Monday
Oct242011

"Go Time"...

*NOTICE TO ALL WHOM I OWE A RETURN EMAIL OR PHONE CALL*   Don't take it personally....   I'm a bit behind on my "catchin' " up right now.  Why?  Well, it's "Go Time" around here....  Just hopped off a plane from Alberta, threw my dirty hunting clothes into the wash and will  have them back in the luggage for a trip to Idaho just 48 hours from now.   While our fall and winter season of Due North Outdoors is in full swing, we're also gathering 13 weeks of shows for our national upland hunting program, "Pheasants Forever Television".    I'm busy documenting upland adventure hunts and I would say, our trip to   Alberta DEFINATELY qualifies.....  

Bow River and Canadian Rockies

 Last Monday, we arrived in Calgary and fished the famed Bow River alongside long-time guide Bob Haysom, who also happens to head up Pheasants Forever Calgary.   Last time I was up there, we lit up that darn river.   I think we had two or three fish over 18 inches in roughly 2 hours of fishing.   This trip, the river returned the favor....  In half a day of fishing on a perfect fall day without an ounce of wind, the Bow gave up exactly one fish.   A darkly-colored rainbow trout.   The good news?  She was a dandy caught on camera from every angle.  
A nice Bow 'bow.....
  The fishing didn't matter much, because our real mission was to tackle Alberta's upland hunting scene.  Tuesday morning, photojournalist Aaron Achtenberg and I were up and packed well before the sun made an appearance.  Bob picked us up and the three of us crossed the foothills on the Eastern edge of the Canadian Rockies and documented an amazing Alberta sunrise.  See the deer? A pile of GIANT mule deer also made an appearance.  Makes for some beautiful television.  
More mule deer
  About 60 kilometers and an hour later,  we geared up in blaze orange and headed, on foot, up a steep coulee in search of sharptail grouse.  Turns out, the area south of Calgary is supposed to be one of the best spots on the planet to chase sharpies.   You could have fooled me... Four hours into our "mountainside" hunt, we hadn't seen a single bird.  Suddenly, this Alberta adventure was turning into potential nightmare.  We'd had slow fishing the day before and now the birds weren't cooperating either.   We did scare out a couple of the biggest mule deer bucks I've ever seen.  Just wait 'til you see the video...
Our second coulee
I continued to hike the steep, grassy hillside and started thinking.  "What if I we don't get any birds and I go home to a steaming-mad boss?"  "Geez, I spent two months getting this trip together and now I'm gonna get fired."  I could feel the sweat dribbling down my back under my Filson vest and I started to get even more nervous.  Suddenly, eight birds flushed right in front of me.  The dog had not scented them.   I just flushed them mindlessly walking the coulee.  Without thinking,  I mounted my Browning and pulled the trigger.  The flushing bird directly in front of me dropped.  At that same moment, I noticed another bird flying off to my left.  I pivoted and instinctively pulled the trigger and the second grouse fell.   My first true double on sharpies.  I looked at Aaron, camera hanging on his shoulder, and we smiled.  Those ten seconds of flushing pandemonium completley changed our attitudes.  Over the next half hour, we documented several more sharptail flushes and we left that darn coulee with a greatly improved outlook.  
Our take...
 That afternoon, we made a quick stop on our way down to the town of Medicine Hat at a historic Canadian site called "Head Smashed In".  While it sounds a bit rough, it's actually a very cool destination.   It's the spot in Southern Alberta where the prairie people once ran herds of buffalo off the cliffs. 

Below those cliffs, researchers have discovered bone fragments nearly 12 meters deep, dating as far back as 6,000 years ago.  This is how, long ago, people gathered food and materials for clothing, shelter, tools, you name it.  Head Smashed In; 
The cliffs...
A pretty amazing stop if you find youself in Alberta.
We woke up the next morning in Medince Hat just a little bit sore, but ready for a full day of pheasant hunting with members of the local Pheasants Forever Chapter.  I chuckled as I pulled open the barbed wire fence along our first coulee.   Ever heard of the Chinooks?  They're famous, or should I say infamous winds up in that part of the world and they were blowin.   Forcast called for winds to 15 kilometers per hour.  My pants flapped and I almost lost my hat.  Turns out the weather lady had it wrong.  We were getting ready to hunt in a full gale.   We dropped into the first coulee and the dogs put up two hens and a rooster almost immediately.  In that wind, no one had a shot at the rooster.  He was gone in the blink of an eye.  For the next three hours,  not a single bird.  Aaron and I once again looked at each other and I could tell we were thinkin' the same thing; "What the heck did we do to deserve hunts like this?"  That afternoon, we finally found two spots where Aaron was able to document plenty of flushes and falling birds.  As we walked out of our final haunt, we both let out a tired sigh of relief...  Alberta turned out to be one of the most intense shoots I've ever been part of.  Guess that's why I didn't feel too guilty bellying up to a hot plate of poutine and a tall glass of Alberta "ceasar". 
Canadian junk food!
I'll have the bags packed shortly and a trip update from Idaho.  Hell's Canyon, here we come.  We'll be chasing chukkars and steelhead on the Snake River....

 

Wednesday
Oct052011

Holy Rapalas...

"Holy Rapalas..."  The words just spilled out of my mouth as I walked into the production room filled with more than one-hundred-thousand Rapalas.  I would quickly come to understand that these storied baits are MUCH closer to a form of religion than just another tackle-box filler.    This story starts with a bad case of jet lag.  Let me explain…

 Finland's Sokos Hotel Chandelier

Jet lag never quite kicked me like it did about week ago.  Sitting at a hip dinner table under a rather strange-lookin' chandelier in a Finnish hotel restaurant, buddy Mark Fisher looked across the table at my baggy eyes and partially-slumped body.  After he finally stopped chuckling, he said,  "Just stay awake until nine tonight buddy and you'll be alright."  "In the meantime, just drink this..."   He slid a cold bottle of beer in front of me and we spent the next two hours waxing about the world around us and all that is fishy. 
The Beer....
 I'd been up about 30 hours and was still kicking.......barely.  I had three hours until Mark’s 9 pm curfew.  See, first I'd taken a late-afternoon flight from Minneapolis to Amsterdam.  After a morning layover, which included a tiny cup of overly-strong Lavazza coffee and a classic European sandwich that tasted like a sack of salted bass plastics, I climbed onto another plane and zipped north a few hours to Helsinki.   Now I was sitting in that hotel restaurant just a few miles from the very home of Lauri Rapala.  Let's just say the jet lag took a back seat as I realized the adventure that was about to unfold…
My Hotel Room Monitor.... Ha!

After a rough night of rest, our small entourage walked through the front door of Rapala's main production plant and got to work documenting the birth of a bait. 
Finland's Rapala Plant
It's downright  magical to see.  Trust me.  Plant manager Arto Nygren showed us every step in the process.  In here, about 160 Finnish workers build baits from scratch. 
Arto and Bill Discussing the Finer Points of RapalasRapala's Magic Machine...
This cool machine spins balsa and other light woods into rough baits.   While we weren't able to shoot these machines up-close  (think proprietary secrets), we were able to see the long pieces of wood spin in and the end result spit out.  Literally  buckets full. 
Baits Popping Out!
Get this.  In an average day, Rapala crafts 50,000 baits.  Yep.  FIFTY-THOUSAND....Almost unimaginable.   We saw workers hand-wrap foil onto baits just as Lauri Rapala did 75 years ago. 
Hand-Wrapping Foil onto Baits While Rapala’s painting secrets are just that, Arto did allow us to open a door in one paint room and peek in as artists zipped their air brushes over hundreds of baits.

  Notice their chairs mounted on wheels, which allow them to zip back and forth over long stacks of baits.   
A Rapala Painter
Looking at the drying racks is the strangest thing.  NEVER have I seen so many baits in one spot.  When I dream at night.  This is what I see.
Nick Shooting Rapalas

Holy Rapalas...
That same afternoon we had a chance to go see the very first bait Lauri Rapala whipped up back in 1936.  Rapala, a local lumberjack turned fisherman,  shaped pine bark and wrapped it in foil from a chocolate wrapper.  A buddy of Lauri’s was a photographer so he borrowed a few film negatives and melted them over that first bait to create a hard shell. 
The Very First Rapala Bait!
Guess what?  It caught fish, lots of them;  So Lauri got to work in the bait business and the rest is, well, you know…

  Lauri Rapala Cabin and Original Tools
After our day at the Rapala plant, Rapala buddies Petri Varis and Teemu Makela joined us and we all
road-tripped down to Petri’s cottage on the Baltic Sea.  Our goal?  Finland’s brackish northern pike!
On the Baltic Sea w/ Petri! 

First day on the water we fought heavy, heavy wind.  What's the old joke? "How many liters in a mile?"  I think Petri's translation equaled to something like 35 to 40 miles an hour.  A strong breeze anywhere you are, especially on a sea! We did manage to land several fish on colorful Rapala Subwalks.  The size 15s are bait of choice out there. 
Rapala Subwalks Ready for Action!
Of course, Teemu landed big fish of the trip.  Makes sense considering he owns one of two known Lund boats in Finland. The model?  Mr. Pike.  There you go…
"Mr. Pike" in his Mr.Pike with Ms.Pike...
Our other goal was to land a few of Finland’s infamous perch.  We think we’ve got big ones around here?  Well, here are a few Finnish perch. 

You get the picture, er, pictures… I’m going to make you wait to watch the show to see exactly what we found...

 

 

 

 

 We also had a little fun with our underwater gear and a few Rapalas. I think this might be a first of its kind!

Our last day in Finland, we decided to check out Rapala’s headquarters right in Downtown Helsinki.  If you look really closely at the building, you should be able to notice something a bit unusual.  See it?
Rapala's Finland HQ

A Closer Look...
Up on the third floor, a world record just waiting to happen.   I’m wondering how the heck I’m going to get that thing in the Lund and troll it. 
A 9-Footer!
I’ll get to work on that.  Meantime, grab a normal Rapala out of the tackle box and take a good look at it. It really isn't just another bait.  Rapalas are a form of religion I've learned to love each time a fish hits.  "Holy Rapala...."

 

Watch for our Finland Rapala Special on Due North Outdoors.  It's going to be a VERY special journey! I’ll keep you posted on air dates...

 

 

Monday
Sep262011

The Quest, Part II

I'm getting a bit "fishy" waiting on late November musky fishing....
Buddy Wayne with a nice fall fish!

If you're a MONSTER musky junkie, you can relate.

Here's a link to last year's Quest show we shot.  Good stuff! 

http://www.duenorthoutdoors.tv/watch-the-show/2010/11/29/due-north-outdoors-the-quest.html

Thursday
Sep012011

Fishing Has No Boundaries...

I pulled into Camp Confidence on Friday afternoon, the Rapid Marine Lund in tow, to see the banners already up and a crowd already starting to party.   Fishing Has No Boundaries' Friday afternoon kick-off is about my favorite event of the year. 


  See, each August, a pile of volunteers put together the coolest fishing event on water.  Boat captains offer up their services so a bunch of folks who don't normally get to fish can get out on the water and share that sensation we all love so much...You know, the tug of a fish on the end of the fishing line.   This year, I partnered with the Hagberg family.  Bryan and Robbie live up in Duluth and Mom and Dad are down the road in Cloquet.

The Hagberg Family!


I had all four in the boat and we had an absolute blast!  Mostly cloudy w/ barely an ounce of wind.  Perfect conditions for our day.  We decided to slip bobber with minnows and crawlers.  Didn't take long to get on the board.   Bryan got us started with a nice largemouth bass.  In fact, he caught the second one too.  
                

Bryan's First Fish!
No sweat though, because Robbie followed up with his bass and a couple of fat sunnies.  Nice Bass Robbie! Throughout the day, the Hagberg brothers caught piles of fish and even had time for a lunch stop up the lake at Zorbaz's.  Oh, and Robbie eaned himself a new nickname.  From now on, he'll be known as Capt'n.   Capt'n Hagberg...He ran the boat all the way down Gull Lake as we ended a perfect day on the water....   280 people fishing Saturday as part of Brainerd's Fishing Has No Boundaries event.  In my book,  that's a darn cool thing.   Hats off to the volunteer boat captains and hats off to the staff at Camp Confidence and the FHNB fls.  Keep up the good work!   PS:  If you happen to find a blue FHNB hat floating around Gull La
ke,   know it's from our boat!  
 

 A GREAT Day!

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday
Aug242011

The Birth of a Really Good Musky Bait...


Most folks who know musky fishing know the appeal of musky baits.  You know the old cliche;  Some baits hook anglers, not just the fish."  Suppose that's why my crates and boxes just keep filling up... 

Another crate fillin' up!


I'm a sucker for good baits and turn into a kid when I have a morning like today's.   See, at 9 am sharp I pulled up to the back door of Phantom Baits over in Ramsey, Minnesota.  Jim Hammarstedt and Todd Cleveland offered to show us their very cool operation and check out a few of the new baits. 

  Phantom's production shop


Inside their modest shop, they've got hundreds of specially-weighted baits ready to go to the paint booth.  I call 'em ghosts.  White dummies Just hanging and waiting for a magical paint job to bring them to life. 

Ghosts...More Ghosts!


That white stuff is a special plastic resin which seems to hold up a bit better than wood and seems to catch more fish!  But here's the real magic behind Phantom.     Todd hand-paints every one of the baits that go out the door.  Simply amazing. 
             

 

Todd in the paint booth....
I won't tell you how many they sell a year, but I will say Todd paints and epoxies roughly 75 baits a
day.   Pretty cool to see him work on custom colors! 

 A Ghost becomes a Phantom...

Freshly-painted Phantoms
The end result?  The kind of stuff I dream of at night.  Phantom's got piles of completed baits ready to go out to customers all over the the US and Canada. 
The finished product....Beautiful baits!
  I'll be fishing several of them in the coming weeks and at the Frank Schneider Jr. Tournament mid-September.  I'll report back!   Thanks Jim and Todd for a VERY cool tour!