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How to Tie: The Pine Squirrel Trout Spey Streamer

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In this week’s How to Tie video feature, Tim Flagler, from Tightline Video is here to show us how to tie the Pine Squirrel Trout Spey Streamer.

Learn About This Fly

Difficulty: Intermediate

When it comes to flashy streamers, there are few patterns that are more effective than the pine squirrel trout spey streamer. Tied with a shank, some squirrel zonker strip, and a healthy wad of dubbing, this is the perfect fly to swing across rivers at the end of a two-handed spey rod.

What sets this fly apart from other squirrel based patterns such as the mini leech, is this pattern’s shank to hanging hook body. By attaching the hook on a thread that hangs below the main part of the body, not only does this fly gain a life-like movement such as that of an articulated streamer, but also becomes harder for an ornery trout to shake out the hook once it decides to go airborne.

As Tim explains in the video, this fly has a lot of steps, and may seem intimidating to less experienced tiers. However, if tied with care and concentration, is a relatively easy fly. This pattern is a great way for novice fly tiers to learn more about tying with shanks and articulated factors.

Ingredients:

  • Hook shank: Waddington shank (here, a Partridge V1SS), size 25mm
  • Thread: Black, 6/0 or 140-denier.
  • Hook: Intruder-style hook (here, a Partridge Z4), size 4.
  • Connection: Maxima Braid Ultragreen, 80-pound.
  • Adhesive #1: UV-cure resin or superglue.
  • Braid coloring: Black Sharpie.
  • Butt: Ginger Angora goat dubbing.
  • Tail/rear body: Rust barred pine-squirrel zonker strip.
  • Eyes: Gold bead-chain eyes, medium.
  • Mid Body: Rootbeer Palmer Chenille, medium.
  • Legs: Brown barred Sili Legs.
  • Front Body: Black cross-cut rabbit zonker hairs. 

Now you know how to tie the Pine Squirrel Trout Spey Streamer!

Video courtesy of Tightline Video, Ingredients courtesy of Orvis

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The Fly Fishing Show 2021: Dates, Locations and Opening Hours

The Fly Fishing Shows are some of our favorite events of the year, they’re a fantastic way to get eyes and hands on the latest fly fishing gear, and meet plenty of fishy folks from around the country. We’re excited to have some new events to look forward to, even if they are 10 months away. Here, we’ve gathered the list of the Fly Fishing Shows coming in 2021, their hours and directions to each, so you can make sure to get them in your calendar. Hopefully, we’ll see you at a couple!

2021 Fly Fishing Shows:

Denver, CO – January 8-10 – Denver Mart

Address: 451 E 58th Ave, Denver, CO 80216

Hours:
Friday, Jan. 8: 10 am – 6 pm
Saturday, Jan. 9: 9 am – 5:30 pm
Sunday, Jan. 10: 9 am – 4:30 pm

Buy advance tickets!

Marlborough, MA – January 22-24 – Best Western Royal Plaza Hotel and Trade Center

Address: 181 Boston Post Rd W, Marlborough, MA 01752

Hours:
Friday, Jan. 22: 10 am – 6 pm
Saturday, Jan. 23: 9 am – 5:30 pm
Sunday, Jan. 24: 9 am – 4:30 pm

Buy advance tickets!

Edison, NJ – January 29-31 – New Jersey Convention and Exposition Center

Address: 97 Sunfield Ave, Edison, NJ 08837

Hours:
Friday, Jan. 29: 9 am – 6 pm
Saturday, Jan. 30: 8:30 am – 6 pm
Sunday, Jan. 31: 9 am – 4:30 pm

Buy advance tickets!

Atlanta, GA – February 5-6, Infinite Energy Center

Address: 6400 Sugarloaf Pkwy, Duluth, GA 30097

Hours:
Friday, Feb. 5: 9 am – 6 pm
Saturday, Feb. 6: 9 am – 5:30 pm

Buy advance tickets!

Pleasanton, CA – February 18-20, Almeda County Fairgrounds

Address: 4501 Pleasanton Ave, Pleasanton, CA 94566

Hours:
Friday, Feb. 18: 10 am – 6 pm
Saturday, Feb. 19: 9 am – 5:30 pm
Sunday, Feb. 20: 9 am – 4:30 pm

Buy advance tickets!

Lancaster, PA – March 6-7, Lancaster County Convention Center

Address: 25 S Queen St, Lancaster, PA 17603

Hours:
Saturday, Mar. 6: 9am – 5:30pm
Sunday, Mar. 7: 9am – 4:30pm

Buy advance tickets!

Staying Afloat #6: Lael Paul Johnson

Introducing the Staying Afloat Series, where we take an inside look into the lives of many different fly fishing guides, shops, brands, and lodges across the world in hopes of finding out how the CO-VID is affecting them, what they are doing to help, and how we can do our part to help them.

For this feature, we interviewed Lael Paul Johnson @flygyde a steelhead/salmon guide, photographer, and entrepreneur located in the Pacific Northwest.

Flylords: Who is Lael Paul Johnson?

LPJ: I’m a former traveling surgical technologist turned fishing guide/photographer originally from Kansas, now living in Seattle for the past 15 years. In early 2005 I came out to Seattle to work at the Children’s hospital, and after a few months of enjoying the city, I decided to renew my contract to stay longer and find out more about the Pacific Northwest. If you have ever been to Seattle in the summer, you know why I stayed, its the place you don’t leave from mid-May to Labor Day, you live in a vacation area. Nightlife, bars, restaurants, and more outdoor activities than you can think of make the city an incredible place to live. All of the fantastic things I mentioned about Seattle and the PNW were enough to make me stay in the area, but fishing made the decision final.

After a few years of living in the PNW and fishing some of the rivers on the Olympic Peninsula, I visited the Olympic National Park, and it was like I had left the state and entered another world. The trees were huge, the river was big, and the landscape was wild and untouched other than gravel access roads to some of the lower parts of the river flowing through the park. Seeing this part of Washington is what gave me the drive to switch careers and pursue the life of a professional fly fishing guide and @flygyde you see on Instagram. National parks are places that everyone should enjoy and are real treasures within our fast-paced digital society, of constant connection. It may sound cliche, but for me, it was the only place where I could genuinely “unplug” from society and what I have seen in surgery. Guiding was a way for me to help others I had worked with when I was in the hospital to find what I had already discovered and also keep me outdoors.

Flylords: How has the CO-VID outbreak impacted your business?

LPJ: Knowing the impacts of COVID-19 on my business is a tough question to answer. Just like everyone else, I am still assessing the damage each day. As of right now, it canceled the rest of my 2020 wild steelhead season, quickly taking over thousands out of my pockets when I’m making the bulk of my income for the year. Also, I host a trip and guide in Alaska on a remote river for wild Steelhead. That too has been canceled due to a mandatory 14-day quarantine upon entering the state. Our accommodations had to be closed down until early May as well, typically when the season is over, and I’m heading home.

Long term, I fear people may not have the income they had to visit the area I guide or be timid to travel. I know being outdoors is one of, if not the safest place to be during all of this. I hope that travelers will still get on a plane to see that for themselves when the smoke clears.

Flylords: Are you still operating?

LPJ: Unfortunately, no. Washington was given a stay at home order by the Governor, which took effect on March 25th at midnight. On the 24th, I spent a few hours on the river to give myself some peace and then drove home to Seattle. I have been on Quarantine ever since.

Flylords: Why did WA close all recreation fishing? It seems a little harsh as no other states have done so yet?

LPJ: Washington shut down fishing to stop the spread of the virus. The reason why they singled fishing out as a cause of the spread of the virus is because of the pressure it would have on the small communities that are still open for fishing during this time of year. This problem wasn’t created yesterday, and fishing pressure funneled to small towns didn’t start with the spread of the virus. Decades of poorly managed fisheries in Washington led to this problem. The virus, alongside the closure to recreational fishing, is only now amplifying that problem and putting more eyes onto something that has been brewing for years.

We have a lot of advocates/groups trying to save our Steelhead, but not too long ago in 2016; it was still legal to kill a wild steelhead. It seems insane, but that is the truth, and to fix the problem we are in right now, we need Michael J. Fox, a Delorean, and a trip back to the eighties. I applaud all people in the fight for our fish; we need you desperately. Unfortunately, our state has made it a very tough battle for those on the front line of this issue years before COVID-19. We cannot recover what has been lost, but we can do a better job of making a new future.

Flylords: Do you think it is safe for recreational fishing right now?

LPJ: If you didn’t have to get gas: YES
If you didn’t have to visit a fly shop: YES
If you didn’t have to renew your license: YES
If you didn’t or wouldn’t pick up your buddy: YES
If you didn’t have to grab food at the small town store already low on stock for their community: YES
If you are not guiding, enticing people to travel from other places that could spread the virus farther: YES
If all of these real situations were not present, then, YES, I think it would be safe for recreational fishing right now.

Now the reality is, that won’t happen, and there is no way to 100% stop all of these activities that go along with fishing. With that being said, why single out us? That’s where I and a lot of other anglers got upset by forcing us to stop fishing but leaving all other sports and outdoor activities up for grabs because we need a license to fish. Fishing is one of the only outdoor activities that social distancing is perfect for, during these times. If our fisheries were appropriately managed in the past, anglers from all areas could visit their local river with minimal travel to enjoy a day on the water. Instead, they are left to crowd the few places that provide opportunities that most anglers live two-plus hours away from.

Flylords: What are you doing to pass the time?

LPJ: I am thinking about what is next while being prepared for what is going on now.

  • Tying flies in preparation for summer steelhead and Chinook Season.
  • Doing all the business tasks that are usually put on hold, with me being on the water every day from sunup to sundown in March and April.
  • Understanding programs that may help small businesses like mine by helping to pay me and my contractors for trips canceled.
  • Staying active on social media to give me and others something to look forward to when the dust settles.
  • I am thinking about other income streams that will keep me on the water and my sport alive while the world is recovering from Corona.
  • Organizing & editing photos and deleting duplicates.

Flylords: Any fly recipes or food recipes you want to share with us?

LPJ: Yes, my favorite pattern and signature fly is called the Night Crawler, featured on page 38 of the latest issue of the @steelheadersjournal. It shows all of the materials needed as well as step by step instructions on how to tie it. This pattern can be changed by mixing up some of the colors to give you more variety in your fly box for different times of the day or species.

Also, in the late fall of 2019, I wrote an article for the Fly Lords for a Dry Rub Salmon and Steelhead Recipe. Very easy recipe to make at home and also on the river.

Dry Rub BBQ Steelhead and Salmon Recipe

Flylords: What are some ways customers can support you right now?

LPJ: Stay positive by looking forward to the future and plan a fishing trip for this summer, fall, or winter. If our schedules are full, we can continue to work through this, possibly recovering from any wages that have been lost.

Some will have to make the tough choice of shutting down if there is nothing in the future to keep them going. The outdoor activities we all love arent going anywhere, and the guides, fly shops, and brands need you to help us get through this, so we can still be there for you.

If you are a bead fisherman or are looking for a different way to make a shoulder for your steelhead and salmon intruders with also adding weight to your tube flies visit www.baitballz.com and purchase a package. They are a soft reusable bead that has many applications and are available in 9 colors. For traditional fly fisherman and Spey guys and gals it will speed up your fly tying process and give you a perfect dubbing ball that will not collapse when in the water.

Flylords: Any advice for other guides experiencing the same hardships?

LPJ: This may be your new beginning for something better, don’t think it’s over if there’s still water in the river!

  • Learn something about helping your business that you never had time for before.
  • Give yourself something to look forward to by reaching out to another guide you have always wanted to visit and trade trips
  • If you can live without it or haven’t used it all year, sell it. Streamline your business and cut the fat
  • Network, network, network! Brand, personality, or location you have always wanted to work with? Now is your time to plan your strategy to do what you have had little time to do. Yes, it may be harder to get there than before, but that time has passed, this is now. Dreams don’t manifest out of thin air, but opportunities to get there do. Don’t waste this time!

Flylords: Positives to come from this mess?

LPJ: Appreciation should be the number one thing on everyone’s mind. The world is seeing what we have taken for granted mean to us. Fresh air is going to smell better; a hug will have more meaning, beers with your crew at the local bar will feel like a family reunion, and a visit to your parents or grandparents we will never want to end.

Flylords: Anything else you want to add?

LPJ: Good things come from bad situations because of the pressure it puts on you to be better. Don’t let the pressure bust your pipe; let the pressure make a diamond!

Cheers to Fat Tire and New Belgium Brewing for making this series possible. Throughout the “Staying Afloat Series,” we will be sending beer to people who are really in need of a “pick me up”. If you have a good story for someone who deserves some beer shoot us an email theflylords@gmail.com.

Be sure to check Lael out at @flygyde. If you’re looking for steelhead guidance on Washington’s Olympic Peninsula, Alaska, British Columbia or Patagonia be sure to visit www.flygyde.com.

A Passion for Steelhead

Dry Rub BBQ Steelhead and Salmon Recipe

Video of the Week: Bay Flats FlyFishing Anthem

This week we take a look at a short film from Bay Flats Lodge. They take us on a short trip to see all of the fishing opportunities that the Texas coast has to offer. The film features some great shots of the redfish that you could be getting on down in Texas.

I don’t know about the rest of you, but this video got me excited to get back on the water soon. I am already planning my post-quarantine saltwater trips and I hope the rest of you are as well!

The video of the week is selected and written by FlyLords team member Conner Grimes (@doublehaulmedia).

Video of the Week: SUDAN

Video of the Week: Baja Buffet

Video of the Week: The Midnight Mission

Social Distancing on the Yellowstone River, Montana Style

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Fly-Fishing is one of the greatest ways to social distance. By its very nature you’re outside, away from large crowds, and at peace with the nature around you. In this crazy time of self-isolation and staying inside, a few brave anglers navigated out in Livingston, MT to remind the rest of us that fish still have to eat and some natural processes continue on no matter what’s going on. Sometimes in the midst of the chaos, we find peace in the most unique places. For most anglers that peace comes when we’re on the river.

Enjoy this short clip by Fishcamp, and try to put yourself in their shoes. For a moment, close your eyes, hear the rushing of the water against the river banks and over the rocks. Think about the flutter of a fishtail in your hands. Imagine that tight line as you hook up with yet another, giant brown on the Yellowstone River. Glancing left and right now and then to check for black bears. Reaching down into the net to pull out your trophy brown trout and pose for a picture.

So sit back, relax, and dive into the world of brown trout fly fishing in Livingston Montana.

This film was created by Fishcamp. Be sure to check out more of their videos on the Fishcamp YouTube page.

These instructional videos are curated and written by team member Sam McLean (@sam_d_mclean).

Photo of the Day: Electric Casting

Eastern Sierra local Jimmy Goodman @goodmannnnnn electric casting for cutthroat on the Owens.

We had rolled down for a mellow evening session on the river and within minutes the sky in the distance erupted with rainbows, lightning, wind, and rain.

It was awesome to watch it rolling through from afar. I quickly grabbed my camera, tried to time the lightning strikes as best I could and luckily got a couple as Jimmy was casting.

We packed things up before the sky unleashed on us and called it day.

Article and photos from photographer @andrew_miller.

Photo of the Day: Teaching Alaska Catch and Release

Photo of the Day: The Double Rainbow

Fin and Skin Interview with Dan Santoro

I went down to Edison, NJ for the fly show this past January specifically to talk Fin and Skin with Dan Santoro. The booth was busy with the sound of the tattoo machine buzzing and onlookers checking out the work.

Flylords: When did you start tattooing and fly fishing?

Dan Santoro: I started my apprenticeship in 2000 and was tattooing full time by September of 2001. About 6 years ago I did a float trip on the Delaware with one of my oldest friends Chris Calabrese, who was already neck-deep in fly fishing. After I landed a smallmouth on a Clouser minnow almost at the boat ramp after a long day of getting skunked with spin gear. I was elated and immediately bought a setup. I feel like to some degree I’ve been doing fishing tattoos my entire career, especially having learned to tattoo in a very blue-collar area, but trying to understand and appreciate fish more has definitely pushed me further along the path. In a way, tattooing and painting fish has become an extension of what I love about fishing when I can’t actually be outside.
getting tattooed
Image courtesy of @lbrasseur

Flylords: How often would you say you get to do fishing-related tattoos?

Dan Santoro: When it rains it pours. Some weeks I feel like it’s a big chunk of my clientele, other times I get none at all. In 2018 I was donating a portion of every fishing-related tattoo to conservation and that really sparked something. I was tattooing people who may have otherwise never found me, or even gotten tattooed. It was actually getting kinda crazy. Doing several weekly, I was like “ok I need to get back to making money” haha. I will probably be getting conservation literature in the mail until the day I die.

Dan Santoro Bass Tattoo
Image courtesy of @dan_santoro

Flylords: For the most part I feel like the traditional fly fishing crowd is not the same clientele that walk into your studio. How did you get involved with tattooing at the fly fishing show? What were your thoughts?

Dan Santoro: It’s all changing. The new guard has far less of a stigma with tattooing and I think maybe some of the younger folks open that door for the older more conservative types. I’ve done plenty of first-time tattoos on 60 plus years old people who tell me they have wanted a tattoo their entire life and now they feel liberated with age and are no longer concerned with the opinions of others. I get goosebumps. It’s really empowering if you let it be. Offering a service that allows a passionate fisherman to express themselves is really an honor in my life. As far as the fly show, Casey Anderson who is a friend of mine, tattooer, and guide on Pyramid Lake set it all up. I was honestly shocked that it had become a thing, but glad that it has.

Dan Santoro Red fish Catch and release
Image courtesy of @dan_santoro

Flylords: I know you were based in NYC for a while where are you tattooing these days? What is the best way for someone to contact you?

Dan Santoro: I am currently at American House in Hawley Pennsylvania. My shop is essentially an appointment-only private studio that I share with my friend Dan Nelson. I have two children now and wanted to slow it down a bit after many years in Brooklyn, Manhattan, and central NJ. I do everything via email and I am fairly easy to find with a quick internet search.

Dan Santoro Tattoo
Image courtesy of @dan_santoro

Flylords: What’s your favorite fish related tattoo you have done?

Dan Santoro: It’s really hard to say and I am grateful for having done so many. I like it when clients are open to a more expressionist version of a fishing-related tattoo. I have no interest in realism on almost any level, so I appreciate it when people aren’t hung up on anatomical correctness and are open to something fun.
Dan Santoro Musky tattoo
Image courtesy of @dan_santoro

Flylords: If you could pick anywhere in the world to fish and tattoo where would it be?

Dan Santoro: Maybe riverside tattooing off a car battery in Labrador. I don’t know how busy I’d be. Eventually I’d also like to go back to Iceland. I have tattooed there in the past. It was a great experience and the locals were excited to get tattooed. However, these days if I’m getting on a plane, I don’t want to bring tattoo equipment, just my rod. I am very lucky to be busy at home.

Dan Santoro Hobo Carp Tattoo
Image courtesy of @dan_santoro

Flylords: I have seen tattoos become more socially acceptable overall but I don’t see a lot of guys out on the water that are heavily tattooed.  Do you ever feel like you get the feeling of judgment or looks on the water or in the fly shop?

Dan Santoro: Honestly I have to say no and I can’t think of one direct negative interaction. I have actually had people with no visible tattoos on them at fly shops and shows tell me they follow my work. That’s pretty special.
Dan Santoro Small mouth bass
Image courtesy of @dan_santoro

Flylords: What’s your favorite species to target and what’s your favorite species to tattoo?

Dan Santoro: I’d have to say smallmouth and brook trout. I grew up bass fishing with dad. Every year we did a long Maine trip. My wife and I have picked up on the tradition. We do a yearly long trip up there now that we have a family of our own. I love Maine and have the earliest memories of bass fishing there. Brook trout because I always find small streams fascinating. The unexpected waterfalls and mystery of the random deep pools. Those little wild fish and their environment make me strangely emotional. I am almost always alone when I fish them. I now live on a great smallmouth lake and about 200 yards from a brookie infested tributary.
Dan Santoro river clean up pig farm ink
Image courtesy of @dan_santoro

Flylords: It seems you were very into conservation and the environment from our talk while I was in the chair. I see on Instagram you have been involved in a few river cleanups. It looked like you guys made a difference and had a lot of fun doing it. 

Dan Santoro: Finding fly fishing was a major eye-opening experience for me. It took all these thoughts and feelings I’ve had about nature and put it in a neat little package for me to understand… and it was simple. We can’t enjoy doing this beautiful thing if we don’t take care of the environment. I found fly fishing in the midst of living in Brooklyn and it made me realize how important the outdoors was for me as a kid and how much I had forgotten it as a city person. We bought a house in rural PA and it all kind of started coming together. Chris Calabrese and I got involved with the Pig Farm guys who came through and helped us do an Upper Delaware River clean up and that really sparked something. We’ve done quite a few now and have several more in the works. All are welcome. You don’t have to fish. It is fun watching people come out as just a thing to do and see the light turn on like “Oh so this is what you do! I get it!” And some of those people have returned for multiple clean-ups.
Dan Santoro Tattoo
Image courtesy of @dan_santoro

Flylords: So if someone wants to travel to you and get a tattoo, where is the closest stream they could wet a line?

Dan Santoro: Happy to tell you my shop is about 200 feet from The Lackawaxen and about 15 miles from the main stem of the Delaware River with plenty of fishing between them.
Fly fishing bent rod
Image courtesy of @dan_santoro

Flylords: Have you ever tattooed a client and then gone fishing with them?

Dan Santoro: Yes I have. Not enough. Maybe I will make a point to do that more often this year.
santoro otter tattoo
Image courtesy of @dan_santoro
Dan Santoro Rainbow Trout painting orignal art
Image courtesy of @dan_santoro
You can Check out and pick up some of Dan’s work at https://www.instagram.com/dan_santoro/?hl=en
If you enjoyed Fin and Skin with Dan Santoro you may also want to check out Fin and Skin with Drew Wilson:
https://theflylords.com/fin-and-skin-with-drew-wilson/

Trout Unlimited Offers Free Memberships To America’s Essential Employees

Yesterday, Trout Unlimited President and CEO, Chris Wood, thanked all the essential employees keeping the country running amid COVID-19’s craziness. In a great show of support, TU announced free one-year memberships for all essential employees. “For all of the essential employees, we want to say thank you. Thank you for everything that you are doing to keep us happy and healthy…We all owe you a debt of gratitude,” said Chris Wood.

If you are an essential employee, or know an essential employee, who would be interested in joining the TU community, send an email to chris.wood@tu.org. Chris closed this announcement by saying, “I very much look forward to welcoming these people into our community of chapters and people who love to give back to the lands and waters that sustain our great nation.”

Again, to all essential employees, email chris.wood@tu.org if you are interested about securing a free one-year Trout Unlimited membership.

Major props to TU, and thank you to all the essential workers out there–your sacrifices are not going unnoticed.

California DFW Emergency Meeting Descends into Chaos as Anglers Voice Opinions

On April 8th, we shared a story about the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) holding an emergency meeting to discuss giving the CDFW director the power to “delay, suspend, or restrict recreational fishing.” They held the meeting online and invited Californians to tune in and voice their opinions regarding the possibility of closing the state’s freshwater fisheries…and man, did they show up.

“Make fishing great again!”, “Fascists!”, “I have the right to speak!” were all shouted during the online video conference by angry constituents.

So many opinionated anglers tuned in that the board was unable to get enough members on the call to form a quorum, prompting the board to cancel the meeting.

“You cancel, we’re just coming back,” one call participant said.

“We also want to make it crystal clear that today’s proposed decision was not about banning fishing statewide or locally,” Bonham and Commission President Eric Sklar said in a statement after the meeting. “We are not contemplating statewide closure.”

For more on the story, check out this article from The LA Times.

A Taste of Steelheading

Going into my recent trip to Oregon, I knew that steelheading wasn’t easy. I had a feeling that I knew what I was getting myself into – the awful weather, the freezing water, huge rivers, scarce fish, and confusing casting. In spite of these daunting considerations, I felt ready and couldn’t have been more excited! 

Oregon cost
The beautiful Oregon coast

When I took my first step out of the airport in Oregon, I was immediately confused. I was supposed to be going winter steelheading, famous for the blinding snow, the bottomless rain, and the chilling emptiness. Instead, I found bright sun and high sixties, which was quite nicer than the weather I left back home in Massachusetts. Apparently, I assumed wrong, or just got lucky, but I can’t say I was disappointed. My dad and I hopped into our rental car and hit the highway towards the near-by town where we were staying. The rest of the day went by fast. We visited the local fly shop, met with some new friends, and crushed some top-notch burgers with a new friend, Jesse, who we would be fishing with the next day.  

Spey setup
Tools of the trade -Nate Holmes

The next morning, we woke up, downed some breakfast, and trailered Jesse’s drift boat to the river. We got a thorough lesson in Spey casting (Thanks, Jesse), to the point that we could plop a fly further than expected and in the general intended direction. And now that my dad and I were pretty much pros (haha), we headed downriver to find some fishy runs.

fly fishing on driftboats
Jesse on the sticks -Nate Holmes

Steelhead are very special fish. Their unique life cycle sets them apart from any other species. Fittingly, as advertised, they are very hard to catch. They’re not like salmon in the way that while fishing, one would see some swimming around. It’s almost like they aren’t even in the whole river. It seems like they don’t even exist until that one moment where it all happens. I’ve learned that this one moment is what drives the extreme, diehard cult of anglers that are Steelheaders. After hours of casting, swinging, stepping and repeating, I got to experience that moment.

the swing
The swing

It was a long run, shallower than some others we had swung, but still had decent depth. The run had a slight curve, forming a loose “C” and a brushy bank. I was at the top of the run, and my dad had the bottom. Jesse, being the amazing host he was, stood by me and gave me pointers, mainly consisting of “you’re moving too fast”, “wait before you take your steps” and occasionally “nice cast”. He said that no one ever catches a Steelhead without feeling good about your swing, and while fishing that run, I felt good. I was getting the hang of Spey casting. The line was shooting out of my rod, and every swing just felt good. I can’t describe why or how, but it just felt good. I was getting in a groove when all of a sudden, my world stopped. Mid juicy swing, I felt as if I was hit by an eighteen-wheeler. My rod lurched forward, and I probably made some horrible noise. I raised my rod yelling “fish”! I was in slow motion. My rod came up and on the other end was a freak of nature. It came up off the bottom and shot partially out of the water. It fired upstream and my line came flying back at me. I stripped as fast as I possibly could to try to regain tension, but I was too late. 

steelhead fly
Our fly of choice

I had never been so happy after losing a fish! I felt like I just won the Super Bowl, but I actually just lost the fish of a lifetime. Jesse and I each got a good enough look at it to see my dreams in real life. I just hooked a bright chrome, large, wild and native Steelhead! I had the “moment”, and even though it was only ten seconds long, it sparked a flame, the same kind of flame that sparked when I started fly fishing, that one day will turn into a fire. A bright chrome fire that will stay with me forever.