" or "Superply" Series. We got to fish with all models. That's our own Patty Barnes putting a 9' #5 through its paces with a 20" rainbow at Flora Lake. These rods feature a fast, lightweight, easy to cast actions combined with finely detailed craftsmanship. We plan to have the most popular models when they are available in 2002. Oh, Antone Ranch is east of Mitchell, Oregon. It has 5 superb fly fishing lakes and some very nice cabins. |
| **(continued from 07/18 The Fly Fishing Shop Insider) |
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Why we love the Deschutes River |
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The
trout are obviously feeding on the surface. Their rises are often lazy and
blatant. At times you will
see the roofs of their white mouths as they inhale insects from the
surface. Healthy duns will
be plainly visible, riding the surface with upright wings.
The emergers and cripples will be difficult to observe with their
lower silhouettes. You may
tie on one of your best dry fly imitations.
Your presentation may be flawless.
It is almost guaranteed that an uncivilized vocabulary will be
the only reward for your efforts. The first duns usually appear
about 11:30 a.m. They are
very well camouflaged for mid-day.
Their graceful up-right wings are pastel gray.
The top of the body is yellow to yellowish-green to blend with
the mid-day surface glare. Their
bellies are pale green to pinkish-orange, matching, to the trout’s
eye, the surrounding vegetation or the fireball sun.
On warm days Pale Morning Duns reach
the surface and hatch quickly. They
are especially fast to leave the water after they are free from the
nymphal shuck. The full
length of the hatch may be over in a matter of minutes.
The hatch may come and go before the trout can adjust to an
efficient feeding rhythm. Cloud cover or rain slows down
metamorphosis, and the hatch can continue for hours.
The higher humidity must hold a key to survival as some wet days
produce hatches of unbelievable density.
Drying time is slowed and insects may ride the surface of the
river for hundreds of yards before wings and exoskeletons are hard
enough to support flight.
Duns, which have hatched in a healthy
manner, are usually ignored. They
are too much of a risk; too much of a chance at calories missed while
energy was expended. Instead,
the trout concentrate on the mayflies as they are sliding out of their
nymphal shuck. A low
floating comparadun with an Antron tail (often called a Sparkle Dun) is
the answer.
As the days hatch tapers off, fewer
emerging insects are available to the fish.
Or so it would seem to the casual observer. This is true in moving water areas where the currents can
carry them away.
Injured and deformed insects are unable
to leave the water and ride the currents aimlessly.
Often they end up as flotsam in back-eddies where they can
collect in vast numbers. Some
eddies are situated so that they collect nearly all of the dead and
crippled insects that come down the river.
Here the currents revolve slowly, and the insects are carried
round and round until they are rafted upon the shore or are finally
brought to the vortex of the eddy.
Often trout will concentrate on these places where maximum
numbers of insects collect.
I watch the vortex of the eddy and
several trout are rising there. Their
dorsal fins often break the surface as they quietly inhale the mayflies.
The binoculars are replaced inside my shirt, and I pick up the
four-weight rod that lies in the sparse vegetation beside me.
There is an opening in the trees to my left from which to cast,
and I slowly start to stalk the feeding fish.
The tippet and the fly are examined while getting into casting
position. My movements are
slow but efficient and fluid. The
trout are thirty feet away, and clearly visible while suspended just
below the flat surface. And
now I am in position. The
rod is raised in preparation for the cast...
From high in the air another predator watches the trout through
steely eyes. The Osprey floats silently on the gentle up-drafts that rise
from the deep canyon. She
adjusts her long, slim, muscular wings and loses elevation, being
careful not to let her shadow fall upon the pool.
Saliva runs from her triangular tongue and the vicious, hooked
beak opens and closes. The
killer singles out its victim, folds its wings tight to its streamlined
body, and drops from the sky like a falling stone. An explosive geyser
erupts from pool as the feathered bullet slams through the surface.
Sharp talons bite into the soft flesh of a trout’s back, and the big
bird rises instantly from the cool water with the captured, writhing
fish. It is not until then
that the Osprey sees the man crouching under the umbrella of streamside
alders, a fly rod in his hand and an astonished look on his face.
As often is the case, one predator's
gain, is another’s loss. The
surviving trout are instantly gone deep into the pool, hiding for their
lives. (to be continued in 07/02 FFS Insider) If you would like to read a more detailed Deschutes River Fishing Report, click here. |
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You could cast more awesome with a brand new fly line. No fish will be able to resist you. Chicks dig guys who catch lots of fish. Guys dig chicks who catch lots of fish too. Fish dig good casters the most! When it comes to fly lines, nothing beats smooth and fast. New lines are smoother and faster. To Top |
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Want to escape the
"trout madness" crowds in Central Oregon? |
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Cool weather has temporarily stopped snow melt on Mt. Hood and the Sandy is very low and water clarity is much better than normal for this time of year. Fishing for summer steelhead in the lower river is productive. Trout fishing in the upper basin has slowed because of cooler water. To Top |
| If you would like to read past "Insiders", click Archives |
| Your commentary is always welcome. Drop us a line: flyfish@teleport.com |
The Fly Fishing Shop, Welches, OR
1(800) 266-3971