Biography
In 1949 my dad put a dough-ball on a hook tied to about twenty feet
of fishing line, attached the line to the big toe of my left foot,
sat me on a dock and threw everything but me into the Panama Canal.
That was when I first began fishing and I've been at it ever since.
Like many people, I progressed through worms, grasshoppers
and lures to fly-fishing. In 1974, I became interested in the scientific
aspects of fly-fishing (Piscatology). Since 1976, I have been keeping
detailed records of fly-fishing as it relates to the weather, the
water, the fish, the feed, the fly, the moon, the catch and an assortment
of other information. This computerized database along with research,
observation and knowledgeable friends has gone a long way to help
me understand the art and science of fly-fishing.
I like to share my information base. I have conducted
fly tying and casting lessons, Lake Limnology and Aquatic Entomology
lessons and written numerous articles or shorts for magazines, newspapers,
bulletins, the inter-net, and a book. At one time I published my own
fly-fishing almanac and I also like to produce maps of lakes. I have
held every executive position in the Kamloops Fly Fishers Association
at least once and was also the KFF bulletin editor for a number of
years. I even served my time on the executive of the BC Federation
of Fly Fishers. Probably one of my most enjoyable experiences was
being ghillie for the New Zealand fly-fishing team during the World
Fly-Fishing Championships.
I still have to go to work each day so don't really
have time to respond to e-mail inquiries. Remember that you don't
have to catch a fish to enjoy the fishing. If you do catch a fish,
that's just a bonus.
Ron Newman