Every fisher needs a fishing calendar to keep track of
time. There’s a whole year’s worth out there for fishing and you’ll need to
write the days down so you don’t forget them. David Lambroughton’s calendar is
simply the best on the market for fishers.
You owe it to yourself to send $18.99 to David for him
to send one out to you. Visit www.davidlambroughton.com,
to take care of the details. David has this tendency to travel around the world
looking for neat places to toss a fly. In the long run, I’ll be fishing some of
those browns in New Zealand, too. I have taken images for glossy magazines for
more than two decades, so I can tell how nice his really are, well composed,
unbelievable colour saturation, some stunning fish and locales.
Look at the cover and ask yourself just how big was the
fish that left its splash in the middle of the image, of a stream that has that
Chalk Streams of England look written all over it. And the purist might point
out that if it is ‘the take’ by the fish then it is the only true method of fly
fishing: upstream, dry fly artistry mentioned in many Haig-Brown books, and
other books of English back ground over the past century.
And the inside cover images are handsome flies in the
Atlantic Salmon fashion, as in they don’t represent an actual bug, but are well
proportioned colourful flies tied in the traditional patterns with the full
panoply of a talented tier’s skills and longstanding classic materials. Should
you ever have the good fortune of an extra hour or so in Campbell River, go
take the tour of Haig-Brown’s house for the superb glass-cased Atlantic flies,
tied, I think, in the Art Lingren style.
Such flies do work for summer steelhead as well, so
have current use. The other book to pick up is Trey Coombs, Steelhead Fly Fishing that has colour
plates of all the classic flies, as well as the fishing method still argued
about today more than a century later. In a nutshell, greased line fly fishing
results from when they used silk to make fly lines. To make them float, the
lines were coated in grease. To make the fly track properly, an upstream mend
was put in the line just after landing, to turn the fly so its tail passed down
stream first, and sunk further.
You will find a more lengthy explanation of greased
line fishing in Coombs’ book as well as Haig-Brown’s A River Never Sleeps. The latter book also has a good list of
historical fly fishing books for the well-stocked library. On the west coast,
though, our fly fishing is mostly for anadromous species, meaning fish that
spend part of their lives in saltwater and part in freshwater. This includes
the five species of salmon, two species of steelhead, searun cutthroat trout,
Dolly Varden Char and searun brown trout, of which there are very few.
We are very lucky because anadromous fish take several
weeks to recognize real food when they change from salt- or fresh-water. That
means we tie stimulator flies, ones the get attention and elicit a strike, but
don’t actually represent any real food item.
But purist freshwater fly fishers, who fish for
resident trout that spend their entire lives in freshwater, know the ticket to
fish is a fly that resembles an actual insect that the fish feeds on, right
when you are fishing. Hatches of May, damsel and caddis flies occur in the warm
part of the day, the adults living only long enough to mate and lay eggs, and
thus the images in the Lambroughton calendar have lots of sun, warmth and wonderful
fish. And anglers getting around on their knees to stay out of view of their
quarries, and tying flies on, brace yourself, hooks as small as size 16. I can
hardly see a size 16 hook – my eyes having been the bane of my life since birth
– so, I am pretty happy to be on the coast and fall back on having to tie
stimulators on size 1 and 2 black salmon hooks. Oh, darn.
The February image features the low gradient trout
streams of Sheep County. These are pleasant, small rivers that are set in
rolling hills and grassy fields where sheep mow the lawn for you. You will see
what a good, easy river looks like. Every hundred yards there is a run, corner,
pool or combination thereof, and between them a riffle where you can easily
reach the other side, unlike Van Isle Rivers that have sweepers, logjams and
almost impenetrable bush to whack.
One of my close experiences with the bottom of a
logjam, here, came after a flood of Noah proportions. I put my foot on flotsam between
two logs in a jam that was at least 20 feet high not giving it a second
thought, and the next second was on my back down an eight feet deep hole looking
back up through the hole to where I had just tread. I learned a valuable
lesson: as flood waters recede, all the flotsam slowly comes together, and as
the water departs, come to rest up against one another, support one another,
and thus when the water is all gone, look like level ground. Not so. Now I
always test with a toe before putting weight on the crud.
A lovely brown in the March image was taken in the
water. I have done the same for a very long time, because, as David mentions,
it is kinder to the fish to keep it in water, not dry ground, gravel, dirt,
etc. where it can be injured. It is the zen of getting older and not wanting to
change the karma of nature.
Lambroughton makes a good point: getting yourself a
back-pack inflatable craft that you can carry anywhere, dramatically increases
the amount of fishing water in a day. And remember, in BC that means avoiding
all the bushwhacking. He has a Waterstrider and I have a Watermaster. I suggest
you pick one up. You and a buddy leave a car at the top, a car at the bottom
and just drive between cars. An example on Van Isle is the very long drift
between the Roberson Creek Hatchery at the top end to the Provincial Park just
before Stamp Falls. If you don’t stop, you go over the falls and are never seen
from again.
June has a good example of cutthroat trout residence:
wood, logs, overhanging trees, a deep crease and slower water. And look at the
generic rubber legged Elk Hair Caddis. This habitat is the exact opposite for
steelhead which prefer rock, absolute heads of pools, tailouts and straight
line runs with rock, not wood. The cast pattern is different too.
And the Lambroughton calendar has a typical occidental
west coast summer steelhead river for July. He does make the same point on
their residing in the absolute heads of pools, in that oxygenated water where
the river tumbles in.
The very pretty Mataura River image shows ultra-clear
water and the middle of a warm autumn day. It makes the point that the connoiesseur
can take a day with only a few memorable trout. On north Van Isle, I once had a
trip made by a 9-lb summer doe that took my fly in the first five minutes of a
weeklong trip.
As for fishing in New Zealand, do recall that it is
summer in December, so you can have the best of the summer here and then make
it extend all year round going there. And do put that on your Lambroughton
calendar.
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