Wednesday, December 30, 2009

the steelhead watcher

I originally read this article from a post at Rogueangels.net

This article is from North Umpqua Foundation.



"Lee Spencer is a volunteer at the Big Bend Pool. He spends hours, days, weeks and months guarding the pool from poachers, watching fish behavior and contemplating nature and how humans affect the environment. These journal pages reflect Lee's thoughts on the fish, the river and how our efforts at protection could be improved.
To read some of his diary entries, click here
Steamboat Creek is the main steelhead spawning tributary of the North Umpqua. Fish that spawn in Steamboat account for 30 to 35 percent of the approximately 2,500 wild fish that have returned to the North Umpqua system in recent years. Before the fall rains arrive that enable the fish to return to the upper reaches of the creek to spawn, the fish hold in large pools ­ especially the Bend Creek pool, 11 miles up Steamboat Creek Road.
In the past, these fish have been extremely vulnerable to poachers. An act of vandalism on such a pool (like some hooligan throwing a stick of dynamite, which has happened in the past) could devastate the North Umpqua wild steelhead population. Fortunately, the fish have a protector in Lee Spencer. Lee has been retained as part of TNUF´s FishWatch Program.
Lee lives in a trailer by the river. When he´s not discouraging potential poachers, he´s educating visitors on the lifecycle of steelhead, and the significance of anadramous fish to the larger ecosystem.
During the summer months, Lee says he´s averaged 15 to 20 guests a day. Many are anglers up from the North Umpqua, though some are just curious passer byers. "Most visitors have a remarkable reaction to the fish," Spencer has observed. "The most common comment I hear is ‘Thank you for watching our fish.'”
Lee's connection to the North Umpqua goes back to 1972. “I took some time off from college and hitchhiked along the river. I though it was the most beautiful river I´d ever seen. I discovered fly fishing for steelhead shortly thereafter.” After eventually taking a graduate degree in Anthropology from the University of Oregon, and working a number of different jobs, Lee began his fish watching vocation as a volunteer five years ago. Three years ago, it became a full-time endeavor, mid-May through December. "I´ve always had an interest in natural history,” Lee shared. “If you have a pre-disposition toward this sort of thing, the opportunity to be here is ideal. The things going on in the pool are far more complex than I ever expected.”
To help raise funds to pay Lee´s modest stipend, the North Umpqua Foundation has created a handsome poster of one of the holding pools on Steamboat Creek. For information on how you can help preserve this wonderful river please email us or write to:The North Umpqua FoundationP.O. Box 238Idleyld Park, OR 97447-0238"

article on David James, Salmon, and The River Why


I found this article link on the Moldy Chum blog today... This is worth reading. Very good insight in to the state of the Salmon from a very credible source.



"They wrote a crappy screenplay, filmed in a rush to outrace my lawsuits, used a non-fly fisher to play a "Mozart" of a fly fisher, used a rubber salmon to play a wild chinook, and so on. I wish them the best because at this point, why not. But as for their movie's chances, how to put it?
Read the rest." LINK (Via: 1859)

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Scott with a very small sample size over Winston


Only 9 people had an opinion on this...however 100% of those 9 people voted for Scott Fly Rods over Winston Fly Rods. I like both. Evidently Scott fans are more opinionated?

big bermuda bonefish

a river runs through it


I recently received a dvd of the movie "A River Runs Through It" (in my stocking) which I obviously have seen multiple times, however, I have 2 movie covers of this at home and neither have the DVD inside. So I was excited to get a new copy of the movie.

There are mixed feeling on Hollywood trying to capture the mistique of what is a passion to most of us. However, even though there is plenty of critiscm about the movie, I honestly feel they did a pretty good job. I still get excited to go fishing after watching this movie, and I think it was good for the sport. Even if Norman Maclean's novel wasn't fully captured on film, it showed a lot of people who were unfamiliar with the sport, a small piece of what captures all of us. That doesn't mean I am going to start promoting everyone wear a felt hat and a wicker creel.

I simply think that it is a movie to enjoy. It is probably the most successful fly-fishing movie of all time. There seems to be a lot of negativity from shop owners, guides, and previously me on this movie. After re-watching it and realizing a few things, maybe it is actually one of my favorites.

It is Norman Maclean's birthday this month, and although he is not around anymore they have put up a monument to tribute the auther which stands outside the church in Missoula, Montana.

new fly fishing film tour entry from reel escape films

In the Land of the Cutthroats - Trailer from Reel Escape Films on Vimeo.

Monday, December 28, 2009