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Fly
Fishing in Russia |
by:
Richard
Chapo |
A
few years back, I spent a year living in
Siberia and had a chance to head out to
a town called Tinda. Much to my surprise,
a couple of the locals had fly fishing on
the menu.
The Siberian Surprise
Mention the word "Siberia" and most people
think of bleak, frozen tundra stretching
for hundreds of miles. Well, this is more
or less true in the winter. In the summer,
however, much of Siberia is a burst of green
with temperatures in the eighties and nineties.
As I had failed to bring shorts, this was
a bit of a surprise to me.
Living in the city of Chita, I had an opportunity
to visit the forest town of Tinda. Tinda
is located about a day east of Lake Baikal
and was built in the 1950s to act as a lumber
town. The communist government haphazardly
relocated a hundred thousand people and
there they remain today. The area around
Tinda is very mountainous and very beautiful.
As the winter snows melt, rivers, lakes
and creeks spring to life.
While in Tinda, I was invited to go fly
fishing with the sons of the people I was
staying with. Hilarity was sure to follow
since they spoke no English and I was fluent
in Russian at about a kindergarten level.
Off we went strolling to the apparent local
hot spot.
After a 45 minute walk, we came upon a slow
moving creek that looked like something
you would find in Wyoming. Trees towered
over us and cast shadows across the water.
Shallow pools of water formed along the
bank and I could've sworn I saw more than
a few of our slippery friends.
As every person knows, a first timer at
anything will always have success. The boys
had fished this spot hundreds of times,
but I hadn't. By all that is good in the
universe, I should've caught 20 while they
caught nothing. Alas, evil had the day.
I caught nothing, nada, zippo. Nikoli and
Oleg, on the other hand, were getting fisher
elbow.
Although they caught a lot of fish, I can't
tell you what they were. The language barrier
was just too much. The fisher were six to
10 inches long and appeared to be related
to Mackinaws, but the vodka celebration
made this pure speculation.
Rick Chapo is with Nomad
Writing Journals. Fly fishing journals
are the perfect
fly fishing gifts for fly fishing trips
and fly fishing vacations. Visit NomadJournalTrips.com
for more fly fishing articles and stories.
This article is free for republishing
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| Rick Chapo is with
Nomad
Travel Journals - makers of writing
journals and BusinessTaxRecovery.com
- recoverying overpaid business taxes for
small businesses. |
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