Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum
Fishing in British Columbia => Fly Fishing Cafe => Topic started by: apollo on May 25, 2010, 08:01:22 PM
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Hello all. I am super new to fly fishing (I don't even have my gear yet) and I am going to be heading out to Cultus Lake in mid June for a couple of days. I would very much appreciate if anyone could help me out with what king of flies to get, how to fish them ( technique), and whatever other things i should know. I did take a fly fishing seminar with Vic from STS guiding but I have yet to do anything on my own (scary). Thank You for listening and I am eagerly waiting to hear from you.
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Apollo: Cultus lake is probably not the best lake to learn fly fishing on. In June, especially as the weather gets warmer, your main goal will be to try and avoid getting hit by the speed boats on the lake. I would probably hit some of the other lakes in the Lower Mainland to practise your fly casting. Some of the other members have already posted their success on some of those lakes. One other thing you might consider doing is some flyfishing on the Vedder in July. As long as you limit your catch and practise proper catch and release techniques you should have fun. I am sure the folks at Fred's Custom tackle can line you up with some flies that should work.
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As long as you limit your catch and practise proper catch and release techniques you should have fun
Or...you could catch and kill your limit every day and have a hoot, too.
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Clarki: making smartass remarks like that especially to new members looking for advice does nothing for the sport. The Vedder gets hammered hard enough during the salmon season. ::)
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youtube is your friend! type in fly casting or fly fishing lessons, failing that go visit your local tackle shop for help :)
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Clarki: making smartass remarks like that especially to new members looking for advice does nothing for the sport. The Vedder gets hammered hard enough during the salmon season. ::)
On the contrary, it does alot for the sport. ;D He asked for tackle and technique advice and you included an unsolicited morality mini-lecture couched as advice. Now THAT does nothing for the sport. There is nothing unethical about killing your limit. As long as our friend is obeying the law, I say fill yer boots and have a hoot.
And what does the Vedder have to do with it...
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On the contrary, it does alot for the sport. ;D He asked for tackle and technique advice and you included an unsolicited morality mini-lecture couched as advice. Now THAT does nothing for the sport. There is nothing unethical about killing your limit. As long as our friend is obeying the law, I say fill yer boots and have a hoot.
And what does the Vedder have to do with it...
Vedder "trout" are Steelhead smolts.
I have no problem targeting them and catch and releasing them but can't stand when people are killing 4 or more a day.
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Re: fly fishing advice
« Reply #2 on: May 25, 2010, 09:58:53 PM »
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Quote from: dennyman on May 25, 2010, 09:42:11 PM
As long as you limit your catch and practise proper catch and release techniques you should have fun
Or...you could catch and kill your limit every day and have a hoot, too.
On the contrary, it does alot for the sport. He asked for tackle and technique advice and you included an unsolicited morality mini-lecture couched as advice. Now THAT does nothing for the sport. There is nothing unethical about killing your limit. As long as our friend is obeying the law, I say fill yer boots and have a hoot.
And what does the Vedder have to do with it...
The Vedder has nothing to do with it.
The question was on what to use if they were fly fishing and your "club everything you hook" mentality adds little if anything to this thread or the sport.
and I request the mods to Modify/delete the offending posts, Including mine!
Let's get back on track!
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You guys are arguing about something that is not applicable (meaning I would never eat anything from Cultus Lake). All i am asking is if someone can give me an idea of the "best" 1/2 dozen flies tht should catch me some fish. Thanks
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I've never fly fished there but searcher flies (wooly buggers, spratleys.....) are a good start on any lake, and after you find the response to colour, retrieve, depth you can refine your fly if an apparent hatch isn,'t helping.
Too much to soak in in a forum banter.
Good luck and hopefully someone will pipe in with some useful info.
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apollo, why would you “not eat anything from Cultus Lake”?
In the past several years thousands of Northern Pikeminnows have been removed from this lake, creating a very favourable environment for other predators. I think the fishing on Cultus could be quite good, at least until the speedboats and water temperatures increase.
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Learn all the safety & regulation first and enjoy the great sport.
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thanks for the info. Dave I wouldn't eat the fish from there because I dont trust how clean the water is. Besides I usually practice catch and release ( most of the time ). I hope i didn't offend you.
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Personally I have landed buckets of those fish on the Shuswap with Nation's Silver Tip, and my Dolly Whacker, in the Thom it has been Tom Thumb and Stimulator.
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apollo, certainly not offended, and admire your C&R ethic, just curious how you have concluded fish from Cultus Lake are unfit to eat?
I’m familiar with pretty much most of the water quality/contamination/pollution issues with Cultus. For sure there are problems as you would expect from any lake that has an est. 3 million visitors annually, but ….. data available for this lake, (and there's lots … Google Cultus Lake sockeye) does not indicate any reason not to eat fish from this system.
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apollo, certainly not offended, and admire your C&R ethic, just curious how you have concluded fish from Cultus Lake are unfit to eat?
I’m familiar with pretty much most of the water quality/contamination/pollution issues with Cultus. For sure there are problems as you would expect from any lake that has an est. 3 million visitors annually, but ….. data available for this lake, (and there's lots … Google Cultus Lake sockeye) does not indicate any reason not to eat fish from this system.
This is good to know. Have you ever eaten any fish from Cultus lake? And if yes, how were they?
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"Have you ever eaten any fish from Cultus lake? And if yes, how were they?"
Good question apollo and it got me thinking - I have eaten many fish from Sweltzer Creek over about 50 years (char, cutthroat, whitefish, chum, coho, and yup, sockeye, and .... my first steelhead caught in 1960) but the only fish I have eaten that actually reared in Cultus Lake was a Northern Pikeminnow. It was barbied and really over cooked ... and it was not good. But my tastebuds were probably in denial due the many beer consumed ::)
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"Have you ever eaten any fish from Cultus lake? And if yes, how were they?"
Good question apollo and it got me thinking - I have eaten many fish from Sweltzer Creek over about 50 years (char, cutthroat, whitefish, chum, coho, and yup, sockeye, and .... my first steelhead caught in 1960) but the only fish I have eaten that actually reared in Cultus Lake was a Northern Pikeminnow. It was barbied and really over cooked ... and it was not good. But my tastebuds were probably in denial due the many beer consumed ::)
LOL. Thanks Dave.
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get a good pair of Polaroids...save your eyes from reflection and flyin' flies...;))
mojo