Saturday, September 20, 2014

New Sage "Salt" Fly Rod Review






Having used the new Sage Salt 890-4 on two very very different recent saltwater trips, I am writing a mini review or review part one (of many to come).   I say part one because it takes time to really get to know a new series of rods.  A trip or two is kind of like the test drive of a new car or the first few dates of a new relationship....  It takes serious miles and serious time to truly understand all three.  In reality it has taken me several years of fishing Sage Ones, Methods, TCX's, Xi2's and Xi3's to understand the sometimes subtle, and sometimes glaringly obvious differences between the unmistakable "Sage" performance DNA found in each series. 
 

The Sage "Salt 890-4" - The name is appropriate


Immediately, after only a few casts with the new Salt 890, I instantly felt the control or sense of control anyway that I have come to rely on with the Sage Ones.  The "Salt" is a wickedly accurate and responsive rod.  It is also a very powerful and efficient casting tool.  I swear, I  looked at tails or rolling fish at distances that normally I wouldn't even consider casting to, and this rod got my fly there and quickly.  It's important to note that it will not make a beginner an expert, but will add ability to whatever skill level you possess.  This "Konetic Technology" that Sage has access to and incorporates into all of their premium rods, is the real deal.  This new technology has given Jerry Siem and the rest of Sage's R&D and design team a competitive advantage with which to practice their art of creation and design.



For shorter casts, the Salt 890-4 can be tip cast,  and can really cast greater distances by loading the rod much deeper into the mid or oven lower section of the rod in the forward stroke.  On longer casts the rod instantly communicates what's going on in the cast.  Line speed ?  All that I can say is "unbelievable".  After the cast - the rod dampens so quickly, that it almost felt like an extension of my arm.  Less vibration or twang in the tip translates to greater accuracy, and we could all use all the help we can get on that score.

After a few days of casting and catching, the difference between the Sage One and their other Series of rods that I have used and the Salt started to become more obvious.  Lifting long lines off of the water is even easier with the Salt.  This rod has way more "RP" or reserve power than any rod that I have ever cast.  I must be a lousy caster, because I have to recast often it seems.  I have never been able to lift 50 or more feet off of the water so easily and recast so instantly in my life.   This is a big deal in saltwater fly fishing.  Not having to strip in a bunch of line saves time and equals more casts to fish.    

The Salt also has a lot more RP in the battle part of fly fishing.   At one point I had hooked a nice  bonefish in a mangrove maze.  I thought that it  was heading out towards the open ocean, but my guide understood that it was angling me towards one remaining little clump of mangroves.  The guide started screaming that I should steer him away from said clump.  The fish was easily 130-150 feet away from me and closing in on freedom fast.  Usually I would have screamed "Dude - the fish is a mile away and the wind is howling in my face and you want me to do what?" But since I couldn't translate dude into Spanish quickly enough, I palmed the screaming reel, raised the rod high, and was able to use that version of RP and forced him to veer right, clear of the clump of mangroves at over 150 feet.   



Jacks later that day with the help of 20 lb leaders allowed me to manhandle fish that normally would have been in the drivers seat.  Lifting, fighting and casting are equally important components in many fishing situations, and this rod does it all just better.


It is a fast action rod that can be made to feel slower by using heavier tapers or heavier lines.  IT IS NOT DESIGNED TO BE ULTRA SENSITIVE IN VERY SHORT CASTS - and it is not.  I would not use the Rio Bonefish or SA Bonefish taper while looking for redfish and sea trout at 30 feet.  Very subjectively, the sweet spot in the salt 890-4 with light lines appears to be from 40-60 feet of line in the air.  

 TheRio General Purpose Saltwater taper or Rio Outbound or any of the other uber taper lines would work much better in close, and makes the sweet spot or optimal load at 20-40 feet in my limited experience with this rod.  Although this rod has enough power to get way beyond that distance with heavier lines, again for my casting stroke, the heavy lines work better in close quarters and feel a bit clunky at greater distances even with this rod.   

On the other hand if I am after bonefish  or permit at distance, the lighter lines such as the Rio Bonefish Taper make this an ultra responsive, ultra accurate tool.  As we say with all rods, the individual using any rod has to find the right line to match your skill sets, and your casting stroke with whatever rod that you are using - and that is absolutely true with the Sage Salt Series of rods. 

Take the time to learn what this rod is capable of, put it to your own tests, and I strongly believe that you too will see that the Salt just raised the bar by a large margin in the world of high performance fishing tools. 

More to follow soon I hope.....

Andy





Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Best trip ever?

My wife and kids make fun of me and joke that every time I take a trip, I usually proclaim upon returning that it was the "best trip ever" or some such nonsense.  A recent week in the Yucatan that a few friends and I spent fishing this past March could possibly have actually been just that...

The background

First of all, it was a much needed escape from the Chicago winter of 2014.  The cold, and snow, and grey skies and the collective "funk" that pervaded and afflicted all of Chicago seemed like it would never end.  We were knee deep in snow - and it was mid March.  This was also the first time since October that I would have a chance to wet a line, and it was a chance to do so in a tropical setting!

For the past 6 or 7 years, I had really found happiness and escape at a lodge called Boca Paila.  I was not alone.   An easy to get to destination a mere 3.5 hour flight from Chicago,  but alas, it had closed.  The pioneering lodge that had help developed "flats fishing" in Mexico, and introduced countless anglers to the wonders of bonefish, snook, tarpon and the mythical permit had sold the lodge property to a developer and we were out of luck. 

Not so - an email that arrived from the lodge owner a few months ago explained.  Boca Paila has morphed and is back - sort of.  Several of the long term guides were still "on staff" and the permits for guiding rights to the legendary fishery were in tact.  If we were interested in staying at a nearby beach house, with house keeping and cooks, they were back in business and we could return to this special place and relive the fun.   Done.

There are many superb options for great lodging and guided fishing in the "Ascension Bay" area of Mexico - but I have developed a friendship with a particular guide named Luciano, a 20 year veteran of this particular fishery and lodge. I decided to return here again and spend one more week seeking the frustrating permit. 

Luciano is known as "Bimbo" - not because he chases women, but because as a kid he liked the Mexican version of Wonder Bread known as Pan Bimbo.   I don't know if he is the "best guide" - that is a relative term and far too objective.  Subjectively, I know that I fish better with him than with most other guides.   He knows what I am cable of, and what my strengths and more importantly my weaknesses as an angler are.  When he says 50 feet, I know what 50 feet means to him.  When he says a "cast a little father" that means 5 feet further.  When he screams "cast a little farther" that means 10 feet more.  He never gives up on a fish and works like a dog.  Bottom line is that I really enjoy fishing with him.  Up until that point, he had guided me to my first permit, and to 5 of the 7 that I had ever caught.

The Trip a.k.a the Permit Saga


On Day 1 we had superb weather, had forgotten the snow, and were beginning to relax.  My boat mate and good friend, Steve Hodges, had been with me the last  3 or 4 trips.  Steve, as a fisherman, is much more accustomed to swinging flies to BC steelhead.  He loves the "hunting" aspect of flats fishing and immediately took to this very different kind of game.

He had become very proficient at summarizing the near misses and "almost eats" of the past 3 seasons of permit fishing, and he really became an expert story teller and permit psychologist during his time on these flats .  I like fishing with Steve, because even though he is a "grown man" he is one of the more excitable human beings I know.  He turns to a shaking puddle of goo with every permit appearance.  He wants to catch one so bad - that I think it actually hurts.  He gets so excited, that everyone in the boat feels like a kid again.  It was also fun to watch his skills quickly ramp up over the last few seasons.  (not an obligatory comment - actually true)

On his first or second turn on the bow, a couple of permit magically appeared 30-35 feet in front of him.  Bimbo shouted "cast" - and he and I were already grinning at one another in anticipation of Steve's recap of what surely would soon go wrong with these two particular fish.

But in a surreal chain of events, the fly landed perfectly (not the surprising part) Steve very properly s-l-o-w-l-y stripped the fly (not the surprising point) the permit followed (not the surprising point) and it ate (really surprising point)


This is what a look of surprise or disbelief looks like! 
A bent rod with a permit attached at the other end!

5 minutes later, Steve sat shaking like a wet puppy, holding the very first permit of his budding career. He had to sit down for the photo as his knees were knocking together so hard!  I know for a fact that something shorted out in his brain - and that Steve was deeply happy at that moment.  The up until now "impossible" happened - and all was right in the world.  Congrats!!!


.


The next day, Steve shared the boat with another friend, Jerry Spinazze.  Steve got to witness Jerry's first permit ever - and a very nice one indeed!  As Jerry summarized, "Knocked another one off my bucket list"  Jerry apparently has gained wisdom over the years and does not place as much "drama and value" on successfully landing a permit of a fly as some of us still do.... 

I know it did, on the other hand, bring a grin to his face seldom seen!    Another round of congratulations.






Then Steve repeated with his second permit - and we were only on day 2 of 6!  




As if this wasn't already too good to be true, I am almost embarrassed to report that I had what can be simply described as unbelievably great luck all week long.  With my buddy Bimbo at the helm, I landed 7 permit in six days.

That is the same number of permit that I had landed in the last 6 or 7 trips combined.   I even landed 2 in one day - twice. 

On the last day, as if things couldn't get any better, we finally cracked the super grand slam.  (That is landed bonefish, permit, tarpon and snook on a fly in the same day) Then we missed out on a second super slam when 2 more baby tarpon threw the hook before I could get them in . What a week!

They ranged in size from this big (or this small)....




to this size - and others on either side.  What made it even more satisfying is that only one was caught from a school of permit (usually "easier" fish), and all of the others were singles or doubles - and usually in very skinny water, all far far from the skiff .

I caught 2 on "Boca Paila Crabs" one on a Puglisi Spawning Shrimp, and the last 4 on a fly that Jon Uhlenhop from the shop had tied for me years ago pictured below. Up until this point, Bimbo had said that it would never work, so it sat neglected.  To Bimbo's credit - he told me to give it a whirl on this trip on day 5, and it resulted in 5 eats and 4 fish! 



This is what remained after the first 2 fell to his creation.


What was different on this trip? 


We landed a total of 10 permit in 6 days.   First of all - we were at the right place at the right time. It's important to remember that.   What else?  Not the weather - it ranged from perfect, to howling windy to downright cloudy/rainy on a few of the days, pretty much like all trips. 

Apart from incredible luck and finding happy fish, I can only point out 2 or 3 things that really made a noticeable difference.

First of all - I switched to Seaguar Grand Max Fluorocarbon tippet material.  This stuff is as good as it gets!  I know it sounds like a minor thing - but it's a HUGE thing.  Two trips ago I lost 3 or 4 permit on hook sets because of crappy or possibly old fluorocarbon that I was using.  You don't get a permit to eat that often - and I will never use anything else again.  It is also incredibly thin - and knots very well!  When you have confidence in your hook set - it ALL works better!

The second thing I did differently is that I used a 9 weight instead of my usual 8 wts.  Not that the permit were too big for an 8 wt - it's just that I could cast a big crab a lot further and more accurately at greater distances than I ever have using the 9wt.  I would guess that one switch gave me 10 or 15 feet of additional effective range.

The last thing I did differently is that I finally took the time to figure out the right lines for each rod I fished at the beginning of the week and made changes rather than "deal with" less than perfect pairings.  We talk about it at the shop all of the time - you have to match up the rod in each situation with the right fly line.  For this kind of fishing - the Rio Tropical Bonefish Line and  the SA Bruce Chard Grand Slam Line matched what I needed for my Sage Ones.  Other lines worked for other rods.  I must point out that these lines suited my casting style and my needs - another caster might prefer completely other lines.  YOU have to figure out which lines work for you.  The right line can be a game changer for every rod - period. I have been frustrated on other trips using the wrong lines on the right rods (and vice-verse) too many times.

So was it the best trip ever? 


For Steve - I hope so.  Not only did he land his first 2 permit, his fiance Kelly joined us towards the middle of the trip - bonus #2- and she got her first bonefish!  (might be some fishing trips in their future)


For Jerry?  A great one - but there were so many to choose from - that I doubt it.  I know he had a great time, and always enjoys time well spent.  Isn't that most important thing?

For me?  Every time I take a trip with friends and there is fishing involved - it's the best!  Throw in an obscene number of landed permit and this one might have been!

Cheers!

Andy


If you would like help in setting up a trip to the new version of Boca Paila or any of the other great flats fishing destinations we work with in Mexico or beyond - give us a call at the shop and ask for Andy or Paul.  We are booking agents with some of the finest lodges out there and have first hand experience that we would love to share with you!  (312-944-3474)

Friday, April 25, 2014

A long time in the making - but Wisconsin is ON

You might not have believed that the winter of 2014 would ever end - but it did and the trout streams found a few short hours away in Wisconsin are fishing great!!!   The snow is gone, the water is in superb shape, the green grass is showing up in droves, and the "good bugs" that fish eat (not the ones that will be biting you by June) are bringing the trout out of their long, dark, sleep.

This is one of the best times of year to experience what all the fuss is about on the hundreds of miles of trout streams found in Wisconsin.  Though the majority of the state has some trout holding water, I am referring to the area known as the "driftless" found in the South West corner of the state.  As the weather warms up, and the days get longer, these streams really come to life.

Now is a great time to fish there, as the grasses surrounding the creeks are not too tall, and the biting varieties of insects have not yet shown up, and the temps are PERFECT for people and fish.  The bugs that make up the trout's food chain, are starting to hatch which makes for sporadic dry fly fishing.  First we'll see midges, small black caddis and BWO's.  The tan and larger caddis are soon to come followed by a few larger mayflies such as sulphers, March Browns, and hendricksons.

Most recently, Jon fished up there with his wife Anne,  and below he shares a quick up-date:

"I just returned from a few days in the Driftless region of SW Wisconsin.  The weather was typical for April where we experienced bright sun, windy and overcast, and periods of light rain.  When the conditions were right there were trout eagerly rising to Black Caddis, BWO’s, and Midges.   




One of my favorite dry flies this time of year is Mercer’s Missing Link Caddis as it is a nice crossover between a crippled BWO and an emerging Caddis.  Most fish we caught were on nymphs such as Scuds (14 – 16), Pheasant Tails (18), and Cased Caddis (10 - 12).  Water temps ranged from the high 40’s to low 50’s depending on where we fished.  





This was my second trip using my new Sage ESN 10’ 3wt and I am absolutely fascinated with the ability to cover water and keep my flies in the feeding zones using the tight-line Czech/Polish nymphing style of fishing.  If you have not done so already try fishing flies tied on jig hooks as they don’t snag as much.   

If you are interested in learning more about short-line nymphing we would be happy to help demystify this technique.  We have numerous books such as Dynamic Nymphing by George Daniels and DVD’s  like Steve Parrot's Czech Nymphing Master Class on the subject and we can explain the leader material, sighters (indicators), and jig flies used in this effective technique.

Get out soon!   Keep in mind the that the "Early Trout Season" closes in Wisconsin for a week on April 27th - and re-opens with standard regulations May 3rd. "