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UNIVERSITY
♦ C O M M 0 N S ♦
qmqiiggqjr
TIT
APARTMENTS
Property address: 90 Commons Drive
UNIVERSITY
OF OREGON
90 Commons Drive
Furnished 1, 2 & 4
Bedroom Apartments
• Washer/diyer in each
apartment
• Close to campus
• On bus route
• Electronic alarm systems
• Fully equipped kitchen
• Private bedrooms/
Individual leases
• Computer lab, copier
and fax availability
• Heated swimming pool
• Basketball and volleyball
courts
• Superior workout
facilities
• Starting at $320
• Roommate matching
service.
• 10 & 12 month leases
www.capstone
1 -dev.com
FIND THING! IN ODE CLASSIFIEDS (BICYCLES, PETS, CARS, JOBS,
,, ROOMMATES, APARTMENTS, CONCERTTICKETS, PLANE TICKETS,
STUFF YOL> LOST, TYPING SERVICES, ON-CAMPUS OPPORTUNITIES)
R. Ashley Smith Emerald
Three fishing fans make their way down the McKenzie River near the Gateway Mall.
Fishing fanatics are
urged to start early
■Oregon Department of Fish
and Wildlife officials are
predictinga healthy season
By Sue Ryan
Oregon Daily Emerald
Oregon Department of Fish and
Wildlife employees are predicting a
healthy fishing season this summer,
despite below-average precipitation
that is threatening to cause a drought.
This is good news for all fishing afi
cionados, including fly-fishing fanat
ics.
Tim Wright, manager at the state’s
Leaburg Fish Hatcheiy on the McKen
zie River, said now is the time to go
fishing rather than later this summer.
“By late July, we’ll run out of water,”
he said.
Wright said good fishing can be
found on the McKenzie River between
Leaburg Dam and Blue River, where
the hatchery stocks trout. But fishers
need to be aware of current regulations.
“If it is a hatcheiy fish, you can tell
because we clip a fleshy part of the fin
— the adipose — to mark them,”
Wright said. “If the fin is intact, you
need to release them.”
Wright said fishers are required to re
lease eveiything except hatcheiy fish
because the native fish are protected.
The policy is an effort to maintain ade
quate levels of native fish in area rivers.
The area above Blue River is closed
to bait fishing. It can only be fished us
ing flies and lures, which includes spin
fishing and fly-fishing. Devotees attest
to the attraction fly-fishing holds as a
skill sport.
“A good fly-fisher is like an ice skater
or some polished athlete,” Wright said.
“It requires coordinated, rhythmic
movement.”
McKenzie Fish Hatchery manager
Kurt Kremerf said the hatchery stocks
the river with salmon. He said 1,200
salmon have come into the hatcheiy so
far, and the salmon season is open until
Aug. 15. Kremerf said fly-fishing at
tracted him because it has low impact
on the fish population and because he
likes the area.
‘Tart ofit is just the aesthetic value of
being on the river,” Kremerf said. “The
other part is the thrill of seeing the fish
leap out of the water to take the fly. ”
Chris Daughters, owner of The Cad
dis Fly Angling Shop in Eugene, said
he has seen the sport grow in populari
ty ever since the movie “A River Runs
through it” — featuring Brad Pitt fly
fishing in Montana—was released.
“Fly-fishing has grown immensely,”
he said. “It is now considered more of a
leisure sport instead of a specialty
sport.”
Daughters said people are buying
flies now for trout and steelhead. These
include pale morning dun, green cad
dis and little yellow stone flies for trout,
and egg-sucking leech, green butt
skunk and silver hilton for steelhead.
Instructor Chris Culver teaches the
art of how to use the pin-sized flies to
University students through an Out
door Pursuits class. He said spin fish
ing involves a single throw of a rod,
while fly-fishing is a more complex
process.
“The differences are in how to pres
ent the fly,” he said. “With dry flies, you
don’t use a lot of movement, and with
wet flies you may use movement or
youmaynot.”
Culver said fly-fishers try to imitate
the natural life of insects with their
techniques. Wet flies are intended to
mimic the nymph stage of an insect’s
life while dry flies represent the adult
stage, each serving to attract fish in dif
ferent conditions.
The 24 University students in Cul
ver’s class have spent six to eight hours
learning how to cast, and the class has
taken several field trips to fly-fishing
sites in Lane County.
“I would recommend Armitage
Bridge on the McKenzie, Holden Creek
Bridge and Deerhom Road,” said Cul
ver. “There are also a few holes I won’t
tell you where they are because like a
lot of fishennen, I have worked at find
ing [my own] spots.”