December Meeting
Open Forum from TFF Members
Come join us and bring a story or adventure to share!
Merry Christmas!
November Meeting
Brian Pultz "Float and Fly"
Brian Pultz is doing a presentation called Float and Fly. This technique incorporates a combination indicator and jig presentation that has become popular for walk in fishing on many reservoirs while casting parallel to the shore line over likely structure. Jigs are deadly when used in this manner and some might claim that it is not really fly fishing. Lets just say it is an adaptation of a fishing style that can and is carried over to fly fishing. Different aspects of fishing the foothill lakes in the area for bass during the fall, winter and spring months. He is still putting the program together and wasn't expecting to do it for another few weeks. So we will be his first. Brian says this can be used for conventional and on the fly (This is the hook). There will also be a video during the program he will show. Check out this video of Ryan Williams, who utilizes this technique as a primer. Ryan’s videos have been highlighted in past issues of the newsletter. The application of Brian’s program will touch on Stillwater tactics for bass and is not to be missed.
Happy Thanksgiving!
October Meeting
September Meeting
SEPT. 19TH PROGRAM for this month is California Heritage Trout - Northern State
Stephen
Holtzclaw will share his successful pursuit of the California Heritage
Trout Certificate last summer. This journey started the previous summer
and covered Northern California from East to West.
Along the way, he
will explain the origins of these varied trout species, where to find
them, and what are the current threats to these unique subspecies of
trout. The Heritage Trout Program is not just about catching small trout
in their native habitats, but the journey to new and interesting places
along the way and a greater appreciation of these threatened trout and
their habitats.
This will be a great program from Steve as I have
fished with him many times over the yr's and his knowledge and passion
is unsurpassed.
August Meeting
Come join us for a Movie!!
By Josh "Bones" Murphy
Artifishal: The Road To Extinction Is Paved With Good Intentions
June
No club meetings in June and July
But here's something we can all do to help...
May 's Guest Speaker Is
Brian Pultz - DELTA BASS BUGS
Winner of the 2016 Costa Bass-n-fly event; Brian has been bass fishing the California Delta his entire life. He has over 30 years experience tournament bass fishing California waters, but his home and true love is the California delta.
Brian has been fly fishing for largemouth Bass for over 20 years and has developed strategies and flies for fly fishing the California Delta based off his vast knowledge of the conventional fishing world. The first fly he developed for Delta Bass Bugs was the Delta Stage Diver. Based off of a double wooly bugger with the addition of a rattle and a deer hair head. This fly suspends in the water column just like your conventional rip bait; one of the most productive baits on the California Delta from fall to spring. The second conventional bait conversion he tackled for DBB was the topwater Frog his answer to that was the DBB Howitzer Popper this fly was designed to be our 4x4 fly to be fished through and over anything. This fly has multiple largemouth over the 8lb mark in the last year including a 9.87lb largemouth taken in June of last year by Brian.
In recent months Brian’s passion for swimbait fishing for Bass has leaked into our fly world with the development of some of our largest and most complex flies such as the Shell Cracker and the Crowd Surfer. The wool shellcracker is our go to subsurface swimbait available in multiple size form the tiny 1.5 inch size 6 all the way up to a 10in double 5/0. The largemouth bass in the California delta and all over the world eat birds and our Crowd Surfer is our answer to that.
In the future he plans to continue the chase of big bass with new and innovative fly fishing techniques and to educate current and new fly fishermen that largemouth bass should be on the list of top game fish on a fly. His presentation will break down specific locations hoping to teach people why fish live in these areas and the different fly fishing techniques that can be used to catch them.
April's Guest Speakers Are
Lance & Kirsten Gray
Streamers
This
is our newest and I believe our best presentation. Streamer fishing has
become a tactic that recently has been pigeon holed only for big nasty fish;
which is bad, because all fish of every size eat streamers. Fish eat other
fish. It is the way their world works. They also eat sculpins, crayfish,
tadpoles and other big protein meals.
We
cover the latest in streamer tactics, equipment, rigging and flies. We also
breakdown water and match the tactic need for that water. We will have the
equipment at the presentation for fly club members to get hands on experience.
This
presentation is animated for the audience to enjoy and to fully understand the
what, how and why of streamer fishing.
Lance and Kirsten have more
than 50 years combined experience in fly fishing. Lance started fly fishing with
his father and brother Lincoln at age 7. In his teens, he began tying flies
commercially for shops all around Northern California. At 17, he went to work
at Powell's in Chico, working in the fly shop and building rods. He guided for
Powell’s, conducted fly-tying and fly-fishing schools, and traveled.
In 1993, Lance and Kirsten
started Saltwater Innovations, a company that manufactured and distributed
products for saltwater fly fishing. Lance’s Crystal Popper, Gray’s Billfish
Fly, the KO Charlie line and the Raghead Crabs are all Saltwater Innovations
products. Kirsten worked behind the scenes, handling the day-to-day operation
running the manufacturing floor of the company.
In 2003 they launched Lance
Gray & Company, a full-service outfitter offering guided trips, fly-fishing
schools, workshops and a travel agency. Lance conducts presentations at fly
clubs and outdoor shows and supports local groups like Cub Scouts and 4H. He's
a signature tier for Aqua Flies, pro staff member for Sage and Rio and is a featured
writer, with articles published in Angling Trade Magazine, California Fly
Fisher, Fly Fishermen, Sierra Fisherman and Northwest Fly Fishing.
Kirsten is a fantastic
photographer who's had images published in periodicals and on websites
throughout the outdoor industry.
March's Guest Speaker is
Guide Maury Hatch
Maury
has been fly fishing the western United States and Mexico for 30+ years. After
honing his skills with trout, he hooked his first striped bass in 1995, and has
been chasing, catching, and releasing Stripers ever since. As a Captain, he
guides both out of the San Joaquin Delta in a center console bay boat in the
fall and spring, and then on a jet sled on the Feather and the American Rivers
in the summer for Stripers, Small Mouth and Shad. All trips include top of the
line equipment as well as custom tied flies. He is an ambassador level pro
staffer for the following products: Costa sunglasses, Simms clothing, Sage
rods, RIO lines and Galvan reels.
February's Guest Speaker is
Kristján Páll Rafnsson
If you have looked into
fishing in Iceland you have probably heard the term "ice age brown
trout" and seen people rave about their size and strength. But what
exactly is an ice age brown trout, how do they differ from a regular brown
trout and why are they so highly praised and sought after?
The short answer... ice age browns is the name given to the strain of brown trout
inhabiting Lake Þingvallavatn, Iceland's largest natural lake. The reason people
get obsessed with these beasts is quite frankly their incredible size, as well
as fighting strength, not to mention the beauty of this creature. Fish over 30
lbs are caught each year.
For the long answer, we need to go back 11 thousand years when the ancestors of
the ice age trout moved in from the ocean and colonized the area.
Those
ancestors were anadromous brown trout that moved back and forth between Lake
Þingvallavatn and the open ocean. Roughly 9 thousand years ago reciting
glaciers and volcanic activity made passage between Lake Þingvallavatn and the
ocean impossible, in effect trapping these previously sea-run fish in the lake.
In the time that has passed since then, the trout have made some remarkable
adaptations to their new surroundings, one of which is the fact that the ice
age trout only reach sexual maturity between the ages of 5-8 years old.
In a
research done by biologist Jóhannes Sturlaugsson, an ice age brown trout that
had reached over 20 lbs in size but was not yet sexually mature, was found.
Another remarkable adaptation that the strain shows is the fact that unlike
most other brown trout in Iceland, the strain does not spawn every year once
reaching sexual maturity, but in fact, each fish only spawns every 2-3 years.
Those years that the fish do not expand their energy at spawning they pack on
weight and size fast. With remarkable growth rate up to 5 lbs a year has been
documented in tagged fish.
The main food sources for these fish are threefold, the 3-spined stickleback
which is a small fish inhabiting the shallows of the lake, any of the 4
sub-species of Arctic char that inhabit the lake but mainly the Murta
sub-species (Salvelinus Alpinus Murta) as well as insect life mainly in the
form of midges, Chironomidae and caddis in all life cycles. These feeding
patterns make them perfect to target with a fly rod as they will take
streamers, nymphs and dry flies when presented to them.
The fishing season for them last from 15 April until September, with primetime
usually being 15 April-15 June.