Annual Picnic Notice
(Mark the date now)
The Canandaigua Lake Chapter TU Annual Picnic is Monday, June
18th;
630pm at the Wadhams Lodge in Powder Mills Park, Pittsford, NY. You may
fish in the Park or other nearby sections of Irondequoit Creek beginning at 3pm.
Brown
trout are stocked periodically in theses waters, which are close to the
picnic area. Bring your gear and enjoy!
Catch and release only.
Casting instructions on the front lawn will be
available to anyone desiring help, starting around 530pm.
The Chapter will supply hamburgers and beverages.
Please bring a dish to share: We need chip and dip, veggies and dip, salads (potato, green, fruit, pasta),
baked beans, or a dessert. Please e-mail Steve Coleman at
steve3c@rochester.rr.com
or call 585/924-9078 to RSVP and let us know what you can
bring. You should also bring your own silverware to enjoy the tasty
treats! A lawn chair might also be a good idea.
Powder Mills Park is located off Route 96, near Bushnell's
Basin. A web page with directions, etc.
can be seen with a click here.
Wives
or girl friends (but not both, unless you are daring) and guests are always very welcome.
This is a great
event and always lots of fun. Plus the food is great!
We will have our usual raffle during the picnic. So . . . Remember to bring dollars
or flies!
Canandaigua Lake Trout Derby, Help
Needed
Please contact
David Morrow at
585/394-8749 or
dmorrow.drm_consult@bluetie.com
(corrected email link) if you can help with the Canandaigua Lake Trout Derby on
June 9 or 10. Volunteers are still needed.
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Fishing the Grand Canyon
If
your looking for a place to fish this spring you might want to consider a trip
to the Grand Canyon of Pennsylvania. The Grand Canyon of Pennsylvania is formed
by the Pine Creek Gorge which reaches 50 miles long and up to 1000' deep. The
nearest town is Wellsboro, PA, which is about a 5 hour drive from the Rochester
area. It is a beautiful area and offers many opportunities for fishing as
well as activities for non-fishing members of the family.
Start
the trip with a visit to Wolfe's
General' Store and Slate Run Tackle shop which is located in Slate Run, PA along
the banks of Pine Creek. The staff at the Slate Run Tackle Shop are very helpful
and armed with their advice, maps and flies head-off on your our own.
Pine Creek is a large creek and has
excellent trout (stocked in April and May) and smallmouth fishing, but access is
somewhat limited. Both Leonard Harrison State Park and Colton Point State Park
have access to Pine Creek (camping and hiking trails are also available) You can
reach the more remote areas by raft or canoe which are available from local
outfitters, such as Pine Creek Outfitters in Wellsboro. Or, you can rent a bike
at Pine Creek Outfitters and bike the Rail-to- Trail along Pine Creek stopping
to fish at promising locations.
Spend
most of your time fishing for wild trout on Slate Run and Cedar Run, two smaller
streams with limited access. You can spend a day biking a 20-mile section
of the Rail-Trail and stopping to fish along the way. The bikes are equipped
with baskets to carry your gear and the trail is a gentle downward grade making
the cycling quite easy.
The nearby town of Wellsboro is quite
charming and has several reasonably priced hotels, motels and restaurants. In
addition, there are many privately owned cabins available for rent in the area.
For those who don't fish, there is golfing, antiquing, biking, and hiking.
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What to do with Elderly Fly Fishermen
We are now into our third day and so far we have
been to the Clinic to have hooks removed; have watched as a person fell
completely over a rock the size of a sleeping buffalo; saw a man sink into a
waist deep volcanic mud pit that was so hot it melted shut the leaks in his
waders; and discovered the herb shrimp I served for dinner caused a skin rash.
I launched into my secure mode of operation this morning; building upon a
perceived interest in
photography, I have sent this elderly couple on a trip over Bear Tooth Pass.
It is a day-long side trip that will take them up over twelve thousand feet
into the Montana of the Big Sky. I built up the trip in such glowing terms in
a desperate attempt to get them into
something they could do without hurting themselves, but am now having second
thoughts. What if they are acrophobic, or suffer from narcolepsy, what if
their driving skills are rusty. What if they get over the Pass only to decide
they are never doing that again, and then discover the only other route back
to the camp will take two days of driving?
These are really fine people and I am not too far behind them in age. Will I
too, soon become a stream-side liability?
Last week I was joined by a highly skilled middle-aged doctor and a wonderful
young man who is in the Assisted Living business. The doctor and I both
encouraged the young man to open one of his facilities on a trout stream in
the West; we offered to buy pre-construction resident slots. I can now see
that there are two more ready made customers for the young man.
This whole thing has set me to thinking about geriatric fly fishing. We
Boomers are growing in number so fast that society can’t handle us. The music
in restaurants is too loud, but they are not going to turn it down for some
old guy. The writing and numbers on cell phones are impossible to see, but the
phone companies are hell bent on making them even smaller. The speakers on the
drive through windows emit noises rather than words, so you just yell louder.
Nobody drives right and mumbling at them seems not to help; when is the last
time you saw a car use its turn signals?
I am here to tell you there is a growth industry in Geriatric Fly Fishing.
Don’t believe me? Just look at Ted Turner, he is seventy something and buying
every trout stream he can get his hands on, his latest is in Argentina. Tom
Brokaw has retired to his Fly-fishing Ranch here in Montana. Dick Chaney has
laid down the shotgun in favor of the fly rod (be warned). Dave Letterman owns
a spread outside Choteau, Montana that swallows up one of the finer trout
streams. There are hundreds of examples of near-elderly and elderly fly
fishermen seeking a stream of their own.
The question for you is; have you made your plans? Can I put you in touch with
the Young Man in the Assisted Living business for pre construction pricing?
Source unknown, but this could easily be a report from a recent
Travel Adventures trip! ~~ C
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Trout Unlimited Proposes Backing Out of Stream
Access Debate

A fence crosses the Ruby
River in southwestern Montana. The Ruby is another Montana waterway where public
access debates have escalated. Photo by Jonathan Weber.
Trout Unlimited, one of the nation's largest and most active conservation
organizations, is considering pulling itself out of the debate over public
access to America's rivers and streams.
A proposed TU resolution states: “Involvement in stream access
disputes is divisive and a distraction from the mission. ….The proposed
amendments would prohibit TU involvement or participation in disputes that pit
claims of public stream access against claims of private property rights.”
For some anglers, that move will be seen as cowardice, others
will
see it as a decision to fight other, more important battles with full-troop
strength and without alienating crucial allies. Almost no one, not even within
Trout Unlimited, will be pleased with the debate, or the subsequent answers, in
part because both are indications of just how difficult it is to accomplish any
kind of wildlife or fisheries protection in a world swollen with human beings
and their conflicting needs, beliefs, and desires.
Trout Unlimited’s Chris Wood says that the issue of public access to rivers and
streams has become an energy sink for his organization, and one that alienates
the very landowners that are critical to the efforts to protect and restore
fisheries.
“We are at the point of deciding who we are as an organization,”
Wood says. “We’ve only had two real access issues come up over the years, and
they were extremely contentious. We cannot afford to let this one issue define
us. To be effective on any kind of large scale we work with landowners to remove
barriers to fish, to restore and maintain instream flows. It is all about
habitat, and most of that habitat is on private land. Advocating for public
access divides us from those landowners, and if we let that single issue
dominate our work, we are not going to be able to accomplish our work.”
The question over fighting for stream access, by conservation
groups or anyone else, has become more complex as economic disparity in America
has become more intense.
And Montana has become ground zero for the debate. The right to walk along a
river or stream and cast for rising trout below the high water line, which is
written into Montana law, is certainly one of the most powerful advantages of
living in Montana, both in the freedom it offers, and in something less easily
defined—a recognition that some things are so beautiful and important that no
one should be able to deny them to others. That unique recognition helps define
the state, and is one of the reasons so many people across the nation revere the
place (and want to move there). But as the state becomes more crowded, that
public right, always a delicate balance of goodwill on the part of the public
and the landowners, becomes ripe for misuse by people for whom fishing or
swimming is secondary to their anger at the wealthy.
“It has become a surrogate for class warfare,” Wood says.
Indeed, it is furious (and seemingly endless) access fights like
the one over Mitchell Slough in Montana’s Bitterroot Valley (widely covered here
at New West by Greg Lemon and others), that have sucked in Trout Unlimited
through its local chapters and helped to drive the new push to abandon the
issue. The Mitchell Slough case pitted wealthy landowners like Ken Siebel,
Charles Schwab and rocker Huey Lewis against access advocates over a side
channel of the Bitterroot River that was, depending on which side you were on,
either a natural stream or a man-made ditch. The case has turned into
an ongoing emotional and legal tug-of-war: Landowners along the
slough argued that what their opponents were fighting for was an expansion of
the stream access law that was never intended by those who wrote it—an expansion
which violated private property rights.
Fights like those dramatically illustrated that a conservation
organization could not afford to involve itself in a battle that began with some
local fishermen calling up the newspaper and a game warden and then testing the
stream access law by venturing onto the property of Huey Lewis and taking big
trout within sight of his windows. It began as a clear case of using the access
law as a boot to kick sand in the face of a conservation-minded landowner who
had undertaken, at his own expense, work to restore fisheries and habitat on his
property.

There were no winners in that fight, and it awakened landowner
opposition to stream access laws far from the tiny arena there in the
Bitterroot.
The issue continues to surface in policy decisions and this
year, the Montana Legislature is trying to clarify the stream access law to keep
such fights out of the courts. But even just finding consensus on clarifying the
issue is a challenge. One bill, however,
Senate Bill 78, does stand a chance of making it to the governor’s
desk and would at least clarify how fences are constructed near county bridges.
Chris Wood says, and documents from Trout Unlimited confirm,
that the organization plans to work to expand fishing access though incentive
programs, among them, using money for restoration in return for access
agreements. Documents state that the organization needs to borrow from the model
of the Nature Conservancy, or Ducks Unlimited, which work closely with multiple
partners and who do not overtly advocate for contentious goals like stream
access on private land. But the documents also explain that many Trout Unlimited
members will recognize that, without the guarantee that new generations will
have a place to fish and wander the rivers and streams, the very future of the
organization is at risk. 
For one TU member in Montana, it’s not a risk worth taking. “We
understand here (in Montana) that TU is involved in numerous issues that are
extremely important, and that access is only one of them,” says Marshall Bloom,
a longtime TU advocate in the Bitterroot Valley. “But in the West, in the heart
of America’s trout fishing, access is inextricably linked to every other element
of the TU agenda. You cannot divorce access from any of them.”
Bloom has no patience for the proposed decision by the national
board to abandon the access issue. “This decision was made in the shadows by a
bunch of East Coast city slickers who caved in to some rich landowners.” Bloom
says, “What’s the point of this decision, anyway? Let’s say that Plum Creek
Timber was going to give TU $70 million, and then a Plum Creek executive said,
“Well, TU’s advocacy in timber issues is detrimental to our timber harvest
plans….would TU then stop advocating for forest plans that don’t harm trout or
fisheries?”

Bloom says state chapters have not been consulted about the
proposal and if the decision is made, it won’t sit well in Montana. “They can
reconsider it, or there can be consideration by us to break off and form our own
group, ” Bloom says.
The Chairman of Montana Trout Unlimited, Tom Anacker of Bozeman,
is more measured in his response, but no less adamant. “We do not agree with
this proposal. What brings people to TU is the experience of fishing our streams
and rivers, and that experience is what inspires me to do the work that I do.
Montana’s stream access law is part and parcel of who we are.” Anacker adds
that, in Montana, unlike other states, access is guaranteed by the law. “We want
to continue to protect those legal rights,” he said.
And if
the National Trout Unlimited decides that is no longer part of the mission?
“This is still a proposal. We hope they will not pass it. I will not speculate
beyond that.”
~~ Hal Herring, March 15, 2007
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Prez Sez .
. .

I would like to thank all of
those that again this year made the Chapter Annual Fly Fishing School a
success. Many members were on hand to either demonstrate or teach the
various subjects. Special thanks to the Chairmen, Steve Coleman.
Unfortunately is seems to be
seriously dry this spring and trout fishing has suffered I am sure.
Hopefully the weather will soon turn for the better and we will be able to enjoy
the beautiful streams that we have in our immediate area. Don't forget to
give the West Branch of the Delaware a try. yes, it is, or can be, very
technical and demanding. Give Craig Dennison a call if you want some tips.
Craig fishes here several times a year and point you in the right direction.
We are looking for a few
members who can give just a little time to help with Chapter activities.
If you would like to get involved, I would ask that you give me a call. I
will be as honest as I can about the time commitment any "task" or involvement
will be. Think about it and please give me a call. 585/248-5020 or
email me at jpc@travela.com.
For now ... I'm going fishin'
...
~~ C
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