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Angler Spotlight: Anna Sanders

Anna Sanders

1. How old are you and when did you start fishing? 

I am currently 20 years old! I have been fishing probably since I could walk, I started more in ponds and lakes because I could ride to them when nobody wanted to go because of the heat! I am attending Armstrong State majoring in Graphic Design and minoring in Photography!

2. Do you prefer fly fishing or conventional tackle? 

I prefer conventional tackle over fly fishing where I am located. With muddy waters and huge tides, sight fishing can be very difficult. For trips down to Florida, I prefer fly fishing. The water is for the most part gin clear, making sight fishing optimal.

3. Favorite fish to catch on the fly. 

As of right now, my favorite fish to catch on the fly is redfish. The Lowcountry here offers low tide belly crawling redfish, or high tide tailing redfish in the grass. When the tide springs, the water gets on these spartina grass flats where the fiddler crabs are. The redfish will have their tails out the water while trying to suck fiddler crabs out of the holes in the mud, making it very easy to sight cast them. Winter time low tide mud flats can be awesome for sight casting schools of redfish up to 200+ fish. By far, redfish is the best sight fishing with the fly rod.

4. Favorite Song?

My all time favorite song and artist is Eric Church, Record Year. If you don’t like Eric Church, please go home and check your temperature!

5. Favorite Movie?

My favorite movie..hmm.. that’s for sure a hard one because I am a fan of any comedy movie, but besides those, Law Abiding Citizen would be hands down a movie I could watch a million time and never tired of!

6. Do you have any Idles in the fishing world? 

I would definitely have to say my idle is Maddie Brenneman (@maddiebrennenman), who is a fly fishing guide in Colorado. She for sure is a badass, her pictures are flawless, she also just seems very humble. Yeah, I would say I have a girl crush. 

7. If you could take one bucket list fishing trip where would it be?

To the Florida Keys to catch bonefish, tarpon, and permit. Three very incredible species that the Low country does not offer, besides tarpon. Our fishery of tarpon is very slim compared to Florida and our waters are very murky, making sight fishing tarpon difficult.

8. What do you think of the Flylords Snapchat Adventures?

The fly lords snapchat adventure is awesome! It is a very unique way to share everyone’s experiences and see different fisheries. Would love to be on it more!

 9. Can you tell us a little bit about your Snapchat Adventure, and the fishing conditions down in the Low Country:

The best month to fish here in the Lowcountry of South Carolina is August, which is also the hottest unfortunately. Battling a 150 pound tarpon in 110 degree heat can wear you down in a snap second. Let me tell you folks, it’s worth every second. This time of year offers a wide species list to chase. Tarpon, Jack Crevalle, Sharks, and Redfish are prime right now. Today we sought after Jacks and Tarpon and engaged with both. The tarpon here in the Lowcountry are tough to catch. A usual day here is jumping one tarpon, but today we were lucky. We went 1 for 1 on tarpon, which we estimate was 110 pounds. As far as the jacks go. Chasing around a 100 fish school we went 1 for 2. Fought a nice 30 pounder for about 20 minutes and pulled the hook at the boat, then turned around and boated a decent 15 pounder. It was a great day on the water here in the Lowcountry.

And follow along on our Snapchat Adventures! Username: theflylords

Snapchat Adventures: Life of an Alaskan Guide

Live from the Kenai Penninsula:

Jeremy Inman takes over the Flylords snapchat, and shows us how a ‘day off’ is spent as an Alaskan fishing guide. 

To follow along add our Snapchat Username: theflylords

Jeremy Writes:

Being a full time guide, especially in Alaska, is not for everyone. The hours are long, and days off are nonexistent. That being said, if you have a good work ethic and the right mindset, it can be a very rewarding occupation. I am lucky to guide in a place where I can work a 12 hour day and still have 8 hours of daylight to chase fish afterwards. And that’s what I do. If you want to guide and still have time to enjoy the incredible fishing this state has to offer, you have to be willing to burn the candle at both ends. This usually means sacrifice sleep, showers and real food. But trust me, it’s worth it. With the sockeye starting to spawn right now you can catch 25 trout and char in an hour, and then drive 20 minutes to fish a small stream with mice and bugs on the surface. To end the day off you can strip streamers and catch a fired up silver salmon for a fresh dinner. It doesn’t get much better than that. Come September it will be time to hunt wild trophy trout up to 35″. If you fly fish, and haven’t made the trek to Alaska yet, you don’t know what you’re missing!

 Not a bad place to call your office…

Some of the perks…

Finding Brook Trout in a Suburban Rainforest…

I found myself stranded in suburban Connecticut with no car, no place to stay, and a couple pieces of clothing to my name. I sent a couple texts to my fishing buddies in the area to see if anyone had a bed I could crash on. Within a couple of hours, Scott picked me up and we were headed to what he claimed to be one of the coolest native brook trout streams he had ever fished. While Scott blabbered on about how “utterly insane” the fishing is at this mystery stream, I was not getting my hopes up. We were headed to another suburban town that is known more for its celebrity residents than its fishing. Even though I thought Scott was full of it, I was ready for another adventure and happy to not be homeless.

We finally arrived at the stream, I picked up the camera and crossed my fingers as Scott searched for rising fish. When Scott tied on a grasshopper that was big enough to feed a rabbit, I began to lose more hope. Walking deeper into the forest, it began to feel more and more like we were in the rainforest. While it was really cool to film I kept asking myself how it was possible that native brook trout lived in this suburban rainforest stream. After a couple hours of nothing, it happened. Watching from the screen on the camera, I saw a trout sip Scott’s hopper as if we were fishing for big browns in Montana. He looked back at me and the only words he could come up with were, “it’s the nice one.” Scott pulled out one of the nicest native brook trouts I had ever seen. In less than 12 hours, I went from being homeless to going on one of the most fun fishing adventures ever. That’s what this sport is all about!

12 Inches of Wild Brookie, gives me the goose bumps…

 Nothing Like celebrating a wild fish with a Pale Ale… Thanks Dale!

Why You Should Take A Fishing Trip With Your Best Friends…

Knox, Brooks, and Jake headed to Colorado this summer, for a fishing trip of a lifetime. They caught a ton of fish and wanted to share their story…

PART 1: The Dream Stream
Location: Middle of Nowhere Colorado

We rolled into the airport on July 17th, grabbed Brooks and hit the road. First Stop: the Dream Stream section of the South Platte River. This 3 mile stretch of sexy, mysterious water is nestled between Elevenmile and Spinney Reservoirs, creating a haven for stupidly huge trout. We rolled into camp, set up our rods and immediately hit the water. The first 3 hours were tough, and the Dream Stream was not living “up to the hype”. We headed 2 miles upstream to a deep narrow pool. Knox quickly picked up a solid Brown around 17 inches, and I followed with a pig around 18-19”. Later, Brooks connected with a monster Brown. 21-22” of South Platte butter. 

A long night of empty stomachs, punctuated by screaming coyotes lead to little sleep. In no time we were up with the sun and ready to get after it again. Today, the Dream Stream would once again challenge us. As the morning began, I moved downstream and to my joy, found a large pod of rising fish. I was pumped. I landed some nice browns and rainbows, but sadly broke off a brown that was pushing 20”. Knox and Brooks soon moved down to where I was and it was game on. We didn’t know exactly what these fish were sipping, but connected with quite a few fish on dries. Knox capped off the morning with a tank of a rainbow around 22” that sucked in a caddis. 

It was time to hit the road again—next stop: Gunnison, Colorado and the Taylor River

PART 2: The Taylor River – Gunnison, Colorado 

We began climbing Cottonwood Pass looking for Elk and Moose, heading for the Taylor River. We summited around 12:30 and began the descent to Taylor Reservoir. I described our destination as “an aquarium”, meaning that you could see monster fish three feet away from you. We arrived around 1:30 and I hopped out of the car to see how many people were fishing my honey hole. There were far less than I had anticipated as this place gets fished hard every day. So we ‘skeeted’ a hard right and parked the ‘burb on a dirt road alongside the river. Like wild prisoners in a compact cell, Jake and Knox ripped at their seat belts and reached for the doors to start fishing as soon as possible. I gave them each “the fly” that would be the key to a fish of a lifetime. Naturally, they had their own plans but took the fly for good measure. I strolled down to the river, hopped in the spot I told these goofballs to start in (which they didn’t) and I quickly hooked into two beautiful browns. Knox and Jake came rushing over saying “What the hell?!? What are you using?!?” I just sat and laughed a little and told them to use “the fly.” From that point on, we landed a few small fish just over 20 inches and went back to camp down river where we topped off the day with some wild, hungry butter balls on seemingly invisible dries. We woke up early the next morning and hit the same spot we hit the evening before. Fishing was tougher that day, fish just weren’t too hungry for some slayin’ so we said screw it, packed up the gear and went to Crested Butte. 

PART 3: The Frying Pan – Aspen, Colorado

 As the sun peeked through the crack in the tent and shined in our eyes we awoke and began to cook breakfast. As we scarfed down our less than ideal breakfast of eggs and beans, we made a plan for the day about where we were going to fish. After a quick discussion, we decided that our best option was going to be a very famous stretch of water where we knew some monster fish lived. In order to catch fish in this section, we were going to have to do something that everyone else in the river wasn’t doing. Last year, Jake and I had fished the same stretch with a more classic method with some success, but we decided we needed to change things up. So we decided to put on some meat (big streamers). After a few casts into the very crowded waters, we decided that we needed to brave the cold water and cross the river where there were fewer fishermen. As soon as we attempted to dry off and warm up we wet our lines again. Almost immediately, Brooks had a monster brown chase his fly all the way back to his rod tip but did not commit. Once I watched this fish chase Brooks’ fly I decided to tie a big piece of meat on my rod as well. After about 40 casts I finally put a really nice brown in the net. Everyone around us was shocked because they had never seen someone actually catch a fish on a streamer where we were fishing on the Frying Pan River. 

PART 4: The Eagle River – Vail Valley, Colorado

July 23rd brought us to Edwards, Colorado, in the Vail Valley. We had been on the road for a week now and a little disappointed with our numbers thus far. Though some big fish had made up for our lack of numbers, we wanted to get after it. The Eagle River runs through the heart of the Vail Valley and boasts some stupidly good caddis hatches. Once we rolled into town, checked in with my favorite shop, Vail Valley Anglers to reload and get some intel on stripping mice. After getting hyped up to try for some fish on mice, we took a break from fishing, flashed back to our childhood, and saw the new Ice Age movie (a great film, for those wondering) That night, we hit the Eagle at 10:30, anxious to get a giant brown to suck in a mouse pattern. 3 hours later…nothing. It’s now 1:30, so we just said screw it, headed to the local park, tied on some streamers, and ripped nasty, stocker rainbows until 3 AM… Naturally, we crashed as soon as we got to bed. We woke up at noon, slightly rested, but ready to fish. The early afternoon was slow. We fished the Colorado High Country with a few small fish but quickly decided otherwise. We headed down valley to the Eagle River, poised to throw at some fish looking up. The first 2 hours had little show, one fish here one fish there. I finally decided to cross the river in chest deep water so I could take shots at new fish. What a decision that was -game on. I landed a stud rainbow, then 3 smaller fish in a row, which finally lured Knox and Brooks across. We fished ’til dark and totaled up 31 fish on dries. Can’t ask for much more.

That’s what it’s all about. Fishing unexplored water, catching undisclosed fish in undisclosed locations, getting leeches, figuring out technical fish in one of the most famous rivers in the state, getting lost, and 3 great friends learning how to survive on their own for 2 weeks in Colorado. We saw things and caught fish people only dream of. 198 trout and 2047 road miles later, we have stories to tell and memories to last a lifetime. Back in reality, the 3 of us are heading off the opposite areas of the country for college (Boulder, CO; Austin, TX; and Miami, FL) but fishing and trips like this will keep us close for the rest of lives. 

Thank you for checking out the FlyLords Blog. Don’t forget to follow them on Instagram and add them on snapchat to see what other Epicness is happening in the fly fishing world.

-Jake Wood, Knox Kronenberg, and Brooks Benkendorfer


Snapchat Adventures: Jefferson Rod Co.

Yesterday we found out that Instagram released a new platform for live videos….

Although I would have preferred Instagram to keep things simple, this will add an interesting level of connection between an account and the audience. (The pressure is on for us)

Snapchat is not dead….

We will continue the Snapchat Adventures, and yesterday is one that I hope you had a chance to watch.

Yesterday, TJ Orton was reporting Live from White City, Oregon. TJ has been fishing with the Jefferson Rods for a while now and being one of my favorite freelance photographers, it was a perfect match for this product spotlight. 

 What is better than having your rod Hand Crafted in the USA?

 The Takeover started in the Jefferson Rod factory, Keith was shaping some elegant cork handles. 

If you had a chance to see a rod handle up close… It is a work of art…

Fishing For Summer Steel is not easy…. As TJ puts at the end of the story “I’m not sure how many of you guys Swing For Steelhead, but its tough, we gave it our best shot, and thanks for tuning in!” 

These stories are live, so we can’t promise you fish, but we can promise you honest gear reviews, and some entertaining stories. Make sure you tune in to our Snapchat for the next Takeover!

Snapchat: theflylords

Shoutout to

TJ Orton

Jefferson Rod Co

Brandon Worthington

For doing a great job with the Takeover. Follow these guys on Instagram for some badass content!

 Photos provided by: TJ Orton

Cover Photo by: Sam Dean

Green Drakes on the Blue River

Comparable to Aspen’s Frying Pan tailwater, the Blue River ecosystem below Green Mountain Reservoir was dense and full of large, and, luckily timed, big Green Drake Mayflies. Aspen hadn’t seen a cloud in 3 weeks so we headed to check out a river offering three different fisheries all within reasonable driving distance of each other.

 Andrew Gerrie peers into distance, searching for rising fish…

Anyone who is an admirer of the Colorado Green Drake knows that many rivers within the state hold some of the best ecosystems for these bugs. But when fish are keyed on the Drakes and rising for the dun, the takes on these bugs are ferocious. On a clear day you can catch a brown wheel around downstream only to hit reverse once more and roll over your fly like a dolphin riding your boat’s wake. It’s exhilarating and frustrating but can make for some incredible dry fly fishing if you can hold a little bit of patience. Be sure to keep your leader long and don’t be afraid to be aggressive pounding the banks- oftentimes Drakes tumble downstream on the surface drying their wings and attract a lot of attention. Keep that bad cast in the water as well and soon you’ll get a take when you least expect it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Charles Warren shows us the reward for successfully matching the hatch….

Flylords Snapchat Adventure: Humpback Salmon

The Flylords Snapchat was Live last night in Hope Alaska.

Chap Writes:

“We are in Alaska commercial salmon fishing as a summer job. On the off days from being in the ocean, we get the opportunity to fly fish. On this day trip we were fishing for pinks, chums, and kings on Resurrection Creek near Hope, Alaska. We ended up landing around 100 fish, catching every species. “

Chap and Thomas did an awesome job on the Takeover. Short and Sweet, with some massive Salmon, and some good tunes. It also looks like taking that summer job up in Alaska is paying off…

Follow along on The FlyLord Adventures Snapchat: theflylords

(Up next our buddy TJ Orton will be live out in Portland Oregon!)

 

If you think you have what it takes for a takeover, email us theflylords@gmail.com

Discovering the Magic of Biscayne Bay

4:15 Am, Pompano Beach Florida.

(Phone Vibration Begins, Cliche I-phone Ringtone Slowly Gets Louder)

I slap at my phone trying to find the snooze button…

(Phone Vibration Begins Again…)

I roll over, wipe the drool off my face, scratch the eye boogies off my eyelids and slowly limp to the bathroom. Stubbing my toe on the camera bag, I am reminded why I am awake this early.

I meet Mark from Bonefish Tarpon Trust in downtown Miami at around 5:20 am. After picking up the boat, some coffee, and some snacks for lunch, we head to the docks. It’s dark out, the air is heavy with condensation, we pass a large crocodile on the way out of the inlet. Mark mounts the Poling Platform, hands me a first generation Orvis Helios, with a Hatch Reel, a well tied crab pattern dangles on the end of the leader.

We enter the first flat, slowly edging our way towards the mangroves. I point to some tails in the distance, “2 O’clock, 75 feet!” We approach. Seeing a tailing fish out of the corner of your eye is a special moment. It sends a chill down your spine and makes the hair on your arms stand up. 

After a few poor casts we scared the school away. They were bonefish, 2 or 3 munching on crabs in a few feet of water. The sun Illuminated the horizon as we pushed on into the day…

The rest of the day was slow. We dodge several lightning storms, talked about fish, girls, life, the usual… We drank some beers, traveled from flat to flat and 10 hours passed with no signs of life or hope. The sky began to darken, Mark was getting texts from his Girlfriend. My face felt raw, I forgot sunscreen again… Dammit. We pretended not to care about not catching anything. But we both knew, deep down inside thats all we wanted.. Just one more shot…

As we slowly cruised off the flat, signs of life began appearing in the distance. 1 tail, 2 tails, 5 tails! Was I hallucinating? The storm had just passed over, their was a slight drizzle, but the water was calm. My hands were shaking, and the wind was picking up. My first cast was horrible, not even close. We snuck closer, whispering every move to each other… Guide and angler moving and thinking together as one unit. I made a cast about 2 feet from a pack of eager Permit…. Slow strip… Slow strip… BAM… My line shot forward, I lifted my rod tip up and the drag started to scream.. My face burst into a wide smile… The line went limp, the fish was off. 

In the distance we saw more schools. We approached, swiftly and efficiently, as I would imagine a Ninja to move if he fly fished. My next cast was perfect, three feet in front of a pack of bonefish. And these were Happy bonefish. I let the fly sink down a little, and started pulling the line back. After one long slow strip, the line went tight, and a missile launched into the distance. 

 Listening to your drag scream with a bonefish on the end of the line is one of the greatest “highs” in the world. It’s a feeling better than any drug could ever make you feel…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We Landed two bonefish that day. Both bigger than I ever expected to be living in Miami. “Biggest Bones in the world, Mark announced in the background”.

Two fins were clipped for genetic testing.

Fly fishing is the kind of sport that takes time. It takes patience, hard work, and a passion for the outdoors. The sport is not for everyone. But for those of you who persevere, and put in the time, boy can it change your life.

Please take a moment to go check out Bonefish Tarpon Trust. 

They are an incredible organization dedicated to protecting our saltwater fisheries.

The Biggest Arctic Char on the Planet

Fishing Guide Pandelis Kolkas @somdreamscometrue talks about working at the legendary Plummers Lodge, and how he likes to target trophy Char. Plummers lodge is located on the Great Bear Lake, in the Northwest Territories of Canada.

Guiding for Plummers lodges has literally been a dream come true for me. There are different techniques we use. Swinging flies, drifting beads under an indicator, casting lures even trolling.

The Char we catch are stunning, quite often huge & put up a fight that will make even the most experienced angler remember every moment of the battle. Multiple world record char have been caught at the tree river & lake trout at the Great Bear Lake. The scenery is wild and untouched by humans.

What makes Plummers lodges so unique is the location, we are the only fishing lodge that guides on Great Bear Lake & the only one with an outpost camp on the tree river.  Besides the exceptional fishing, our hospitality is from the heart. We are like a big family up there, making sure each guest is offered the trip of a lifetime.

If you are interested in booking a trip here, send us an email theflylords@gmail.com 

Photo Of The Day: Kayak + Fly Rod = Bass

Damond Bungard takes his fish photos to the next level with this epic drone shot of a Bass Eat!

Check out Jackson Kayaks for some serious fishing kayaks.Â