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Friday, September 3, 2010

40 Rivers To Freedom

Fly Fishing & Fly Tying Blog

Archive for May, 2009

Hotspotting

Posted by AC On May - 29 - 2009

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The worst part of the drive home is the stretch from Albany to Buffalo. Its an area of the earth where time slows down, and you either sleep or deal with the boredom. The sun was in my face, so I dealt by daydreaming about the days ahead. Most people think that they go back to places not because of the new memories they’ll make, but because some stupid part of them thinks that the same thing will happen again. As we drove westward on I-90, I knew that lightning wasn’t going to strike twice. As I approach my 29th birthday, I’ve realized this, and have begun to appreciate just knowing that I’m somewhere that lightning was.

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Instead of following the south shore of Lake Erie, we crossed into Canada.

What’s a kilo-meter, eh?
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West shore of Lake Ontario
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It a weird place, that Canada. Except if someone held out two handfuls of dirt in front of me, one Canadian, and one American- I don’t think I could tell the difference. Not to mention, all of their shopping centers are filled with the same boring mega-chains that ours are. Yet from the second you enter, till you come back to the U.S. through customs in Port Huron, you can always sense that something isn’t right.

During the few days leading up to the trip, I developed a craving for brook trout fried in butter with fresh morels. the next morning when we woke up, my son and I hit the road to one of my favorite morel spots. Along the way we stopped at a small party store to get something to drink. Standing behind the counter was an old friend from high school. He had just moved back to the area after failing to make it down in San Antonio, Texas. When I asked him what it was like down there, all he could muster was that there were a lot of Mexicans. I set two pops on the counter and asked for $10 in gas on pump 2.

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We stopped at another gas station up the road before heading into the Pigeon River Country State Forest. The Pigeon is a big ass chunk of northern Michigan laced with a maze of gas well roads and logging trails. 20 minutes into the woods, we pulled off to an excellent squirrel hunting spot, and sprayed each other down with bug dope. Instead of walking through the woods with our eyes on the canopy, our eyes were focused on the ground. I was starting to think we weren’t going to find any after seeing how dry the area was, but we did manage to find a handful of shrooms, and a small patch of wild leeks. We also ran into a small herd of cow elk.

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Can you count how many elk are in this picture?

I talked the boy into driving over to check out a few of the Pigeon’s trout streams

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Let me preface my naming of rivers by saying that-

1.) No outdoorsmen in Michigan doesn’t know about the three main rivers flowing through the Pigeon: the Sturgeon River, the Black River, and the Pigeon River. Each is about 30-50 miles long, and for the most part, average about 20-50 feet in width.

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2.) 11 months ago, a small dam privately operated by a yoga retreat, The Song of the Morning Ranch, “accidentally” was opened wide up. This released a massive plume of sediment that pretty much wiped out what was a thriving, blue ribbon, brookie and brown trout stream. This is the second time this has happened. The last was like 30 years ago.

Did any of you outside of Michigan hear about this?

While I lived in northern Michigan, I was involved with the local chapter of Trout Unlimited. One of the things that was happening at the time was an effort by TU and the MIDNR to have the dam federally regulated since Song of the Morning was operating it in a peaking mode instead of a “run of the river” mode. Basically, they’d let a bunch of water out every night, then reduce flows to a trickle during the day. This is bad for fish, bad for bugs, bad for the whole ecosystem.

Did any of you outside of northern Michigan hear about this?

FERC refused to regulate the dam, despite the fact that it met several of the criteria listed in the Federal Power Act. Had the dam been regulated, the latest fish kill probably wouldn’t have happened.

Yeah, some streams need to be kept secret, but the three main streams flowing through the Pigeon River State Forest- an area with rampant oil and natural gas exploration, constant logging operations, and dam owning yoga hippies aren’t one of them. (I have nothing against them, they just suck at operating their damn dam)

If you read this report, or any other report, and you’re inspired to go fish an area or a river for the first time- go there and treat that river like it was one of your own homewaters. Be there to fight for it, tooth and nail, should it ever need people to stand up for it- the same way you would if your own local stream was threatened.

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We drove over to the tourist water on the Black River.

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Then we headed over to the Pigeon River to see how she is healing.

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After scanning the water upstream, and then down for several minutes, my son asked,

“Dad, how come there are no rising fish?”

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He passed out in the back seat on the way to the next spot. Feeling a little tired myself, we headed back to my in-laws’ house for a nap before heading out with my father-in-law for northern pike.

That Fresh Feeling

Posted by AC On May - 20 - 2009

After writing yesterday’s post, I begged and pleaded with asked my wife if we could go home to Michigan this weekend.  Although she initially wasn’t to keen on the idea, I eventually talked her into it.  Just goes to show the power of visualization.  So tonight, instead of hitting the carp flat, I’ll be packing.

To say I’m happy about this trip would be a bit of an understatement.

Got an email from my friend, Graham.  Looks like he might need to invest in some moth balls…

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Actually, he tied these 212 moths for an upcoming Sony/Columbia Pictures movie.  Since starting his business, Film Flies, Graham has tied flies for an array of blockbusters.  Last week when my kids got Bedtime Stories in the mail from Netflix, I was pumped to see one of Graham’s realistic bees land in Adam Sandler’s ice cream cone.

Did I mention that I’m going home this weekend?

Shaq caught an absolute pig on The System a few days ago.

The girth on this fish is crazy.  I’d love to see how big it is in the Fall.  For the full story, check out Shaq’s blog.

Hmmm, what else was I gonna say?  Oh yeah, I get to go fish my homewaters this weekend!

Pete over at Fishing Jones just posted a Pike report of epic proportions- even bitch slapping the fishing gods along the way by doing it with a banana in the boat.

Word on the street is that the banana was actually hidden the entire time, and then brought out at the last minute, just as the last casts were made. If I were Pete, I’d be afraid of what the fishing gods are gonna do to retaliate.  Seriously, you don’t mess with the fishing gods like that.  They get pissed.

Personally, I would never try to trick them, especially while I’m fishing my old stomping grounds in northern Michigan this weekend.

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The environmental law and policy blog, Legal Planet, hits the nail on the head in a piece posted today on California state water officials plans to “fix” the  Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta- that big, dying estuary on the west coast.

“DWR’s underwater barrier system strikes this observer as but the latest example of our longstanding environmental hubris: the idea that we humans can engineer our way out of any environmental problem if we just throw enough money and hardware at it.”

Basically, the California Department of Water Resources is using the power of disco to scare salmon from the mega pumps that divert water from the delta and ship the water south- to all those people who live in the desert…

“The latest, proposed solution, as reported by San Francisco Chronicle writer Kelly Zito, is a $1 million, experimental engineering project brought to us by the California Department of Water Resources (DWR), one that would make Rube Goldberg proud. The project consists of a bank of underwater sound effects, strobe lights and bubble machines designed to steer migrating salmon away from the giant pumps that divert water from the Delta and ship that water south. Those pumps are the centerpiece of DWR’s State Water Project, and are viewed by many experts as the principal cause of crashing fish populations in the Delta, including ESA-listed salmon and Delta smelt.”

The Perfect Day

Posted by AC On May - 19 - 2009

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More than anything in the world, I wanna go back home to northern Michigan this weekend.  I want to take a walk through the cedar swamp, to the hardwood ridge overlooking the Black River where I proposed to my wife.  I want to take the long way back to the car, and hopefully find a few morels.

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After I get back to my car, I want to drive downstream to that spot where I caught that 14″ Brook Trout on a Muddler Minnow.  I want to catch 3 Brookies around 7″ and take them back to my car with me.  I’ll clean the trout, then fry them with the morels.  One for me, one for my son, and one for my father-in-law.

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After we’re done eating, I’ll drive over to the Au Sable.  Not sure if I’ll go to the North Branch, the Main Stream, or the South Branch; but I’ll figure it out when I get there.  No matter what parking spot I find myself, I’ll probably do more watching than fishing.  I just want to watch the fish rise, the bugs fly, and the sun set…

Bad & Good News on Coaster Brook Trout

Posted by AC On May - 18 - 2009

From the AP-

TRAVERSE CITY — Federal officials have decided against placing the coaster brook trout on the endangered species list.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service published its decision today in the Federal Register. It said coasters were not distinct enough from other types of brook trout to justify listing them as endangered or establishing protected habitat for them.

Coasters migrate from streams to lakes, then spend most of their lives drifting along the coast. They tend to grow larger than other brook trout, which stay within rivers and streams.

They were once abundant in the upper Great Lakes. Now, the only self-sustaining populations on the U.S. side are in four Lake Superior streams.

The Sierra Club petitioned the government in 2006 to designate the coaster as endangered.

This must be the first time that a species wasn’t added to the endangered species list, and it was bad news.  There is some good news that comes out of this decision though.  Especially for all those people out there who have Coaster Brook Trout on their “life list”, but haven’t checked it off yet.

If Coaster Brook Trout aren’t genetically distinct from “normal” Brook Trout, then those dinks swimming around in that trickle up the road are Coasters.  You’ve already caught a Coaster Brookie! Feels great doesn’t it?!  Congratulations!

Am I the only one with a funny taste in my mouth?