How is it that I haven't run across this thread before?
Great pictures, everyone!
I grew up fishing - caught my first Coho salmon on my fifth birthday, and never looked back! When I was about 20, I picked up my first fly rod, and was "hooked".
Spent the last 25 years trying to get a handle on the art of the fly cast - ha ha!
I chose an area to live where theres some world class fishing at my door-step, very nearly year round - and spend a good part of every year walking rivers and floating on lakes.
Once upon a time, it was all about the catching - but that gradually changed for me, now I don't much care if my line tightens on an outing - as long as there was peace and quiet, no other folks around, perhaps a wildlife sighting or two - and a good buzz to enjoy - makes me a happy and balanced man.
These days I pretty much fish dry flies exclusively. Not because I'm any sort of elitist - but because seeing that dry fly disappear in a perfect head and tail rise that hardly disturbs the water around it is the real art of fly fishing for me. My part in it is very small - but that rise - thats what I see when I "go to my happy place".
Anyway - I hope you won't mind if I add a few photos to the thread.
Long ago, I stopped killing the fish I catch - except halibut - all halibut come home for the freezer - ha ha! But all the trout in the following photos were released.












Sometimes its just all about the sky-scapes.


Great pictures, everyone!
I grew up fishing - caught my first Coho salmon on my fifth birthday, and never looked back! When I was about 20, I picked up my first fly rod, and was "hooked".
Spent the last 25 years trying to get a handle on the art of the fly cast - ha ha!
I chose an area to live where theres some world class fishing at my door-step, very nearly year round - and spend a good part of every year walking rivers and floating on lakes.
Once upon a time, it was all about the catching - but that gradually changed for me, now I don't much care if my line tightens on an outing - as long as there was peace and quiet, no other folks around, perhaps a wildlife sighting or two - and a good buzz to enjoy - makes me a happy and balanced man.
These days I pretty much fish dry flies exclusively. Not because I'm any sort of elitist - but because seeing that dry fly disappear in a perfect head and tail rise that hardly disturbs the water around it is the real art of fly fishing for me. My part in it is very small - but that rise - thats what I see when I "go to my happy place".
Anyway - I hope you won't mind if I add a few photos to the thread.
Long ago, I stopped killing the fish I catch - except halibut - all halibut come home for the freezer - ha ha! But all the trout in the following photos were released.












Sometimes its just all about the sky-scapes.


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