
Brown Trout~Brooke Gavin Biggar
Brooke is an artist residing in Cleveland, Ohio. You can enjoy her drawings here and the work is available on line. You might also note the young woman can catch ‘em as well as draw and paint them.

Brown Trout~Brooke Gavin Biggar
Brooke is an artist residing in Cleveland, Ohio. You can enjoy her drawings here and the work is available on line. You might also note the young woman can catch ‘em as well as draw and paint them.

Although not updated in the last month…the information here is worth review for Oregon Fly Fishers. Site care of Buster. By reviewing the maps, I could see the clearcuts since 1968 and their seeming vastness. I would like to see the reforestation maps and yields from those efforts and the boardfeet replacement equations. Does that matter? They did all that cutting (and exporting…another BS issue) so has the replanting been successful or is it even close to re-harvesting. The site suggests it is lagging (let me guess…climate change), and if it is lagging, for whatever reason, then no harvests should commence. If economic indicators provide no demand then no harvests should commence. And, if it doesn’t…for the communities that require food on the table…perhaps a quicker infusion of stimulus monies for those green jobs are in order for Tillamook County. Perhaps Governor Ted or our vaunted eco saavy Senators and Rep’s could for once be heard from. I know that is all highly improbable. While many are upset over Cheney appearing at a function, perhaps they should aggressively ask…what the hell has the State of Oregon government been doing for how many years under Kulongoski, Kitzhaber, Roberts, Goldschmidt and the pious Hooley, Blumenauer, DeFazio, AuCoin, Wu, Merkeley and Wyden. Quite a strike force of earnest green blood. So what gives? They are aware and they defer. Why? They have had the numbers enough times to bring a halt and haven’t.
I wonder if the flooding we see almost yearly in Tillamook County will become even more epic than the last few years? The put ‘n take philosophy for fish and timber is so pervasive in Oregon that the hard choices that were and are on the table are not palatable to the current or past leaders of this fair state.

“Some readers might infer that SPOT has too many problems in its present state. On the contrary, if the user is aware of and takes into account the basic limitations of the Global Positioning System and satellite communications systems, and indeed of all electronic positioning and communications systems, SPOT can be literally a life saver, and has been already. SPOT, like all GPS-based and satellite-communications-based systems is undergoing rapid development. In my discussions with the company, they are taking their mission of making an affordable emergency location device very seriously.”

“The four needed to work up a plan of action, so they drank beer while considering a strategy. It was determined that Steve Jr. would distract the eel because he had drank the most alcohol and believed he was bulletproof. He opened up the sliding door down below to see what the “monster” was doing. As the door opened, the eel came up the two steps biting at anything along the way. The four brave men then ran to the wheel house like women and slammed the door shut. They never did identify which one of them screamed like a girl.“
This story raises so many thoughts from the enjoyable writing style to the 9mm in an unsteady hand. It is hindsight to add what if’s and reinforces that parts of the world offer up fishing events most of us freshwater trout/salmon chasers won’t encounter. Better their lower extremities at risk than mine. Story courtesy of Mara Henderson of Clearwater, Florida.

Edward Van Put
ED VAN PUT Catskills Fly Fishing Historian
“Van Put’s prodigious research and wordy prose takes us on this voyage through time and space visiting significant ports of call and authoritative personages along the way to paint perhaps the most complete history of a region. A region devoted for almost two centuries, to the pursuit of Savalinus Frontinalis, the American Brook Trout, and its cousins the Brown Trout and, of late, Rainbow Trout. It was here in this twice blessed place that fly fishing in America began in earnest.”
“This panoptic chronology covers nearly two centuries of failure and success, tragedy and triumph in the cradle of American fly fishing. It is an essential reference for any and all who fish the Catskills….” (More Info)
“The Rio Grande and other rivers in the Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego (P-TdF) regions of South America provide some of the best sport fly fishing in the world. While salmonids are not native to South American rivers, they are now well established and fly fishing ecotourism is an important regional industry. However, concerns exist that the fishing pressure may have begun to impair trout population structure and productivity in some of the rivers.”
“We also are interested in documenting why brown trout and sea-run salmonid fishes have so successfully adapted in the Rio Grande. Specifically, we are interested in potential interactions between resident and sea-run life history types of brown and other salmonids that are present in the Rio Grande (e.g. Rainbow Trout), especially in relation to interbreeding and competition for food and space by juveniles. We believe that such information also is essential to sustaining high quality fishing in P-TdF, as well as better informing the science of salmon rivers worldwide.“

www.explorepatagonia.com/