Showing posts with label daiwa sagiri. Show all posts
Showing posts with label daiwa sagiri. Show all posts

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Boulder Creek 2012 09 22

It has been a few weeks since I was able to get out and I feel like I missed already out on some great Fall fishing. Fall is by far my most favorite time of year to be on the water.

Today I got the opportunity to fish Boulder Creek for 3h in the morning and show the Vagabox some fine Colorado fishing. Arriving in the canyon, I started feeling that today would be tough; it was pretty chilly and the water was very low. Indeed, in the first hole, I spooked all the fish before I was even able to cast. Realizing that I needed a more stealthy approach, moved just a bit upstream and hooked a cute little brown on my very first cast.

As turned out, the fish were very cooperative if you didn't spook them. I fished all day with various kebaris from the Vagabox and hooked somewhere around 30 fish. I LOVE FALL FISHING! What surprised me most was not that the fish were taking the kebaris willingly but the number of fish and diversity - I landed 4 different species of trout: brown, rainbow, brook and a cuttbow. Not sure if that qualifies as a Colorado Grandslam but I think it is as close as you can get without catching an actual pure bred cuttie.

I also did today some gear testing, I received a very cool pack from fishpond, the Piney Creek Tech Pack. This was the first time out and it's a pretty cool pack, I will do some more testing (at least one day hike into RMNP is a must) before I will post a comprehensive review.

the Vagabox and diary
the Vagabox hanging out and enjoying Boulder Creek
 look at those spots on this brown!
beautifully marked rainbow
surprise of the day: cuttbow
the gem of the creek, a brookie
looooow water...
... but they are still there and bunched up!
ahh Fall....
bow on a claret spot copper bar and Daiwa Sagiri, the tool of choice today
Get out and fish, Fall is short and Winter will be here soon!

Tight Lines, -K

Days on the water this yer: 27

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

RMNP Wild Basin, August 11, 2012

After a busy work week in NYC, I was looking forward to spend some fishing time in Rocky Mountain National Park with my buddy Graham Moran of Tenkara Grasshopper. We had initially plans to hit the West side of the park but my plane from NYC was delayed a few hours and I didn't get home until very late on Friday and had no time to do some research there. So Graham and I decided to hit Wild Basin since I know the area already fairly well.

I brought a new rod back home from NYC that I acquired from Chris Stewart, the TenkaraBum. A soft action zoom rod, the Daiwa Sagiri 39MC that zooms from 11.5" to 13" and weighs a whopping 2.0oz as per Chris' website. I fished this rod back in Utah before the Summit and knew I wanted one. Last week Chris got another shipment and I had one put aside for me. Although I thought that 11.5" might be a bit long in that section of the park, I had to fish it. And it worked remarkably well until we headed way further upstream where I had to get the Daiwa Soyokaze 27SR (9ft) out of my backpack.

Fishing (and catching was great) although it started a bit slow until it got a big warmer and fish became more active. As expected, most fish we caught were brookies with a few browns, a rainbow and a few greebacks in the mix. So we had a Colorado Grandslam combining our catch (I missed the rainbow and Graham missed a greenback).

The weather was a bit cool for the season, with a few showers in the morning but warming up to mid 70ies late afternoon.

first fish of the day - a typical brookie up there
a nice surprise, a good sized brown trout
Graham getting into position with tourists checking out the falls
nice water on the lower section
Graham sneaking up on some fish from behind a big rock
further upstream - perfect for the short 9' Daiwa Soyokaze

chunkie
  
it's getting tighter
nice greenback to close out the day
snowshoe rabbit 
Days on the water: 23

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Utah Trip 2012 - Part 1 - Before the Summit

Wow, what a busy week that was! I got to fish quite a bit and met some cool peeps from the tenkara community. Let's start at the beginning:

Day 1 - Tuesday July 24th - Denver to Meeker
Take-off after work, drive half-way from Denver to Park City where I was staying. Half-way point: Meeker, Co. The drive was noteworthy, with temperature ranging from 95F in Denver to 55F just on the other side of the Continental Divide with a crazy downpour that made driving downhill from Eisenhower Tunnel more like sledding. Aquaplaning is the word. Crazy. The Colorado River in Glenwood Canyon looked still impressive but man it is low. A lot of water is being missed downstream. Driving from Rifle to Meeker made me feel like a lonesome cowboy. No traffic, the road to myself, impressive landscape. Oh, and some really bad Mexican food in Meeker. Bland would have been very tasty.

Day 2 - Wednesday July 25th - Meeker to Park City, fishing the Provo River (middle)
Highway 64 to 40, following the White River downstream. Surprised I am allowed to do 65mph on that type of road but hey... this way I will get there quicker. Dinosaurs! Yes, dinosaur status everywhere in the city of Dinosaur. Even at the intersection with 40 and the school playground. Guess the big attraction around is... Dinosaur National Monument. Cool landscape. Still feeling like a cowboy, maybe even more so than the day before. Now I am in Utah and feel like I am almost there. Well, just a few more hours. Passing some interesting water, including Strawberry Reservoir. Man, that looks fishy.  One more hill and Heber Valley is in reach. The Provo flows through Heber... I think I will fish the Middle Provo before calling it a day. When I got to the Bunny Ranch, there were a few cars and a couple guys calling it a day saying the fishing is tough, one a fish or two to hand. One was complaining about the flows and saying he's heading up to the Weber. The other was actually handing me some flies that should work. Beaded San Juan Worms... I am polite and say thank you and put them in a box with "retired" flies. I gear up and head to the river and hes, it's flowing high. But hey, I fished it before with my 9ft 5wt before and the flows were even higher back then and did ok. Well, half an hour into it I had already 5 brown trout. Dinks, around 5" to 7", but all caught on a sakasa kebari. Knowing how to and where to fish high water is key, focus on the edge and slower water. Best trout was around 13" to 14", a bit longer than the handle on my Ito. 18 fish to hand when I was wrapping up around 4.30pm. I forgot how windy it gets on that river in the afternoons. Packing up and driving the remaining few miles to Park City and chill.

Middle Provo River around the "Bunny Farm" 
First Utah trout of the trip
one of many dinks I caught on the Provo
nice Provo chunk - turns out to be the biggest trout of the trip

Day 3 - Thursday July 26th - Fishing with BC of Tenkara Elevated
I met up in the morning with BC in Provo and headed to some "undisclosed" creeks, a request of BC that I honor. The first two creeks yielded only one fish since they were running pretty "off-color". Then we headed a bit south and hit a tenkara perfect little creek with very willing rainbow trout. 'Nough said.
Chocolate Milk Trout 
the harder they are to catch the prettier they are
BC of Tenkara Elevated 
Small Creek Fishing
BC working it
Day 4 - Friday July 27th - Fishing with Anthony Naples of Casting Around and hiss friend Jeff, Paul Gibson of Tenkara-Fishing.com and Chris Stewart, the TenkaraBum.
Friday started out early and with an interesting drive from Park City to Spruce Campground in the Big Cottonwood Canyon over the mountain instead around it (via SLC). This road, which I knew was unpaved, turned out to be probably the worst road I personally drove a vehicle (there was one road that was even worse in New Zealand but I was a passenger only). Anyway, the highlight of this short drive that I spotted a mother moose next to the road and a calf right on the road. I never came so close to a moose before. Pretty cool. Anyway, at the campground we all met and decided to head over to the Little Cottonwood which was the bigger and supposedly easier water to fish. It turned out this was true, the water was rushing, gin clear and strewn with nice big boulders. Fishing was a bit challenging; I started out fishing downstream but I didn't start catching fish until I decided to fish upstream (gin clear water, remember?). I quickly got 2 brookies and a rainbow out of the same pocket water and was able to pick a fish here and here going forward. Fishing wasn't fast but very satisfactory.

Little Cottonwood - fast super clear water with lots of pocket water
One of the "more open" sections of Little Cottonwood
high gradient creek- tenkara!
Chris Stewart, the TenkaraBum
first fish on Little Cottonwood - a healthy brook trough with shoulders
nice rainbow trout on Little Cottonwood
another nice brookie 
Anthony Naples of Casting Around
Anthony Naples
Chris working promising water
When we were sort of done and ready for a break, Chris and I were a bit in a pickle, we couldn't really move back or forward and the only way out was through some very thick brush (turned out that there was also some poison ivy...) and it took us a while and some sweat and strong words to get back to the trail. Anthony met us on the trail, he was smart enough to get off the river sooner that we did. The three of us hiked back to the cars on that trail which was closely guarded by a rattle snake that gave us a nice friendly rattle while we made our way past it (Anthony had the pleasure the walk by it for a third time and point it out to us ahead of time so that we were prepared). Back at the cars, Paul shared a funny story about cops, a sword yielding wanna be samurai and some Japanese tenkara anglers further upstream... some teasing was in order later that evening!

Since Jeff, Anthony's friend had a little accident and got his leg pretty bruised, he and Anthony decided to call it a day. Chris, Paul and I jumped in our cars and headed back to the Big Cottonwood and give it a try. The water was definitively smaller and brushier. Again, it took me a bit to adapt but soon I got into some smaller brown trout with a nice one to close out this day's fishing.

Big Cottonwood - looks nice, doesn't it?
still nice, but increasingly challenging
reward after some stealthy fishing
Friday evening I headed back to SLC for a small get-together with Daniel Galhardo of Tenkara USA, the TenkaraGuides, the Japanese guests and a few new friends for drinks and dinner.

Part 2 - The Summit will follow later this week, I am heading to NYC for business.

Tight Lines, -K