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The Middle River Group, LLC

fly fishing, conservation and politics.

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  • Who is Tom Sadler

tenkara, conservation, communications, politics

Key grip and trout wrangler at the Middle River Group, LLC. Playing Doc Holliday to the Wyatt Earps of the fish and wildlife conservation world. Deputy Director, Marine Fish Conservation Network. Guide and instructor, Mossy Creek Fly Fishing. Freelance outdoor writer.

OWAA announces location of 2016 annual conference

February 23, 2014 By Tom Sadler

FROM OWAA NEWS

Explore Big Sky Country with OWAA

The Outdoor Writers Association of America invites you to join us July 16-18, 2016, in Billings, Mont., for three jam-packed days of sessions, demos, hospitalities and more.

Rims-Biker-Photo-Credit-Billings-Chamber-CVB-low-rezThe Billings Convention and Visitors Bureau/Billings Tourism Business Improvement District, Southeast Montana Tourism and local chair Jack Ballard look forward to welcoming OWAA to “Montana’s Trailhead.”

Ballard says, “There are enough diverse outdoor recreation opportunities in the Billings area and beyond to keep an OWAAer exploring for a month. We can’t wait to show you around!” Pre- and post-conference trips can include mountain biking the Rimrocks surrounding the town, fishing the Yellowstone or Bighorn rivers, hiking, exploring natural and Western history sites, touring local breweries and distilleries and more.

And as 2016 also marks the National Park Service’s centennial anniversary, don’t forget about Yellowstone National Park and the surrounding area.

“An hour from Billings, the village of Red Lodge perches at the base of the Beartooth Mountains, a gateway community to superb hiking and backpacking destinations in the Absaroka-Beartooth Wilderness and the front door to the Beartooth Highway [into Yellowstone], described by the late Charles Kuralt as the ‘most scenic highway in America,’” Ballard adds.

Rimview-Skyscape_LRBetween your pre-and post-conference adventures, the host hotel and meeting space for the 2016 conference is the Holiday Inn Grand Montana, which boasts $109/night room rates that include use of their indoor pool and sauna, fitness and business centers as well as convenient access to I-90 and a complimentary airport shuttle.

Demo Day will be held at the Montana Audubon Conservation Education Center. The Center’s site is a 27-acre former gravel mine that has been transformed into wildlife habitat with more than 65,000 trees and shrubs planted for habitat restoration since 1998. The facility also include three large ponds with access for fishing, canoeing and non-motorized boating.

Blue Creek Shooting Complex and Preserve will host the Shooting Day program. Located just nine miles outside of town with more than 250 acres of scenic property, the complex is a sought-after destination for shooting enthusiasts from across the region, providing ample facilities for archery, rifles, pistols, sporting clays, airguns and even dog training.

Rimrock-Bluffs-and-Yellowstone-River-Photo-Credit-Billings-Chamber-CVB-low-rezReturning to Montana for the first time since the storied 1987 Kalispell conference, the 2016 OWAA conference is sure to provide outdoor activities and experiences to suit any attendee, all while allowing the opportunity to boost your career, expand your professional networks or promote your products or campaigns.

Details about the Billings conference will be posted at http://owaa.org/2016conference as they become available.

The Coin of the Realm is Action

February 16, 2014 By Tom Sadler

Absaroka Wilderness Kiosk Sign_edited-1“All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.” -Edmund Burke

Readers of the conservation topics in this blog know that I take the conservation of our public lands very seriously. At its core is the firmly held belief that access to healthy habitat creates recreational opportunity that leads to economic activity.

When those values are threatened by our elected officials or thinly veiled campaigns to discredit the good guys then we must do more than hope things will change.

To that end, below are some recent articles that shine a light on the importance of our public lands and the perils of doing nothing. Each is worth a read, but more importantly each must be seen as a call to action.

Todd Tanner’s post, Insidious: Let’s Stop Our Losing Streak from The Flyfish Journal and reprinted in Hatch Magazine is the strong medicine and dead on target.

When you think about it, none of this is complicated. If we want to save our tarpon, we need to get off our asses and fight. The same applies for our trout, and our salmon, and our bonefish, and our smallmouth bass. Nobody else gives a shit whether we’ll still have steelhead in 50 years. Nobody else cares if our snowpack melts away and our rivers run low and hot; nobody else gives a damn if ocean acidification renders our favorite saltwater fisheries bare of everything except an endless armada of jellyfish. It’s on us. Here’s a news flash: it’s always been on us…

Passion, though, has its price. We have to stand up for our fish, and for our waters. If we don’t, then we’re nothing more than parasites boring into nature’s soft underbelly, taking nourishment but giving nothing back; assholes of The Ancient Hybernian Order of Assholes. Is that a little harsh? No, it’s not. If we hope to wade into cold, clear rivers 20 years from now, and if we hope to stalk pristine saltwater flats, then we have to pay the piper. And like it or not, the coin of the realm is action.

As Tanner points out, we are our own worse enemy. We hope the same approaches that worked 20 years ago will somehow bear fruit these days. I think it is a fools errand. We need more voices raised in protest, more pitch forks and torches, more hard and pointed questions asked of our elected officials. The days when the political maxim “go along to get along” was king are dead. Long live the king.

The battlegrounds will continue to be our public lands. The attacks are nothing new and have a one-sided notion of what the public benefit is. Rarely is it of benefit to those of us who cherish the great outdoors.

In Government Property, Stalking the Seam’s Matt Copeland reminds us of the economics of lost adventure and the soul healing value of public land.

What kind of tracks does the X-Box leave, and what do they grow into? I have no intention of finding out. My son, like most kids in the rural west, is surrounded by “Government Property”, known locally as the BLM, the Forest Service and the State Sections. Management of these public lands is a perpetual controversy, the discussions of which often center on economic value. Aldous Huxley was right when he  wrote of an economics driven dystopia in A Brave New World that, “A love of nature keeps no factories busy.” But it’s equally true that no factory ever built the foundation of a life. And given time to mature, the investment of a bike ride, a sunburn and few fresh scratches can yield one hell of a return.

Pity those who put such meager value of the places that Copeland writes of. Pity them and turn their asses out of elected office.

When it comes to public lands, access is the key. In We Need Our Public Lands Now More Than Ever,  Hal Herring writes of the somewhat two-faced approach some in Congress take when it comes to providing access to our public lands.

While political leaders in Western states may address hunters and fishermen with loud brays of support for the Making Public Lands Public Act (who could hate such an aptly named bill?) the first real question burns: do they support the reauthorization and full funding of the LWCF? Some Congressmen these days seem to delight in declaring their wholesale, never, never, never, opposition to any new purchases of public land (they call it “adding to the federal estate”). Such an ideological stance would make a eunuch out of the Making Public Lands Public Act — there would be cases where we lose access to tens of thousands of great public hunting because some politician has an ideological disdain of using our own money to buy a few acres. In the real world of second jobs and paying for houses and kid’s boots and college bills, we don’t use one-size-fits-all ideology to make our decisions. We should not allow our elected leaders to do it, either, even way up there in the rarefied air of politics.

As a veteran lobbyist of 30 years I know better than most how the game is played. The chances of the sportsmen’s groups and the outdoor recreation community ponying up the kind of money needed to compete with industry and the large political agenda machines are slim to none and slim just boarded the train home.

There is one element of the game where we do have a chance, it is the court of public opinion. Sure it is hard work; it means writing letters to the editors, doing blog posts, commenting on BS stories and calling out elected officials when they vote against our best interest. We need to make our voices heard over and over again.

Here is an idea, how about a score card on Congress? Bob Marshall offers a very compelling case for it in his Field and Stream post Sportsmen’s Groups Should Publish a Congressional Report Card.

Yet once those disappointing votes are cast, the folks working on our behalf at sportsmen’s conservation groups have to swallow their pride and continue to treat the offending pols as if they’re sportsmen’s best friends. They turn the other cheek again and again because they know just how much more damage that pol can do if he or she gets really angry.

These votes against sportsmen’s interests have been more numerous and egregious in the last four to six years than ever before. Because they have brought funding for conservation almost to a standstill, the damage is piling up.

Veteran sportsmen’s lobbyists know irreparable harm is being done and are desperate to get sportsmen off their shell buckets and vocally into the fight.

Count me as one of those desperate veterans. The organized groups have been and continue to fight the good fight but they need more support from the rank and file outdoorsmen and women who care deeply about our great outdoors.

Marshall’s idea has merit if for no other reason than to stop fooling ourselves into thinking our elected officials give a damn about what we do. Marshall hits the nail squarely when he says “When the offending congressmen and women know they won’t be held accountable for their votes, where’s the deterrent?”

Tanner’s right too, it’s on us, it’s always been on us.

Have you had enough yet? Are you ready to start keeping score?

Speak your mind while you still have time.

Rhodo and Sato Reviews

January 4, 2014 By Tom Sadler

New_Tenkara_Rods
Rhodo (L) & Sato (R)
Tenkara USA Image

In my review of Tenkara USA’s new triple zoom rods the Rhodo and Sato, I included links to a couple of reviews. As folks get their hands one these rods more reviews are popping up.

In order to have reviews handy they are listed and linked below. I will add more as I find them.

The Fly Line: Fly-Fishing: Tenkara rods don’t have to be long to be effective

Troutrageous!: OMFG! Two New Tenkara USA Rods

Tenkara on the Fly: TenkaraUSA’s new rods: the Rhodo and Sato

Discover Tenkara: Exciting New Tenkara Rods and Field testing the Sato

Tenkara Talk: New Sato & Rhodo Rods from Tenkara USA

Teton Tenkara: New Tenkara USA rods: Sato and Rhodo — review  and Tenkara USA Rhodo — review on You Tube.

Tenkara USA: New Tenkara Rods Sato and Rhodo Triple-zoom with “Keep Your Plug”

If you have a review you would like included, let me know in the comments and I’ll post it here.

Want one?

You can get the Rhodo and Sato in the store or online from Mossy Creek Fly Fishing and there is no charge for shipping!

Five Great Trout Streams for Tenkara (fini)

December 31, 2013 By Tom Sadler

This is the final installment and instead of pointing out just one more great trout stream, here is a way to see all of Virginia’s trout waters courtesy of the GIS folks at the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries.

They have created Google Earth files for the Commonwealth’s trout waters and when you load the file on Google Earth you can explore to your heart’s content.

So grab a tenkara rod, now you have no excuse not to “ramble out yonder” and find some new water to try.

Enjoy!

A tip of the Kromer to Mike Kelsey of the Appalachian Tenkara Anglers Facebook group for the heads up on this cool tool from VDGIF!

source: http://www.dgif.virginia.gov/gis/google-earth-files.asp

Tom and Lily search for new water

Adding to the Kromer Collection

December 29, 2013 By Tom Sadler

A while back I decided I needed an alternative to a ski hat for the winters here in the Valley. My first Stormy Kromer was a nice refined green wool one (it has even been to the White House). I later added a waxed cotton one to use when guiding in the rain.

At some point this fall/winter I mentioned to MRS that I fancied a buffalo plaid one. To my delight Lily gave me one for Christmas.

A Kromer for all seasons
A Kromer for all seasons

If you don’t know about Stormy Kromer hats you should. They are classics.

The Tie That Binds

December 28, 2013 By Tom Sadler

Guiding for Mossy Creek Fly Fishing is one of the more enjoyable and interesting parts of my crazy life. But what adds to the enjoyment is the community that is part of Mossy Creek Fly Fishing. The owners are guides themselves and they bring the positive guide attitude to the shop and those of us who work with them.

It is hard to explain to friends and clients how just much fun it is to work with the Trow Brothers but Two Fisted Heart Productions has done a great job in this trailer for Blood Knot, their entry in the 2014 Fly Fishing Film Tour.

Take a look.

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