Tuesday, December 20, 2011

newfoundland plans



If we are gonna make this happen we are going to have to pick a date soon and confirm everyone that is going. i think we are going to need another boat and maybe a couple of 4-wheelers. Looking at sometime in June, Toby is gonna try to line up another guide for us so picking a date sooner than later will be alot easier to arraign. After the holidays we should get together and nail down a date.






e-mail from Toby











































Hey guys, here are the Pictures of my cabin at the area known as "Camp 12", approx 16 km's East of Hawkes Bay, NL. The cabin is located next to 2 very well known trout fishing lakes. It is approx 1/2 mile from Angle Pond and approx 3 miles from the Bluey Lake. Blue Lake is one of the largest lakes up here on the Northern pen and is very well known for BIG Trout. Will need a boat in order to fish any of these lakes, but I have that covered with a 16' lund that I bought this year. The roads are pretty rough getting into the area's, and may be a good idea to bring along a quad or two if you guys come in the spring. Can work out further details later and check on some possible dates. I am a licensed guide and am permitted to guide a party of 3 plus myself. I will check around over the winter and come up with someone else from the area who has a guide license as well. Just may have to feed the other guide food and liquor for a couple days.... ha. Lots of room at the camp as the entire upper level consists of sleeping quarters. Just may need to bring along sleeping bags and mattresses. The camp is 24 x 28 with a barn roof. Lower level consists of large kitchen and living room and bathroom. No running water, but have septic and generator for electricity. Just have to haul water in from nearby spring. I am actually thinking about applying for a spring bear license as well this year, so may be able to actually throw in a bear hunt along with the fishing!

Sunday, December 18, 2011

JBFC Newfoundland Bound!


Last weekend during a trip to the camp Barrie informed us that his RCMP buddy, Toby, has invited us to come up to the "Rock" for a fish and some down home Newfoundland hospitality. We all said yes bye! Looks like we'll be heading up in June sometime. The cost will likely be in the 4 to $500 dollar range for those of us that will be driving. This would include, gas, ferry (both ways), booze, food, and fishing license. Camp sleeps 7 and we should have some pics of it soon. We'll post more details soon. Sounds wicked.

PS- Ryan, if you don't make it on this trip we're all disowning you!!!

stay thirsty my friends,

Bucksaw.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Ryan Nebogie - New Zealand




Ryan Nibogie took his hot girlfriend to NZ for 3 months to shag in a rented camper van and fish the mountain streams. No, this is not my dream! OK, it actually is.



It's spring time, the rivers are low and clear. He tried for a few days and eventually hired a guide. Ends up, while I wasn't exactly calling it right, suggesting shallow nymphing with zebra midges, as Phil and I did in Utah on the Green River, I was close. Guide recommended tungsten midges and sheep hair indicators. Sounds like Czech nymphing to me.



Check out the picture he sent me. I told him the next one better include his girlfrind in her bikini!



Nice job Ryan......you cheater!




Expensive JBFC, but something worth talking about. He wants to go back next year.


He got back to me on this post right away. Here's what he had to say.


"Did I mention that fish was 8lbs. Guide was showing us mouse imitations that work in a few weeks. Had this pic of a gutted brown with 9 mice in it. Crazy. Easiest fishing is now. The fish become extremely wary. Lets go for two weeks next yr."

Friday, November 11, 2011

Stove for Bunkhouse!


Heres what the stove for the bunkhouse looks like, ain't she a beaut.

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Bunk House Progress






We finally got started on the bunk house @ River Oak Camp. Jay, Barrie, and myself got the floor built and started throming around some idea to frame it. Here are the pics.

Monday, September 26, 2011

A Nice Sunday

Heading back from the camp after a great day on the still waters. Life is good!
Sent wirelessly from my BlackBerry device on the Bell network.
Envoyé sans fil par mon terminal mobile BlackBerry sur le réseau de Bell.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Day #1

Landed in Calgary met up with Shawn headed to Cochran for a quick bite. Had a great afternoon fish near Turner valley. Thunderstorms rolling through but still got into a few nice fish. More pics to follow. Thanks to Shawn's buddy Ryan for being the tour guide and showing us how to send a bull trout over the falls!
Drinkin' beer, shootin guns, pickup trucks.... Yup we are in Alberta!
Heading to the Mountains... Stay tuned!!
P
Sent wirelessly from my BlackBerry device on the Bell network.
Envoyé sans fil par mon terminal mobile BlackBerry sur le réseau de Bell.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Alberta Bound

Jay, Mark and I (Phil) are heading west for a visit a 5 day Cutt, Bull, Rainbow and Brown trout-a-thon. Stay tuned! FYI Mark travels with designer luggage.... Jay and I have been telling people he is our Manager.


Sent wirelessly from my BlackBerry device on the Bell network.
Envoyé sans fil par mon terminal mobile BlackBerry sur le réseau de Bell.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

River Oaks Jambore! July 22nd-24th.



It's about damn time! We are hosting the first ever River Oaks Jambore, featuring the Mannette Trio, and special guests know for there Trout Lake anticks. This is sure to be a great time had by all. Good food, drink, and music, what more can you ask for.



Can"t wait to see ya'll there!

Saturday, May 28, 2011

There's a new JBFC Champion!



Congrats to Big Joe Mufferaw on hauling out a hog on this years JBFC, I better see you wearing that championship belt @ the camp the next time I see you. He won with a 15.5" brookie caught in stillwater "X". The trip was a great time this year with lots of fishing, buggying, food & booze. A big thanks to Cal for bringing the lobsters. Now "surf & turf is a must every year. Hope to see ya'll back next year.






Mark

Sunday, May 15, 2011

JBFC 2011 soon approaching!







The big annual fishing trip is set to start this coming Friday and I'm bring in the big guns! My big guns that is. Since Phil and Shawn are out for this years trip the only guy I have to watch out for in that damn "Leon". Barrie I was going to let you have a shot at getting your name on the JBFC trophy, but not now. I think I will seize this opportunity to become the champion once again. O Shit, Mike and Joe are coming too, I didn't think of that until after I started writing this post. Yup, Barrie I decided that I'm gonna give the championship to you this year. HaHaHa ( this is a evil wha, ha, ha! )










Looking forward to the trip boys, bring your A-fishing game and the fly dope cause those little black bastards have started.





Also bring the bikes, tubes, and beers. Doing some backcountry fishing this year so we may need the tubes and bikes.





As far as the food goes, bring some snacks; we'll all go splits on the breakfast food and I think we will have a supper scoff each night.










See ya'll Friday night!










Bucksaw Smitty, over and out.










PS- Phil's not aloud down for a one dayer to win the JBFC title, so don't you think about think about it.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Pic from Paul

Grizzly fishing trip



Pics of our trip to the rockies this weekend.
Paul

You Don't Always Need to Match the Hatch

This month, most of us can expect to finally start seeing mayflies and caddis hatching on our local trout waters. As one great writer noted, fly-fishing is the only sport that peaks at the beginning of the season and tapers off in intensity as the months go by. There are notable hatches in the summer and even the fall, but fly-fishing's World Series is in May.

For many anglers, hatching flies and rising trout signals the start of the game of "matching the hatch" - using flies as close to the real thing as possible, in terms of size, shape and color. It's become a very scientific business, with anglers using the Latin names of insects and tying or buying flies so realistic your wife would scream if she saw them on the kitchen counter. (In fact, many wives have.)

But in recent times, there's been something of a backlash. A growing number of fly-fishers are embracing simplicity and choosing general patterns, focusing on presentation instead of imitation. These anglers are convinced that they can catch all the fish they want with a Parachute Adams or a Gold-Ribbed Hare's Ear. They don't carry a separate box for each life-stage of each insect. They change flies only as a last resort.

There's something to be said for keeping it simple. Recent articles and informal polls show the experts believe presentation to be far more important than imitation. A fly that's an exact replica of the Blue-Winged Olives on the water won't draw any strikes if it's dragging sideways across the current. A shaggy Usual, on the other hand, can take fish after fish, as long as it drifts perfectly naturally down the feeding lane.

There are exceptions - most notably rich, slow-flowing tailwaters with heavy hatches and wary, wild trout. These fish do indeed get used to feeding on particular insects, and don't seem to recognize "mis-match" flies as food. When wild browns and rainbows on the Delaware River in New York get keyed in on a hatch of size 18 sulfurs, you won't catch many - if any - on a size 12 Adams.

But on most rivers, a well-fished general pattern can perform as well as a direct imitation. Here are some tried-and-true flies that aren't wax museum replicas of the real things - but will put a bend in your rod, provided you stay out of sight, avoid splashing around and make sure to get good drifts:

Elk-Hair Caddis. Have some small (20), medium (16) and large (12) ones, including a few in black, and you're ready to fish anytime caddis are emerging or hopping around laying eggs. They'll work as stonefly imitations, too, and have been known to take trout even during mayfly hatches - after all, fresh mayflies' wings often lean way back.

Adams. The mixed brown and grizzly hackle suggests movement, the hackle-tip wings come into a trout's view just the way real mayfly wing tips do, and the gray body is a good compromise of the various shades of grays, olives and tans that real mayflies display. Have small, medium and large, and make sure you have some (or even all) in parachute style, as opposed to collar hackle.

Usual. A brilliant feat of minimalist fly design from the northern Adirondacks of New York in the 1940s, the Usual is made of only two things - snowshoe hare's foot fur and thread - and trout absolutely love it. It can be fished dead-drift as a dry fly, damp in the film as an emerger or swung and swam through the water as a wet fly. You can probably find them in lots of different colors, but the true spirit of the fly is to just use it in the original, natural tan.

Griffith's Gnat. Tie or buy them as tiny as you can and use them for all your midge work. Trout can be surprisingly selective on tiny midges, and some will probably refuse the Griffith's Gnat. But others won't be able to resist its peacock herl body and spiky hackle. Have some larger ones, too - 18 or 16. It's just plain buggy.

Light-Colored Comparadun or Sparkle Dun. There will be times when you need a light-colored dry fly. They are often the times when trout are fussiest, like those Delaware browns. Comparaduns and Sparkle Duns sit flush on the water, striking perhaps the most realistic pose of any dry fly style. Again, have them in small, medium and large, and you can cover sulfur hatches, Light Cahills, White Flies, etc. Also a great fly for those last few minutes before dark - both you and the fish can see it.

If you're a committed hatch-matcher, then by all means, match on. It's a grand game, and in some cases makes the difference between an average outing and the fishing of a lifetime. But if you find yourself intrigued by the New Simplicity, a small but well-chosen selection of proven patterns - combined with careful, thoughtful technique - can provide a memorable time on the water.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Clearwater Fish May 1, 2011





















Fun day at an awesome pool on the Clearwater River. Located at the bottom of Cork Screw Mountain and the start of Seven Mile Flats. Ryan (an Engineer with Keyera Energy Rimbey gas plant) caught this monster, Shawn 2, and Paul Plaquin 1. Paul's picture to be added later, it's on his phone. Saw a grizzly (pictures to be added), wild horses, white tails, mulies, and a moose. No elk to make it the fab 5. Great day. All other rivers blown out (Stauffer, Prairie, Raven, Etc)

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

big trout

Took Joe back to the the honey hole and he hooked a beautiful 18'' brookie on one of his own flies. If this is the same trout that we think it is, it grew 3'' in one year! Nice fish Joe

Sunday, April 3, 2011

JBFC 2011


How does the long weekend in May work for everyone for the 12th annual JBFC? Shawn can't make it but we're going to see his ugly face in August anyway. Should be good for most. I'd like to get a few new guys down like maybe Mike Brenton (Jay u should ask to see if he's interested), and Phil said Randy may want to get into it too. Let me know if this date works, I want to start on the gift packs soon.


We should tell Max too. He"ll make it back to a JBFC one of these years!


Bucksaw

River Oaks Gambore!


How's she going fellers? I was talking to the Mannette boys about making a trip down to the camp to play some music and have a fish and or buggy run last night and they all seem interested, which is great. I'd also like to invite Gary, Dennis, and maybe Vincent aswell. So the next question is when would be a good date for all of this to happen on one weekend?


Barrie, what would be a good date for you? We could even do it in Sept. or Oct., I just want to pick a date where we could get most, if not all of them down. Lets start to work out some detalis on the first trip down to the camp this year for a fish or sooner. Looks like I won't be able to get down until May. We'll talk before then.


Hope everyone has got their lines wet,


Bucksaw

Sunday, March 20, 2011

iPhone Incredible


I now use an iPhone 4. It can do a lot. I can't wait to take pictures and video this summer fishing. Great camera. It can email video direct from phone. Also, found a great APP on fly fishing knots for $0.99. Looked around for an APP for hatches in my area. Found a hatch APP for North Western USA for $4.99. I don't need that, but wish someone would put one together for Canada. Crazy what can be done now a days. My phone is my new lap top, my truck is my new office! Hope all is well back home. I won't make the JBFC in May at the camp this year but welcome some or all of you out to Alberta for a great trip when you can make it. August for the Blackstone would be the best. Fun times guaranteed!

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Trip to the camp Apr.1st!


Barrie, is the camp open for the weekend of Apr.1st? Phil, Jay and I are thinking of heading down. let me know what you can do.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

JBFC 2011


How does this work for everyone; JBFC 2011, May 20th-23rd (24 weekend), St.Mary's river, all is welcome? Leave your 2 cents in comments! Lets make it another classic!
Bucksaw

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Extra Camp beds

Who is interested in going in on some bunks for the camp? Cabelas has a nice set of bunks that would be great for extra guests in the camp bedroom.
They are $269 CDN (Cabela's Canada) or $249US at Cabela's
http://www.cabelas.ca/index.cfm?pageID=79&section=&ID=6816



Tuesday, March 8, 2011

This years Trip

It's 24 days until fishing season here in Nova Scotia. We have been talking about getting a big trip in this year and trying to book things sooner then later. Let's get talking to see what schedule could work for a folks.