Saturday, December 8, 2007

Al's Amazing Catch

It was a perfect day, mid-August, 1999. We were fishing private water on the Old Fort River in Quebec, guests at Morgain's Salmon Camps. There were four of us on this trip: Dad, Alan, Dave and me. Dad had flown Al home from Alberta for his first taste of Atlantic Salmon fishing. Our daily routine was to travel in groups of three men - one guide with two sports. Dave and I went with Harvey Fequet, 8 miles by boat to fish Third Pool. A mile hike further on were Tag Pool and Fourth Pool. Dad and Al stayed closer to camp with Curry Fequet on First Pool and Second Pool.

At the foot of First Pool there is a wide sandbar where salmon congregate. Al had raised several fish there with a white Phentex bug, and even had hooked a couple briefly, but couldn't master the fine art of playing and landing a grilse. The air was thick with advice, "Keep your rod tip up!" "Keep the line tight - don't give him any slack!" "When he's taking line, let him go! When he tries to rest, reel like hell!"

It wasn't long before Al had another hookup on that Phentex bug. He followed Dad's and Curry's advice on playing a salmon and did his best to keep the rod tip up. The grilse cartwheeled through the air several times yet, in short order, the fish lay docile in the guide's net, whereupon the hook instantly fell out of its mouth!
When Curry examined the fly, he noticed there was no point on the hook - it had broken off! Alan, being a novice flyfisher, had experienced a close encounter of the rocky kind on a backcast. It had blunted his hook completely. He had been fishing the same fly for a couple of hours, had connected with several takers, but had been unable to achieve a solid hookup on any of the salmon. It was a minor miracle that he even hooked, let alone, landed that fish!

To illustrate today's post, I found a similar fly, put it in a vise, then snapped the business end off with a pair of pliers. The sketch in my journal, however, suggests that the remaining hook on Al's fly was, in fact, much shorter than my attempt to replicate it. (Click on the middle photo for a close-up view.) Landing that fish was quite an achievement for any angler, even more so for a newbie! So, here's to Al, the unsung angler, and his amazing catch!
Good Luck and Good Fishin'!
-Random Phrump

Photos by Random Phrump.

3 comments:

Unknown said...

Hey Warren:
Thanks for the memory jog . . . (down the lane of the same name).
I have a similar photo taken on that trip, in which the grilse had his snout chewed off. Our guide had tied it to the bow of our canoe and a mink thought he had a better claim to it than I did.
- Alan

Steve Dobson said...

Hello Al,
A fella' I know asked me one time what would be the best thing he could do to catch a fish. I thought about it a little and offered, "Well, it wouldn't hurt to be lucky". I guess you can vouch for that.
Cheers,
Steve

Random Phrump said...

Hello, boys:
Just for the record.. the White Phentex Bug is tied with these materials:

Hook: #6 or #8 wide gape hook
Tail: Red Squirrel
Tag: 2 turns of Neon Green yarn over flat mylar silver tinsel. Leave a bit of silver showing at the tail
Body: White Phentex yarn
Hackle: Dark Gray Dun - Dry fly quality - palmered, about 10 turns.
Head: Black Lacquer

This fly was deadly on the Old Fort River, Quebec.

RP