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What fly fishing clubs do you guys go to?

2.5K views 25 replies 16 participants last post by  redgibber  
#1 ·
My dad had mentioned the Olympic fly club, but I don't see it listed in the clubs section. He thought it still met in Edmonds. I talked to somebody today up on the NF Stilly and he mentioned the Evergreen club in Everett. I can't wait for the Nano Spey Clave on the 19th. I need more info from clubs.

Matt
 
#4 ·
I belong to the Washington Fly Fishing Club. It's the oldest (started 1939) and largest club in the state. We meet in downtown Seattle. It has some pretty hefty horsepower folks in it (some names you may recognize are Steve Raymond, Les Johnson, Preston Singletary). One of my primary reasons initially for joining is because of the depth of knowledge in the group; thought I might be be able to pick up a scrap of knowledge or two. Also, the club is very active.

It's a men only club, which is an issue for some folks.
 
#9 ·
I've got at couple of clubs that I belong to that you might like:

First I've got to agree that its hard to beat the Overlake Fly Fishing Club. Best decision I made last year. It is truly a flyfishing community. It costs $35 to join and somewhat less than that for the annual fee, but your money goes to a reserving the location for good dinner each month, guest speakers, and renting out a room for a mothly fly-tying roundtable where some real savvy tiers teach you things from their experience. You also have access to a large how-to and destination video library and boxes upon boxes of flyfishing books that you can check out from the library. Be friendly and open and people will eagerly share their knowledge and friendship with you.

The other club is the Washington Hi-Lakers. Cost of the membership is an annual payment of $10-15 which essentially goes to to reserving the room at Mercerview Community Center in Mercer Island. The members of this club are generally pleasant, but it is not as intimate of a setting as the OFFC. What you will find is this club will teach you a great deal of info about indentifying races of trout, salamanders and other amphibians, and you will obtain information from guys that absolutely love to hike into aquamarine lakes that are surrounded by granite slides, cliffs, glaciers, and chock full of cutthroat. It appears to me that generally, the club is more into hiking than fishing. The club is full of total smart-asses and their humor enought is worth the $10-15. Regardless, you learn to survey lakes which is a trait that that gets you in good with Fish Biologists. You may even obtain information about "zipper-lip fisheries." Golden Trout, Grayling, larger Cutthroat... I would describe the relationship between surveyor and Fish Biologist as highly symbiotic.

Sparse

Streams are made for the wise man to contemplate and fools to pass by.
(Sir Izaak Walton)
 
#10 ·
What do I know---I'm just an old man

This isn't a club, this is just something someone dreamt up to do this saturday at the Ben Howard boat launch. If you Spey fish and suck at it this will be the place to come.There's quite a few people from here that said they were going to show up and if you don't (people) I will hunt you all out and break all your rods. :TONGUE

Jim
 
#12 ·
Hi Circlespey,

The announcement for the nano-spey (spey, milli-spey, micro-spey, nano-spey :AA ) was posted a week or so ago. For details, go back a page or two and look for Nano-clave in the title.

Also, you can find a similar posting in http://www.flyfishingforum.com/speyclave/. Click "General" and look for the topic "Announcing a Nano-Spey Clave".

It's at 11:00 AM, this saturday, 19 Oct, at the Ben Howard Boat Launch, Monroe, WA.

Hope you can make it. I've got a pretty good response, so far.

Cheers,

Michael
 
#18 ·
Speyfishing is a term coined to describe fishing while using the Spey cast. The Spey cast was a technique, developed in the nineteenth century on Scotland's River Spey, that allows the angler to make long casts in areas that have little room for a backcast. Basically, the cast entails loading the rod by forming a D-shaped loop with the line behind the angler while the fly and leader are still "stuck" in the surface film of the water in front of and either up- or downstream (depending on the current direction) of the casting position. The cast can be made with a single-handed rod, but is more commonly performed, and really comes into its own, with a long (up to fifteen feet or even more), two-handed rod. In this country such rods have come to be known generically as "Spey" rods. At one time almost entirely restricted to Atlantic salmon fishing in Europe and the British Isles, these rods and techniques have become very popular among steelheaders over the last twenty-five years or so.
 
#19 ·
Other advantages

that spey gives the angler besides longer casts is better line control due to the longer rod and better fish control once hooked due to longer rod with the lower handle functioning as a fighting butt. Although the longer rod can make landing a fish more difficult. Also, one can cast heavy sink tips with very little effort without wearing your arm or elbow out during a long day of fishing. The list goes on.

Oh yeah. Fidalgo Fly Fishers.
 
#20 ·
Northwest Fly Anglers meets the 3rd Thursday of each month at the Haller Lake Community center at 12579 Densmore Ave N. Tomorrow nights speaker is Steve Probasco with a show on Montana streams. Fly tying at 7 PM by guest, meeting starts at 7:30 PM and runs until 9:30 or so. Membership is about $25 a year (my wife pays it so I don't recall), great outings (the Deschutes this coming weekend), coed, monthly raffles, good comraderie, great library for members, great classes, etc. Come on by!

Randy
 
#21 ·
What do I know---I'm just an old man

I went out yesterday to soak a few flies,and when I got home I thought that I would read a little and give out some lies. I only spend about a hour at a time on this stupid thing. And yes I'm a hunt and peck typist. Even then I make lots of mistakes. But why do you care how much time I spend here. I'm not using up your time. It's the only way I get to talk to so many different people. And this is the fastest way to 1000 posts that I can think of. So there
:TONGUE :KISS :TONGUE :KISS

Jim
 
#25 ·
What fly fishing clubs do you guys go to? Famous WFC Mem

I belong to the Washington Fly Fishing Club. It has some pretty hefty horsepower folks in it (some names you may recognize are Steve Raymond, Les Johnson, Preston Singletary). [/quote]

Another Famous and Well-known member of the Washington Flyfishing Club is WA State Fly Casting Champion Richard Embry.

Last year he threw a DT 4 weight 117 feet (that is into the backing folks!)

It would be worth attending just to rub elbows with him, and hope for a chance to see his casting artistry at work. :EEK