Current Works Guide Service
  • (231) 883-8156
  • ted@current-works.com
  • Book a trip
  • Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Home
  • Guide Trips & More
    • Guide Trips & Pricing
    • Casting Lessons
    • Gift Certificates
    • Book a Trip
  • Fishing Report
  • Fish & Seasons
    • Steelhead
    • Trout
    • Smallmouth Bass
    • Salmon
    • Bluegill / Panfish / Bass
    • Golden Bones / Carp
  • Rivers & Hatches
    • Upper Manistee River
    • Lower Manistee River
    • Betsie River
    • Boardman River
    • Hatch Chart
  • Fly Tying
  • Articles
  • Gallery
  • About
    • About Your Guide
    • Testimonials
    • Newsletter
    • Area Information

Trout

The Boardman River

Posted by Jeanne Kraimer - March 12, 2012

Boardman River Trout Fishing - Traverse City, MI

The Boardman River is a gem when one considers its proximity to Traverse City. Starting as two rivers, the North and South Branches near the villages of Kalkaska and South Boardman, they merge and become one, flow north and eventually drain into West Grand Traverse Bay. The river generally runs clear and cooler, resulting in insect hatches that can be delayed behind its neighboring rivers.

Beginning in 2012 and ending in late 2018 a total of three hydroelectric dams were removed on the Boardman River watershed after some controversy and a lot of work in an effort to return the river to it’s natural riverbed.

Brown Bridge dam – the furthest upstream – was the first to be removed, followed by Boardman Dam (Cass Road traveled over the dam) and lastly, Sabin Dam.  A small dam and fish ladder are in place in downtown Traverse City while the future of a proposed FishPass system works through the process of design, approval and implementation.

For the nostalgic history buff or interested angler, one of the most popular dry fly pattern used – The Adams, was originally developed by guide Len Halladay for angler Charles Adams who fished the Boardman River.

Upper Section

Boardman River Brook Trout

Brook Trout

The upper section includes both the North and South Branches of the Boardman and where they come together, the “Forks” and downstream to Brown Bridge Pond. This is the smaller water of the Boardman which experiences fair to good hatches. Ranch Rudolph is located in this section of river and there are a number of places to access the river including some State of Michigan campgrounds: The Forks, Sheck’s Place, Trail Camp and Brown Bridge Road. The river averages 25 feet in width and flows quickly over a gravel bottom. Not good with a roll cast? You will be soon as there are bank-side and overhanging trees in much of the upper section of river. Don’t look for real large fish in this section, but fun fish nonetheless. Fish slow and thoroughly and you might be rewarded with something a little bigger than and handful of brook trout – larger fish do exist in this water.

Middle Section

Boardman River - Fly Fishing For Brown Trout

Fishing Close to Traverse City

When Brown Bridge Dam was removed, so was Brown Bridge pond – the impoundment upstream from the dam. It’s been fascinating to witness this old lake bed become a river again as the water moves quickly through a valley of vegetation. Quick moving and relatively shallow water is lined with easy to read structure all the way to the former dam site. With additional time, the Boardman’s wild fish population should redistribute throughout what is essentially new river.

Below the former Brown Bridge dam’s location anglers will find the quick and swift water continues with the addition of some deeper holes along its gravely bottom. Hatches of Hendricksons, Sulphurs, Brown Drakes and Grey Drakes can offer the fly angler some great fishing for brookies and brown trout close to town. Public access is relatively limited to a few bridge crossings and Schumsky’s access.

Just below the Beitner Road crossing is some of the fastest and deepest water in the river and requires even more care when wading. In short order the river meets the former impoundments of Boardman and Sabin dam which have also been returned to their natural river bottom and offers great looking water with lots of potential.

Boardman River Brown TroutThe water in these sections are still in transformation as of early 2019 and it will take another couple of years for the banks to completely stabilize, the planting of vegetation to take root and spread, structure added and ultimately the fish to occupy it. While the fish are still learning the water, anglers will be doing the same because this water resembles nothing like it had for the past 70 plus years.

By removing the dams, the average high temperatures have already dropped significantly making for better fish survival in the warmer months of the year which will only help the non-stocked waters offer fly fishers an opportunity at brown and brook trout.

Lower Section

The water below Boardman Lake – specifically downstream of Union Street Dam located in Traverse City is considered the lower section. At this time, migratory fish are not passed above this dam as decisions on policy and a potential FishPass barrier and sorting system proposed for this location are made.

While considered “Urban Fishing,” steelhead anglers catch fish throughout the fall, winter and spring — often on their lunch break or just after work. In the warmer months, anglers can find Smallmouth, Brown Trout, Rainbow Trout, Pike, Carp, Walleye and who knows what else swimming in it. Not a bad place to cast a line when in town with a limited schedule.

In late August as Salmon begin to move upstream, a weir is placed just below Front St. and is used for egg collection and processing. The fish congregate below the dam as do anglers making it a bit of a spectacle. Watching the fish jump up the fish ladder can be entertaining as is watching the fish processing – if in town this time of year, stop by and have a look.

Anglers can be found in the surf — where the mouth of the Boardman meets the bay — swinging flies or casting baitfish patterns which can bring a Steelhead, Salmon, Lake Trout, Cisco, or Smallmouth Bass to hand.

Boardman River Hatches

Boardman River - Fly Fishing and Matching the Hatch

Hendrickson

There are a number of insects that can be found on the various sections of the Boardman River, and the times of the hatch can depend on which section as the dams and the waters above and below them are affected. The most noteworthy of insects include Hendricksons, Tan Caddis, Sulphurs, Brown Drakes, Grey Drakes and The Hex.

The summer months can offer some good terrestrial fishing due to the overhanging vegetation along the river. When nothing seems to be working on top, try swinging soft-hackles, smaller streamers that imitate small fish or, when all else fails, go with a big streamer on a sink-tip.

Check out the Hatch Chart for specific bug emergence information.

Map & Directions

The Boardman is located in Traverse City and starts 20 miles east near the villages of Kalkaska and South Boardman. Most of the river is Grand Traverse County.

Map of Traverse City and the lower Boardman River.

Map of Traverse City and the lower Boardman River. Click to interact and scroll south for additional mapping.

broadman, brook trout, brown bridge pond, brown drakes, brown trout, county, couties, dam removal, fly fishing, fly-fishing guide traverse city, flyfishing, grand traverese, grey drakes, hatches, hex hatch, kalkaska, ranch rudolph, river, sabin dam, salmon, shecks campground, south boardman, steelhead, sulphurs, surf, ted kraimer, the forks, traverse city, trout, trout fishing the boardman river

Sucker Spawn Egg Fly

Posted by Jeanne Kraimer - March 10, 2012

Sucker Spawn Egg PatternThis fly represents a clump of eggs released from either a walleye or a sucker, where it gets its name. It is easy to tie and looks very realistic when wet. Do know that if you tie it in oranges and in larger sizes to imitate steelhead or salmon eggs, it will tend to be fairly heavy and can easily drag a bit.

The material for the sucker spawn varies; some tiers choose to use angora yarn, small amounts of egg yarn, Aunt Lydia’s Sparkle Yarn to name just a few. Find what looks good to you and have some of these flies in your box. I use Needleloft yarn available at craft shops.

Sucker Spawn Recipe

Sucker Spawn MaterialsHook:      TMC 105 #6-10, Gamakatsu C14S #8 -12, TMC 2457 #8-12
Thread:    Uni 6/0 – Lt. Cahill
Body:       Needleloft in both yellow and light yellow

Tying Instructions

Sucker Spawn - Step 1Step 1.Insert hook into vise and wrap a thread base from the hook eye to above the hook barb.

Sucker Spawn - Step 2Step 2. Take about 5” of each color thread and separate the two strands, using one of each color.

Sucker Spawn - Step 3Step 3. Lay the yarn parallel along the hook shank and wrap back towards the bend in the hook.

Sucker Spawn - Step 4Step 4. Take one strand of yarn and twist in your fingers stopping just before the
material double overs onto itself, then fold over, to make a loop and tie down.

Sucker Spawn - Step 5Step 5. Repeat with both strands/colors and vary it up a little for a realistic look.
(Notice how the different colors are on both sides of the hook shank?)

Sucker Spawn - Step 6Step 6. Whip finish.

Sucker Spawn Egg PatternA complete Sucker Spawn Egg Pattern

Print This Page
egg cluster pattern, egg pattern, egg pattern for steelhead, recipe, sucker roe, sucker spawn fly pattern

Thing-a-ma-Hex

Posted by Jeanne Kraimer - March 9, 2012

Thing-a-Ma-Hex Fly Pattern

Hex fishing at night can be difficult for some just to know where the fly is, let alone if it’s on target and drifting drag- free to rising fish. Glow-in-the-dark fly lines help with their non-intruding glow characteristics, but that doesn’t show you your fly at the end of the leader, where it’s at and whether or not the fish just ate your hex or a natural bug nearby.

The “Thing-a-ma-Hex” uses a miniature, glow-in-the-dark strike indicator (expensive word for bobber) designed to be the post while helping you to keep track of the fly once its on the water. This glowing post also helps to keep the fly landing upright and floating on the water.

Charge the uni-bobber with a bright flashlight being careful not to shine Thing-A- Ma-Hex - Dry Fly Patternthe light on the water and fish you are targeting – that assuredly will put them down. The amount of glow is very subtle, so it doesn’t spook fish while providing an idea of where the fly is  located on the water.

If you are looking for a bright beacon, this is not it. You will want to dress this hex fly with floatant beforehand, and as with any dry fly, keep it out of the water until you are ready to cast. Have fun tying and good luck hex fishing!
 

Thing-a-ma-Hex Recipe

Hook:           TMC 2313 #6
Thread:        Flymaster Plus – Brown
Tail:              Pheasant Tail
Body:           Deer Hair
Hackle:         Brown & Grizzly Rooster Neck or Saddle
Post:            Uni-Bobber – Glow-In-The-Dark

Tying Instructions

Thing-A- Ma-Hex - Step 1Step 1. Put the hook in the vise and wrap a base layer of thread from behind the eye to above the
hook point. Slip the uni-bobber over the eye of the hook about ¼ inch behind the eye and attach to
the hook with figure-8 wraps so it is upright. Make enough wraps and tight enough to keep it there.

Thing-A- Ma-Hex - Step 2Step 2. Trim off a 4-5 pheasant tails fibers and tie in behind
the uni-bobber so the tips extend 1½ times the hook shank.

Thing-A- Ma-Hex - Step 3Step 3. Select two large hackle feathers. Trim some of the barbs to stubs at the
base of the feather to provide some grip and prevent the feather from slipping out.

Thing-A- Ma-Hex - Step 4Step 4. Tie in at the base of the uni-bobber with the underside/convex side of the
feather facing you. After tying in, wrap horizontally up the base of the uni-bobber.

Thing-A- Ma-Hex - Step 5Step 5. Select a long clump of deer hair that is at approximately the diameter of a
pencil. Clean the under-fur and short hairs, then use a hair stacker to even it. Pull out by the
base of the hair and remove the short hairs, while trying to get the proper thickness for the
body which should be aprox. 2/3 of a pencil’s diameter. Tie in the deer hair between the
uni-bobber and hook eye so the tips extends beyond the hook half the length of the shank.
The pheasant tail fibers should extend beyond the tips making for a tail.

Thing-A- Ma-Hex - Step 6Step 6. Even the hair so it is on both sides of the hook shank.

Thing-A- Ma-Hex - Step 7Step 7. Gently wrap the thread backwards while holding the extended deer hair
with your opposite hand. Make for even spaced wraps falling ¼” from the tips.

Thing-A- Ma-Hex - Step 8Step 8. At the end, make two or three wraps a little more pressure, then advance the thread forward
again with increased pressure, crisscrossing the wraps and ending between the uni-bobber and hook eye.

Thing-A- Ma-Hex - Step 9Step 9. Trim the butts of the deer hair and tie down the head covering any deer hair that is exposed.

Thing-A- Ma-Hex - Step 10Step 10. Take both the feathers at the same time and wrap them under the bulbous uni-bobber
and make a heavy parachute style hackle. Tie off and whip finish. Be sure to out head cement
on both the head of the fly and the wraps at the end of the extended body.

Thing-a-Ma-Hex Fly PatternThe end result!

Thing-A- Ma-Hex - Thing-a-Ma-BobberThe idea for this fly was borrowed from a fly called a Thing-A-Ma-Bug which uses non-glow in the dark
uni-bobbers as the post to assist with floatation and easy identification on the water.

Thing-A-Ma-Hex Victim

Print This Page
glow in the dark hex fly, hex dry fly, how to tie a hex pattern, parachute hex, trout on hex
«‹567

Testimonials

Lessons - Learn to Fly Cast or Improve

Casting Lessons

About Ted Kraimer Fishing Guide

About Your Guide, Ted Kraimer

Gift Certificate

Gift Certificates

Fish & Seasons

Trout Fishing Manistee River near Traverse City Michigan

Trout

Carp Fishing West Grand Traverse Bay

Golden Bones / Carp

King Salmon Fly Fishing - Betsie River Near Traverse City

Salmon

Fly fishing for smallmouth bass Manistee River and Northern Michigan Lakes

Smallmouth Bass

Bluegill, Panfish and Bass Fly Fishing on Local Lakes Near Traverse City

Bluegill / Panfish / Bass

Fall Steelhead Manistee River

Steelhead

Ted Kraimer • Current Works, LLC • PO Box 333 • Traverse City, Michigan 49685 • (231) 883-8156

© 2024 Current Works, LLC — All rights reserved
  • Home
  • Guide Trips & Pricing
  • Fishing Report
  • Fish & Seasons
  • Rivers & Hatches
  • Fly Tying
  • Articles
  • Gallery
  • About
  • Sitemap