Posts tagged ‘Michigan Fly Fishing Club’
If you’re like me and cabin fever is upon you hard and fast, then perhaps it is time to start planning for spring trout fishing in Northern Michigan! A good place to get the engine going is at the Midwest Fly Fishing Expo sponsored by the Michigan Fly Fishing Club. As in past years, the event will be held this Spring at the Macolm Community College Sports and Expo Center. The two day event will be held this year on March 13th and 14th.
This is a big show for the Michigan angling community, and most of the larger Michigan fly shops and guides make an appearance. In addition to vender space, there is a casting area, and a number of educational programs and speakers. Speakers for this year include Dave Hughes, Bob Jackin, and Jeff “Bear” Andrews. From the Traverse City area, Chuck Hawkins of Hawkins Outfitters will be doing a talk entitled “Where to Catch Big Trout.”
The Best Western Georgian Inn in Roseville has special rates for conference attendees. The group rate is $59.00+tax.The show itself has a very reasonable fee for attendance and that price includes admission to the various seminars — the potential educational value is well worth the price of the show.
I’ve attended perhaps four shows in the last ten years, and it is a good time. One of the special treats for fly tiers is digging through the seemingly endless boxes of cheap, highly-discounted fly tying materials that almost everyone seems to be selling. Lots of good bargains, if you don’t mind digging around for a few minutes.

Best's Fly Box
In last Sunday’s edition, Macomb Daily Columnist Terry Drinkwine shares his thoughts on fly tying and design after attending the Michigan Fly Fishing Club’s annual banquet. As he relates in his column, the featured speaker this year was A.K. Best, production tier and familiar name to anyone who reads John Gierach’s books and essays.
Based on what Terry relates in his article, Best apparently gave quite the talk, illustraed with detailed slides, and focusing on the intricacies of more realistic fly design and the fact that there is a world of difference between just tying flies that sell in shops (or follow the pattern sin books) and tying flies that really catch more fish. Given the remarkable number of flies that Best has tied and sold over the years, he is certainly in a position to speak with authority when it comes to distinctions such as this.
“A.K. showed slide after slide of mayflies and made it a point to ask why on earth we use dubbing to create a mayfly body when we can see in every photograph that the mayfly body is a smooth-looking segmented part of the fly. I thought about it for a minute then realized he was right. I’ve never seen a hairy non-segmented mayfly, so why do I tie them otherwise? The answer is, of course, that’s what the patterns call for and every fly shop sells them that way and we catch fish with them. The question is, could we be more productive if we tied them using quill segments or some flat material instead?” – Terry Drinkwine
Terry notes in his article that A.K.’s theories on fly design go back many years to the time that he (meaning Best) was living in Alpena — which of course sent me to the Internet for some kind of confirmation and, yes, it turns out that A.K. is a native Michigander, though of course he has made his home in Colorado for the majority of his life.
This is the second time in recent memory I got this sort of surprise as it was only recently that I came to learn that fly-tier Craig Matthews of West Yellowstone’s Blue Ribbon Flies is also a native of the Great Lakes State. I’m a big fan of his work, too, and can report that his shop in West Yellowstone is a first-class joint. Add to this list Traverse City’s Kelly Galloup and Michigan seems to have a habit of producing outstanding tiers who at some point move West.


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