The
one thing I like to do the most is fly-fishing; the only thing I enjoy more
than fly-fishing is sharing that activity with people. Of all the fly-fishing experiences
I have obtain over the last seven years I found that the most fun experiences
were the ones with beginners. I enjoy teaching people, not only are they
learning a new skill but I’m getting them to appreciate the natural environment
a little more. To appreciate something such as native brook trout, that could
be lost for ever to the slightest temperature change, to appreciate something
like tiny bluegills that there presents supports an entire ecosystem without
them there are no predatory fish. The biggest thing I appreciate is for people
who take time out of their lives and spend a day with my worthless life to go
fishing. When someone bails on me when they said they would go fishing with me,
lowers my self-esteem just a bit more. But when they do go fishing with me, it
raises my self-esteem, and gives me a good reason to keep pursuing my most
favorite activity of fly-fishing. A wise fly fisherman once sung “I got flies in my pockets, boxes full of
dreams,
So many places other people want me to be,
Bills to pay calls to make
guess they're gonna have to wait
I'm busy doing nothin' In the North Country,
Trout,
Salmon all around no hotels not even a town
Lay my head where it falls tonight,
Wake up on the side of a stream cast my line tie on a dream,
Waste another
day chasing things with fins, Flies and fins are all I have,
Some folks
think its so sad,
Coulda been a politician or scientist,
One of these days I
know I'm gonna die
I work just enough to survive
Spend my time chasing fish and
tying flies.”
This page will provide information on fly fishing, there will be stories, philosophical views, fly tying, fish in general, and what ever else fly fishing related.
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
Ghost on the Fly
The
most significant thing that happened in my life was my first ghost on the fly.
When people here the word ghost, they think of that super natural being that
can go through walls. But what I mean by ghost is the fish called the carp. It’s
a slang term given by fly fisherman. You might wonder why a carp is called a
ghost, because one second there in front of you and in next second they are
gone. Generally people think carp are slow stupid fish, a nuisance for the
environment, and are not a targeted sport fish. Well those people are wrong. Carp
are intelligent, fast, strong, like with any other fish they’re essential, and
a sport fish to some fly fisherman.
The
journey begins on May 19th 2012, it was a Saturday, was an
abnormally warm day for May, and my high school prom was on that day. The day began
early in the morning around 7am, my dad and I got up ate a warm breakfast, put
our 9ft 8 weight fly rods in the truck, put our canoe on the truck and set out
for our trip. Our destination was Lake Quannapowitt in Wakefield Massachusetts.
I never fished in this lake before so I didn’t know what to expect to catch. On
our way over I ask my dad what we might catch in this lake. My dad told me that
it was a warm-water lake so warm-water fish and that one of his social media
buddies told him that there were carp in this lake. I never caught a carp on
the fly before, but I tried so many times, on the Concord River, the Sudbury
River, and some reservoirs with no success. Like with any of those other trips
I would get excited to catch a carp but not get one. But I had a good feeling
about this trip.
When
we finally arrived at our destination my dad got out of the truck and walked
down to the lake to look in the water while I assembled my fly rod. Immediately
my dad yelled “Matt! come over here”. I dropped my fly rod and ran down to my
dad’s side. He pointed to the murky water, a dark silhouette swimming in the
shallow water. I looked at it closely and it was a huge carp. I waited in that
one spot for a while and saw one after another. After my rod was assembled I
made a few cast from shore before we launch the canoe. Soon after those bad
casts all the carp disappeared, my dad and I set out on the lake to look for
more fish. When we were in the canoe we had specific jobs, my dad would paddle
and steer the boat, and I would stand up and spot for fish to cast to. My dad
and I had many opportunities to cast to some fish but with no luck. After we
paddled and fished by the boat launch in the north side of the lake, we decided
to paddle over to the high bank across the lake in the east to try and find
them over there.



When
whatever it was swimming toward the boat, my jaw dropped because it was a carp.
Next thing that fish did was run hard my drag on my reel was screaming. The
fish must have run 75ft cause he went into my backing. He then started swimming
back to me and my line went loose, I thought the fish spat the hook or snapped
the line, but it turn out the fish was swimming faster than I could reel in.
The fish swam back to the boat and the drag went screaming again. I thought
that fish would bend my rod 90º. I brought the fish back to the boat for the
third time and my drag went screaming again.


Saturday, February 2, 2013
Going Fishing
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When you go out fishing somewhere,
the local bass pond or trout stream, what do you want to see when you get
there. It could be the beautiful scenery; the wildlife could come strolling
into view, but for me the one thing I want to see is the fish. I want to see
the action of them striking that dry fly, the fight they put up against me,
their vibrant colors, and then to see it swim away. That’s what I want to see
when I go out fishing, but that’s not what always happens. What usually happens,
I get excited expecting to get a fish strike, I get to river, get all rigged up
and ready to go, make a couple of cast in one spot and then move on to the next
one, I stay there till it gets dark, and when come to that time to go. When I
leave with no fish my self-esteem gets lowered slightly more, when I can’t fool
that dumb stock trout. I think to myself, I don’t even want to fish any more
and if I don’t catch any thing its not worth going, but then I’m told maybe you
should tie flies prepare a good mind set. So that’s what I do tie flies to
clear the mind of all its frustrations. When I return to the river with a clear
mind that’s when I do get a strike, I may have not caught the fish but getting
a strike is just as good and I accept its not all about the fish. Its just
being there is what it’s about.
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