Showing posts with label Switching it up. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Switching it up. Show all posts

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Switching it up


Switching it up with Ben See

As we approach the spring steelhead run in the Alley, it comes as no surprise that with each rain we receive, the more fish that are coming into the stream system. While I would normally be searching for chrome with the centerpin and spawn sacs, I am happy to say I am keeping up with the switch rod and fly venture. While I knew in the beginning that trying my hand at spey casting and fly fishing would be a challenge, little did I know how much of a challenge it really would be. I have to admit, I have snuck out the pin and put the smack down just to get some of my mojo back. I am sure I am not the first and certainly won't be the last person to enter into the spey world and be completely confused on this technique, gear, and method of targeting fish. But, as I have said in the past I don't quit, I won't quit.

When swinging a streamer you get plenty of time to observe your surroundings and also do plenty of thinking. For me the next thing I think of with the pin is the next fish. The next thing I think of with the switch rod has nothing really to do with fish. While I am trying to figure out how a fish with a pea sized brain can out think an angler and at the end of the day put them in checkmate, I find myself daydreaming. This in itself is probably one of my issues with the my spey success.

How is it that an angler that knows how to read water, knows fish migration patterns, watches USGS flow gauges like a hawk, can pickup a pin and smash fish daily, knows basically every stocked stream in Steelhead Alley, can zig when he needs to zig and zag when he needs to zag? But, pickup the switch and meet the skunk more often then not? This got me thinking stream side, and to my surprise I found myself off on a tangent again in my own mind.

I am a perfect example of why telling anglers where to fish has little to no advantage. If I have said it once, I have said it a thousand times. Teach an angler how to use a specific technique and they will figure out the where to fish. Telling an angler where to fish when they don't have a good grasp on the their chosen technique doesn't do anything good for the angler or the angling community. As social media has become quite popular over the past few years, these sort of tools are a blessing and a curse to our fishing community. A blessing on one hand as to allow anglers to meet those likeminded to learn from each other. A curse on the other hand as it provides a stage for those ignorant of the true challenges of our fishery. While they spew nonsense, only to be confronted by those anglers who can be seen fishing in sub zero temps in the winter and scorching days in the summer for species other than steelhead. The ignorant then become defensive when those that actually know what is going on with our fishery confront them. They should actually speak less and listen more to the true challenges that are faced in Steelhead Alley. Maybe then, which I doubt, but just maybe they would realize they are contributing to the problem and not the solution.

Team SAA will be back out there on the streams this weekend looking to find the chrome. Hopefully water temps will rise a bit more and that will trigger some good action in the coming week.

Until Next Time...
Fish Hard...Fish Often...

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Switching it up with Ben See – Part 4



Switching it up with Ben See – Part 4

It has been a while since a new episode of “Switching it up” has been published.  I would have loved to come to the computer and write a great success story of how I have been able to pick up a switch rod, throw on some sink tips, swing hobo spey patterns and land some fish.  Unfortunately I still have a lot to learn and every trip out to the streams produced another skunk.  Like the movie Goundhog Day, it was the same ole thing.  Head out to the river, conditions a bit different then the last, but hopes of hooking up with some steelhead still the same as the first day I started spey casting.

This skunk scenario repeated itself 9 times. Yes 9 trips out to the rivers!!!  As frustration levels increased and confidence levels in my fly fishing skills in general decreased I had to reassess a few things.  Is it my casting?  Is it my presentation of a fly?  Could it be the fly itself?  Am I using the right sink tip?  Are the fish just not biting?  Am I fishing the wrong areas?  Where are the fish?  What am I doing wrong?  It is cold, windy and miserable out here.  What in the hell am I doing!!!

Giving up isn’t an option, but I am truly humbled by the spey and the swing.  I never thought I would crush the fish and put up numbers, but rather would find a new way to target the species that I love so much.  As I have said in the past and still believe today, the method an angler chooses to fish for steelhead is of personal choice.  While it is no secret that using bait presentations can and does put up the numbers per say, the fly presentation is a different mentality.  It isn’t about the numbers but rather the experience.

On the bright side, my fly tying skills have grown leaps and bounds from when I first started with fly fishing.  I have grown fond of the Snap T, and feel confident I can put a fly where I want it.  Unfortunately, the fish gods just haven’t blessed me very often yet with actually catching a few fish.  I attribute a lot of this to the conditions I am fishing this winter, and also the learning curve of spey casting with the switch rod.  I won’t quit, I never quit.  

2 months of fishing and no fish, so I figured I would dust off the centerpin and see if I could get my mojo back.  I am a firm believer that if you believe you will catch fish you will, and if you don’t believe you won’t.  I believe every time I go out with the centerpin that I will catch fish, and on Sunday I did just that.  It was nice to have a double digit day on the Chagrin River.  A mix of chrome and colored up bucks, and the action was fast and furious.  

Many have asked me if I have gone back to the centerpin.  The rod and reel you use is a tool.  While I enjoy my time on the water, it is also nice to be rewarded with a few fish as well.  I will be back using the switch rod soon.  I don’t quit and I won’t quit.



Until Next Time…
Fish Hard…Fish Often…

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Switching it up with Ben See - Part 1



Switching it up with Ben See – A beginners journey



My obsession for fishing started at a young age.  For as long as I can remember I have been holding a fishing rod in my hand.  In the early 1980’s I can remember fishing with my grandfather during summer breaks.  A worm and a hook was the preferred method of targeting bluegill that hung tight to a makeshift break wall of old used tires in the former private Goodyear employees summer get away called Wingfoot lake in Portage County Ohio.  I was fortunate to also have access to a private pond over the hill at my grandparent’s home.  The memories of extended stays in the summer at my grandparent’s house so that I could get up early and target bass and bluegill will be cherished memories.  

The natural progression for me and I would assume for many anglers was to go from that old cane pole and short snoopy rod too your first spinning rod and reel.  Casting mister twister’s, jitter bugs, hula poppers and deer hair inline spinners made me feel like a master angler at the time.  Several years later, a lot of practice and countless sun burns I found interest in pike fishing.  Now at that point a young adult, with a driver’s license I was able to begin the scouting on my own.  I was able to scout new water for the elusive pike, and expanding on my fishing skills and feeding the passion of angling.  



Fast forward a few more years and I happened to be introduced into the world of steelhead fishing.  Little did I realize at the time, the attraction I would have or the road I would get to travel.  It took me 2 seasons of hard fishing to even land my first steelhead trout.  Using a Shakespear spinning reel and 6’ bass rod I finally landed my first chrome.  What a sense of accomplishment I had.  I was hit by the bug.  I haven’t looked back since.

I progressed from that short bass rod to a noodle rod, eventually pairing that rod up with a Centerpin.  Each year honing my skills, learning more about how to target Steelhead Alley chrome and putting up the numbers.  I will be the first to admit that numbers was what I was after.  I felt if I got the skunk, I had a bad trip and likewise if I had a double digit day it was as successful trip.  Somewhere along the line years later, even when I was getting the numbers, I didn’t have that feeling of great accomplishment.  I can’t really describe the feeling other than to say something was missing.  

As I travelled this road of Steelhead Alley fishing, I have been able to surround myself with likeminded anglers, all loving the fishery, the great outdoors and the fellowship shared amongst each other.  I will forever have some great memories to share with my son on some of the best and worst days on the water.  For the past year I have seriously tried to look within myself to figure out where the spark has gone.  While it was always there, the grind to get the next fish seemed to consume me rather than enjoying the one on the line at the time.  I think maybe I need more of a challenge or as the name of this series says “Switching it up”.  Maybe I just needed something different to feed my passion of steelheading.



During my steelhead journey I have had the joy of coming in contact with anglers of all sorts.  From fly guys, to spin guys as well as centerpin anglers.  I began to be a shop rat of sorts at Chagrin River Outfitters in Chagrin Falls, Ohio and meeting the owner Dan Pribanic.  Primarily a fly shop, I was exposed to a different world then I knew with centerpinning.  I have always marveled at the sexy looking streamers, skulpins, bunny leaches and intruders in the boxes at the shop.  A method of targeting steelhead that I was watching anglers use was this rod called a switch rod.  The casting motion looked therapeutic to say the least.   The ability to flip a large streamer or skulpin pattern looked great!  I have considering giving this technique a try but always resisted because centerpinning is very effective.  Though the pin puts the fish on the bank, I am looking to get back that feeling I once had and that sense of accomplishment after landing that chrome. 

For me personally, I look at the methods of targeting steelhead and the tools used as just that.  Tools and methods!  Each certainly have their benefits and drawbacks.  No person is better or worse for their desired method of targeting fish in steelhead alley.  It is simply put, what do you want to get out of your trip to Steelhead Alley?  While I am not saying I will never use a centerpin again, I have decided to make a leap of faith in an effort to get back to what interested me in this sport to begin with.  



I have since invested in a new tool.  Thanks to Dan at Chagrin River Outfitters, his guidance and instruction during the process of me selecting a new tool has been a great help!  I now have a Beulah 8 weight with a Lamson 3.5” Guru.  I will be running a Skagit 475 grain weight head and a plethora of sink tips.  The hard work of learning how to effectively cast and eventually hookup with my first chrome on a switch rod is in full effect.

I look forward to sharing my experiences and documenting them as so that maybe other anglers who may follow in my footsteps can relate with the process of learning something new.  Thanks in advance to those of you who will be getting a lot of questions from me in the future on the what, why, and how to?

Until Next Time…
Fish Hard…Fish Often…

Monday, November 12, 2012

Weekend Wrap-Up November 12th, 2012



Weekend Wrap-Up November 12th, 2012



This past weekend, anglers across steelhead alley were presented with favorable river conditions.  Weather was mid 60’s and sunny.  Flows ranged from 150-300 cubic feet per second throughout the area.  Flows were good as was the water color.  Quite a few anglers had the same idea, get out there while mother nature threw us a sunny and warm weekend.  

Some have heard that I am setting down the centerpin for a little while to learn a new technique.  Well the rumors are true and I now have a switch rod.  I have packed away the pin for the winter and plan on dedicating my time learning the Snap T, Single/Double spey casts.  I am looking forward to documenting my journey through this spider web of information they call the switch rod and sink tips.  Stay tuned for a new series called “Switching it up with Ksuflash – A beginners journey”.  



Until Next Time…
Fish Hard…Fish Often…