Archive for the ‘General Meeting’ Category

Bitterroot Trout Unlimited Breaking News!!!

Saturday, April 10th, 2010

April 15 BRTU Meeting

Don’t forget that legendary rod maker “Boo Boy” Glenn Brackett from Sweetgrass Rods will be presenting the April 15 BRTU program at 7:00 pm at the Hamilton Elks Club.

Glenn says that anyone that has a special bamboo rod they own or have made should bring it down and he will take a gander at it. This is a chance to learn from a bona fide master.

Also, Glenn will be bringing  tickets for chances on a Sweetgrass Rod raffle that the Lewis and Clark TU chapter is raffling off as a fund raiser. This 3-piece, 2 tip, 7’9″ 4/5 weight bamboo rod is being built specifically for LCTU chapter by the booboys!

They will sell no more than 300 tickets for this $2500-valued rod with the drawing to be held at the LCTU fundraising event on October 2, 2010.

Ticket prices are $20 for 1 ticket, $100 for 6 tickets, or $300 for 20 tickets. You won’t want to miss out!!!! So, bring a check made out to Lewis and Clark Trout Unlimited.

If you can’t make the meeting, but still want to snag a raffle ticket, contact Dave Delisi at Sweetgrass (406-684-5440, or click HERE to email him) to buy some tickets.

Fly Fishing 101 at Hamilton High School

Volunteer opportunity!

Fly Fishers of the Bitterroot (FFB) and BRTU are working with staff at Hamilton High School to put on “Fly Fishing 101” for the senior PE class students. Cliff Gibbons from FFB is leading the effort, and Chris Clancy, Eddie Olwell and Jeff Gary are among the instructors. However, additional volunteers are needed to assist with the classes.

Mark you calendar! The  classes will be on April 15, 19, 23, 27 and 29. Morning sessions will be from 9:55am to 11:25am & afternoon sessions from 12:38pm to 2:08 pm.

To learn more or to help out, contact Cliff at cegibbons@bridgemail.com or 406-961-5642.

The state of the Bitterroot by Chris Clancy & Leslie Nyce, FWP

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010
Join us March 18th at 7pm!

BRTU presentation by Chris Clancy

THE STATE OF THE BITTERROOT:
Shifting Baselines from Fishing Regulations to Gene Regulation
by Chris Clancy & Leslie Nyce
MT Dept Fish Wildlife & Parks Wildlife & Parks

Public is Welcome!

Hamilton Elks Lodge • 203 State Street
For more information, call 363-6158 or gchester55@aol.com.

Elks Lodge

elks1651.org

203 State Street
Hamilton, MT 59840
(406) 363-3031
Get directions

January 21 program – Native fish restoration in Montana

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

The January BRTU meeting will be at 7:00 PM Thursday, January 21 at the Hamilton Elks Lodge, 203 State Street. Travis Horton, who is the Native Fish Coordinator for Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks, will give a presentation about Montana’s Native Trout programs. This will be a great opportunity to learn about what makes Montana’s fisheries so special. Attached is the postcard that is being mailed out. Please feel free to forward on to interested friends. If you have any questions, please contact Bill Bean at 363-6158, Fishaus@blackfoot.net

Link to programs offered by Bitterrroot TU


Elks Lodge

maps.google.com

203 State Street
Hamilton, MT 59840-2522
(406) 363-3031
Get directions

December 2009 Bitterroot Trout Unlimited news

Monday, December 7th, 2009

BRTU wishes everyone a Happy Holiday season.

It is probably a bit chilly today for even the most dedicated anglers to be out plying the waters. Plus the blanket of ice and slush complicate that perfect drift with the large stonefly nymph, assuming you have one of the new Polar winter rods with heated guides.

There is no TU meeting this month, but here are a couple of items that might be of interest.

Casting Healthy graphic

Notice of spring Fly-Casting Institute at Marcus Daly Hospital. The October presentation by Dr Tim McCue “Casting Healthy” drew one of the largest crowds we have ever had. A number of members expressed interest in learning when the next clinic would be.

See the flyer (on the left) for information about a session scheduled for next April. Certainly, as our shoulders, elbows, wrists and vision show the signs of wear and tear, many of us can use all the help we can get! The cost is a little steep – about 3 float trip equivalents – but reports suggest that the class is very valuable.

For more information about the casting clinic visit www.flycastinginstitute.com and www.mdmh.org.

Mitchell Slough redux. In case you thought the controversy over Mitchell Slough ended when the Montana Supreme Court rendered its decision, think again! The latest wrinkle relates to some of the landowners establishing feeding stations for migratory waterfowl on their property in an effort to snark duck hunters from hunting the waterway. It is illegal to hunt birds in an area where they are being fed. Ducks are not dumb, so they will quickly recognize that this area not only provides provender but also a refuge from the pesky shotgunners. However, the issue is complicated since a number of houses are right on the banks and also because it would be trespassing to retrieve a bird that landed on the ground instead of in the water.

Stream access only permits recreationists to stay within the highwater marks of the channel. The landowners have petitioned Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks to close the stream to duck hunting on part of the slough. MFWP is exploring solutions to this issue and has scheduled a public hearing at the Bitterroot River Inn at 6:30 pm on Wednesday, December 9. Public comments will be accepted until Friday, December 11.

Here is a link to a Ravalli Republic story that gives more detail. http://www.ravallirepublic.com/articles/2009/12/02/news/news57.tx,

This post was submitted by Marshall Bloom.

Bitterroot River and Other Stories by Chris Clancy, Montana FWP Fisheries Biologist

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

Bitterroot Trout Unlimited General Meeting
April 16, 2009
Chris Clancy, MT FWP Fisheries Biologist


 The Elks Club, Hamilton, Montana

Chris Clancy presented a dynamic slideshow about trout in the Bitterroot River. He shared stories, photos, fish counts and statistics, and graphs about brown, rainbow, cutthroat trout and more.

There were close to 25 people in attendance and the crowd was immersed in his talk and visual aids. Chris asked for questions, and there were some, but mostly he provided us all with current and facinating information about the state of trout and their habitat in the Bitterroot River and it’s tributaries.

He also shared that Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks (his office in the Bitterroot) and the Bitterroot National Forest Resource Staff have an especially effective relationship in monitoring and managing the health of the Bitterroot River, tributaries, and fishery. They share information, personnel, equipment and resources. This relationship and working with the University of Montana at Missoula and Montana State University at Bozeman allow better monitoring, information gathering and in depth studies to be accomplished. We are fortunate to have Chris and other biologists like him. Thank you all!

Chris is available for presentations. You can reach him at:
Chris Clancy, FWP, 1801 N. 1, Hamilton, MT 59840
phone 406-363-7169
email: cclancy@mt.gov

BRTU General Meeting presents Rob Breeding and Guiding on the Flathead River in NW Montana

Sunday, February 15th, 2009

Note: This meeting was cancelled and the speaker will be rescheduled. Check back for a complete schedule of general meetings and presenters. We are sorry for any inconvenience we may have caused.

The general meeting is at the Elks Club in Hamilton on Thursday, February 19 at 7:00 PM. Email Geoff Fitzgerald for more information at fitzes91@yahoo.com.

Rob Breeding is an outdoor writer who has worked for newspapers in Montana, Arizona, California and Idaho. He moved to Hamilton, Mont. in 1992, where he won his first Montana Newspaper Association Award for outdoor writing while working at the Ravalli Republic newspaper. After working in Arizona (where he edited the state’s top outdoors section at the Arizona Daily Sun in Flagstaff) and Idaho, he returned to Montana in 2006. He has worked in journalism as a writer, editor and professor for more than 20 years. He teaches journalism at Flathead Valley Community College and previously taught at Northern Arizona and Idaho State universities.