Achigan Article by Nelson Ham - Tight Lines Fly Fishing Company
Transcription
Achigan Article by Nelson Ham - Tight Lines Fly Fishing Company
30-41 Achigan 6/19/06 7:31 PM Page 30 Nearly wiped out Achigan of the midwest during the logging years, smallmouth bass make a triumphant return in the freestone streams of Wisconsin S 30 F I S H & F LY T O R Y A N D P H O T O S N E L S O N R . H A M Underwater photography by Eric Engbretson SUMMER 2006 31 30-41 Achigan 6/19/06 7:31 PM Page 32 F RENCH EXPLORERS TO EASTERN CANADA, New France, adopted the Algonquin word achigan for bass, meaning “the one who struggles.” They were referring to the tenacious smallmouth bass so abundant in the rocky streams and lakes of the southern Canadian Shield—the low but ragged land of ancient rock that is the core of North America. Included in the Shield is the north country of Wisconsin, and this landscape belies a long and turbulent pre-history ending with the Great Ice Age. But the Wisconsin northwoods endured its toughest environmental challenge only in the last 150 years, with the clear cutting of forests, construction of dams and pollution of water resources. Vast quantities of fish described by early settlers were decimated, including the smallmouth bass. Today northern Wisconsin is a premier smallmouth river fishery. The forests have returned, the rivers run clear and the smallmouth bass are back, accommodating the dams as best they can. Many miles of streams await those interested in pursuing achigan once again. The bass grow large—three to five pounders live here—and you’d be surprised at the flies they’ll eat. Think saltwater big. Dark Waters and Ancient Rocks On a hot day last July, I headed north from Green Bay to float a favorite stretch of river with two new clients. The quickest route takes me about an hour and a half—if I don’t get caught behind an RV—and the ride is easy. The small towns along the way are great for coffee, but otherwise don’t make much of an impression. My anglers were meeting me at the launch, so I rode alone and made the trip a bit longer. Twenty miles short of the landing I turned on to a gravel road that follows the river. I wouldn’t call it a “river road,” but it’s close enough. It weaves its way back and forth for a few miles, every so often giving a glimpse of the river. I always slow down for these picture spots and pretend they’re views from long ago. The forest is thick by this time of year, and the water is dark—tannin-stained from the bogs upstream. Then there are the rocks. This is a freestone river to be sure, held up by two-billion-year-old rocks of the Canadian Shield. They’re worn but solid. Of course they make up the falls and rapids, but in this river they also make ledges, banks, humps and islands—unlike an alluvial river of sand and silt. Seemingly sprinkled on 32 F I S H & F LY top are plenty of boulders, some the size of my driftboat. These are erratics left by the last great North American glacier—the Laurentide Ice Sheet. This river is like many in northern Wisconsin. If you’re a smallmouth angler, it is some of the best water in the world. Achigan thought so as well; northern Wisconsin is native territory for smallmouths—lots of rock and gravel, downed wood, shady banks, big boulders and clear water full of crayfish and minnows. Smallmouth bass here did well for several thousand years, and today hold their own. But 100 years ago it was damn hard to find a decent shade tree, a clear drink of water or a smallmouth in the northwoods. The environmental history of northern Wisconsin, its rivers and the smallmouth are inseparable— linked by ecology. It’s a story of land pushed to the brink of disaster by greed, followed by a tale of redemption. Cut, Dam and Kill I first set eyes on northern Wisconsin over 20 years ago and thought I was in an ancient forest. When I moved here and started pursuing brook trout and smallmouths, I learned the trees were hardly old. A century ago, Wisconsin was the antithesis of any legitimate conservation ethic. In the late 1800s and early 1900s, the northern forests were clear-cut to “feed” the growing cities of the Midwest and elsewhere. Land was to be conquered, not cared for. Few thought of the long-term consequences, but Increase Lapham was an exception. Think of him as Wisconsin’s first state scientist. In a show of conser- vation foresight, he wrote Report on the Disastrous Effects of the Destruction of Forest Trees, Now Going on so Rapidly in the State of Wisconsin in 1867. Lapham’s warning went ignored. When the lumbering era ended around 1930, the northwoods was called the cutover. Old photos show “stump forests” without a standing tree in sight. And absurdly as it sounds, the new land was advertised as good farmland. But these infertile soils, poor growing seasons and rough terrain proved to be an agricultural nightmare for settlers. Early in the lumbering era, logs were moved to milltowns by floating them down rivers such as the Wisconsin and Wolf. Trees were cut in winter to take advantage of spring floods, and the logs were also easier to move out of the forests and swamps on frozen ground. With river transport came the need for dams as a means of moving logs across drainage divides and from tributaries to major rivers. This increased spring flows and reduced log jams, but rail transport eventually took over after the damage had been done. These log drives were destructive to rivers. Even before a drive took place, a channel was “improved” by removing or blasting boulders, rock ledges and sunken logs to lessen the chances of a catastrophic log jam. When appropriately-named splash dams were opened to initiate a drive, the sudden flood of logs would scour the channel walls and bed. Aquatic life took a real beating. Although many 19th-century dams in Wisconsin were built for logging purposes, some operated grist mills and an era of hydroelectric dam construction followed in the early 20th century. Sure, it looks pristine and calm right now. Just wait until there’s a five-pound smallmouth bass splashing on the other end of your line. Smallmouth bass here did well for several thousand years, and today hold their own. But 100 years ago it was damn hard to find a decent shade tree, a clear drink of water or a smallmouth in the northwoods. Thousands of dams remain in Wisconsin. Most of the northwoods lay in shambles at the beginning of the 20th century. Wild fires raged, lakes and rivers choked from silt and channels were ravaged by drives. Hundreds of dams squeezed the rivers. Land, lake and river ecosystems were devastated. Catching a decent fish was practically a fantasy. Imagine how much worse it got when the paper companies started polluting the water in the decades after the log drives. MURDICH MINNOW PATTERN BY BILL MURDICH TIED BY UMPQUA FEATHER MERCHANTS HOOK: Tiemco 811S, size 1/0 THREAD: White 6/0 Uni-thread TAIL: Silver Flashabou over white bucktail with pearl Flashabou COLLAR: Silver Flashabou over white Ice Fur BODY/HEAD: Pearl Estaz, top colored with cool gray Pantone pen. If needed, use underbody of white med. chenille for bulk EYES: Silver or pearl 3-D molded, size 5.0 NOTE: For freshwater use TMC8089NP size 10 or Targus B9089 size 8. Revelation, Rehabilitation and Rebirth Someone saw the light. The relatively mature forests and mostly healthy rivers of the northwoods today are owed to model conservation and environmental movements that developed in the 20th century. Environmental tragedy turned into a remarkable recovery. By the early 1900s, a State Conservation Commission was established, which included the Fisheries Commission and State Board of Forestry. Northern Wisconsin was replanted with the help of the Civilian Conservation Corps and nurtured to forest once again. The conservation effort to rehabilitate the northwoods was well underway by the 1930s, and it SUMMER 2006 33 30-41 Achigan 6/19/06 7:32 PM Page 34 included restoring streams and lakes to bring back the “good old fishing days.” Sid Gordon, author of How to Fish from Top to Bottom (1955), for a time headed the program to improve aquatic habitat. Fish hatcheries were important to this rehabilitation effort. The first fish hatchery in the country was built in Madison about 1875. A bass hatchery was established in 1903 in Minocqua, and by 1940, Wisconsin had eight stateoperated bass hatcheries that produced between 1.5 and 2.5 million fry and fingerlings per year. In the 1950s it was clear that natural reproduction was sufficient to maintain bass populations and stocking was almost eliminated. Even so, much of the bass stocking that took place in the early 20th century was for largemouths, which were stocked mostly in lakes. Stocking of smallmouths was minor, and limited bass stocking has returned in recent years. The struggles of Wisconsin’s aquatic resources didn’t end in the ‘40s and ‘50s, however. Senator Gaylord Nelson founded Earth Day in 1970—the impetus for the establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency and the Clean Water Act. It was finally some help to address years of abuse of water resources. Dams remain a complex issue. Hydropower is a relatively clean energy source, but the negative impacts are obvious, such as restricting fish passage for spawning and dramatic flow changes that flood or strand fish. New laws make it easier for the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources and groups such as the Wisconsin River Alliance to have a voice in protecting rivers when hydroelectric dams come up for relicensing. So, Where are We Now? Many Wisconsin rivers are better today than they were several decades and even 100 years ago. Most rivers designated by the DNR as Outstanding & Exceptional Waters are in the northwoods. The return of smallmouth bass to northern Wisconsin is especially 34 F I S H & F LY BARTEAU MINNEAUX PATTERN BY BART LANDWEHR TIED BY BART LANDWEHR HOOK: Tiemco 8089NP, size 6 THREAD: White 6/0 Uni-thread TAIL: Gray Icelandic sheep fur over pearl Flashabou over silver Flashabou over white bucktail LATERAL LINE: Two peacock herl each side THROAT: Red rabbit COLLAR: White Ice Fur UNDERBODY: White medium chenille BODY/HEAD: Pearl blue Angel Hair spun in dubbing brush; top colored with cool gray Pantone pen EYES: Silver or pearl 3-D molded, size 5.0 NOTE: Vary the pattern by coloring with different pens. The Barteau is a great saltwater pattern as well and has been used to catch many species including jacks, stripers and snook; substitute a stainless hook. BASS SANDWICH PATTERN BY BOB MARVIN AND NELSON HAM TIED BY NELSON HAM HOOK: Daiichi 2461, size 1/0 THREAD: Chartreuse 6/0 Uni-thread, Flatwaxed Nylon for attaching foam TAIL: Two chartreuse marabou plumes LEGS: Orange round rubber hackle UNDERBODY: Chartreuse Estaz BODY: White 6mm craft foam, front cut at 45-degree angle EYES: 7mm doll eyes NOTE: Body is from The Happy Face Fly by Captain Bob Marvin, Naples, Florida. It’s a simple but effective way of creating a popper from sheet foam. Substitute rabbit strips, craft fur, bucktail, or feathers for the tail. Rubber legs can be attached to front foam tie-in. Fish with short, quick strips and give good pops. A long strip will pull the fly underwater, resulting in a big air bubble and pop. impressive if you consider that the species received little help after the logging era and the modern population is self-supporting. Stocking numbers from the Wisconsin DNR are telling: In fiscal year 2005, about 14,000 smallmouths were stocked statewide—compared to about 170,000 largemouths and over 20 million walleye, three million pike and two million brown trout. The smallmouths seem to be doing well on their own, but this doesn’t mean they aren’t susceptible to over harvest. A trophy fishery can be lost in a hurry. Convincing more anglers to practice catch-and-release and to not fish for bass protecting their nests during the spawn is critical. Why? First, there isn’t much scientific debate that removing a male from a nest, even for a few minutes, results in some mortality to eggs or fry. And there is no question that a guardian removed permanently from a nest results in complete mortality. Basically, fishing to a bass on a nest is a bit like hunting deer chained to a fencepost—let them be. Second, there is a common misconception that bass numbers are near those of trout in similar-quality streams. As John Lyons, fisheries biologist for the Wisconsin DNR, told me, “…because bass are higher up on the food chain [largely fish and crayfish eaters versus aquatic insects]…more total primary and secondary productivity is needed to produce a pound of bass than a pound of trout.” He went on to explain that anglers and even some fishery managers have unrealistic expectations as to how many bass a stream can support. Lyons’ years of research suggests that trout will have maximum densities three to 10 times higher than bass, all other things being equal. Finally, bass in colder, less-productive, northern waters grow much slower than those in southern states. A 20inch river bass from northern Wisconsin is easily 10 years old or more. Catch-and-release angling is vital to supporting and improving the fishery. Their river homes and lives are tough, even without the destruction of days gone by. The smallmouths still endure the dams, ice, cold, heat, floods, pike, musky and countless other obstacles. A trophy smallmouth is more than anything a survivor, “one who struggles.” Waiting for Popper Time When I met my clients that July morning last year, we dropped my driftboat at a launch below a dam, and I ran my shuttle. My two smallmouth mentors, Tim and Bart Landwehr from Tight Lines Fly Fishing near Green Bay, had found their “shuttle girl” a couple of years earlier. Still in high school, she drove fast enough—seemingly powered by bubble gum and pink flipflops—and I was back at the ramp in 15 minutes. As I rowed away from shore, I knew we would quickly be out of the dam’s sight and then float seven miles without hearing a car and only seeing a cabin or two. My anglers started casting minnow patterns at bank eddies, and within five minutes both had 14-inch smallmouth. We started into a long straight reach. Here the river flows over those 2-billion-year-old rocks and also follows a fault—a suture zone where ancient North America added a new piece of crust a long time ago. I barely had to move the oars to drift just so. Otherwise I stared at the water, alternating between my angler’s flies and the bank far ahead, looking for the telltale swirl of a surface take. No swirls yet, but it was only midday. We stuck with my mid-summer play and kept on fishing big streamers, but I was so wishing for popper time. Summer Strategies, or, Keeping it Slow I’m no different than most bass anglers who believe catching smallmouths on the surface is simply the best. There is good fishing in Wisconsin spring and fall, but a hot July and August are the halcyon days of northwoods smallmouth fishing. Fishing smallmouths in a big Wisconsin river can seem daunting, but keep two things in mind: First, there is a lot of unproductive water. Second, you aren’t going to find many spots where you’ll catch 20, 10 or even five fish too often. So, besides recognizing good structure, it’s best to cover large amounts of water. One strategy that I use mid-summer involves searching with a large (four-tosix-inch) streamer on a floating line (e.g. Murdich Minnow). Fish such Fish large salt water flies with short, erratic strips to imitate dying minnows. Then, annoy the heck out of your driftboat companions by catching all of their fish. TIBOR REEL AD SUMMER 2006 35 30-41 Achigan 6/19/06 T A C K L E 7:32 PM Page 36 T I P S A Northwoods Fly Box PICK FLIES THAT COVER THE WATER COLUMN IN ZONES—surface, shallow, middle, deep and bottom. Most of the following are widely available: Good surface flies are Umpqua’s hard-body poppers, Dahlberg Divers, Murray’s Shenandoah Chuggars and Sliders, Whitlock’s deer-hair poppers and foam poppers. Get these in minnow gray, red/white/black and yellow/red to start. Add yellow or chartreuse, and black for the divers. Standby streamers are the Clouser Minnow, Whitlock’s Sheep Minnow, Barr’s Bouface, Lefty’s Deceiver and Blanton’s Flashtail Whistler. Most come in one or two standard colors; good Clouser colors are chartreuse and white, chartreuse and yellow, sculpin and baby smallmouth. Bottom patterns include Whitlock’s Near-Nuff Crayfish and Scorpion, woolly buggers, Holschlag’s Hackle Fly and Galloup’s Zoo Cougar. Go for browns, olives, black and crayfish. Murray’s Hellgrammite and various nymph patterns are great. Some swear by Clouser Bass Nymphs. Many bass flies are tied on Tiemco 8089 hooks. Buy them mostly in sizes 10 and 6. For most other freshwater hooks, use sizes 1 through 8. For saltwater patterns find hooks no larger than 1/0, preferably 1 and 2. Better yet, buy models and tie your own on freshwater hooks. If you tie, the TMC 8089 and the Targus equivalent are excellent. I use the Targus in size 8 quite a bit. The Daiichi 2461 is good for longer-shank patterns. Smallmouths will sometimes feed heavily on trout forage. Carry a box that includes terrestrials—hoppers, beetles and ants. Some Wisconsin streams have good leukon, brown drake, and Hex hatches. A few White Wulff, Drake, and Hex patterns will have you covered. streamers as a dying minnow, meaning erratic strips and pauses. Slow, long strips are a no-no. If you’ve ever watched a predator fish feed on baitfish, you know the act. Dying guys are always taken first—the easy meal. Also, never take your eye off the fly. A smallmouth often hits the fly during the pause and will spit it out before you feel the take. If you don’t get hits on a shallow minnow, think about going to a smaller fly first, then probing deeper with a weighted streamer, such as a Clouser or a crayfish imitation. If need be, switch to light sink-tips. Choose crayfish patterns that have action even in slow water. Worst of all are the raffia-and-feather concoctions made to look like real crayfish. I’d take a woolly bugger any day. Fish these with a strip-pause-pause-strip cadence. In the best of times you’ll go up the water column. When aggressive fish start hitting shallow patterns, switch to poppers or divers. For most bass anglers, smallmouth on the surface is ‘our’ dryfly fishing. There aren’t many ways to mess up popper fishing, but most people seem inherently good at doing it wrong. Some people do pop too much, however. In still water, 10 to 20 seconds between pops is an absolute minimum, some would say even a minute or more. If you’re fishing moving water, the time isn’t as important as the distance. A pop or two every ten feet is a good start, but pop more frequently with increasing turbulence or turbidity. The second problem is the hook set. It’s human nature to set the hook as soon as you see action at the fly. Wait a second or two—then set the hook. You’ll catch more fish by slowing down. On the Rocks With No Ice Technique is one part of smallmouth strategy, but you need to cover structure. Authentic river rat and smallmouth master Dan Gapen (son of “Muddler” fame) calls them “cuts”, but you’ve heard “current breaks” or “seams” in trout fishing. They’re places where water velocity abruptly changes because of stream structure. Smallmouth don’t expend more energy than they need to. They would rather be in slow water right next to fast current, a veritable food highway. People think of cuts as being only vertical, such as where current breaks around a boulder, but velocity transi- On a typical summer day, focus your surface and shallow-water presentations on bank eddies, points of rock or gravel jutting into the channel, rock ledges, rock walls, rock islands, rocky shorelines and river humps—shallow, rocky, submerged islands. These flies are made completely out of baby bunny rabbits. Or synthetic fur and rubber legs, either one 36 F I S H & F LY Remember the Nymphs Nymphing for bass is important to master. In the heat of midday, when fishing with streamers or poppers can be slow, Harry Murray’s strategy of methodically drifting nymphs through riffles into pools can be deadly. Bass nymphing is best done differently than nymphing for trout. Bass are sight feeders—a fly showing life is important. Again, pick flies with materials that have action in the slightest current like marabou and soft webby hackle. The most effective way to fish nymphs, and even crayfish at times, is to periodically move the fly by hard mends or lifting the line. You’ll know the fly has jumped when you move the indicator. Bigger flies also mean a bigger indicator. This technique can be extremely effective on finicky smallmouth. It’s also a great searching technique in off-color water. Try Murray’s nymph patterns, woolly buggers, Tim’s Moppet and crayfish. TIM ’S MOPPET PATTERN BY TIM LANDWEHR TIED BY TIM LANDWEHR HOOK: Tiemco 8089, size 10 THREAD: Black 6/0 Uni-thread TAIL: Black zonker rabbit strip, yellow Krystal Flash BODY: Copper Diamond braid LEGS: Fluorescent yellow round rubber hackle HEAD: Black rabbit fur spun in dubbing loop EYES: Lead or lead-free medium dumbbell, yellow NOTE: Chartreuse, black, crayfish and white are standard colors. For white pattern substitute red Krystal Flash, pearl diamond braid, red eyes, white and red, with black perfect rubber legs and a turn of red fur at the head. It can be stripped like a crayfish, but is most effective drifted under a big indicator with occasional jumps by mending. tions also occur in the horizontal, for example where a riffle empties into a pool. The classic river structures to target for smallmouths are those that generate cuts or those that concentrate forage (crayfish and minnows) in slower water. On a typical summer day, focus your surface and shallow-water presentations on bank eddies, points of rock or gravel jutting into the channel, rock ledges, rock walls, rock islands, rocky shorelines and river humps—shallow, rocky, submerged islands. Uniform sand and small gravel isn’t productive—but don’t pass rock piles big enough to hold fish. Big boulders and boulder fields should never be missed. I learned that lesson the hard way two years ago when Bart and I guided four anglers. We were on a stretch of river he had floated the preceding month and I had only seen for two days. We were even between our boats most of that summer day, but then I “low-holed” him—unintentionally, of course. When he passed me, his anglers were sitting and he was rowing fast. He moved to a shelf with boulders in shallow water, dropped anchor, tied poppers SUMMER 2006 37 30-41 Achigan 6/19/06 T T A A C C K K L L E E 7:32 PM Page 38 T T II P P S Gearing Up for Smallmouths PICK A MEDIUM-FAST OR FAST-ACTION NINE-FOOT 8-WEIGHT for your first smallmouth rod. The heavy line allows for easy casting of heavy or wind-resistant flies and quick landing of a strong fish in current. Six and 7-weight rods certainly have their place in smaller streams and also in clear, shallow water typical of late summer, so keep those in mind for those conditions. I prefer fast action rods (but not too stiff) and haven’t used anything better than the Sage XP. They cast well in the range of 30 to 60 feet and have strong butt sections. Other folks certainly make excellent fly rods, just make sure you test cast with a fly when it’s time to buy. You don’t need a stop-a-truck drag for bass, but reel weight is more important than you think. Casting a tip heavy 8-weight will lead to arm and hand pain. Pick a reel that balances your rod roughly at the position of your index finger and thumb. If money is tight, get a good rod and workman reel. If your wallet is more forgiving, consider that your new 8-weight will be ideal for steelhead and bonefish—assuming you have a reel with a quality drag. Buy the best reel you can. Ross Canyon reels are proven big fish performers. The Cadillacs are still Tibor and Abel. I plead shameless endorsement for Rio fly lines. The Clouser is the best bass line that I’ve used. Its turns over bulky flies easily and shoots well. Rio uses the Clouser taper in several other lines useful for bass fishing. My favorites are their short-head (seven to nine and a half-foot) intermediate, type 3, and type 6 sink-tip lines (look for Streamer Tip and Density Compensated Sinking Tip). They’re ideal for shallow rivers. I use the intermediate clear-tip line often. Its slow sink rate is perfect for fishing streamers over submerged bars, shelves and humps. on both rods and waited. In the next 20 minutes, my boat picked up two fish and his boated 12, while we were made to watch. In the afternoon heat the bass had moved up on to the shelf to feed on minnows, and they were happy to eat poppers as well. The lesson learned was: grasshoppers should never low-hole their masters. Weeding Out Weedy areas attract minnows and can harbor big bass. They can also be tough to fish with fly tackle; try surface and weedless patterns. Slower water downstream of riffles, larger drops to deep water, and the tails of pools can be productive. Occasionally you’ll need intermediate or deep-water lines and flies. Drowned or partiallysubmerged wood is a mixed bag. Isolated stumps or logs will often hold a fish or two in an 38 F I S H & F LY Flies connected to floating lines are best served by a standard eight or nine-foot leader tapered to eight, 10 or 12-pound tippet. If you tie your own, there are plenty of published formulas to pick from. Sink-tip lines work fine with a three- to five-level leader. Regular mono is good most of the time, but fluorocarbon has its place, especially in low, clear water. I’ve used mostly Umpqua and Rio tippet, but I’m also impressed with Frog Hair; although expensive, it really is supple, stretchy and strong. Tie on your flies with the non-slip loop knot. It is strong, quick and easy to tie—and most importantly, allows the fly to move freely. Practice tying the loop small; big loops cause tangles. Check your leader and knots frequently. Casting a big fly rod, especially with heavy flies and sink tips, isn’t easy. Take a couple of lessons, and practice regularly. Focus on basic casting, but also mending, shooting line, casting under obstacles (branches) and accuracy. Two skills poorly developed in many anglers are hook setting and fish fighting. Have someone show you how to strip-strike properly. Most people use far too little force and wonder why they lose fish—they never did set the hook. There is a lot of stretch in a fly line, and 10-pound tippet is strong stuff. It takes skill to land a strong fish quickly, and keep in mind that the “Orvis Pose” is a bunch of b.s.—it’s a great way to break a rod. Keep the rod lower and closer to your body. You’ll tire a fish quickly by pulling the rod in the direction opposite to its run. One final thought—a good guide will show you how to fish as much as where to fish. Take advantage of that. MIKO ’S MUDBUG PATTERN BY NELSON HAM TIED BY NELSON HAM HOOK: Eagle Claw 630, size 1 THREAD: Brown 6/0 Uni-Thread WEIGHT: Medium nickel-plated Dazl-eyes EYES: Black medium bead chain or burned mono; tied down bend from shank CLAWS: Two brown grizzly marabou plumes FEELERS/LEGS: Orange or yellow round rubber hackle; Flashabou and Krystal Flash to complement BODY: Brown grizzly, oversized saddle hackle; palmer over pearl-root beer Estaz NOTE: Plain lead eyes can be used, but harder dumbbell eyes create more sound when hitting underwater rocks. Most effective fished when stripped instead of nymphed. otherwise bleak stream bed. Some authors stress fishing the shady bank, but too many fish are caught in sun. Concentrate on structure and forage first, and then shade. Nonetheless, always cover water beneath overhanging trees. Honestly, if you’re fishing northern Wisconsin rivers for the first time, you would be blind to miss half the good structure. The islands, ledges, points, walls, humps and big boulders are obvious in the lower flows typical of late summer. Short of signs saying, “cast here,” the structure can’t be more accommodating. It’s some of the best smallmouth water in the country. But the other half? River knowledge is hard won. There are still times when I fish with Tim or Bart on a river we all know, and invariably we catch a few more fish on “their side.” At its bleakest, fishing for smallmouths will make you think you’re Smallmouth bass are wily creatures, but can still be fooled by an expertly-placed leggy fly. also seldom saw big fish pictures—no 22-inch monsters. I did catch fish, but not many and not anything big. Then I had an epiphany, mostly because I was just really tired one Saturday morning. A few years ago I accidentally watched ESPN one weekend and started reading In-Fisherman and Bassmaster. And to answer your question: No, I don’t have one of those fishing shirts that make me look like a NASCAR crew chief. But I suspect there is a flyfishing rep somewhere with visions of guides wearing Winston or Sage plastered across their shirts and embroidered flames thrown in for the new generation. What I noticed was the gear guys using tactics a lot more refined than things I’d seen in any fly fishing magazine. Granted, fishing deep with gear is more user-friendly than with fly tackle, but to be more successful as a smallmouth fisherman, I needed to nymph and sling sink tips more effectively and more often. Otherwise, my bass fishing It’s fishing those trenches that will make you look long and hard at spinning gear the next time you’re at a hook-and-bullet store. hunting for the giant squid in an ocean trench. When the fish disappear there is only one place to go—deep with heavy flies and sink-tips. Gapen calls it “center-streaming.” The fly tackle is cumbersome, the casting is not really casting, the strikes are hard to detect and the fishing is slow. My advice to you: Good luck It’s fishing those trenches that will make you look long and hard at spinning gear the next time you’re at a hook-and-bullet store. The ESPN Epiphany When I first read about fishing for smallmouths, it seemed that I’d need poppers, a few crayfish patterns and roughly 500 Clouser minnows—and the streamers should all be two-tothree inches long. I AVER Y A N C H O V Y PATTERN BY NELSON HAM TIED BY NELSON HAM HOOK: TMC 8089NP, size 10 THREAD: Danville monofilament, ultrafine TAIL: Silver and pearl Flashabou, mixed BODY: Pearl Ice Wing Fiber or Gartside Secret Stuff or Martinek Dri Ice TOP: Smoke DNA Holo-Fusion EYES: Pearl or silver 3-D molded, size 5.0 NOTE: Ice wing fibers are attached in alternating clumps until the head is reached, then brushed vigorously rearward with a dog brush. Flies up to six or eight inches long can easily be tied in combination with other tailing materials like feathers, Icelandic sheep fur or Puglisi fibers. Try fishing with a Petitjean Magic Minnow Head or Wigglefin. would be like dry-flies-only fishing for trout. All this led me to one magical thought: I wondered why we didn’t use flies as big as some of those bass lures. Have you measured a Zara Super Spook or looked lately at the size of most soft baits? Three-to-six inches is a lot more common than two or three— and the largest swimbaits used today for targeting giant largemouths are almost a foot long! It was about this time that I started fishing saltwater with Captain Bob Marvin. A chance referral put me with this masterful, old-time, Florida guide. His snook flies acted like smallmouth flies. I also became entranced with saltwater tyers like Steve Farrar and Tim Borski. Their flies made of the latest synthetics, sometimes mixed with naturals, were no longer stiff and lifeless like their predecessors. The final piece of the puzzle was my SUMMER 2006 39 30-41 Achigan 6/19/06 7:32 PM Page 40 friend and former fishing partner Phil Cochran, an ichthyologist now living in Minnesota. In my mind he is the last of a dying breed of old-school field naturalists. He gets the credit for everything I know about stream ecology, but certainly none of the blame for all the things I’ve forgotten, which are a lot. Phil showed me my first caddisfly— Helicopsychidae if I remember right— the one whose case looks like a snail shell. For the next few years he went on to show me how a stream works. He also showed me research of his friend John Lyons, who most consider the Wisconsin DNR’s expert on smallmouths. B A S S P A L A , O . F. ( O R I G I N A L FLOATING ) PATTERN BY NELSON HAM TIED BY NELSON HAM HOOK: Mustad 3191, size 2/0 (straighten offset bend with line pliers) THREAD: White Flymaster; white Flat-Waxed Nylon for attaching foam LIP: FlyLipp UNDERBODY: Pearl Estaz BODY/HEAD: Black over white strips of 2mm craft foam EYES: Silver or pearl 3-D molded, size 5.0 NOTE: Flash tail and rattle can be added. Short, quick strips work best. Saltwater Streamers and Big Stinking Bass The result of all this fishy learning is that I realized big saltwater streamers should work for imitating minnows important to a river smallmouths diet— sometimes more so than crayfish. And there was no reason not to go big; ichthyologists say that four or five inches is an optimal forage size for larger bass. Many minnows such as shiners, dace, stonerollers and chubs have average lengths of two-to-four inches, with the largest adults being several inches longer. That is when I started using saltwater patterns for smallmouth. New equipment and tying materials meant I could cast the flies easily and they had life in the water. Most importantly, I caught more big bass and fewer smaller ones. When Tim and Bart trusted me to show me their smallmouth “crusher,” I felt an inner redemption. It was a fiveinch saltwater pattern marketed by Umpqua called the Murdich Minnow. Fished like a dying minnow, it attracts Bass in colder, less-productive, northern waters grow much slower than those in southern states. A 20-inch river bass from northern Wisconsin is easily 10 years old or more. Catch-and-release angling is vital to supporting and improving the fishery. T R A V E L T I P S Northwoods Rivers and Shops DON’T EXPECT “TOP 10 SMALLMOUTH RIVERS.” Similar articles have turned weekend trout fishing on the spring creeks of southwest Wisconsin into a team sport, complete with early morning races to the one car pull-outs. Fortunately, many bass fishermen focus on lakes in the summer and many smallmouth streams in July and August can only be negotiated by wading or canoe. On many summer days you can have a Wisconsin smallmouth stream to yourself. The DNR estimates about 3,500 miles of smallmouth water in the Wisconsin. The northern water includes the big rivers and flowages, such as the St. Croix and Wisconsin—almost all of which can be fished by boat. The southwest streams are part of the spring creeks region. This is small-stream wading or canoe water. Buy DeLorme’s Wisconsin Atlas and Gazetteer for planning trips. Wisconsin has excellent trout-only guidebooks, but Motovioloff’s Flyfisher’s Guide to Wisconsin (2003) includes smallmouths. Midwest Fly Fishing magazine regularly publishes articles on smallmouth streams, patterns and tactics and can be found online at www.mwfly.com. Russ Wayre’s Smallmouth! America’s Top Bass Waters (Midwest/South ed.) profiles several lakes, rivers, and flowages in Wisconsin. Much more info on the “where” can be found on the Internet. Many smallmouth waters are on state or federal land, or under the pervue of power companies, and these folks are happy to supply info. You shouldn’t have trouble finding them online. A good start is the DNR website at www.dnr.state.wi.us. Use the U.S. Geological 40 F I S H & F LY Survey’s website to monitor river discharge, especially with the passing of summer storms (water.usgs.gov). You can assess whether you’ll find a raging torrent or perfect conditions on your favorite river. The following are Wisconsin flyshops that can set you up with equipment, flies, and a good guide. Local river knowledge is important. Top-water and shallow-water fly fishing is a relatively short season—plan ahead. July and August are the prime months. By the way, we haven’t touched largemouth bass or lake fishing— Wisconsin is black bass wonderland. Tight Lines Fly Fishing Co. Tim Landwehr DePere, Wisconsin 920-336-4106 www.tightlinesflyshop.com Angler’s All Roger LaPenter Ashland, Wisconsin 715-682-5754 [email protected] The Fly Fishers Pat Ehlers Milwaukee, Wisconsin 414-259-8100 www.theflyfishers.com Superior Fly Angler Jeff Dahl Superior, Wisconsin 715-395-9520 www.superiorflyangler.com Hayward Fly Fishing Outfitters Larry Mann & Wendy Williamson Hayward, Wisconsin 715-634-8149 www.haywardflyfishingcompany.com big smallmouth. Unfortunately, the Murdich didn’t survive in Umqua’s lineup—they never figured out that Bill Murdich made a killer smallmouth fly. Like me, you’ll need to tie your own, but it is completely worth the time and effort. Believe me. Smaller flies have their important place in bass fishing—in spooky water, for example—and sometimes bass simply aren’t aggressive to larger prey and thus larger flies. But the latest generation of fly rods makes casting larger flies easier, and new fly-tying materials allow us to tie bigger patterns that are light, maintain the appearance of bulk, shed water easily and show life in slow-moving water. Don’t expect big streamers to be a panacea. You’ll probably catch fewer fish on average, sometimes very few, but in the right situations you’ll be casting the right fly to take some of the biggest fish of the season. It is the same principle used by Whitlock, Galloup, and Linsenman to target monster brown trout—big baitfish patterns with big equipment for big fish. If you are serious about hunting big bass, give big minnow patterns a try and stick with them. We’ve waited far too long to fish big “lures” to smallmouths. The Bassmasters did it years ago, but they had a good reason—they fish for money. I also have some new bass heroes— Steve Farrar, Bill Murdich, Tim Borski, Jack Gartside… the list goes on. The next time you need some bass-fly inspiration, look in the saltwater bins. You might stumble onto a bass-wielding treasure. Just for a Moment My new friends and I finished the float last July by casting poppers to rising fish, but the biggest fish that day took a Murdich Minnow it saw only for a second. The outside bank of a fast sweeping bend had a rough rock wall Just like putting together an opening paragraph or the foundation for a building, bass fishing is all about structure. Find downed logs or rocky banks and you’ll find the fish. with one eddy no wider than a shoebox. Time for one cast and a quick strip. I had to slip my boat slowly downstream into quieter water so we could land the fish—19-inches long and dark SILI -SKIN MINNOW PATTERN BY STEVE FARRAR TIED BY NELSON HAM HOOK: Tiemco 8089, size 10 THREAD: White Flymaster or Danville monofilament, ultra-fine UNDERBODY: Mother-of-Pearl Sili-skin rolled around middle half of hook shank TAIL: Silver Flashabou over Tan DNA Holo-Chromosome over white DNA Holo-Fusion BODY/HEAD: Pearl Flexicord Light (quarter-inch) covered by Mother-of-Pearl SiliSkin EYES: Silver or pearl 3-D molded, size 3.5 GILL SLIT: Red Pantone pen HEAD COATING: Dip in Softex, Softbody, or Plasti-Dip as chocolate, but as beautiful as they come. On some days I’ve seen that river, with the passing of a summer storm and low fog, look a bit like the coastal rainforest of Alaska. The rocks look eerily like cloaked sentinels, standing guard, unwilling to give in to the constant passing of dark, acid waters born in headwater bogs. Similar is the smallmouth bass, a survivor, unwilling to come to hand without a fight—the one who struggles. The Algonquin were right on, and this struggle can mean many different things. If you come to the northwoods, you might find yourself whispering achigan when the fighter slips out of your hands and back into dark waters. Nelson Ham grew up the son of a Bavarian fräulein and a U.S. Army combat soldier who always let him go his own way. A glacial geologist and college teacher by trade, he spends his summers fishing and guiding in northeast Wisconsin for Tight Lines Fly Fishing. He lives in Green Bay with his very understanding wife. She even rows a driftboat. SUMMER 2006 41