4.8 • 1.9K Ratings
🗓️ 23 December 2022
⏱️ 72 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
My guest this week, Sarah Baker [35:40] is a woman who has a job most of us would envy—she studies and manages the populations of wild, native brook trout in the mountains of northern Georgia. Learn more about these southernmost populations of brook trout, their life history, and where you can find them (no spot burning, just some general areas to investigate for yourself).
In the Fly Box this week, some great questions that range the spectrum of fly fishing, such as:
A listener is confused by recommendations for sinking lines for an Alaska trip
Can I tie flies smaller than size 18 with the regular jaws in my tying vise? Do I need to purchase midge jaws?
Someone told me not to use water-based head cement on size 20 and smaller flies. Why?
If I know I have a reasonable fly and good drifts, does it make sense to spend more than a half-dozen casts in one spot?
I am a newbie and other than the typical questions about what fly to use, what other questions should I ask in a fly shop that will be helpful?
If I want to try Spey casting with my single-hand fly rod, what fly line would be best?
Can smaller Spey patterns be used for trout and bass on a single-handed rod?
I am taking my first saltwater trip to Turks and Caicos. I have an 8-weight freshwater outfit. Do I need to get a special saltwater rod and line?
Can I use a 450-grain Depth Charge line on my 10-weight rod? And besides fishing for striped bass, what other saltwater applications are there for this line?
I am having trouble with my Clinch Knots breaking in cold weather. What am I doing wrong?
Any advice for tying on a size 22 Zebra Midge in cold weather?
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Welcome to the Worvest Fly Fishing Podcast. |
0:13.4 | This is your host Tom Rosenbauer and I have a really interesting podcast for you this |
0:17.9 | week. |
0:18.9 | My guest is biologist Sarah Baker and Sarah has a fascinating job. |
0:24.5 | Sarah works on the native indigenous wild, Brooktrout populations of northern Georgia. |
0:32.9 | We don't normally think of native Brooktrout as being in Georgia, although they're actually |
0:38.4 | quite common. |
0:40.5 | It's the southern range of Brooktrout and there are some mountain streams where they occur |
0:48.1 | and they're not threatened but they're rare and they're definitely fishable populations |
0:57.3 | and Sarah has a lot of really fascinating things to tell us about these native Brooktrout |
1:04.0 | populations. |
1:06.0 | I hope you enjoy it. |
1:07.4 | I know I enjoyed talking to Sarah and I keep forgetting to mention products. |
1:16.2 | I know you all like to know about new products and things that I'm personally excited about |
1:21.6 | and one of the new products that I've been using a lot lately is the Orvis Wide Mouth |
1:30.4 | Guide Net and I know most of us aren't guides but it's a long handled net. |
1:38.1 | It's a long handled net with a big wide square soft rubber bag and I know about you but |
1:46.2 | I am tired, my arms aren't very long and I am tired of trying to stretch out and reach |
1:52.0 | out and land fish and a long handled net just makes so much sense. |
1:58.6 | They're a little bit more difficult to carry. |
2:00.5 | Most people stick them in the back of their waders although there is a slot in the new |
2:06.8 | waterproof sling bag for this net but it still makes it kind of wide when you're carrying |
... |
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