Author Archives: ondafly

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About ondafly

I have met some of the most amazing people through fly fishing. Paying forward all the knowledge and lessons I have acquired over my life is worth sharing. I continue to learn something new every day on the water. Fishing makes me happy and sharing it with good like-minded people is what it's all about. Life is short, smile each day, and have fun, hopefully near water.

jeros (jellyfish elimination robotic swarm)

photo courtesy of fast coexist.com

photo courtesy of fast coexist.com

un-policed  floating mechanical killing machines designed to destroy jellyfish in the world’s oceans? good or bad idea? in my humble opinion not a good idea, read on! For full article click here!

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the fall run…how sweet it is

photo courtesy of conway bowman

the last cast of the trip! photo courtesy of conway bowman

bass blitz, photo by Al Q

montauk bass blitz, photo by Al Q

Kuddos to my buddy Conway Bowman (host of Fly Fishing the World, Bowman Bluewater) who just got back back from his first fly fishing trip to Montauk. He fished with my buddy Capt. Paul Dixon. Conway walked into the fall run with perfect timing and had a great week of landing large bass and blues. I look forward to watching the episode it when it airs. Dixon is one of the best in the business when it comes to consistently staying on big fish. I know Paul a long time, he was the first guy to introduce the fly fishing industry to daytime flats, sight fishing for stripers and blues back in the early nineties in Montauk. I was very fortunate to be there during that period and it was very special time.

If you have never experienced the early Montauk or east coast fall run, it is pretty sick. It is like the great wilder beast migration across Africa only imagine acres of striped bass slurping tiny rainbait on the surface. If you are fly fishing off the surf, it is all about timing and luck for the fish to get into casting range. If you are on a boat, they have no where to hide and it can be like fishing in a barrel providing you position yourself properly.  A good boat guide will know how to anticipate the movement of the fish especially after a few yahoos drive through them and in Montauk it can get nutty this time of the year.  Most of the time the good guides try to stay clear of the mosquito fleet and find smaller less obvious blitzes so they can get their clients hooked up without drama. As a kid I usually preferred fishing the beaches and staying away from the crowds. This was my favorite time of the year growing up, the beaches were empty, the air crisper, the shadows longer and the bass got bigger!

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corbina patrol overseas?

photos courtesy of Ken Hanley

photos courtesy of Ken Hanley

here a fun one straight from Ireland, courtesy of our buddy Ken Hanley!  I love it when we get photos from far away places… in Ken’s words:

“Reporting in from Galway Ireland.
Field observations: No beans on the beaches. No beans in the harbor.
Alternate target: an adundance of  Guinness!”

Cheers, Ken

 

 

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art for reel!

Screen Shot 2013-09-24 at 10.29.34 AM

 

I had the good fortune of being able (no pun intended) to design the new logo for Abel’s Reel Art Contest which has just kicked off and will go till November 30th, 2013. This should be a fun contest. I hope some of my fellow artistic fly fisherman and women out there will get inspired to be creative and submit some fun designs.  Click here for more information!

 

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grab the fly rod and the surfboard!

Design by Al Q

Design by Al Q

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whopper…

photo courtesy of grindtv.com

photo courtesy of grindtv.com

Click here for story!

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hawaii is hot…

fukushima_radiation_map-650x4301

 

I do not like to be a downer but this is starting to freak me out. I also do not like to cry wolf unless I have all the facts and I DO NOT have all the facts on this, but I will continue to try to find out more on this alarming state of the Pacific Ocean. This is a map of the Fukushima nuclear fallout heading towards Hawaii. I really do not understand why the international community isn’t paying more attention to this? Why isn’t Japan calling out for help if they haven’t figured a way to fix this horrific scenario? We live in a global community, everyone is in danger! Contaminating the Pacific with radiation is a big deal!  I want to f**king scream  Check out this blog!

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fly zone recap…

Jim Solomon explaining the lay of the land prior to demonstrationing how to catch a surf perch. photo by Al Q

Jim Solomon explaining the lay of the land prior to demonstrating how to catch a surf perch. photo by Al Q

a couple of cast later, the proof of a well presented fly. photo by Al Q

a couple of cast later, the proof of a well presented fly. photo by Al Q

Me and Jim Solomon conducted our first fly fishing the surf series at the Fisherman’s Spot this past Saturday and Sunday. We had six very enthusiastic anglers ready to soak up some salty knowledge and hopefully continuing their passion for fly fishing the surf. This form of fly fishing is one of the hardest to perfect but with the proper basics and a little practice is very rewarding and is easily accessible to those living near our blue pacific shores. Me and Jim agree, it is always great sharing knowledge and seeing an angler land their first surf fish on the fly.  Hope to see some new faces when we do our next Surf Zone! Special thanks to Ken and Steve at the Fishermen’s Spot for being our gracious hosts and allowing us to use their shop!

 

Howard Schecter is all grins after landing a surf perch on a beautiful Sunday morning near LAX. photo by Al Q

Howard Schecter is all grins after landing a surf perch on a beautiful Sunday morning near LAX. photo by Al Q

Don Bell with one of his surf perch. photo by Al Q

Don Bell with one of his surf perch. photo by Al Q

 

 

 

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golden trout lanyards…

GTL_combo

Sorry but I have had some serious internet/email issues and I just got back online. Last Wednesday I had the pleasure of doing a surf presentation at the Deep Creek Fly Club in Riverside and
got to catch up with some old fly fishing friends and make some new ones. In the back of the club house, there was a table spread out with these really cool lanyards made by DCFC club member Steve Brunelle. I later learned that Steve grew up near Manhattan Beach and was an old salty angler like myself. Please check out Steve’s website, www.goldentroutlanyards.com, they are well-made here in the good old USA by Steve, he can even customize them to your needs if you contact him directly. I am looking forward to the saltwater version he is making for me and I will share it with you when it arrives. Thanks Steve!

 

 

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the bait tail changed the way I thought about striped bass…

Al Reinfelder on the left with one of his many big bass taken on the bait tail, center is Al's book on the subject, now out of print, and far left is Al's partner in crime Lou Palma with a nice group of bass that fell for their bait tail jigs.

Al Reinfelder on the left with one of his many big bass taken on the bait tail, center is Al’s book on the subject, now out of print, and far right is Al’s partner in crime Lou Palma with a nice group of bass that also couldn’t resist their bait tail jigs.

This is kind of a blast from the past! When I was a kid growing up in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn I was obsessed with fishing artificial lures for stripers. I used to make my own top water plugs out of broom handles and paint them with spray paint.. For me getting a fish to eat something that wasn’t real and making it come alive was what it was all about. One of my heroes back in the day was a guy named Al Reinfelder. I used to subscribe to two magazines back in the day. The Long Island Fisherman which was a weekly black and white publication that had great local intel on the party boat scene and the local surf scene. The Saltwater Sportsman always had awesome articles on early saltwater fly fishing that allowed a poor Brooklyn kid to dream about exotic species in far away places. Al wrote articles for both of these pubs but I first I learned of Al Reinfelder while reading the Long Island Fisherman in the early seventies when I was a teenager. I used to save all the issues he wrote articles in, man, I wish I still had them. Al used to have the most amazing photos of big cow stripers; he just always looked good holding big fish, not a hair out of place. He passionately wrote about fishing off bridges at night and would masterfully swim his bait tails through the piling shadows hooking big fish religiously. He loved to fish the Crossbay Bridge in the Rockaways not far from my home waters in Breezy Point.  Al and his fishing buddy Lou Palma created the Alou Eel (Al from Reinfelder and Lou from Palma) which were artificial eels that had a lead head you could cast and swim like a real eel at night. They Started the Alou Fishing Company together. I still have an Alou eel somewhere in my fishing shed. They were deadly lures. From the leftover plastics tails of the Alou eels, the boys created the bait tails which were like bucktail jigs only with plastic tails that seamlessly came off the lead heads. Al and Lou are each holding one in the picture above. This was the beginning of saltwater plastics on the east coast that specifically targeted local stripers, blues and weakfish but soon became so popular almost every species of fish around the country were landed on them. You may ask why am I talking about bait tails when I spend most of my fishing with the fly? The reason I am bring this important jig back is because the principles are the same. You must impart action to allow your fly or jig or swim to imitate a wounded bait fish and entice the apex predators to eat. Although just stripping in the fly or reeling in the lure will sometimes get bit, it is the skill of the angler that will adapt the cadence of the action, fast, slow, stop, drop, change sizes and colors etc., to make your fly or jig, a lifeless piece of plastic or artificial materials come alive. What made Al Reinfelder such a great angler was his dedication to understanding how fish feed and how to present his artificial bait tails so they got eaten. It wasn’t a fluke why Al always caught big fish, he earned it, and was gracious enough to share it with those that cared to take notice… it was a sad day when I heard that Al Reinfelder had drown, his boat capsized on a river while fishing for shad, I think the LI Fisherman did a special issue on his life…he will always be remembered in my book and his approach to solving a problem by adapting his baits to fit a particular situation was a life lesson for me.

 

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