Hey, folks, it's Marvin Cash, the host of the articulate fly.
Marvin CashAnd we're back with another east Tennessee fishing report with Ellis Ward.
Marvin CashEllis, how are you?
Ellis WardI am doing well now, Marv, how are you?
Marvin CashI'm just trying to stay out of trouble.
Marvin CashAnd, you know, you were lucky.
Marvin CashYou had moved out of town and you're in Jonesboro and, you know, you were spared the worst of it, but, you know, the folks around you weren't really.
Marvin CashYou want to kind of.
Marvin CashI know people are kind of, you know, eager to hear kind of firsthand, kind of what are you seeing in, you know, the Johnson City, Elizabethton area where you kind of fish?
Ellis WardYeah, I'm doing my best not say a tale of two cities, but it kind of is Johnson City proper and, and Bristol Bluff City.
Ellis WardI mean, really, the, the tailwaters themselves.
Ellis WardIt's their tailwaters.
Ellis WardThey were insulated to a certain extent.
Ellis WardIt's the towns and anything around any of the freestones.
Ellis WardAnd just to give people some context of the extent of this, the degree to which a freestone can pick up and move water.
Ellis WardAnd I'll just use the Doe as an example.
Ellis WardAnd this is a river that runs.
Ellis WardI can feel it in when Wilbur Dam, when the Wataka tailwater is running 1700 cfs and below the confluence of the dough, I can feel that.
Ellis WardI can feel the difference.
Ellis WardWhen the dough is pushing 200, 250, because it's normally in the 50 to 100.
Ellis WardWhen the Wataga is low and the doe is over 100 cfs, you can tell going over rocks or, you know, the lanes are wider, the super skinny kind of shady stuff.
Ellis WardSome of the drops in the middle river, they're just easier.
Ellis WardAnd that's at 100 cfs.
Ellis WardAnd that difference between 102 hundred, 250, that's really, really meaningful.
Ellis WardWhen it's up at like 400, 500 cfs, that's kind of blown out chocolate milk debris in the water.
Ellis WardWhen it's at 800, if it's pushing 1000, that's where we start seeing water in some of the boat ramp parking lots and new banks start getting eroded, that type of stuff.
Ellis WardSo that's at 1000, which doesn't happen that often.
Ellis WardThat river was up to 17,000 cfs.
Ellis WardAnd it's just not.
Ellis WardIt doesn't have the bank structure for that.
Ellis WardIt doesn't have floodplains.
Ellis WardAnd the Watauga tailwater is so insulated and so regular that they just don't have those wide eroding floodplains.
Ellis WardSo I know that the sycamore Shoals ballad hospital was being evacuated.
Ellis WardI think that was Friday evening.
Ellis WardAnd you know, as I'm, as I'm talking about this not having floodplains not meant for this bank erosion.
Ellis WardAll that french fraud where I've spent untold hours the last five years muskie fishing in the last couple years, muskie guiding the numbers there.
Ellis WardJust astronomical.
Ellis WardAnd it's gauges that normally read 100, 200 cfs are reading 10,000, 15,000.
Ellis WardThe french broad going through Asheville, people can look up some of the destruction here.
Ellis WardIt's just cleaning out anything that was adjacent to the, you know, one story shops and little restaurants adjacent to the river.
Ellis WardIt's a parking lot.
Ellis WardIt's a mud flat.
Ellis WardI mean, five minutes from me on the Nola Chucky, there's a bridge that looks like some sort of war footage when you drive up to it.
Ellis WardAnd I went down to the next three bridges, and it's all the same.
Ellis WardThey're just, it's just evaporation.
Ellis WardThere's just.
Ellis WardThere's not even traces of abutments.
Ellis WardIt's just fully carried down, you know, 50,000 cfs pushing through there.
Ellis WardAnd you can see just with dirt marks, you know, it's 2300 yards on either side of what would even be a big flood before.
Ellis WardSo it's weird.
Ellis WardIt's weird being five minutes from that and we lost power, but we had water.
Ellis WardIt's what got hit.
Ellis WardGot hit so hard.
Ellis WardAnd then other people may have lost power or water, but, I mean, if you weren't in that direct hit, it's.
Ellis WardIt's not like a hurricane with, with the.
Ellis WardWith the winds.
Ellis WardLike, this was strictly rain and flooding.
Ellis WardAnd so you have people with complete losses of their home.
Ellis WardAnd I'm not kidding you, 50 yards away with a little bit of elevation.
Ellis WardThe neighbor's house is 100% untouched.
Ellis WardUm, so it.
Ellis WardI don't know, it.
Ellis WardIt's.
Ellis WardIt's been weird, I would say.
Ellis WardAnd I think I felt.
Ellis WardI felt okay enough about whatever moral compass that is still left in me to go out and start fishing the south Holsten.
Ellis WardBecause, I mean, come on, dude.
Ellis WardThe flows were looking great.
Ellis WardI don't want to desensitize it too much, but there's a lot of places that I would say localized and very significant damage that need help.
Ellis WardAnd I think you were talking about putting some links into the show notes here.
Ellis WardBut it's kind of a tough one because it's not like Florida.
Ellis WardLike, you get a hurricane, what are you doing with insurance?
Ellis WardWhy isn't your house at stilts, et cetera.
Ellis WardIt's, I don't want to say once, once in a lifetime or more, but statistically, that's what we're looking at.
Marvin CashYeah, it's incredibly devastating.
Marvin CashI mean, loss of life, loss of property.
Marvin CashI mean, you know, it's going to take, you know, years to get back to normal.
Marvin CashYou know, I guess what I would say, folks, is last week I put out a blog post and I'll link to it in the show notes that gives you some donation ideas for Southwest Virginia, western North Carolina and East Tennessee that are state agencies and large charities that are funneling money to the people that are on the ground.
Marvin CashOne of the things that I've suggested across the board is as it becomes easier to get back into East Tennessee and western North Carolina, tourism is incredibly important to that part of the world and you need to go and do your best to support local merchants.
Marvin CashAnd that includes fly shops and fishing guides.
Marvin CashAnd I think one of the things that you can definitely do is you can buy gift certificates and gift cards.
Marvin CashSo there's revenue coming into these local communities.
Marvin CashBut also, too, if you have trips booked, you know, don't cancel the trips if you can possibly do it and let the guides and the shops keep the money because it is going to be a very, very long road back.
Marvin CashBut I will drop those links in the show notes.
Marvin CashAnd I would also say, too, that our friends at visit Johnson City have kind of shifted from tourism to supporting the community.
Marvin CashAnd, you know, if you're in need, you can go there, charge your phone, get water, get help finding hotel rooms.
Marvin CashYou know, Alec Castro is my contact there, but the whole team there is ready to help.
Marvin CashAnd as we have more information, we will certainly push it out in our social media channels and on the website and in the podcast and well kind of shift a little bit.
Marvin CashI did have a question for you, Ellis from Brenner.
Marvin CashAnd hes getting ready for Muskie season and he wanted to get your thoughts on kind of the best materials to incorporate into your musky fly so that you get good kills when you strip the fly.
Ellis WardOkay.
Ellis WardYeah.
Ellis WardWell do a hard pivot.
Ellis WardWe can talk about the other stuff for a long time, but very, very briefly.
Ellis WardI'd also say John at Tailwater Glyco has been reaching out and I know you've talked with him as well.
Ellis WardSo there's, there's a bunch of good resources there, too.
Ellis WardAll right.
Ellis WardPivoting to phishing report question answering.
Ellis WardSo for fly time, I love this question.
Ellis WardAnd we didn't get a chance to talk about it before this call.
Ellis WardSo, thoughts coming at you live here.
Ellis WardThe, I mean, two materials that I like the most for what he's talking about, which is getting a pronounced stop of the front part of the fly so that you get.
Ellis WardOr you can get some form of dog walk, I would say, with, with some of the smaller, musky flies, you can.
Ellis WardIf you're, if you are going to add weight using something like brass dumbbell eyes, you really don't need to do that.
Ellis WardI like to do it occasionally if I'm tying with shanks and, you know, with the, with a small trailer hook.
Ellis WardBecause if you think about the difference between, like, a five odd yemenite hook and a shank, there's so much more metal, so much more weight in that hook.
Ellis WardSo if you're tying on a shank, you know, to put in some lead wraps or something actually helps with that, the momentum and then some of that castability.
Ellis WardIf it's a pretty big fly, and then if you shift that up front, then you can, depending on what type of material you're using, you can get a little bit of a jig, I'm guessing what he's talking about.
Ellis WardAnd something that I focus on much more is bucktail or the synthetic that I love for this strong fuzzy.
Ellis WardAnd I would throw another option in there.
Ellis WardAnd this is kind of a sort of a curveball, but crafter with, um, either a.
Ellis WardA flexible uv coating.
Ellis WardAnd, you know, if you feel like putting eyes on it, great.
Ellis WardBut, but if you, if you shape it in a way that encourages movement side to side.
Ellis WardSo saying that another way, if you shape it skinnier on the sides of and taller on the top and the bottom, that encourages side to side movement.
Ellis WardCause that kill happens when you remove your pulling force and the fly is left in the water.
Ellis WardAnd so you get the kill when the force against that fly, which can come through friction, it can come through buoyancy.
Ellis WardUm, when the force of the water against the front part of that fly is much greater than it is against any other part of that fly.
Ellis WardAnd so, you know, with the swim bug, for example, which I have some versions that I fish for muskie, you have a bunch of buoyancy up front with the deer hair head.
Ellis WardAnd it's like trying to put a, you know, an exercise ball underwater.
Ellis WardSomething that's really buoyant, it doesn't want to be in there.
Ellis WardAnd it gets moved very easily by the water because it doesn't want to be in there, you know, on the other side of the spectrum would be a bare hook that would just fall through the water.
Ellis WardSo the more buoyant you get, the more sensitive the head shape is.
Ellis WardAnd then you look at, you know, that craft, for example, is that's just surface area.
Ellis WardSo if you have looking at the front of the fly, like looking at its nose and it's skinny on the left and the right, but tall on the top, tall on the bottom and maybe even wider on the top, you're going to have the most friction wherever you have the most surface area.
Ellis WardSo that would be at the top.
Ellis WardIf you're just looking at it straight on, once you stop stripping that, it's going to get pushed one way or the other because it's not a perfect system when it gets pushed one or the other.
Ellis WardIf the sides are markedly a bigger surface area than the top or the bottom, it's going to get slammed sideways and, you know, it'll look like it's, it's tail is kicking out and it's, it's heads going back.
Ellis WardSo bucktail, honestly, same, same deal.
Ellis WardAnd it's why the bulkhead, the Buford, that platform can be so effective because when tied properly, just having something buoyant, it up front is going to give you that dog walking kill and then strong fuzzy.
Ellis WardI'll encourage people to watch some of the videos that Gunnar Brammer has done.
Ellis WardI've done a couple flies with it on YouTube, but you can get that stuff pretty dense and shape ahead that responds with that kill because there's a lot of friction, but it doesn't come with the buoyancy.
Ellis WardSo some trade off.
Ellis WardAnd sometimes you do want that.
Ellis WardAnd I'm going to be appreciative of our time here.
Ellis WardMarvin, stop talking.
Marvin CashWell, that's good.
Marvin CashI'll tell the snipers to stand down.
Marvin CashFolks, we love questions on the articulate fly.
Marvin CashYou can email them to us or dm us on social media, whatever is easiest for you.
Marvin CashAnd if we use your question, I will send you some articulate fly swag drawing for some cool stuff from Ellis at the end of the season.
Marvin CashAnd you know, Ellis, before I let you go, you want to let folks know where they can find you and book you and all that kind of good stuff.
Ellis WardYeah.
Ellis WardBest way to reach me is my cell phone at 513-543-0019 Instagram is Ellis Ward guides and trip information.
Ellis WardYou can send a booking request, email, look at fun pictures at ellis wardflies.com dot.
Marvin CashWell, folks, you know, we're, our thoughts and prayers are with everybody in east Tennessee, western North Carolina and southwest Virginia, they've been impacted by the hurricane.
Marvin CashAnd, you know, if you're, if you, you know, need help, there's some resources.
Marvin CashJohnson visit Johnson City.
Marvin CashIf you folks want to make a donation, I'll drop the link to some, some options in the show notes.
Marvin CashAnd if you have information that you would like for me to share on the podcasts or in my social media channels, just reach out.
Marvin CashI'm happy to do that.
Marvin CashAnd, you know, we hope that everyone's able to kind of move forward the best they can.
Marvin CashAnd we're thinking about you.
Marvin CashAnd, you know, again, if you can, you know, support the local communities as they sort of come back to life, that would be terrific, too.
Marvin CashTight lines, everybody.
Marvin CashTightlines Ellis appreciate it.
Ellis WardMarvin.