Trip Report 2015 August 29 – Bear Creek, Fayette County, IA

University life took a schizophrenic turn or two in the past two weeks.  First I was teaching two intermediate-advanced courses.  Then I was teaching nothing.  Then, on four days notice (literally) I found myself teaching our main introductory course, with no preparation and having never taught it before or developed any course materials.  It makes a kind of sense in the medium and long run given the current administrative environment, but it’s going to be a wild, time-draining ride.  So all of a sudden time on the water is precious again.  James and I have had our three previous camping trips in a row cancelled due to weather and this weekend’s plans made four, with 100% thunderstorms and 1-2 inches of rain forecast Friday and Friday night at Little Paint Creek.  Instead we headed out on Saturday to see what we could do at a rain-swollen Bear Creek.

A non-standard look for an Iowa August morning, foggy and overcast and cool in the wake of a day and night of showers and thunderstorms.
A non-standard look for an Iowa August morning, foggy and overcast and cool in the wake of a day and night of showers and thunderstorms.

Continue reading Trip Report 2015 August 29 – Bear Creek, Fayette County, IA

Book – “Simple Flies”

I just received my copy of Morgan Lyle’s new book “Simple Flies; 52 Easy-to-Tie Patterns that Catch Fish.”  Here is my review: SQUUUEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!

I can’t imagine a book more perfectly timed and pitched to my personal angling zeitgeist.  It’s not wholly focused on tenkara, although the scene and its iconic flies get heavy play.  It’s a kind of fly tying manual (though it claims not to be a “full-on” one, it has an introduction to materials and techniques and beautifully clear, step by step instructions with good colour photographs for each of the patterns).  But it’s better than that.  Although it’s small format, the pages are glossy and everything is in high quality full colour; it’s the closest thing available to a kind of mini-coffee table book for minimalist flies.  Each pattern is introduced with a brief essay on its history along with fishing and tying notes where appropriate.  There are profiles of some of the people associated with various styles (including American tenkara pioneers Daniel Galhardo and Chris Stewart).  The main pattern chapters are “Simple Wet Flies,” “Simple Nymphs,” “Simple Dry Flies,” and “Simple Streamers.”

Even the venerable Woolly Bugger is included, in a new “simpler” twist that is sending me directly to my vise to experiment.  Of the Woolly Bugger, Lyle writes “In fact, as a fly tier, it’s always made me a little uneasy; on some level I’ve had to admit to myself that tying and fishing anything else isn’t truly necessary.”  That sums up the current state of my experience perfectly.  On my return to fly fishing I gravitated to woolly buggers on the third or fourth excursion, then spent a couple of months discovering and having success with killer bugs and classic nymphs.  When I’m fishing for trout, though, it’s black and olive woolly buggers that are the backbone.  And I sometimes feel vaguely unsettled about it, like deep down it means I’m doing it wrong.  I like learning to tie and I like trying other patterns, so I keep trying to expand my fly box.  But on the marginal, mostly stocked streams I am in range of, if I have #12 black and olive woolly buggers in my fly box, I know I can catch trout.

This is a book I have to force myself not to devour all at once.  I know I’ll be browsing and rereading it endlessly in the next weeks and months.  I wish it had been available when I started out back in April, because combined with the TenkaraBum website it’s a perfect introduction to the whole ethos of practical, simple, yet extremely effective flies.  A beginning angler/tyer interested in tenkara could buy this book and have an immediate, accessible foundation to work from.  Almost all of the patterns that I fish regularly, five months into a tenkara career, are included in the book.  But there are also a number of similarly compact patterns I hadn’t come across in the usual tenkara internet haunts.  While there are excellent step-by-step guides for some of the patterns available at TenkaraBum, having a different take is always useful, and there is no other book that gathers the essential minimalist patterns with the kind of information on background, materials, and well illustrated tying steps found here.

Whether you buy it as an introduction, as a tying manual, or seize on it as one of the few currently available tenkara-related books, you can’t go wrong.  It’s both eye candy and brain candy, and if you fish tenkara and like reading about your hobby (as most fly anglers do), you pretty much have to have this relatively cheap, very high quality book.

Trip Report 2015 August 14 – Bear Creek and Grannis Creek, Fayette County, and Richmond Springs, Delaware County, IA

James returned from the United Kingdom on Thursday evening.  We scheduled a play–it-by-ear fishing day on Friday, as he was working on a six hour jet lag.  We decided on Bear Creek (Fayette) because there’s not a lot of walking and it’s easy to bail from in case he got tired.  We got on the stream around 9 am and he put on a brave face, but it turned out he’d woken up at 3.40 am and not gotten back to sleep and he was very pale and had a headache.  The stifling heat and humidity probably didn’t help.  I caught a rock bass and a chub and we saw a few trout but failed to catch any and we beat a retreat after only half an hour or so.

Reunited.
Reunited.  I am smiling. That’s me smiling.

Continue reading Trip Report 2015 August 14 – Bear Creek and Grannis Creek, Fayette County, and Richmond Springs, Delaware County, IA

Trip Report 2015 August 08 – Mossy Glen Creek and Bear Creek (Clayton County) and Bear Creek (Fayette County), IA

So the existential crisis seems to have blown over pretty quickly.  Word came down that both of my face to face classes this fall semester have been cancelled by the college due to low enrollment (don’t want to bore anyone, but the “run it like a business” governance mentality at many public universities doesn’t understand what goes on at a major research university beyond classroom teaching, and doesn’t understand why you’d need to run intermediate and advanced courses with fewer than 16 students).  On the one hand, this is a stressor professionally, as we try to figure out how to maintain nationally prominent graduate programs when we aren’t allowed to actually teach graduate courses.  On the other, the immediate answer for me personally is to double up the amount of teaching I do in large low level undergraduate courses in spring semester (teaching large classes is something I enjoy anyway) and, well, have the entire fall semester largely free of teaching responsibilities.  Tough one.  Yep.  Darn.  So I think it turns out that any crisis was more the start of semester looming than any loss of interest in fishing.  Because the instant the looming ended I sprinted back out to a stream.

ANYHOW, I decided to continue exploring new water by targeting Mossy Glen State Preserve and Bixby State Preserve, which are near one another north of the town of Edgewood in southwestern Clayton County.  Each has an entry on the DNR trout stream list.  However, clicking through to the stream page for each, the map shows no fishable water.  In addition, neither stream is shown on the interactive trout stream map.  If you download the pdf map that covers both, however, there are stream segments indicated and both are listed as special regulation streams.  This seems to be the only place this is indicated, and exactly what the special regulations are isn’t said (usually it means catch and release only, but sometimes there are lower size limits and artificial lures only).  Both seemed to hold out the possibility of something off the beaten path and maybe the chance at something special.  So I told myself that this was as much about exploring as fishing.  As a backup if they both fell through, it wasn’t far over to the streams of Fayette County, and I figured I’d try Bear (that is, if Bear fell through I’d try Bear) having let two weeks pass since my last visit.

Could, uh, use a lick of paint.
Could, uh, use a lick of paint.

Continue reading Trip Report 2015 August 08 – Mossy Glen Creek and Bear Creek (Clayton County) and Bear Creek (Fayette County), IA

Trip Report 2015 August 05 – STSNBN, Fayette County, IA

Nobody reads my blog (how could they, as I haven’t actually told anyone about it?), but an imaginary reader who hadn’t read it front to back might be wondering “What the badword does STSNBN mean?”  STSNBN stands for Stream That Shall Not Be Named.  Q: Why, MarginalTenkara, must it not be named? A: Because uttering its name might risk inviting the Prince of Darkness to enter our world and I, for one, am going to play it safe.

So my resumed fishing career appears to have entered its first existential crisis.  I last went fishing well over a week ago.  I’ve had my time to myself since then in a way that’s shortly (when university and grade school resumes) going to seem utopian.  For all that time and for one more week I can more or less do whatever the heck I please all day every day.  What did I do? I didn’t fish.  Instead I threw myself back into boring stuff like my life’s work and rarely emerged from my basement study, where I engaged in long daily marathons of granular, obsessive science.  In standard neurotic fashion, my reaction to this wasn’t “Awesome! I found my mojo again!” It was instead “I’m really worried I’m not fishing enough.”  It wasn’t that I was pining to fish.  It was that I wasn’t pining to fish.

There’s basically no situation that I can’t find a way to stress over.

Continue reading Trip Report 2015 August 05 – STSNBN, Fayette County, IA