Monday, April 23, 2007

Fly fishing guide in Eugene Oregon

Fly Fishing Guide in Eugene, Oregon: It doesn't get any better than this. Last weekend when my brother came in from NYC for a few days of fly fishing in Eugene, we decided to go with a guide rather than going it alone. I knew if we went by ourselves and wade fished the Middle Fork of the Willamette we'd catch a few fish, but I was hoping for more. I considered taking our inflatable kayaks, but at the last minute I stopped at The Caddis Fly and booked a trip with Chris Daughters. It was the best decision I've made so far this year.

From MattStansberry


1. If we'd have taken the kayaks, I probably wouldn't be writing this right now. I'd be dead. Two and three foot standing waves, pounding rain and cold water would have made it a long day.

2. Daughters put us on a fish bonanza. I have never in my life caught so many big wild trout. Ever. Just to give you a sense of scale: Nate hooked into fish he could barely move -- it was actually two fish on two flies on a single cast.

From MattStansberry


I wanted to post these photos so my brother can start bragging, but I plan to write more on what was working and why (and the other drift trip we took last weekend on the McKenzie).

From MattStansberry


From MattStansberry


From MattStansberry

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Mudsnails in Oregon: Invasive Species Whack-a-mole

New Zealand Mudsnails may be the most depressing invasive species issue facing trout fishermen in the West. According to a pamphlet from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service:

  • Mudsnails are 1/8 of an inch long (but could be as small as a grain of sand
  • Mudsnails have a wide tolerance in water quality and temperature -- in fact they can live for days out of water on your gear
  • Mudsnails reproduce by cloning, so you only need one
  • Mudsnail population densities can reach half a million in one square yard of river.

    New Zealand Mudsnails eat algae, outcompeting native bottom dwelling insects, impacting fisheries.

    So how do you stop the spread? Let me warn you, it's pretty depressing...

  • Scrub your wading gear with a brush, disinfectant
  • Freeze your waders overnight!
  • Boil your waders for five minutes above 130 F.

    Montana State University has taken up the study of NZ Mudsnails. The map below shows the spread of the snails.

  • Oregon State Senate moves to ban canned hunts

    According to the Associated Press, the Oregon State Senate voted 22-5 to ban "canned hunting" in Oregon. It would outlaw the hunting of such animals as Ibex goats and Russian boars on closed game reserves.



    I'm not opposed to "canned" huting from an animal rights perspective. And I'm not really bent out of shape about it for the "sporting" reason either. I am opposed to canned hunts and exotic ranching in general on the grounds that the animals can escape and impact wild animals -- spreading disease, out-competing native species.

    Quote from ODFW: If you have species that are classified as livestock that can escape and manage to establish themselves in the wild, yes, it can pose a definite threat to native wildlife and habitats.

    Ron Anglin, head of the Fish and Wildlife Department's Wildlife Division.

    Monday, April 16, 2007

    McKenzie River Fly Fishing Report: 4/15/07

    Last night I headed down to Armitage to try my luck wading the lower McKenzie River for some late afternoon trout. The day had warmed up nice, especially compared to the day before, so I expected the trout to have the feedbag on. No dice. We got there around 5-ish, walked downstream to the little gravel island and a tail out. It looked PERFECT, but nothing was happening. Not much in the way of bugs either. Sporadic little caddis coming off, some really weird thin mayflies too, but nothing major. Fish were rising though, maybe to some sort of trico spinner? I didn't get a bite. T-O-Double-D caught a couple fish before Wild Bill and I got there, but we never saw one on the line. The evening temperature drop might have put them off a little. Good news all in all: You can wade Armitage and there are fish there.

    There is word on the street of crazy-early summer steelhead below Dexter. I can't believe it, but will if I start hooking them in the town run.

    Wild Bill is out this week, chasing roosterfish in Baja.

    The Kid (pictured below) is coming in from NYC to decompress. We'll probably drift from Salt Creek to Black Canyon in our inflatable kayaks, unless somebody thinks that would be suicidal. Seriously. I've run them all summer, but never in high water. I'm asking for advice. Meantime, I'll check out my Soggy Sneakers guide.

    Stop credit card offers from wasting paper

    As I was cleaning my office today, I emptied my shredder and started thinking about all the literally TONS of paper I throw away thanks to credit card companies sending me pre-approved offers every day. Think of the paper, ink, gas used to deliver this garbage... let alone the annoyance of having to deal with it. So I just googled my way out of the problem and came up with OptOutPreScreen.com, a site that got the thumbs up from both Lifehacker and the NY Times. OptOutPreScreen is a service provided by the consumer credit reporting companies to allow you to get off the mailing lists of hundreds of banks sending offers in the mail. It takes 2 minutes to avoid this flood of crap for five years. I can't believe more people don't do this.

    Funny sidenote: I looked at Lifehacker first -- before the NY Times article. Says something about the power/influence of blogs.

    Sort of related: Thanks for the comment! The Green-e program director commented on my post about EWEB going green. I've seen this kind of interaction on the bigger, techie blogs but not in the "fish scales and snails" corner of the Web that OOJ calls home.

    Sunday, April 15, 2007

    William L. Finley National Wildlife Refuge photos

    We checked out the William L. Finley National Wildlife Refuge today. Nice wildflowers, cool birds -- but I'm out of steam. Here are the photos:

    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry

    Saturday, April 14, 2007

    Western Pond Turtle sighting, fly fishing on the Willamette River

    I've spent the last two days fly fishing on the Middle Fork of the Willamette River. Friday night we checked out the area near Oakridge, fishing a park on the south side of the river that produced a couple weeks ago. No luck here, we headed back to the bridge and crossed the other side. A couple goons were throwing rocks into a pool we wanted to fish. They didn't like the look of us and moved on. Still nothing though, and we went back to our original plan where we'd caught some fish before. Lots of different caddis coming off, not a bite.

    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry


    Today, Todd and Ben (AKA B-real the Norwegian) headed out to the nearby confluence of the North Fork and Middle Fork of the Willamette, near Westfir. The rain was rolling in cold and the water was high, but we managed to fish most of the day. I caught the nicest looking wild redband I've ever seen (no photos -- out of battery today) and got a few more bites. In fact, we left quite a few feeding fish in the pool, but the guys were getting wet and cold and were ready to go.

    From MattStansberry


    While I was on the river yesterday I stumbled onto a Western Pond Turtle, a species listed as endangered in Washington and threatened in Oregon. According to the Oregon Zoo, the biggest threat to the species is the non-native bullfrog and largemouth bass. Both prey on juvenile turtles.

    The Oregon Zoo, ODFW and the Lower Willamette Turtle Project are hosting a Western Pond Turtle workshop on April 20th at the Oregon Zoo.

    Thursday, April 12, 2007

    Oregon outdoor links

    I got a new laptop today (Thanks TT!) so I'll be sending my old cranky lappy to the big refurbisher in the sky. I had a bunch of links in my Favorites list that I wasn't really doing anything with, so I'm going to post them here before I lose them.



    First, Al Campbell's Advanced Fly Tying online fly tying lessons have helped me waste several hours whipping up Bitch Creek-style weaved chenille stonefly patterns that look really cool. I've been using neon colors to cook up something I'm calling the "Crazy Bitch". My guess is that it'll never see a day on the river.

    Also, a couple local Oregon photographers have caught my eye: M.G. Halle and Chuck Griffin. Halle has a blog about the photos he shoots. Griffin's site is more gallery and storefront. He has a bunch of photos up at the Wild Goat cafe in Eugene.

    Wednesday, April 11, 2007

    EWEB Green Power -- Green-e certified

    I just got my bill from EWEB this week and saw a brochure for its green power intitiative. I've signed up to pay one extra cent per kilowatt hour (which translates to about $7 per month in my case) to have "100% green power". Does this mean my energy is coming directly from photovoltaics and wind? Probably not. The idea is to directly finance sustainable, non-fossil fuel based energy. I asked the customer service folks if I was paying extra to support hydro (which I don't want to do) and they said that they weren't sure if energy was coming from "Fish-friendly" hydro or not, but it looked like it was mostly solar and wind. EWEB certifies that it's energy is green through a program called renewable energy certificates by a third party, Green-e.



    How much of the cash is actually going toward green energy development? What kind of authority does Green-e have? I have no idea. It might be something to investigate further, but I'm willing to bet $7 a month that they're doing the right thing in the mean time.

    Check out the EPA's glossary of green power terms.

    Monday, April 09, 2007

    New Mexico photos: Bandelier and Tent Rocks

    I spent the last week in New Mexico, so here are some of the photos from that trip. Check out the whole series on Picassa or Flickr, whichever you prefer. Highlights include trips to Bandelier National Monument and Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument.

    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry


    From MattStansberry