Posts Tagged ‘Tasmanian trout flies’


Winter RiverFly fly tying courses – course content

April 28th, 2009 by Daniel
A brace of Black and Peacock spiders

A brace of Black and Peacock spiders

Our fun and modern fly tying courses are beginning to take shape for Launceston, Hobart and the North-West. Launceston classes start on the 21 May, and there are still a couple of spaces left. The venue is at The Essential Fly Fisher, at 105 York Street. Email me to reserve a place www.riverfly.com.au/contact

Dates for the Hobart and the North-West classes will be set soon, as class numbers are beginning to fill. Please email me if you are interested in attending courses in either of these areas www.riverfly.com.au/contact

Course content

The courses have been structured to enable all skill levels to participate, and to teach take-away skills for tying better flies, and tying them easier. Some of the topics covered will include:

- Technique for tying durable bodies with peacock herl

- Tricks for tying deer-hair and Possum Shaving Brush ‘wings’ for better flotation and fish-catching

- Technique for tying in durable, non-slip parachute hackles

- Techniques for tying easy ‘porcupine’ hackles – the easy high-viz alternative to parachute hackles.

- Tying with deer-hair – bullet-heads and the WMD

- Correct techniques for tying with foam – glue, legs and the Chernobyl Ant

- The rules for using colour and UV reflective materials in flies

The course will cover many more topics along the way, and the day-to-day techniques that may be troubling you (such as dubbing!) will be covered through the course of tying the featured flies.

There’s no better thrill than catching a fish on a fly of your own design. Come and join us to learn more about how to do it.


Winter fly tying courses – Launceston from 21 May

April 17th, 2009 by Daniel
A Tasmanian trout on a hand tied fly

A Tasmanian trout on a hand tied fly

As promised, here are the dates for our first round of winter fly tying courses. The dates are subject to minimum numbers (3 pers) and course numbers are limited to 6 participants. The course is structured with some simple ties first off, and the complex flies last – so the course is suited for all abilites from beginners to experienced. Your flies will benefit from the tricks and tips taught in these classes, from a simple and durable technique for tying with peacock herl, down to the best ways to tie deer-hair. 

Learn to tie all the flies you’ll need for the new season.  From simple and deadly Stick Caddis or  F-Fly patterns, right up to the chunky WMD and Chernobyl Ant.  All in all, a minimum of 12 patterns will be covered.

Cost: $190 per person, with tying notes, fishing notes and required tying material on the night supplied by RiverFly.

Dates : 5 nights, 2 hours/night, every Thursday starting 7pm 21 May at the Essential Fly Fisher, 105 York Street Launceston.

 

Devonport / Hobart Classes: If you and 5 mates would like to form a class and have a suitable venue, please contact us: for your efforts we’ll give you your place free of charge!

Contact Daniel to book your place or for further enquiries www.riverfly.com.au/contact

(A small number of vices are available for beginners to use on the night, or you can purchase your own, with scissors, deer-hair stacker, bodkin and bobbin holder for ~$150 through the Essential Fly Fisher.)


RiverFly Tasmania fishing report April 2009

April 14th, 2009 by Daniel

baetid mayfly dun

baetid mayfly dun

David Scholes and the modern-day hatch

David Scholes was (and is still regarded as) one of Australia’s most revered fly fishing authors. He wrote of fly fishing in Victoria and Tasmania during the 1950’s and 60’s, which were considered to be among the halcyon days of these fisheries: little or no fishing pressure, plenty of water, and many new fisheries to be explored.
Reading through David’s classic Fly Fisher in Tasmania (1961), there’s stories of rivers, hatches and fishing with mates, but for me, it is a story of one memorable ‘hatch’ that stands out–a unique army caterpillar fall on the North Esk River. From Fly Fisher in Tasmania:

‘One day stands alone on the broken rivers–the day I found the Army Caterpillars on the North Esk. I had witnessed this rare event previously, but never with such startling results…I would like you to hear about this extraordinary tale. Friday was the last day of December 1954 and began with a clear warm sunny morning and little wind…about nine o’clock, we broke out of the willows into a more open and sunny section. Then and there I beheld the first part of a spectacle I had never seen before, nor have I seen since…The bend I looked into was high on our side, curving away to our left, but for as far upstream as I could see, the whole pool seemed alive with rising trout…At first we were spellbound by the size of the trout, some being absolute whales of five or six pounds.’

In this story, David was speaking of the largest caterpillar fall he had fished, a ‘hatch’ that featured armies of paddock-munching caterpillars migrating to an isolated stretch of river, where they proceeded to climb off over-hanging tussocks and onto the water, not unlike lemmings from a cliff. These caterpillars float, making them an irresistible prey item, while their sheer numbers are enough to bring even the biggest fish up from the deepest pools–exciting stuff indeed.

How does this link to our modern-day fishing? This year I was lucky to guide two groups onto two different army caterpillar falls on our broken rivers – the St Patricks and the North Esk rivers.

Brian and his son Nick experienced the first caterpillar migration during January on the St Patricks River, where trout’s bellies hung like under-slung saddle-packs, disgorged with the floating prey almost 54 years to the day after David Scholes experience his own North Esk hatch. Later in the season, and more recently, the Sloan group of first-timers from Victoria also experienced a migration of caterpillars on the North Esk river, leading to an almost three-pound trout for Jennie in her first hour of fly fishing ever! I wonder if it was on the same stretch that Scholes’ fished all those years ago?

These hatches were great events, with a significant demonstration for us to take note of. Though our fisheries may be effected by climate change, over-allocation of irrigation rights and increased pressure, there is still so much left to protect and enjoy–hatches that would make the lad’s of the halcyon days giddy with excitement are still a reality, and the glass is half-full; let’s do our best to keep it that way.

March and early April 2009 fishing report

Autumn day on Brumbys Creek

Autumn day on Brumbys Creek

March is typically my favourite month to fish, but this past month was best described as sporadic. In Launceston rainfall was at a 25-year high for the month, which meant that plenty of frontal systems crossed through the state – these days were hard for fishing, while the preceding humid days prior to the arrival of a front was good for baetid and ant falls. Unfortunately, whilst we did have good hopper action, the increased rain and greener paddocks led to a shortened hopper season.

In summary, a dozen excellent ant and baetid days were experienced, along with a couple of solid hopper days. The highlight fisheries for the month were the Lower Macquarie (ants, baetids), St Patricks (hoppers, baetids) and the Mersey rivers (ants).

Fishing predictions for late April and May 2009

Winter feels like it is arriving early this year, so the fishing will be primarily reliant on baetids for the rest of the season. Ants will be an option on the warmer days, and on the rainbow waters into May, gum beetles and midge will be the key hatches.

We offer discount guiding during May on the rainbow waters, with most days focusing on high-bank polaroiding some favourite lowland lakes, and a bit of nymph-fishing on the rainbow trout rivers. Contact us if you would like a day or two on the water at these discount rates www.riverfly.com.au/contact .

*RiverFly Fly Tying Classes – winter courses*

This winter we will be holding fly tying classes for beginners and experienced tiers. Consisting of six evening-sessions, these courses are being built around the fly selections we use for guiding, many of which are featured in our In Season Tasmania coffee-table book. We will also be featuring a few secret patterns that produce the goods during the hard times!
Much of the tying will focus on the little tips and tricks that make the major difference to the quality of your flies, the time it takes to tie them, as well as their fish-catching abilities.

Class dates for Launceston are about to be released, with a maximum of six persons per class. Register your interest by E-mailing me now www.riverfly.com.au/contact

If you live in the North-West, Hobart, or anywhere else for that matter, and have a few mates or fishing club that would like to form a class, we’d also love to hear from you–we aim to offer classes to all that would like to learn.

To register interest in our fly tying classes, please Email me at www.riverfly.com.au/contact

Fishing Tips

Fishing Tip1:  On a humid and stormy day, the fishing often peaks just prior to the rain – make sure you don’t just fish antsthe fair-weather days, or you’ll miss out on some great fishing opportunities.

Fishing Tip 2:  When spooling your reel with a new line, make sure you unroll the line from the spool, rather than pulling it off sideways: the later will result in a series of permanent twists in your line

The Source Tasmania dvd–Release date July 2009–pre-order now

If you can’t make it to a showing of The Source–Tasmania during the national Rise Fly Fishing Film Festival this winter, you can pre-register for a copy now www.riverfly.com.au/contact. Check out our blog (webdiary) entry for more details on this awesome high-definition dvd, due for release in June 2009. www.riverfly.com.au/blog .
That’s all for this month’s report. If you are reading this fishing report via our blog (webdiary), remember that the tech-savvy among you can subscribe via RSS. If you are receiving this report via Email, feel free to pass it on to your friends using the Forward tab below.

Happy Easter from Daniel, Simone and the RiverFly Tasmania team.


The giant stonefly and Max Christensen’s Bloody Mary

April 8th, 2009 by Daniel
Bloody Mary

Bloody Mary

In Flylife Magazine Spring 2008, I wrote an article on the Mersey River in Northern Tasmania. Within this article I spoke of hatches of giant stoneflies, and the large bouyant dry flies used to imitate the adult insect – flies such as our WMD Hopper, or the slightly more crass Chernobyl Ant. Well, it appears that this is a hatch that hasn’t passed through time completely un-noticed.
A couple of weeks ago I was lucky to receive a parcel in the mail from well know fly-fisherman Rick Keam, detailing the history of Max Christensen’s Bloody Mary fly, a popular wet fly used even today among the highland lakes of Tasmania. In Rick’s own words:

‘Few people today know that he (Max) developed it as an impressionistic imitation of those same stoneflies. It is still around of course, but nobody ties it with the really long, raked-back hackles it originally featured’

Of even more interest in the parcel were two items: an excerpt of an article written by David Scholes on the Bloody Mary, originally published in the Anglers Digest during the late 1960’s, and three Bloody Mary flies tied to correct proportions for me to try.

From the Anglers Digest, Scholes writes:

‘But every so often a real gem comes to light, a fly that either answers some long-standing need, or, by virtue of it’s success just as a nondescript, is a contribution of definite value to the sport…Without question the Bloody Mary is such a fly.’ ‘Max Christensen’s thoughts were first stirred when he considered the larval and adult stages of large stoneflies and wondered how to best imitate them. Bloody Mary is the result of much subsequent trial, error, and careful experimentation. I have no doubt that, in addition to achieving this aim, Max has accidentally evolved a most remarkable general-purpose fly which, so far as I can see, will work successfully at any time, so long as it is fished correctly.’

Isn’t it interesting how the future is often rediscovering the discoveries of the past? My questions in parting is this: if Max was seeing enough stoneflies to prompt thought, it is most likely that he was fishing the Chudleigh Lakes or the Mersey River, two modern-day hotspots for giant stonefly activity. The thing is, these fisheries were barely mentioned by the friends of Max such as David Scholes. So where was Max fishing – was it way out west in the Chudliegh Lakes, or perhaps deep among one of the Mersey’s great gorges, well before either became modern-day icon fisheries?


In Search of the Giant Stonefly

January 30th, 2009 by Daniel
A giant stonefly hitches a ride

A giant stonefly hitches a ride

The giant-stonefly (Eustheniidae) hatch is a mysterious Tasmanian event. Most anglers would have seen the adult insects running around from time-to-time, but few would have fished a serious hatch. These massive bugs are found right across a huge range of Tasmania’s clear, cool waters, including tributaries of the St Patricks and North Esk rivers, the Meander, Mersey, Liffey and Leven rivers, Arthurs and Great lake, and among the Western Lakes.

These beasts are big: two inches in length (equivalent to a size 6 long-shank hook) is not unusual for these little beasties, appearing from their nymphal stages as winged adults, racing up mid-stream rocks as they hatch into mature adults.

For a number of years I have been studying the hatches of these little-known insects, trying to find the right time, and the best place to hit the hatch. These experiences have shown that late January is the best time for the hatches, during the warmest time of the year. The best locations are the fast and bouldery rivers of the north and north-west, and among the north-western area of the Western Lakes.

With this information in mind, I am off to fish some of Tasmania’s best fly fishing waters in search of the giant-stonefly hatch, one of the rare hatches that brings the biggest of the best fish to the surface. My trip will start in a deep gorge of the Mersey River for two days, followed by four days in the Western Lakes. My fly of choice will be the WMD Hopper, with an orange underbody, tied to a eight-pound tippet. Wish me luck!

If you would like to join RiverFly Tasmania for a day on the rivers, or on a Wilderness Campout to experience the best fly fishing Tasmania has to offer, contact Daniel for more information

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For WMD Hoppers and dozens of RiverFly Tasmania fly patterns, visit our online shop