I finally got to go fly fishing this year. First time in 2013. And it happened in Italy. Go figure.
There are many great things about my new job that brought me to Southern Maryland. But the one not-so-great thing is that it has virtually eliminated my fly fishing for trout. Nothing really close by - the Gunpowder is almost 2 hours away - and my travels haven't been taking me to any trout areas. Until now.
I just got back from 2 weeks in Urbino Italy for work. The city is beautiful, the food insanely good, the wine plentiful and wonderful. And, since we had a fee weekend, I decided to look into going fishing on the Saturday we had free. Through the power of the Web, I found Luca Castellani, http://www.lucacastellani.it/ a guide in the Tuscany region of Italy. We emailed back and forth and I secured a day with 2 guides for 4 of us. We met near Sansepolcro in the morning, secured our licenses, and set off for the Tevere River. (Which, as I later found out is actually the Tiber River, which eventually flows through Rome.).. The section we were to fish is a Catch and Release tailwater section that is home to brown trout and grayling.
Luca took our two more inexperienced flyfishermen. Reports back from both of them was that they had a blast , Luca was a great and patient teacher, and they caught some fish. I fished with my rep, Greg, who has limited fly fishing experience. Our guide was Moreno Borriero, a very experienced fly fisherman originally from South Africa. He has intimate knowledge of the stream, hatches, and fish. He is also a very accomplished bamboo rod builder. He showed me the water and then spent some more time with Greg, working a bit on his casting. (After my first few casts, I felt like he should be helping me. When you take a substantial amount of time off from fly fishing, it becomes apparent that you can no longer make even a simple effortless cast. It all came back, but it did take a while!)
A morning brown trout
Greg fishing a bugger against the bank
Wooly buggers work everywhere!
The fish in these waters are pretty highly pressured and are extremely selective. There were a few rises as I worked my way upstream. Occasional BWO's lifted off the surface. I had to go to a 9' 6x leader with a 3'-4' 7x tippet, and a #20 CDC olive. I brought a few trout to hand in the morning, but really had to work for them. It was, in a word, perfect. Nothing big for me - fish were all around a foot in length. The other guys were throwing buggers and brought a few nicer fish to hand - 16"-18" fish. There are some really big fish in these waters, too. I set up on what Moreno thought was a rising grayling and , after a couple dozen casts, finally got him to take. Of course, a grayling has an over-slung mouth and needs to come up and over a dry fly to take it - much like a redfish in saltwater. Of course, I pulled the fly away before he actually go it in his mouth. Nice move, Joe!
A light lunch was to be provided, per Luca's website. To me, that meant a sandwich and a bottle of water. Instead, we went to a very small cafe along a nearby road. We sat outside, drank wine and beer, and were served a couple of large platters filled with the most delicious cured meats and cheeses imaginable. A couple loaves of fresh bread, some olive oil. Awesome lunch!! Then the bowls of pasta came out. This "light lunch" at a roadside café was seriously better than anything from the finest Italian restaurant in the states. The food in the region is amazing.
The second or third course of the "light lunch"
So - back to the river after lunch. The afternoon turned out to be the kind of day you dream about. Well - at least I dream about. Good, solid hatch of BWO's. Constantly rising fish. TOUGH, selective fish. So selective that they consistently refused the NATURALS that were floating down the current seams. I had a dozen fish within casting distance of me rising steadily. For 3 hours I cast to them, extended my tippets, changed flies to smaller , more subtle patterns, got ignored, got refused, missed hits, got ignored some more. I finally got one small brown trout, and I couldn't have been happier if it had been a 26" trout. These fish were tough, selective, and demanded perfection. I LOVE fishing to these kinds of fish, even though they almost always win.. I had a ball.
A very well colored brown trout
Me and Moreno with another brown
Finally, at the end of the afternoon, I decided to see if I could still catch any fish, and tied on a San Juan worm under an indicator. 3 trout and 30 minutes later, I decided that, if I really needed to catch something, I could still nymph fish and bring something to hand.
Now I remember why I love fly fishing - it is days like this that live on forever in my memory.
On the home front, my wife saw a new butterfly come into the butterfly bush. After a couple of failed attempts, I finally got some pictures of it. The shots I tried to get with its wings upright were blurry, and this little guy doesn't hang around very long. Also, I leave you with a photo of my favorite spider - the Orb Spider. He's got quite a lunch, feasting on a pretty good sized grasshopper.
Our new butterfly - a Red Spotted Purple!
Orb Spider
One man's journey through life, where everything seems to involve some aspect of fishing or water.
Showing posts with label butterfly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label butterfly. Show all posts
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Butterflies to get you through a week and a half
I'll be out of town - in Italy, actually, for a week and a half, so I'll post a few pics to pass the time before I go. (For those few folks who have been long time sufferers at the hands of this blog - you're probably thinking "A week and a half??? Usually you only post twice a year!!") I should come back with a lot of photos - keep your fingers crossed In addition to spending the time in a beautiful old walled city - Urbino - I get a chance to fly fish for trout and grayling on Saturday, and hunt pheasant and red legged partridge on Sunday. Plenty of photo ops.
The pictures below were taken on our vacation. We visited the Lewis Ginter Botanical Gardens in Richmond VA - I HIGHLY recommend it if you're in the area!. They had a butterfly exhibit, and these shots came from there. Nothing really artistic - just cool butterfly photos.
See you in a week and a half
Joe
The pictures below were taken on our vacation. We visited the Lewis Ginter Botanical Gardens in Richmond VA - I HIGHLY recommend it if you're in the area!. They had a butterfly exhibit, and these shots came from there. Nothing really artistic - just cool butterfly photos.
See you in a week and a half
Joe
Monday, August 19, 2013
A few more photos
A few more photos on this quick post. Going out of town for a week for business. I'll post more over the weekend.
I erase a LOT more bad hummingbird photos than few acceptable ones I keep!
The big gross bug I photographed earlier in the year. This time eating a moth or butterfly
I erase a LOT more bad hummingbird photos than few acceptable ones I keep!
The big gross bug I photographed earlier in the year. This time eating a moth or butterfly
Monday, August 12, 2013
Butterflies and bugs
Man, I am really liking this photo thing. Probably to the point of really starting to irritate my wife. Like most things I do, I'll jump into this with both feet, and pretty soon I'll get the "eye-roll" when I pull out the camera again to take another (100th? 500th?) picture of a cool butterfly. Oh well.
This week I have a few butterfly pics and 2 (what I think are ) really cool bug pics. As always - click on the photos to enlarge them and see their detail.
Thanks for stopping by.
Oh yeah - we just got back from vacation. While away we went to a very cool Conservatory/ Arboretum which happened to have a Butterfly exhibit filled with the coolest butterflies I've ever seen. All just flying around next to you in the enclosure. Needless to say, my camera got a workout. I'll post those on the next few posts, but I think I took around 200 photos in the Butterfly exhibit.
This photo is not a special one, but I love the coloration of the calibrachoa flowers
A nice photo of an Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Playing around with some color over saturation
I love these Hummingbird Moths!
Praying Mantis' are always fun to photograph
Not sure what this is, but it's big and looks like it would hurt if it bites!
This week I have a few butterfly pics and 2 (what I think are ) really cool bug pics. As always - click on the photos to enlarge them and see their detail.
Thanks for stopping by.
Oh yeah - we just got back from vacation. While away we went to a very cool Conservatory/ Arboretum which happened to have a Butterfly exhibit filled with the coolest butterflies I've ever seen. All just flying around next to you in the enclosure. Needless to say, my camera got a workout. I'll post those on the next few posts, but I think I took around 200 photos in the Butterfly exhibit.
This photo is not a special one, but I love the coloration of the calibrachoa flowers
A nice photo of an Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Playing around with some color over saturation
I love these Hummingbird Moths!
Praying Mantis' are always fun to photograph
Not sure what this is, but it's big and looks like it would hurt if it bites!
Sunday, August 4, 2013
Fishing in Minnesota, and a few more photos
That's right - actual fishing. A rare occurrence these days in my life. I had to go to Minneapolis/ St. Paul area for business and had all morning before leaving for the next flight. My rep and I decided we'd try to get out in the morning for a few hours with a local guide. Ken did the arranging, and he did it well! Our guide on Lake Minnetonka was Shane Raveling. Shane and Dean Capra have, over the years, teamed up to win just about every noteworthy tournament in the upper Midwest. So, I knew we were in the hands of a guy who knows the lake and knows how to fish.
I just didn't realize we'd have so much fun! Shane was a blast to fish with! He knew the water intimately, and showed us the pattern to use to catch fish. It has been a couple years since I actually fished for Largemouth, but it came back to me pretty quickly. We used a technique that I believe was developed on Minnetonka - fishing a Senko on a jig head with an exposed hook in 10-15' deep weed beds. The idea is that the fish either hit on the drop, or when you RIP the worm free from the wed and it falls back. It took some getting used to, but I ended up boating about 9-10 largemouth over the morning. Shane was fishing to try to locate fish and establish a pattern, which he did. He also caught a 5 pound LM - beautiful fish for MN. He got a few pike, too.
Great day, great fun.
Here are the couple of pictures I took.
So - there you have it - I have NOT forgotten how to fish!!
But I'm still pretty enamored with the camera thing. Here's a few more for your viewing pleasure
I just didn't realize we'd have so much fun! Shane was a blast to fish with! He knew the water intimately, and showed us the pattern to use to catch fish. It has been a couple years since I actually fished for Largemouth, but it came back to me pretty quickly. We used a technique that I believe was developed on Minnetonka - fishing a Senko on a jig head with an exposed hook in 10-15' deep weed beds. The idea is that the fish either hit on the drop, or when you RIP the worm free from the wed and it falls back. It took some getting used to, but I ended up boating about 9-10 largemouth over the morning. Shane was fishing to try to locate fish and establish a pattern, which he did. He also caught a 5 pound LM - beautiful fish for MN. He got a few pike, too.
Great day, great fun.
Here are the couple of pictures I took.
So - there you have it - I have NOT forgotten how to fish!!
But I'm still pretty enamored with the camera thing. Here's a few more for your viewing pleasure
Saturday, July 27, 2013
Moths, and more buterflies
This post has some very cool moth photos, as well as a few more butterflies. The moths are, well - they're just cool. but since I only really find them on the porch in the morning if a leave the porch light on, they aren't very artistic. Just neat photos of cool moths.
I think the butterfly photos have more "artistic" qualities, even though I wouldn't know an artistic quality if it bit me in the ass. I'm having more fun with the butterflies using different lighting techniques and various focal points. Some accidental, some on purpose. Oh well.
I just received a new 50-300 mm zoom lens for my camera, so I expect to be posting this stuff for a long time to come.
And - I actually went fishing last week, and caught a few fish. I WILL post that rare event!
Enjoy!
This is probably my favorite moth - reminds me of a bat
I think the butterfly photos have more "artistic" qualities, even though I wouldn't know an artistic quality if it bit me in the ass. I'm having more fun with the butterflies using different lighting techniques and various focal points. Some accidental, some on purpose. Oh well.
I just received a new 50-300 mm zoom lens for my camera, so I expect to be posting this stuff for a long time to come.
And - I actually went fishing last week, and caught a few fish. I WILL post that rare event!
Enjoy!
This is probably my favorite moth - reminds me of a bat
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