It turned out to be not as cold as I expected today. However, it was overcast and foggy in the morning, with light south-west breeze. The fish were active, and Olives did show up, as they often do on gloomy early November days. I spent the entire day fishing pretty much two flies: black and brown leeches, and Olive dun imitations I tied yesterday. I brought and used only one rod-McFarland with Edgar Sealey (J.W. Young) reel. It worked like a charm...
Sunday, November 11, 2007
November Days
It turned out to be not as cold as I expected today. However, it was overcast and foggy in the morning, with light south-west breeze. The fish were active, and Olives did show up, as they often do on gloomy early November days. I spent the entire day fishing pretty much two flies: black and brown leeches, and Olive dun imitations I tied yesterday. I brought and used only one rod-McFarland with Edgar Sealey (J.W. Young) reel. It worked like a charm...
Saturday, November 10, 2007
Sunday, November 04, 2007
Windy Day Rod Testing
Saturday, November 03, 2007
New Rods
I have just finished a couple of new rods.
The first one is another vintage Lamiglas (dark brown usanded blank). It is a strong, 7'6" 5 piece rod, which works best with lines 6, 7 or 8. I built this rod mostly for warmwater fishing. It is a bit too powerful for trout fishing around here.

The second rod is built on McFarland Dry Fly Taper E-glass blank. It is a 7'10" #4 in a 4 piece version. The blank color is dark amber brown ("flamed cane"), with white spigots. I used the Struble D-8 seat with myrtle insert, and I turned the straight Garrison grip. The vintage agate guide has a plum stone, and I used the Snake brand snake guides on this rod. I also experimented with ferrule plugs of wood and cork I turned on my hobby lathe-they work just fine! Pictured below is the rod with Edgar Sealey Flylyte reel (by J.W. Young) from 1965.
Saturday, October 20, 2007
Reel seats
I have also recently made this all cork down-locking seat, pictured on the top. I used some leftover parts, including the stainless steel ring, as well as the combination of Copano burl cork and the regular cork. It will probably be used in the upcoming months, perhaps for some short, light line glass rod.
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Waterloo in the Fall
We found two typical Fall hatches on the stream-very small olives (Plauditus punctiventris) and larger Baetis sp. hatching sporadically. Around 1:00 PM we found a bunch of rising fish, who took BWO imitations in sizes 16-20. Little Rabbit Foot emergers and duns got the job done and my Country Gentleman Variant dries took fish successfully. Amy stayed with the surface flies for the entire afternoon, while I fished Buggers upstream, throughout the quiet pools, where there would be no apparent activity on the surface. I managed one nice 15' brown on the hopper pattern. Bugger produced in the riffles, too. Grasshoppers were active on the banks and they can be productive on this
We didn't get any giants, but enjoyed the steady action, finishing near the upstream bridge around 4:00 PM, tired and happy. I will try to make another trip (depending on the weather) in the next week or so. My plan is to test the new McFarland Dry Fly taper glass rod I am working on right now.
Monday, October 01, 2007
Another season winds down...
Pine Creek improvement in the lower section of the stream has been finished. They have built a nice parking lot with the inscription dedicated to Amy's grandparents (picture on the left.) I fished the creek several times during the past ten days and the fishing has always been exciting. I did not get many large brookies in comparison to the last September, but enjoyed the consistent action. The stream is becoming more popular and that is my only complaint. You can see the pictures of the same stretch of the creek taken last September (left, below) and several days ago (center, below). The bank improvement looks great and should increase both the numbers and the size of fish.
I finished the season with the side trip to the Kinnie, two days ago. The stream was slightly stained, but I found some fish on the top, feeding on small olive duns. Each time I fish this stream I remind myself that I really should fish it more often, since it takes only 30 minutes for me to get there. Here are a couple of pictures of the stretch I fished (below), taken in the late afternoon. (I decided not to take any fish pictures, anyway.)
I will be waiting for some warm days in October and November to visit streams in NE Iowa.


I will be waiting for some warm days in October and November to visit streams in NE Iowa.
Friday, September 14, 2007
BWO
For the past several days I have been witnessing some exciting BWO hatches on the streams of the Driftless area. Here is the imitation I prefer to fish any time BWO's are hatching...
Tail: olive angora/lite -brite blended dubbing (short) and wood-duck fibers (long)
Body: olive turkey biot
Thorax: opossum dubbing, slightly teased out
Wing: grey rabbit foot hair (or natural cream, for visibility)
Monday, September 10, 2007
Waterloo after floods
As it is always the case after the flood, the stream bed changed in certain locations. Certain holes were filled out, but the stream was in a nice shape. I fished mostly grasshoper imitations on my Lami 8' #5 and switched to brown leeches at the end of the day. The winds were gusting, but the sky eventually cleared and the fishing was just geting better by the time I had to head home.
Monday, September 03, 2007
Back in Boston
I fished various locations around Winthrop and Revere both evenings. Spring tides and strong SE winds brought plenty of debris along the beaches, and I found plenty of juvenile bunker each night. Unfortunately, there were no stripers or blues crashing the bait. I can only imagine how the fishing in the harbor will be in a couple of weeks, with the fall migration under way...
I have brought along my latest creation, a travel saltwater glass fly rod built on a vintage Lamiglas blank. Even though the catching was not great, I had a great time testing the new rod. The old Lami blank is unsanded and much faster in action than the contemporary Lami Honey blanks. I suspect it is an older S-glass model ( I actually have another in dark brown color), and it reminds me of a graphite, but it is heavier and little smoother.
I must admit I was disappointed I haven't had a chance to properly 'baptize' the new rod. However, I will make sure I visit the Beantown every summer from now on... You can view the pictures of the rod below.
Thursday, August 09, 2007
Brook Trout and Lamiglas 7' 3wt
I have just finished another glass rod-Lami 7' 3wt 4pc, built on older blank from Clemens Tackle. I've been using the two piece version of the same model for the second season now, and both rods have pretty much identical actions and flex-profiles. The four piece version has just so slightly more stable tip, which I prefer.
Amy joined me for an afternoon trip to the favorite brookie stream to try the new rod. It was a beautiful summer day, perfect for wet wading. Consistent breeze proved to be a good test for the soft rod. Brookies vere active despite the hot weather, but I didn't connect with larger fish. I ended up with at least a dozen fish-most of them in the 7-8' range. Majority of the fish took a foam hopper and I got a few on the beetle imitation. Unfortunately, I forgot to charge the camera battery and Amy ended up with the single photo (see above) before it went dead.
On our way back, we discovered an excellent, newly opened cafe and enjoyed our macchiato and biscotti.
You can see the close-ups of the new rod below...
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