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BTW - steely pics wanted

3K views 19 replies 7 participants last post by  juro 
#1 ·
It's easy to put up images, just read the 'book' (icon for help above). When you land that hawg hauzer, post a scan for us vicarious steely addicts from afar. Heck, even scenery shots from the PNW do it fer me.

Talking about scenery, we get some awesome stuff on Cape Cod during season. Patagonia images from Luis were pretty amazing too. I'll ask Dave Boucher to take a lot of shots from his upcoming Keys trip... and not of the cross-dressers.
 
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#2 ·
RE:For Juro

Hi, Juro,

I getting ahold of Tim Purvis ASAP and see if he can send you the scans we originally used for my (now defunct) Have Boat Will Travel web site. Tim did a beautiful job with them.

Meanwhile, I'm sending you more slides and a couple of prints. I think I have your address around here somewhere, but if not, could you please resend it.

Sorry I've taken so long to get going on this, but I've been way too busy at work. Hope to get some quality stream time in soon.

When are you going to go public with this, and I'll let my friends know.

My apologies to forum members who read this. It's my surest way to contact Juro.

Petri heil,

Eric
 
#3 ·
Got back a couple of pics from the Snake in October. the first is the first steelhead I ever caught on a surface fly: a riffle hitched purple muddler.

http://www.teleport.com/~dharman/1stsurf.jpg" border="0">

The second is a fish that came to hand 20 minutes later. It came up and looked at the muddler but would not come back. I tied on a black fly of my own design and greased lined it over the lie and the fish just exploded on it.

<img src="http://www.teleport.com/~dharman/hotpants.jpg
 
#4 ·
What an attractive couple! That hen is sleek and her hues are beautiful, that buck is chunky and all business. Must have been a fun-filled hour.

Just love the fall dryline steelhead fishery, what more could a freshwater angler ask for than trophy sized trout on top? Any trout longer than a Spey rod handle is a handful, and I love my 7136-4 Sage too.

Now to find something to clean up all this drool off my keybd!
 
#5 ·
Great pics Duggan,
Now what we need is pictures of rivers scenes with you battling a leaping steelhead, caught in mid-air, with the ghost of Roderick Haig-Brown in the background.
Seriously, keep the pics coming. Some of us desperately want to be out there, a pool ahead or a pool behind you.
BTW what weight and length Sage are you using?

Jay C.
 
#8 ·
Duggan,

I have an unfished 8150 that I can't wait to try out on the Merrimack for Atlantic Salmon. You understand, it is only practice for the Olympic Peninsula. The early sessions have gone well, but you don't know the rod until you have had a serious fish on the line.
Hopefully we can post some East Coast pics in trade.

Regards,

Jay C.
 
#9 ·
Jay -

I look forward to the Merrimack salmon trip with you next month after the flows recede from the thaw. If you are serious about the PNW trip this fall, let's make arrangements.

I'll be splitting time between Vancouver Island and Washington state around the end of August.

Can't wait!
 
#10 ·
Juro,

The Merrimack is a definite go. Just pick a time and let's do it. The upper reaches above FD are open so an exploratory trip is in order any time now.
On the second topic; PNW, with plenty of notice, I can committ to any time in late August/early September. What did you think about a full multi-media article out of the adventure?

I'll call,

Jay C.
 
#12 ·
Beautiful pics of beautiful fish, Duggan. These are not steelhead but what the hell... a little peek at what's coming to the Flyfishingforum over the next few months 8^)


http://www.geocities.com/hsiul57/peek1.jpg" border="0"> <img src="http://www.geocities.com/hsiul57/peek2.jpg" border="0">

<img src="http://www.geocities.com/hsiul57/peek3.jpg" border="0"> <img src="http://www.geocities.com/hsiul57/peek4.jpg
 
#16 ·
>is this Luis from FF@???

Indeed Brian. And if I remember correctly you've been around FF@ since the early nineties as well... like Juro, right? I know some guys in Argentina that fly fish for dorados. Maybe I should ask them to write a piece with pics and I could translate... hmmm 8^)
Can't believe you guys are fishing already. Here in Montreal we're back to deep freeze mode. That thaw we had was too good to be true!
 
#17 ·
Hi Luis,

I've been around FF@ since being introduced to it by Juro - on the banks of the Snoqualmie River where we were both chasing steelhead no less. Subscribed sometime in the mid 90's - seems like quite a while when I look back.

I sympathize with you guys stranded in places that get a *real* winter like Boston and Montreal. I remember snow drifts, frozen locks, etc etc. (grew up in Maryland). Seattle gets rain, but we're swinging flies at least 10 months of the year (I usually take most of December and January off).

Looking forward to more great pictures - that Atlantic Salmon looks awesome!

And BTW - you never did divulge the origin of the dead mouse - did the Brookie regurgitate it?
 
#18 ·
Yeah - curiousity's got this cat too... what's with the >blech< mOuSe? (do tell!)

I gotta mouse story - Bill Littlewood (Brian you know him) caught a largemouth with a dark yarn coming out of it's gullet one day when he and I snuck into a drinking supply pond. He said "wow this thing swallowed a ball of yarn" and yanked the yarn. It was attached to the half decomposed body of a water rat... the tail looked like yarn.

I have never eaten a largemouth bass since that day. Not that it has anything to do with the meat, but...
 
#19 ·
>And BTW - you never did divulge the origin of the dead >mouse - did the Brookie regurgitate it?

These last photos are from local Montreal friend Eugene Hoyano. According to him, the little feet and tail were sticking out of the brookie's gullet. I love it... Carnivorous squaretails!
 
#20 ·
Tod Dillion uses a HUGE fur fly to catch HUGE Labrador brookies. He brought pictures to Sully's fly-tying clave at the Stony brook sportsman's club. The material appeared to be similar to nutrina, which is a material our friend Martin Joergensen from Denmark uses to give his seatrout flies a seductive action (in much smaller quanitities). The net result was some amazing brookies from the Canadian north, willing and able to eat rodents. Another friend Wayne Norwood is a regular Labrador trophy brookie flyfisher. I'm astounded whenever I see these giant brookies!
 
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