WS5. The Red & Orange Volcano Winter Steelhead Alaskabou Tube Fly










WINTER STEELHEAD ALASKABOU TUBE FLY PATTERNS. $US each - Price does not include hooks
THE RED & ORANGE VOLCANO ALASKABOU
George Cook designed and named this fly Volcano because of its colour being
close to molten lava. The reddish orange colour has always been a great salmon
and steelhead fly because it mimics their deep ocean food. Steelhead, Chinooks, Chums, Char & Coho will feed on shrimp & prawns when they are available. These fish often retain the search image of these crustaceans long after they leave the Ocean and enter freshwater. These are must have flies for Alaska, Kamchatka, British Columbia & the lower 48
WINTER STEELHEAD SOFT HACKLE MARABOU ALASKABOU STREAMERS
Large soft hackle marabou flies are an important weapon for the winter and
early spring steelhead, salmon and char fly fisherman. I am not sure who came up with the idea of
large soft marabou flies for steelhead fishing but there have been a number of
fly tiers who have added to the development of the design. Eric Lester in his
1987 'Book of Fly Patterns' lists some flies tied in the early 1970's by Jack
Gartside, an American fly-tier. The style was called 'soft hackle streamers'.
John Farrar, a Seattle guide, adapted Poul Jorgensen's rabbit fur hackle large
flies by substituting soft marabou instead. Bob Aid a tackle shop owner from
Seattle further developed this style of pattern based on the work of John
Farrar. In the 1980's in Alaska George Cook and Don Hathaway found the soft
marabou salmon flies they were using worked better for steelhead. They developed
their own flies based on the most effective colors that range from red, orange,
blue to purple. They were given the name 'Alaskabou'. When modern flash materials became available they were added to
give better results.
JACK GARTSIDE
Jack Gartside used to spin fish with jigs or worms. He had
never heard of fly fishing until 1957 when he went to a sportsman show in
Boston. There he saw a well known fisherman Ted Williams tying a fishing fly.
Jack had never seen a fly tied before and found it magical. He was 13 at the
time and pestered Ted to let him have a go. Ted patiently showed him how to tie
a woolly worm. Jack was hooked for life. He became a high school English teacher but quit for a life
of fly fishing. He roamed the world on a shoestring budget to fish exotic
locations. About 1990 he realized that he had been missing the great local
fishing around Boston Harbour. There are over 183 miles of shoreline. He decided
to fish every mile and has written the definitive guide to the area – The fly
fisher’s guide to Boston Harbour (available from his website www.jackgartside.com).
The water is a lot cleaner than it was in his childhood. The fishing is all year
around and world class. Striped bass are the best game fish. With all this
waterfront it is easy to find isolated stretches.
Jack has not found it easy fly fishing for a profession as he never knew where the next dollar was coming from. Summer is his slack time. He fishes but also has to get ready for the winter. That is when he does most of his work and has to earn enough to see him through the next summer. He makes his living tying and designing flies, writing and giving public displays. He ties thousands each year but he has had to supplement this income with regular jobs like taxi driving , skimobile servicing, tobacco factory worker and coffin maker. If you have ever dreamed of giving up your day job and becoming a professional fly fisher seriously think about your decision before you commit yourself.









STEELHEADS:- Steelheads are simply migratory rainbow trout. (A Sea Trout is the migratory form of the brown trout). They spawn in freshwater rivers and lakes, remain there for about two years, then migrate to the open sea where they will stay for another two to three years before they begin returning to their native rivers. Steelheads returning to their home rivers, will be fully mature and weigh between seven and ten pounds. Fish that have stayed in the ocean longer can reaching impressive sizes of 12 to 20 pounds or more. Unlike the migratory salmon, not all sea-run steelhead die immediately after spawning. About twenty percent of each steelhead generation that returns to freshwater to spawn make their way back down the rivers and into the sea again. Not many will be strong enough to make a second spawning run.
Steelheads in the sea look very much like river trout until they begin their migration when they change to a bright silver, their backs a darker grey. Anglers call these trout "chrome bright," or "chromers." After they have been in freshwater for a time, however, steelhead slowly begin to take on the color patterns of true rainbow trout, with various patterns of black spots sprinkled across their backs, complete with smears of red on the cheeks, with distinctive red stripes marking their flanks. These red stripes can range in color from soft coral pink to a deeper blood-red color. The males fish are more colorful. Migrations continue throughout the year, although the most active steelhead months are December, January, and March for winter steelhead; and June through August for the summer runs. Most steelhead rivers have only a summer or a winter run; some have both, and some experience no spring or summer steelhead runs at all hosting an autumn/fall and winter-run trout. It is mostly the big rivers, that have steelhead runs year-round.









Winter-run steelhead become very single minded. It is the greatest run of trout in terms of numbers. All their energy is devoted to spawning. For the most part, when they do feed, or strike a fly, they seem to do so out of habit and instinct rather than true hunger. It is this instinct - the steelhead's curiosity that can work to the angler's advantage. They will still strike at a well-presented artificial fly. They are also exceptionally wary, nervous, and incredibly difficult to catch. Winter steelhead seem to be, by far, the spookiest of the migratory steelhead. In shallow, clear water. Even the hint of a shadow moving across the water startles them, sending them scurrying.
The spring and summer trout runs produce the highest quality of steelheads, in looks and sport. They are still sexually immature when they enter the rivers. They will spend more time in freshwater before they begin spawning. Most winter-run steelhead will spawn quickly and then return to the ocean, some do linger in the rivers throughout the winter and into the spring. Spring and summer-run trout will often remain in the rivers through the summer months. When these steelheads strike, they do so with a great deal more ferocity than winter-run trout. They fight like big saltwater fish and are one of the great game fish of the world.









FISHING FOR STEELHEADS
The best way to insure good future fishing is to leave the females alone. Any bright fish is probably a hen on her way upriver, and should be left alone, although exceptionally large ones are a tempting target. Watch for female steelheads that turn on their sides and pump their tails, to scoop a hollow where they will drop their eggs. The scent stream of pheromones is like a magnet to the males. Hooking or otherwise spooking the females, is almost a guarantee that any near-by males will depart, and then there are NO fish to target. Accurately casting to the edges of the gathering steelhead male pack will get hits from the males. Cast far enough upstream of the fish to allow the fly to sink to their level before it gets to them. Drift the fly into the fish's face, and lifting and swinging away when it gets within a few inches. This method brings out their predatory instincts. You should see the strike using sun glasses. Set the hook with a downstream sweep of the rod. Play him away from the pack, to avoid spooking the rest of the fish.
Some smaller males will be chased off by larger males, and will drift back. A careful river bed presentation may elicit hard strikes from these fish. Keep the fly deep. Burn that into your brain. The fish are intent on spawning, rarely feed. You must get down to their level. Many Steelheads return to rivers during the coldest months, December to March when the temperatures average between 36 to 42 degrees. Steelheads will not move far for a fly in these temperatures but they will bite. To make things more interesting the rivers are often high, in spate and off color. It still makes sense to go by the old "Bright day-bright fly, dark day-dark fly" but don't get locked into it. Experiment with patterns and sizes. After missing a strike, I like to change to a smaller version of the same pattern. If that doesn't bring a hit, I go to a fly that's completely opposite of the original. A huge black egg sucking leech would replace a tiny Polar Shrimp.









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