Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Waders & Specs For Old Folks 24Nov15

As my Guide wading boots have been resoled a number of times and when dry they are hard to put on, I have searched for the next pair. I sold my last rubber-soled G4s "experiment" to DD - super easy on & easy off, but slippery for me and just not the right fit. I went to Angler's Covey and tried the G3s but rejected them again (as I did prior) due to fit as they hurt my ankle. All's good as I believe my next pair has just arrived in the mail, Patagonia Foot Tractors. No one had them in COS to try so I went to Backcountry. They were much more expensive than Simms so I hope they work. Around the house they are like slippers so fit seems stellar - the toe box is very big for warmth in thicker socks but fit for control is still great. What makes these so unusual is that they are outfitted with aluminum bars on the sole of the boot. The bars are somewhat maleable and are designed to grab rocks - reviews have raved about this aspect (including a 68 year old western states fisherman who swears by the gen 1 version). I bought the gen 2 version created this year. They might be a little heavy but who notices that in the river - and hiking on dry land long distances might not be as comfy as my Guides. I hope they work for me.

Also, DD will be glad to learn I finally availed myself of the VSP and bought a new pair of glasses. This is after like 8 years in my last pair. Some German metallurgist guy left their aerospace industry to make hypoallergenic frames and optics. OvvO... superlight titanium alloy.

Monday, November 23, 2015

Magnum P Ale 23Nov15

First taste of an Amber I brewed 2 weeks ago.-Mouth feel is nice but could use a bit more CO2. Its only been on the CO2 for a couple days. Good finish.-Color came out perfect for what I was shooting for.-Pretty bitter, but not too much. I haven't brewed with Magnum Hops before and I think I will again for sure.  I was going for slightly more hop flavor. - Good fruity smell, not as much hop smell I was expecting from the Cascade hops.- light alcohol at about 5% as expected with the light grain bill.
Extract Recipe
Grains:
6.6lbs LME
1lb Caramel 20L
Hops:
1 oz Magnum 60min
1 oz Cascade 20 min
1 oz Cascade  5 min
Yeast:
Safale 05

Moonrise Save 23Nov15

As forecast I went to the PT on this gorgeous day in Pueblo. I caught a sufficient number of smallish fish out of Nature Center in the AM on silver surfer, DRC's FOD and black ice weight... in recognition of the BWO hatch. Did I say small fish... in a pretty crowded environment... with a decent fall BWO hatch on... grrr. That said, I went early enough to grab the first weir and did jack and then the carp hole and did jack. I fished all the way to the Valco bridge skipping folks as needed... I headed back to the car for lunch early and drive up to Valco. Also somewhat crowded upstream from Valco but I still managed to coax some fish in - still smallish relative to what's REALLY in the stream. I reached the hatchery feed, and a good unoccupied deep hole just below it, about moonrise. Things began to change... I hooked 3 big fish in a row (with an astonished nearby fishless couple as onlookers) but didn't land them despite 10-15 minute fights each and having one at my feet (but below the weir). They were really fighting long and hard and I could not cajole them to shallow water. I was getting nervous. Then I hooked another and finally landed him (blood red midge larva) after another big battle. And then another breakoff of something really big which raced through the water like a torpedo. And then landed a 20"er, but kindof skinny, on Jimi's Axe. Moonrise above Valco basically saved the day for me finally with some true PT activity... so cool.

Saturday, November 21, 2015

Happy Birthday to Me 21Nov15

I finished my custom tournament spec "Colorado Is So Cool" cornbag game set today. [Yea - it's called cornhole everywhere else but at least back in the day that had a undesired connotation, so I've renamed it cornbag.] I suppose "everyone" needs a cornbag game set to accompany drinking beer and Kala gave me the perfect IPA glasses (shown here with Modus) to assure each cornbag toss is funnier than the last. The beer meisters as Dogfish Head and Sierra Nevada collaborated with Speigelau to fashion these IPA-specific glasses. Supposedly the ribs jostle the beer releasing hops and citrus aroma which the narrowed rim keeps near your nose. She also gave me some Belgian ale tulips too which appropriate for IPAs; we are gonna compare). "IPAs Are So Good."


Whoa... then we went to the Smiling Toad brewery... a very unassuming place south on 8th street from #24. We had IPAs - the BEST I've had in COS! IPA Freely is their headliner, Fulcrum is their double and Winter Red is their red. Freely is excellent and citrusy, Winter Red is as good, ne' better, IMO than Pike's red; the Fulcrum is "ok." If you have a chance to hit this spot (and you do 'cause you often ride in the area), I highly recommend it. Then, I tried a Madarin Modus in the alternative glass style - also very good - and the glassware worked well too. Great birthday with Kala.



Friday, November 20, 2015

Windy, Warm and Nearly Worthless 20Nov15

I got out to the PT again despite the forecast for wind. Forecast was accurate... it was howling and gusting, making casting nigh impossible. And, it kept the hatch mostly off. It was a comfy day though as it was warm and sunny. I arrived on the water at 10:30am and did score a good hole but really did little there; there were quite a few fishermen, some guided. I did catch fish on the silver surfer, DRC's FoD and a blood red midge above the Nature Center but mostly smaller fish (smaller even than yesterday, like 10"). I did manage to get one nice 18" 'bow on the red midge deep in a hole above Valco in the afternoon after I moved up there. It was 63° when I left at 3:40pm and 33° degrees when I got home. I think conditions are telling me something - "move on to skiing Dave." Still...


Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Prep for Late Fall on PT 18Nov15

I'm coming off a "win" at Keystone... successful re-entry onto snow. And I'm headed to the PT tomorrow despite CO Dept of Wildlife planning to do elctro-shock fish inventory around the Valco bridge. In prep for the outing I sense I need to add some winterish bugs to augment the purple Jimi's Ax that worked well last outing. Visibility is still just ~18" so flash is in order (but it always is).

I need a small BWO emerger to compliment my mercury head RS2 and I found a recipe from O'Grady at the Drift Flyshop called the Fly of Destiny. I mimicked it some but added a metallic blue bead as a head and changed materials a bit (#22 TMC2487 hook, rusty-dun/gray-brown thread, metallic blue glass XS bead, 8 pheasant tail fibers for the tail then left in for the wing/legs, XS copper wire ribbing, UV callibaetis ice dub (kindof grey and lavender UV)... put on bead, start thread, tie in tail, tie in wire, build slim thread body, wrap wire, move thread in front of remaining PT fibers with several wraps, dub callebetis UV ice dub thorax, fold PT fibers over thorax for wing casing, tie in fibers behind eye and separate 4 fibers on each side of thorax sweeping back, secure fibers and then whip finish). This one should be awesome with low winter flows when BWOs are hatching, like now... let's just call it Dave's FoD.

I need a cobalt blue headed midge larva with a little more visibility than my highly imitative Awesome midge I tie for for spring. I don't know what to call this blue-headed green midge. It features a cobalt blue glass head, a green thread body with krystal flash rib wrap, and peacock UV ice dubbed thorax.

These flies plus some silver stuff if viz is really bad and some larger red midge larva should be my rig. I'll report results on all the new ties in a subsequent field update.
Ok... I hit the PT about noon at the Nature Center. It was crowded and I was relegated to fishing between the good holes/weirs. I caught quite a few fish but none too big - most ~14". I fished upstream pretty quickly, moving around guys as needed, and caught up to the electro-shock raft. I turned back intent on getting to Valco before it got too dark. I was pleased with the performance of DRC's FoD; it took most of the fish till later in the day. It is not as rugged as I'd like though - the PT fiber wing casing tends to shred. The glass bead version shown above actually seemed to work a bit better this particular day. The bug activity was astounding... I should've arrived earlier to get some good spots and hit more of the BWO hatch (I thought I'd be there in plenty of time but was not). The flows are very low but visibility is still only mediocre. In the PM at Valco a new #18 red vinyl midge on 202R hook took a couple nicer fish as did the cheeseman emerger (I was thinking the mayflies are pretty small). I didn't fish the cobalt blue headed midge. All rainbows... very few fish were really worthy of imaging but my camera is back at Fuji for repair anyway.

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Skunked on a Late Arkansas Outing 08Nov15

While Greg made us almost real fishermen with a 10" brown to net (plus another), Daryle, Jim and I couldn't muster even a strike on our variety of flies flicked past their noses. The water was cold @ 38° and flows were "recently" bumped by 100cfs, but that's no excuse for this gorgeous fall day in the Arkansas river valley in Big Horn Sheep Canyon. We visited (I can't say fished) Pinnacle Rock and Five Points for this downfall. Insulting after injury was a stop at Royal Gorge Brewery (good stuff and vibe actually in Canon City) for beers, wings and to watch the Broncos falter.

Monday, November 2, 2015

One Weight Decisions 02Nov15

Hitting the small streams this past season begged for something even lighter and smaller than my 3 weight... I went on the hunt. I narrowed the choice and compared the TFO Lefty Kreh Finesse 1 weight ($190 new but no tube) with the Sage TXL-F 1 weight (discontinued price ~$400, normally $650 - their "Little One" is the replacement ultralight at $850) after research. The TFO is ~6'9" long and the Sage is 7'10" and both have lifetime, no questions, replacement warranties (important to me), are 4 pc rods and are 2+ ozs. It really wasn't a fair contest at the end of the day - I could cast more delicately, accurately and further with the Sage - perhaps its the length but the taper seemed finer acting too. I also chased down a Sage Click reel (also prior gen) - here I got a $280 reel on sale for $200 clearance then presented a 25% off coupon to score it for $150. My Click II weighs 2 1/3 ozs and balances the TXL nicely. I would've liked bronze or lime to match the brown rod color - but not for +$100, so black it is. The setup is loaded with Rio LT 1 weight line (unusual departure from SA GPX for me but they don't make a 1 wt). I may not be able to get this setup on the water in 2015 but I am excited for it's packing and small stream potential - perfect for Indian Peaks Wilderness and RMNP. As a consequence of finding the Click at Sierra Trading Post, I had it shipped to the new store in town to avoid shipping charges ;) - the store (@ Powers & Barnes) is worth a visit as the prices are awesome (if you don't know STP already) and the selection is very good right now (ski apparel, etc.)... Kala scored a well reviewed GoreTex Marmot rain jacket for <50% of REI price for instance. If you go, find the 25%-30% off coupons.

Sunday, November 1, 2015

West Creek Brook Trout 01Nov15

Today I stole out (mid-day, late - sorry GL) for West Ck (outside Woodland Pk) and while I was lost for an hour on 4wd roads I finally arrived. The trip is basically among an ATV & dirt bike haven with campers all toting the toys. Below shows orange following the roads I took in and green shows where I fished... the water is a couple miles between two private pieces of property. The water was very cold and I was pleased to find brookies so close to home - who knew? They hit both the BH pheasant tail dropper and the smallish royal coachman dry. West Ck is a super small (4' across) stream totally slammed with willows, so going is bushwhacking. There are some beaver impoundments where "larger" fish were holding. It was a glorious day on the Front Range again so being out was awesome. I started in just sneakers but returned to get neoprene socks and wading boots as the area was marshy enough to make travel better if properly outfitted. All the parts of the 1 weight haven't yet arrived so the 3 was used to rip lips before I got the hang of the small fish again. Fun but I only spent a couple hours fishing and had my fill - probably because the willows made travel and casting pretty challenging.