Sheesh Leland, you're supposed to be working there at Earl's studio! ;-)

I sure wish my wife were as tolerant of my fishing expeditions as 
yours seems to be.

Kent Lufkin


>The fax is on the way.
>
>
>
>Thanks, I will be doing the Narrows with a couple friends this saturday.
>Depending on the results, I will hit a steelhead river.
>
>Leland.
>
>  > From: "Patrick Petersen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>  > Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  > Date: Wed, 30 Aug 2000 10:56:22 -0700
>  > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>  > Subject: Re: saltwater flyfishing
>  > Resent-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  > Resent-Date: Wed, 30 Aug 2000 10:51:29 -0700
>  >
>  > Leland thank you for sharing, my fax number is 206-297-1252
>  > Will you be fishing this weekend? Are you interested in Hoodsport kings?
>  >
>  > Cheers,
>  > Patrick
>  >
>  >
>  >
>  >
>  > ----- Original Message -----
>  > From: Harper Studios/EcoStock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>  > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>  > Sent: Wednesday, August 30, 2000 9:38 AM
>  > Subject: Re: saltwater flyfishing
>  >
>  >
>  >> Patrick,
>  >>
>  >> If you have a fax, I can send you a detailed drawing and instructions. I'm
>  >> not hep enough to send over the net.
>  >>
>  >> Leland.
>  >>
>  >>> From: "Patrick Petersen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>  >>> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  >>> Date: Wed, 30 Aug 2000 09:27:59 -0700
>  >>> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>  >>> Subject: Re: saltwater flyfishing
>  >>> Resent-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  >>> Resent-Date: Wed, 30 Aug 2000 09:23:08 -0700
>  >>>
>  >>> Leland,
>  >>>
>  >>> Would you be kind enough to share your Coho popper recipe with me? It
>  > sounds
>  >>> like you have a lot of experience in the salt and had success with that
>  >>> pattern. How did you come up with it? Is it similar to the pink wog
>  > fished
>  >>> in Alaska?
>  >>>
>  >>> ----- Original Message -----
>  >>> From: Leland Miyawaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>  >>> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>  >>> Sent: Tuesday, August 29, 2000 10:25 PM
>  >>> Subject: Re: saltwater flyfishing
>  >>>
>  >>>
>  >>>> Sky wrote,
>  >>>>
>  >>>>> That was very helpful, but I have just a couple of questions I hope
>  > you
>  >>>>> wouldn't mind answering.
>  >>>>>
>  >>>>> When do you prefer sinking and floating line?
>  >>>> I use my dryline when I fish my surface poppers. I will also use it
>  > with
>  >>>> sinking or wet flies when the water is "bumpy" or the fish are actively
>  >>>> slashing and crashing bait and I need to pick up my line, make one
>  > false
>  >>>> cast, or water haul, and put the fly on another fish. I will use the
>  >>>> slimeline when the water is glass smooth and/or I think the fish are a
>  >>>> surface shy.
>  >>>>
>  >>>>> When you do use sinking, how long do you let it sink?
>  >>>> Because I am fishing moving water, the amount the line sinks is
>  > dependent
>  >>>> on the speed of the water. If you make uptide mends, you can slow the
>  > fly
>  >>>> down and drop it a bit deeper and a downtide mend will speed up the
>  > fly.
>  >>>>
>  >>>>> Do you let the fish take it or set it as soon as you feel the hit?
>  >>>> If you fish a tight line and are in contact with your fly, simply
>  > lifting
>  >>>> the rod on the strike will hook most salmon. When big fish hit, I
>  > usually
>  >>>> give them a second hit to make sure they're on as good as they can be.
>  > On
>  >>>> my poppers with a two-handed strip, since it's all visual, I keep
>  > pulling,
>  >>>> until I feel the fish on hard, even after I see and feel the strike.
>  >>>>
>  >>>>> Thanks
>  >>>>> -Sky dunphy
>  >>>>>
>  >>>>>
>  >>>>>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Leland Miyawaki)
>  >>>>>> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  >>>>>> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  >>>>>> Subject: Re: saltwater flyfishing
>  >>>>>> Date: Tue, 29 Aug 2000 18:02:48 -0700
>  >>>>>>
>  >>>>>> Hope this helps,
>  >>>>>> Leland.
>  >>>>>>
>  >>>>>>> Sky wrote:
>  >>>>>>
>  >>>>>>> I'm very interested in try the saltwater flyfishing like you would
>  > do
>  >>> at
>  >>>>>>> lincoln park or the narrows bridge or at golden gardens for sea-run
>  >>>>>> cutts.I
>  >>>>>>> have some basic questions about it:
>  >>>>>>>
>  >>>>>>> -what weight rods
>  >>>>>> I use six and eight weight rods. The six is a 9' Sage SP and the
>  > eight
>  >>> is a
>  >>>>>> 10' Scott Heliply. The longer rods will help keep your backcasts off
>  > the
>  >>>>>> sloping beaches. I use leaders over 12' tapered to 3 or 2x on my
>  > dryline
>  >>>>>> which is a Mastery steelhead taper but I am currently using a
>  > bonefish
>  >>>>>> line. I use a shorter 5' leader on a Mastery stillwater line
>  > (slimeline)
>  >>>>>> for my sinker. The six weight rod, I use during the winter/spring
>  > months
>  >>>>>> primarily for sea runs, and smaller resident silvers. I am fishing
>  > the
>  >>>>>> eight weight now because I am fishing over larger coho and the
>  >>> occassional
>  >>>>>> blackmouth and soon, chums. And it will get windy soon. Use reels
>  > that
>  >>> will
>  >>>>>> not corrode.
>  >>>>>>
>  >>>>>>> -best tides to fish
>  >>>>>> I look for moving tides right on the beach at points of land.
>  > Depending
>  >>> on
>  >>>>>> the beach, it can be either incoming or outgoing. I prefer big
>  > changes
>  >>> and
>  >>>>>> will fish them four to two hours before the change.
>  >>>>>>
>  >>>>>>> -neccessary backing (length ang strength)
>  >>>>>> Just the backing as necessary for the reel you're using. Only the
>  > larger
>  >>>>>> kings will take out an unusual amount of line.
>  >>>>>>
>  >>>>>>> -time of day factor?
>  >>>>>> I like lowlight, which could be dawn, dusk, rain, fog, or overcast.
>  > But
>  >>> if
>  >>>>>> there is lots of bait, anytime will do.
>  >>>>>>
>  >>>>>>> -what flys (for cutts and salmon)
>  >>>>>> Take a look at Les Johnson's Flyfishing for Pacific Salmon. But
>  >>> generally,
>  >>>>>> we're talking baitfish imitations now and euphasid and amphipods
>  >>> (shrimpy
>  >>>>>> stuff) for the winter/spring.
>  >>>>>>
>  >>>>>>> -wading
>  >>>>>> Just deep enough to keep your flyline off the sand, or to get a
>  > little
>  >>> more
>  >>>>>> line out.
>  >>>>>>
>  >>>>>>> -presentation (line, stripping, depth)
>  >>>>>> I have been using a very steady two handed strip with the rod under
>  > my
>  >>> arm,
>  >>>>>> but you can use short one-handed strips. Imagine shaking a
>  > thermometer
>  >>> is
>  >>>>>> the way Les Johnson calls the Euphasid Hop.
>  >>>>>>
>  >>>>>>> Any help would be appreciated
>  >>>>>>>
>  >>>>>>> -Sky Dunphy
>  >>>>>>>
>  >>>>>>>
>  >>>>>>
>  >>>>
>  > _________________________________________________________________________
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>  >>>>>>
>  >>>>>>
>  >>>>>
>  >>>>>
>  > _________________________________________________________________________
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>  >>>
>  >>
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