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Fly fishing

oldsparkey

Well-Known Member
Aug 25, 2003
10,479
123
Central , Florida
www.southernpaddler.com
David.....

The way I see it is that if it is good enough to learn with and it catches fish then it is all a person needs. The fish don't care what it cost you. :roll:

It's the same thing over here , you can spend a bank roll for a rod and another one for a reel and all it will do is to get the fly out there for the fish to look at. One of the rods that I have I found in the barging bin at a fishing shop and they had it marked at $20.00. For that price I had to take it home and the thing has a good action to it.

Chuck.....
 

dawallace45

Well-Known Member
Chuck

The mates gear is beautiful to use , they have a great feel to them but is that feel worth $2000 ? not to me it isn't


Johno

Great video , it makes it seem easy , will have to watch it several more times before it sinks in

Actually it's probably the best video I've seen on fly casting

David
 

dawallace45

Well-Known Member
I've been a fan of Lefty Kreh's writing for some time , I've read a few articles by him over the years and seen a few videos with him in them , actually I was reading a story of his just the other day , it's from a interview he did where some one asked him his most memorable fishing trip

Here it is below

David


What is your most memorable fishing trip?

I have made a number of trips to fish in Australian and New Guinea. The Australians are like the British, they like to play practical jokes on people and when I was down there for five and a half weeks making films and these bastards were pulling jokes on me every day. After three and a half weeks in Australia I went to New Guinea with Rod Harrison who the leading fly fisher writer round there. On the way there, Rod like the others likes to play tricks on people and all the way up to New Guinea they were telling me about this thing that lives in the rivers near the sea, brackish rivers its called New Guinea bass and they don’t spell it like we do its spelt Nuigimi. They said this is the baddest, meanest, most horrible, hardest fighting fish you ever saw in your life and they went on and on. Because it lived in rivers they called it the River Rambo. Well I didn’t believe anything they said cause I thought it was a big joke but they took us into this tiny river in a helicopter and dropped us down through the trees. This was real primitive country and that night Rod Harrison gets out two bulk spools of line for his plug reel and asked me to help load these reels up. One was 40 lbs test and one was 50lbs test. Well I thought it’s a big joke, Ill help him to put the lines on and then he took some seven inch Rapala plugs and took the hooks off and threw them away and I asked what’s wrong with the hooks and he said they ain’t strong enough. This was the most bullshitting thing I had ever heard in my life. So now I thought you know what, he might not be kidding so I got out 20 lb test and bimini twisted it and put a shock leader on.

Next morning we got in the boat and go down this river and there are flocks of parrots of all colours, green and red macaws, hornbills and monkeys screaming at us from the trees. I look around and there is nothing in this boat but the two rods with the plug reels, great big trawling reels and I wonder if these guys are telling the truth. These New Guinea bass hide under trees that have fallen in the river and they dive out and grab something and dive back under there. So we pull up to the first tree and Dean Butler now one of their top writers but he was a kid then, was running the motor. We had a forty horse power Yamaha on a twenty foot Yamaha boat and we pull up to the sunken tree and Rod says “okay have a go”, I replied “no you have a go” and he says “no I want you to go” and I said “no I ain’t going but you go I want to see what is going on” so he finally picks up the 40 lb outfit takes his pliers out and tightens the star drag down on the reel. Dean has the motor sitting in neutral. Rod is an incredibly strong guy they call him the gentle giant with arms as big as your thigh he throws this big lure back into these trees and starts to wind, out comes this big green thing and grabs the plug he sets the hook and yells “hit it Dean” and he put the motor in reverse and tries to tow this fish out. My eyes look like mushrooms on stems then all of a sudden “bang” and the 40 lb test snaps, busted. Man I am getting this 20 lb test of my line. Now we come to the next tree and I ain’t ready yet, Rod has another go, this time its with 50 lb test. He threw it back in there and this thing came out and grabbed it and went back in the tree. A human can’t break 50 lb with his bare hand, we tried and we ended up having to cut the line so we lost two plugs on two fish. We come to the next tree. Now my fly line is only 40 lb test and I have a 40 lb test leader right to an 80 lb shock leader and a great big Lefty deceiver on a 5/0 carbon steel hook with weed guards on it I’m using a rod I have caught sail fish and all kinds of stuff on. I’ve never been armed so well in all my life. So Dean pulls the boat up to it and I made a cast and out comes this big green thing and I set the hook the way you would on a sail fish “hit it Dean”, he drives the boat backwards and the fish ran back in the bushes and run a burn groove right across my hand. We go to the next tree after I have re-rigged and when I hooked that one I wrapped the line around the reel and Dean towed the fish out into open water. Interesting thing about this fish is that after 2 minutes they exhaust themselves but these are the damnedest two minutes you ever had with a fly rod in your life. If you ever get a chance to do that go do it. The biggest fish I caught that year was 18 lb but there have only been about eight guys who have caught these fish on fly.

New Guinea holds some fond memories for me and not just the big fish. But it’s different now when I first started going there with the guys from Australia what a pleasure it was to fish for fish that had never seen a lure or a fly, I like dumb fish. Some people say they like to outwit smart fish I just like to outwit fish I don’t give a damn whether they are smart or not. I caught 20 species of fish that I had never caught on a fly rod before in New Guinea and Northern Australia. At time it was a pristine wilderness its not that way now they have a done a lot of logging and there is gold mine flushing there on these rivers and the natives are not so friendly now, at that time they were and it was a paradise, it really was.
 

dawallace45

Well-Known Member
Johno

You got a address for me to send that video back to you ?

Actually I'll probably be passing through Texas next week , possibly on Tuesday , going down to a mates property out side of Bingara to do some hunting and fishing , you got a phone number , if I get a chance I'll give you a ring

David
 

gbinga

Well-Known Member
Nov 7, 2008
736
2
Hoschton, GA
I really shouldn't admit this, but I feel like a real dummy right now. I always wondered about John's location. Just figured he was some rich guy who had property in Texas (USA) and also in Australia. Never occurred to me that there was a Texas IN Australia.

George