- ED HERBST'S ZAKHAMER EMERGER
- HANS WEILENMANN'S SIX FAVOURITE STREAM PATTERNS
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S WINGED PARALOOP DRY FLY
- HANS VAN KLINKEN ON HIS KLINKHAMER SPECIAL
- PETER BRIGG'S NEW WOLF SPIDER
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S EXTENDED BODY EMERGER
- FLY TYING COURSE
- ED HERBST'S SIX PACK OF FLIES
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S PALOMINO MIDGE
- GERALD PENKLER'S SMALL STREAM 6 PACK
- GERRIT REDPATH'S 6 PACK FOR RIVERS
- LEONARD FLEMMING'S TOP SIX STREAM PATTERNS
- ETHAFOAM EXTENDED BODY MAYFLY PATTERNS
- DARRYL LAMPERT'S TOP STREAM FLIES
- SIX FLIES FOR THE REST OF MY LIFE
- PETE BRIGGS TOP SIX SMALL STREAM PATTERNS
- LUCA MONTANARI'S SIX FAVOURITE STREAM FLIES
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S SPEEDY CATERPILLAR PATTERN
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO'S SPLIT-HACKLE DRY FLIES
- TYING ZAKS. CRITICAL SUCCESS FACTORS
- RAFFIA-BODIED MAYFLY EMERGER
- PALMER-BACK FOAM BEETLE
- THE BEST WAY TO LEARN FLY TYING
- THE GOOD DOCTOR'S BEETLE
- TYING THE RONCALLO SPECIAL
- TWISTED BODY MICRO CDC PATTERNS
- TYING AND FISHING THE MUDDLER MINNOW
- BENDING HOOKD FOR BETTER MAYFLY IMITATIONS
- BENDING HOOKS FOR BETTER MAYFLIES
- TYING THE PTN TO THE ORIGINAL PATTERN
- J BOBBIN REVIEW
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO TIES EXTENDED TUBE BODY MAYFLIES
- LA FONTAINE'S AIR HEAD
- AGOSTINO RONCALLO PARACHUTE FLY METHOD
- An egg laying mayfly imitation by Stanton Hector
- Ed Herbst on the evolution of the modern fly tying vise
- The Mirage mayfly imitation
- Luca Montanari - A yound Italian whose flies are out of this world
- Ed Herbst reviews the J Vice
- Bob Wyatt's Deer Hair Emerger
- Tying Ed Herbst's Hopper
- New dry fly - The halo-hackle RAB variant
- Tying the CdC Midge
- Tying the ND Dragonfly Nymph
- How to tie and fish the Red-eyed Damsel Nymph
- Tying the Halo Hackle Klinkhamer Emerger
- Tying the DDD
- Tying a High water RAB
- Tying the Zak
- FLY FISHING ON THE EDGE OF THE KAROO
- LATEST FLY FISHING NEWS
- CLLECTOR'S EDITION OF HUNTING TROUT
- THE RETURN OF HIGHLAND LODGE
- OPENING 2012 ON THE HOLSLOOT
- OPENING THE FISHING FOR 2012
- FISHING THE END OF 2011- PHOTO ESSAY
- THE BEST OF THISWEBSITE FOR 2011
- LIGHT LINE FISHING FOR BUFFALO
- HUNTING TROUT SECOND EDITION
- NEWS AND FEATURES COMING TOMORROW
- Ed Herbst is fishing again
- NOVEMBER 2011 NEWSLETTER
- Haernertsburg Centenary celebrations
- WHAT STREAM TROUT EAT
- BIRKHALL LAKE - A PHOTO ESSAY
- A DAY ON THE COLDBROOK
- RHODES SEPTEMBER 2011
- Fishing News
- ROCK ART ON THE SWITH STREAM
- HANDMADE LANDING NETS - THE NEW WAVE
- PHOTOGRAPHING INSECTS
- A DAY FISHING PONDS
- THE UNITY - A TRIB OF THE KARNEMELK
- FLY FISHING RHODES IN JULY 2011
- SNAKE AWARENESS COURSES
- 31 JULY 2011 NEWSLETTER
- TRAVERSING THE ENTIRE LENGTH OF THE ORANGE RIVER - A DVD
- UNDISCOVERED FLY STREAMS
- RANDOM THOUGHTS ON BAMBOO FLY RODS
- 3 July 2011 NEWSLETTER
- THE UGIE LADIES' FESTIVAL
- 12 June 2011 NEWSLETTER
- MAY 2011 FLY FISHING DIARY AND NOTES
- FLY FISHING THE RHODES AREA
- THE TITANIC TIGERFISH OF TANZANIA
- IMPRESSIONS FROM THE WILD TROUT ASSOCIATION FESTIVAL
- SNAKES IN STREAMS CAN HAPPEN!
- MARCH 2011 NEWSLETTER
- PORTRAIT OF AN ARTIST - PADDY STARLING
- Early morning hopper fishing - A photo essay
- Closed Cell Foam Strike Indicators
- Between the Storms - Reminiscences of a Fly Fishing Trip - Part 2
- Between the Storms - Reminiscences of a fly fishing trip
- Minor tactics in high wind
- Fishing with a geographer - photo essay
- A day on a mountain stream straight out of heaven
- October 2010 Newsletter
- Chris Bladen- Fly fishing in bronze
- Witels River Photo Essay
- SEPTEMBER DIARY
- The Lighter Side of Guiding
- Iceland Salmon
- Underwater Fly Fishing Photography
- Photographing Fish
- April May Newsletter and Diary
- March 2010
- February 2010
- A photo and word essay on South Island New Zealand by Gerhard Laubscher
- THE EXCITING DIEPSPRUIT RIVER
- OF GEORGE MAURER BAMBOO RODS AND WRITERS HARRY MIDDLETON AND JOHN GIERACH
- PIKE ON A FLY FROM THE THAMES
- FLATHEAD MULLET IN GRAAFF REINET
- GARY BORGER'S SMALL STREAM FLY SELECTION
- THE PATTERNS FRED STEYNBERG RELIES ON FOR RIVERS AND STREAMS
- David Kleyn's top six patterns for rivers and streams
- FLY FISHING THE KAROO
- AD MADDOX'S FLY FISHING ART
- RETURN TO PATAGONIA
- DORADO IN BOLIVIA
- A DAY ON THE WITTE
- KRAAI RIVER GRAND SLAM
- Don Phillips - The Everett Garrison of the space-age fly rod
- Red tag fools willow grub feeders
- From an artist in wood - Steve Boshoff
- Don Phillips solid boron fly rods
- FRESH WATER BONE FISH - THE NATAL SCALY
- FISHING THE DIEPSPRUIT NEAR BARKLY EAST
- SEATTLE and the SAGE ROD COMPANY
- MAGNETIC FLY HOLDER
- CAPE STREAMS REVISITED
- THE YEAR OF THE MOUSE - BROWN TROUT HEAVEN
- RHODES - THE GUIDED EXPERIENCE
- PROFILE ON DAVE WALKER
- FLY FISHING FOR TIGERS IN THE ZAMBEZI
- Dimpling Trout by Garret Evans
- REVISED CONVEX LEADERS FOR ULTRA-LIGHT RODS
- DAVID KLEYN'S FISHING AND IMAGES
- ALL YEAR ROUND FLY FISHING ON WTA WATERS
- THE WILD TROUT ASSOCIATION
- A VERY SPECIAL BAMBOO ROD RETURNS
- TYING THE TVN NYMPH
- AUCTION OF ED HERBST RODS AND REELS
- FLY FISHING RHODES IN MID WINTER
- The EFFTEX tackle show
- Pete Brigg's July paragraph
- TARPON FROM CUBA
- SOUTH AFRICA'S FLY OF THE CENTURY
- THE SOUTH AFRICAN GAME FAIR
- NEW ZEALAND - LEONARD FLEMMING'S END OF SEASON
- PETER BRIGG'S APRIL 2011 PARAGRAPH
- ESSAY ON THE JAN DU TOIT'S RIVER
- C & F Threader and clipper
- The river Nera in central Italy
- Pete Brigg's February 2011 Paragraph
- A fly tying DVD series by Ed Herbst and Andrew Ingram
- Pete Brigg's January Paragraph
- Incidental fly fishing in Utah
- New Zealand South Island Newsletter - Leonard Flemming
- Rod Dibble furled leaders by Ed Herbst
- Pete Brigg's December Paragraph
- Ed Herbst in search of the ultimate small stream fly rod
- Pete Briggs November Paragraph
- Pete Brigg's October Paragraph
- Ed Herbst on new 'Whisper' rods
- Pete Brigg's paragraph - Third in the series
- Pete Brigg's August paragraph
- Pete Brigg's paragraph
- Ed's Column - July 2010
- Ed's Column - May/June 2010
- Ed's Column - May 2010
- Ed's Column - April 2010
- DRAGONS ON A DRY FLY
- STERKFONTEIN DAM - A DRAMATIC PLACE
- THE JDT's
- THE UPPER SAALBOOM RIVER
- READER'S IMAGES PART 15 - NEIL HAYES-HILL ON THE OKAVANGO
- VALENTINE ATKINSON'S PHOTOGRAPHY
- READER'S IMAGES PART 14 - LOTHENI AND BUSHMAN'S
- READER'S IMAGES PART 13
- A day on the Bushman's and Lotheni
- MOLENAARS RIVER - SHARLAND URQUHART
- FISHING THE KOLA PENINSULA
- Trout in North Island New Zealand, fishing in snow in Rhodes and Japanese trout streams
- READER'S IMAGES PART 11 JADE DOS SANTOS
- READER'S IMAGES PART 10
- THE WOLF - A RARE GLIMPSE OF A LOVELY STREAM
- GERRIT REDPATH IN RHODES
- TOM LEWIN FISHES AN ITALIAN CHALKSTREAM
- READER'S IMAGES PART 9
- READER'S IMAGES PART 8
- MORE OF GERHARD LAUBSCHER'S WONDERFUL IMAGES
- READER'S IMAGES PART 7
- Gerhard Laubscher - State of the art fly fishing photography
- MORE GERRIT REDPATH IMAGES
- READER'S IMAGES PART 6
- GERRIT REDPATH - ACE FLY FISHING PHOTOGRAPHER
- THE LITTLE POTT WITH GEORGE BRITS
- READER'S IMAGES - PART 5
- READERS IMAGES PART 4
- READER'S IMAGES PART 3
- READERS PICTURES 2
- READER'S IMAGES
- ORVIS BREATHABLE WADERS
- ORVIS, PFLUEGER PREDATOR GEAR FOR SALE
- VEST, PACKS, WADERS, BOOTS AND RODS FOR SALE
- CULT FLY RODS FOR SALE
- REELS FOR SALE
- GARY GLEN-YOUNG SECONDHAND GEAR
- HERMANUS VERMONT HOME FORSALE
- Sage rod, Eclipse line, Rosenbauer book
- Stealth rod, Orvis reel, Marryat fly box for sal
- FLY RODS FOR SALE 2 NOVEMBER 2011
- Grizzly cape wanted in exchange for..
- OCTOBER 2011 ITEMS FOR SALE
- Secondhand Tackle and Books for Sale
Fly Fishing Diary
April May Newsletter and Diary
April May Newsletter and Diary
| Fly Fishing Diary |
For more images of my trip to Rhodes follow the link at the bottom of this page...
End of the Western Cape season , the Kraalstroom and a Chinese Ferrari

Graeme Field on the Kraalstroom
The end of season here in the Western Cape didn’t so much tail off, as it usually does, as go out with a bang. I’d had a few days hunting fussy fish in thin water, sometimes blown apart by wind, sometimes blessed with gentle breezes and blue skies laced with puffy clouds and then all of a sudden the rains came, in two heavy cold fronts, lifting the rivers, dropping temperatures and all but putting and end to the hatches and the fishing. Even our last resort down here in times like this, the Holsloot, a tail-water fishery, was unreliable and miserly with its trout. There was a perfect day on some private water, the Kraalstroom, a tributary of the Elandspad, that we fished only a day or two before the first rains fell. I was with Ryan Weaver who manages the farm Fizantakraal and Graeme Field who runs a company called Liquid Horisons. The stream was bare bones and the trout spooked just lifting the rod to cast. In some bigger pockets we took a few trout on deep nymphs, but the Kraalstroom is such a magical place – ferns, ancient trees, gnarled roots, moss-covered stones – that it wouldn’t have mattered even if we hadn’t caught a thing.

Moss, rocks, roots, mystery...

Kraalstroom rainbow

Frederick Mostert
There was also a day when I fished one of our regular streams with rod maker, Steve Boshoff, and a friend from London, Frederick Mostert. We caught more than a few trout on a day that Frederick described as one of the best he could remember and he got all his fish on a big dry fly, which sounds sort of counter-intuitive in a low stream but I will expand on that later. How I got to know Frederick, though, and what he does for a living is a whole story on its own, but let me just say that he has a Ferrari, a limited edition of only five ever made, and he owns the sixth – made in China! So, of course, you can sort of guess his profession. He’s a patent rights, intellectual property and brand protection lawyer working for one of the biggest companies in the business of high end, luxury products, Richemont. He spends plenty of his time in China closing down factories making Cartier watches, Mont Blanc pens, Purdey shot guns, yes, even Ferraris. Steve and I agreed that he was the most interesting man we ever spent a day fishing with.
The Coq de Leon saddle hackle RAB and Bear Lodge Angler
As for the big dry fly, well Frederick was new to the dry fly on fast streams and if there’s one essential ingredient to doing that well, it’s that you have to be able to see the fly. The big RABs I tie stand out like quivering haystacks so that’s what I gave him. I call them High Water RABs, and I tie them with ultra-wide, dark speckled-bronze Coq de Leon (CdL) saddle hackles. I tie them for rough riffle water when the rivers are up where they are hard to beat. Frederick couldn’t miss seeing the RABs and they worked. In an hour or two he landed half a dozen nice fish.
The CdL saddle I got from Ed Herbst who in turn brought it in through Bill and Kathi Morrison of Bear Lodge Angler in Wyoming. Both Ed and I have been doing business with them for years and I rate Bill as one of the most effective locators of fly tying materials I have ever come across. You’ll find his business at www.bearlodgeangler.com. Their prices are very reasonable, the range is outstanding and delivery is sharp.
Rhodes, Branksome and Gateshead

A beautiful run. The upper Bokspruit on Gateshead

Gateshead
Rhodes this year was close to heaven. The rivers were perfect and clear, although Tony Kietzman who guides in the area, told me that the level in the Bokspruit had dropped maybe six inches from the previous week and the bigger fish had been replaced with slightly smaller ones in greater abundance. How that works I don’t know, but I don’t argue with the wisdom of the locals. I was planning to fish alone, which I did for a few days, but chance encounters with a couple of anglers who happened to be up there at the time, meant that I got in four or five trips with company.
The fishing was not as typically good as it gets in this part of the world, but then there wasn’t a day when we were anywhere near skunked. I’d have said that in the colder water a nymph on an indicator would work better than a dry fly, and I probably would have used little else, but two of the lads I fished with were dry fly fanatics. They caught plenty of fish, but I suspect if you were after the bigger fish, say 15 inches and over, a slow, deep nymph was the way to go. To hook the better fish up here you need to concentrate on the deeper slots and fish them really well – meaning to take your time on getting more than a few drifts into likely places and then making sure that the fly was coming through deep enough. That’s how you catch the big fish here. You hunt them. The honey holes are those deep, darker green looking spots under root-bound banks. If you dead drift through the shallower runs and riffles you will always get plenty of fish, but they are likely to be smaller. Then, of course, if the fishing is slow a Leisenring Lift helps. All this does is add movement to induce a take. The LL amounts to a slow, even lift of the rod tip to bring upward movement into the fly.
The landscapes were spectacular this autumn, particularly on Branksome, Basie and Carien Vosloo’s farm just upstream of Birkhall. I had a lovely day here fishing with Ritchie Morris and Mark Ransome. In places the river was alight with the incandescent yellow reflections of poplars, but the willows were still hanging onto their greenness. The veld too had turned a deep russet red and in the clear air the distant mountains were pretty shades of pastel blue and purple.
Gateshead and Tony Kietzman

The Bell on Glass Niven

Tony Kietzman on Glass Niven
I ended up fishing the usual waters – the Sterkspruit, the Bell and the Bokspruit – all of them lovely, but I came to the conclusion that if there is a dry fly stream designed by God for himself and his Saints, it is the Bokspruit at Gateshead. I was with Tony and four guys from Cape Town, Paul Mukheiber, Dave Lefeuvre, Jeremy Duthie and Guy Sampson. Again we met up by chance and sort of guided them a few times on this trip (not that they needed much instruction). We told them that our usual guiding fee of R600 an hour and R600 per Coq de Leon-hackled RAB, was a steal! They reciprocated with some of the better river lunches I have known. My friend Agostino Gaglio from Klerksdorp does a good riverside Mediterranean spread – salamis, Parma ham, rockets, sun dried tomatoes, cheeses, olive oil, balsamic vinegar, crusty rolls and so on – but these guys were the pasta kings. At times I had two dinky gas stoves burning on the tailgate of my truck, one with a pot of water on it for the pasta, the other with a pan for the sauce. The pasta was served hot, even sprinkled with Parmesan cheese. And their coffee was real, not the sort of instant stuff I normally drink on streams.
Tony Kietzman is a wonderful companion on a fly stream. He has been living in Rhodes now for two years and apart from understanding fly fishing – and its attendant poetry – he is an expert on local plants, including the rich alpine flora, and the local bird species. To contact Tony call 082 8943946 or email him at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . For a visit to Branksome or Gateshead contact Carien Vosloo on 045 9749303 or 082 49331132. Tony will soon have his own page on this web site and Carien is getting her Gateshead Lodges up and running again.

Poplars in autumn colours, the Sterkspruit on Branksome

Mark Ransome on the Branksome section of the Sterkspruit

Rainbow from the Sterkspruit on Lindesfarne
Maclear, Richard Viedge, Vrederus and the Diepspruit.
On the drive up to Rhodes Lionel Reid, called my cell phone waxing lyrical about the fishing they had in the streams around Maclear along with Richard Viedge, a guide in the area. Lionel was in his car at the time on his way to fish the Diepspruit on a farm called Ross Trevor. The Diepspruit is in the New England district twenty odd kilometres west of Barkly East. This is a relatively unsung stream and it shouldn’t be. I remember Ed Herbst and I once fished a section after walking a fair way downstream where we found something of a gorge. We got a few pretty trout and over the years we have had some good fishing in the Diepspruit on the farm Millard. Lionel called me the next morning. Sadly, they were leaving to head home to Johannesburg otherwise I would have driven across to fish the Diepspruit with him, but he said the fishing had been sensational – very strong trout, excellent condition and relatively big fish.
It sounds as if the streams on the Maclear/Ugie side of the southern Drakensberg are really doing well. I must say I long to get back to this area – onto streams like the Wildebeest, the Mooi and the Upper Pott. I had hoped to get there this trip, but a flu-like bug put an end to that. Ed Herbst and Tony Kietzman recently fished a high section of the Wildebeest and said it was as good as heaven. As it happens I have just put the phone down after chatting to Richard Viedge. He said the rivers have never looked better in this patch on the Planet and last week a friend of his took a 16 inch rainbow from the Upper Pott, a tiny, beautiful stream on a dry fly! I told Richard I’d be seeing him come September!
For those of you wanting to have some more facts about this area contact Richard on 082 6571728 or email him at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . For accommodation, I recommend staying with Juan-Marie Naude at Vrederus (phone 045 9321572) or at www.linecasters.co.za/vrederus/diary.htm .

Landscapes from heaven. The Bokspruit valley
To view more images taken on this trip follow this link to the Image Gallery
