Sunday, November 6, 2016

A Disptach from Alaska


What follows is a terrific bit of writing from Mark Koide, the hero of my Ruby Springs post last year. Let's book the next trip! 

by Mark Koide

Since Greg appears to have taken a hiatus, I wanted to share a fish story, one that all dads and sons who fish together will appreciate.  The backstory is that a long time ago I had a co worker who was a hardcore flyfisherman.  He let it influence his choice of college and even where he lives - on the tailwaters in Westport CT.  The consequence of this was his son, now entering his senior year, took his avocation to a much higher level.  He attends Colorado College, a short drive to the South Platte Dream Stream, majors in marine biology and spends his summers making a buck teaching flyfishing and this summer guiding in Alaska.  I remember Max as a 10 year old catching browns to 20 inches and largemouths to 5 lbs in his backyard.

His father Ted and I parted professional ways almost 20 years ago, but have been able to maintain a semiannual fishing schedule.  This usually involves hooky from work and family since we both now have multiple teen to early 20ish kids and wives who are working and working at home.  Our fishing trips have been, therefore, of the "next wednesday might work, you in?".  Location and fishing conditions are secondary to the demands of our work and family schedules.  So we have done the best that we could in this part of the country (I live in Northern NJ) on very short windows of opportunity --  Farmington, Housatonic, Upper Delaware, and of course stripers and blues up and down the coast. 

Last year there was  a distinct shift in schedule.   Both Ted and I have reached the place where we have a bit of flexibility at work and the kids are in college with its narrow required windows and high school events where we are often decidedly not required.   So when the email or text comes across, they are now more like  “can you meet me in Bozeman, MT in 4 weeks for three days”.  Got that one from Greg last year and he chronicled our adventure here.  

Greg’s text was followed last fall by “Max and his friends’ are ok with us joining them on the South Platte in late October.”  There was the undertone of serious fishermen were inviting a dad and a friend who had better be competent in the invitation.   While I am no match for Ted and Ted is now well shy of Max and his friends abilities, we held up our end and had a remarkable experience.   One that at some point should be written up because it involved a small pool that turned up browns to 26” and rainbows to 20” on an hourly basis.  But that isn’t this story. 

This story starts with the recognition on the South Platte that Max and his friends at Colorado College have transcended from competent to gifted  with the best of all complementary traits patience.  So when the text came in May “Max is guiding in Alaska on Lake Creek for the summer”,  I immediately texted back two letters “IN”.  This was in itself remarkable because for almost 15 years, I have been stuck at 49 as the number of states that I have travelled through.   Too many years on the road for work and a childhood spent driving to visit our relatives on the West Coast and Southwest  had left me one state short.    Only the prior week, I had convinced my family that we should lock down our vacation plans to go off the grid in late August with a once in a lifetime trip to Alaska’s Denali and Kenai Fjord National Parks.   Now in my 53rd year, I would be hitting the state twice.

PHOTO: A preview of what's to come.

To make the trip even more attractive, Ted and I were on a family rate at the lodge which meant a significant discount filling a vacant cabin.  Ted and I were to rendezvous in Anchorage on a Sunday night and fly out ion Rust’s charter plane service n the morning.  Both of us were on airline points and food at the Mountain Wilderness Lodge was all included.  Max would be our guide. 

Travel warning:  Getting to Anchorage from the East Coast on American Airlines points is a alarmingly risky proposition.   Six hours late with additional stops in Denver and Seattle (my original route was EWR to DFW to Anchorage) and a change to Alaska Air for the last leg, I made it to our room.  There I learned that Ted had only just arrived beating me by 2 hours despite having a six hour start on me.  For those quick at math it means he was 10 hours late.  It was now 3am in Anchorage and we had 5 hours to sleep before we needed to catch the bus to Rust’s.

A final thought before I continue,  my experience in flyfishing like many of you has taught me that this is the kind of fishing that has nothing to do with luck.  Drift fishing dead bunker through Woods Hole, casting into the rips off the Vineyard and even chasing funny fish with the long wand are influenced by luck.  In my experience with salmonids and flies, the skill of the angler is directly correlated with the frequency and size of the fish he/she catches.   It has to do with  strategy, presentation, accuracy, and the fight.  As I have encountered new species and aqua environments, experience is also required to land trophies even if you have been fortunate and skilled enough to hook up.  On the South Platte, we had established an order for frequency and size.  Max would lead on frequency and size followed by Ted and then me.  


Sunday, January 3, 2016

Now I know Jack

Florida Jack
While I've managed to ignore this blog for six months, I haven't neglected fishing. I decided to title this post, "Now I know Jack," because I've had two great saltwater adventures that resulted in hard-fighting jack fish.

Back in October I went fishing with Captain Scott Hamilton in Jupiter Florida. Scott's outfit, Fly Fishing Extremes, focuses on big, powerful Florida fish. He uses 10-weight and stronger flyrods and is known for catching sharks, false albacore, dorado and big Jack Crevalle. Here's a recent article about his exploits that was in the works when he and I went fishing. It's from Hatch Magazine.

We met early one morning at the marina for a half-day of fishing in the inner harbor, where golfer Jack Nicklaus' home is located. The winds that week were simply too strong to allow fishing in the open waters of the Atlantic where he likes to fish ship wrecks and other structures that hold big fish.

We scooted across the waterway to a bank lined with scrub trees, where he seined for bait. We used flies he had tied, but he baited the water to attracted schools of jacks and tarpon.



I cast back into the trees with the 10-weight I had borrowed from Captain Scott and a jack nearly ripped the rod out of my hand. He had warned me that unlike trout and salmon fishing in the Pacific Northwest, I was to get my rod down to the water rather than jerking it up to the sky. To set the hook I should do that with repeated jerks to the side. Otherwise the jack would snap the rod. I did just that, in part because I had no choice. He had set the drag quite tight and even so the jack ripped off line -- zzzz-zz-zzz-zzz!

The fish was beautiful but sadly we didn't take a photo. Take my word for it. My son's baseball game was about to start and so I had to hustle back to his tournament, where he hit a couple of triples so the hasty retreat was justified.

It was my first jack.

Hawaii Jack (or HI, Jack)

Fast-forward to December. I flew into Maui on a Saturday afternoon before Christmas, and was on the water early Sunday morning with none other than Discovery Channel's Pacific Warrior, Jon Jon Tabon. Like Captain Scott, his outfit also uses extreme in its title, Extreme Kayak Fishing Adventures. Jon Jon is THE expert on flyfishing for Hawaiian bonefish, or O'io. He is also a gentle Aloha spirit and a great teacher.

He's a scarce commodity. Between taking care of his family, filming Pacific Warrior and guiding almost every day, you're lucky to get him. Last year I tried but he and his wife, Amanda, were going through a tough time with parents who were fighting cancer. This year I hit the jackpot by getting him on the first day of my trip.

I used my own 8-weight Sage rod and his shrimp pattern fly. He likes to use a 10-foot leader. The first thing Jon Jon focused on, before we got into the water in Kihei was how to cast in the wind. Weather advisories had the seasonal trade winds at 25 mph gusts but it would hit 50 mph while we were out there. It wasn't pretty but with his guidance I managed to cast alright even in the midst of the worst winds. At some points I could barely stand up in the water.

We were really looking for O'io but I knew jack was a possibility, too. We were in the shallows and looking for good spots where the sandy bottom meets the coral reef. Even with polarized sunglasses I couldn't clearly make out the sea bottom but at one point, in my mind's eye, I was casting to a sandy bottom sandwiched betwee two reefs. I felt a bump and thought it was me hitting bottom but just in case I timidly set the hook and immediately felt the head shake. Fish on! I hiked the rod tip to the blue Hawaiian skies and felt a very heavy weight on the other end. Jon Jon instantly knew it was a jack and the only question was what kind. Had it been a bonefish it would have peeled off all my line but even so this jack little by little did peel of line. It bent the rod nearly in two.

The fish fought very well for a good 5-7 minutes before we brought it in. It was a beautiful and fat fish. Jon Jon advised me it was a Pa'opa'o, a sort of Hawaiin permit as he described it. When I showed my photo below to locals on the island they instantly called it a Papio. Later in the week I settled the discrepancy when visiting the Maui Ocean Center where I found the photo and description pictured below. It is in fact a Pa'opa'o. A Papio appears to refer to any juvenile form of jack, whereas Pa'opa'o is specifically a golden trevally.

It was a huge honor to fish with Jon Jon.



Sea-run cutthroat trout back home

In the back of mind, in the heat of Hawaii, I had New Year's Day circled on my calendar back home. The Gig Harbor area of Pierce and Mason Counties are favorites this time of year. When we got back from Maui, it was cold but sunny in Seattle and after getting some work done for several days I set out one morning for Purdy and Vaughn Spits as well as the Rocky Bay area. I just had to say hello to another sea-run.

I packed my 6-weight and some flies and headed south. High tide was about 11 am and so I caught the end of the incoming tide and most of the outgoing tide. In the first two locations I see a fish or feel a bump. But the sun was brilliant and the air refreshing.

Finally, I returned to a stretch where my father and I had fished several years ago. I waded out and cast for about a half-hour to no effect. Then I looked down the shore to my left and saw some floating docks and decided to stand in the midst of them. Suddenly I got hot with 6-7 strikes, five of which I landed. They were not huge -- 12-14 inches, but respectable and good little fighters. I snapped a photo of one below.

These are very special fish, and we're lucky to see them becoming more and more abundant in the Puget Sound.

 
 
Ernest Hemingway and Zane Grey
 
Even though my fishing has been somewhat limited this past year, I did manage to read a couple of fairly obscure (these days) collections of writing about fishing by novelists Ernest Hemingway and Zane Grey.
 
Hemingway on Fishing is a collection of his short stories, parts of novels and newspaper articles in which fishing is the central theme. Big Two-Hearted River is a must for any literary fisherman. When I have more time I will try to write about some of the fishing literature I've enjoyed.
 
Zane Grey was my grandma's favorite author of westerns. His collection of writing, Zane Grey on Fishing, is less a literary feat and more instructive about light tackle fishing for big game off Florida. I was excited and surprised to learn what an astute fisherman he was.
 
Both Grey and Hemingway clearly inspired baseball great Ted Williams.