About the Rave

This blog is meant to be an open forum, so please let us know what you think. If you’ve got thoughts, opinions or ideas for stories that we should cover, lay them out there. Or if you think we’re missing the mark, tell us, we’ve got thick skin. Most of all, we hope you enjoy seeing what we’re up to and get inspired to go take your own adventure soon.

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Costa Conservation: Lofty Thoughts from the Low Country

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

We don’t just enjoy catching fish. We also enjoy the dining on the catch of the day from time to time. And it’s no secret that down in the South, most of us know our way around the kitchen and enjoy taking part in the finer things. We had the chance to catch up with two friends of The Watery Rave who happen to be experts in that area, Matt and Ted Lee, also known as The Lee Bros. Matt and Ted grew up in Charleston, SC, and in 1994 founded The Lee Bros. Boiled Peanuts Catalogue, a mail-order source for southern pantry staples such as stone-ground grits, fig preserves and the like. Their first cookbook, The Lee Bros. Southern Cookbook, received the James Beard Award for Cookbook of the Year in 2007. They are contributing editors for Travel + Leisure and the wine columnists for Martha Stewart Living. Here’s a bit of what we talked about:

WR: In terms of trends, movements, even paradigm shifts within the food / restaurant industry – what are you guys seeing specific to the idea of sustainable seafood?

LB: We’ve noticed that the specific species that are proclaimed as overfished or “safe” change gradually over a few years as the stocks fluctuate, which makes the subject murky and difficult to track for the average seafood consumer. Increasingly, though, the restaurant chefs have stepped in and become the conduits for that information, which is a huge help to everyone. Chefs, by the way, are also the people driving the search for local species that are tasty and rare in the marketplace, but abundant in the oceans. Chefs want their food to stand out–and diners are becoming more adventuresome–so an exotic local fish with a clean bill of health is tastier than an endangered bluefin any day.

WR: Have you noticed any impact of the BP oil disaster in the gulf when it comes to buying and cooking seafood?

LB: We’re still seeing some Gulf fish and shellfish coming into markets in the Lowcountry–because it’s a long coastline, and not every fisherman has (yet) been touched by this. But we’re not sure for how much longer that’ll be the case. And for some of our friends, like Susan Spicer, chef of the New Orleans restaurants Bayona and Mondo, who just filed a class-action against BP on behalf of the region’s chefs, the restrictions on commercial fishing that are in place are already keeping them from doing their jobs.

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Expedition Belize

Sunday, June 6th, 2010

We all landed in Belize City in the rain within a few hours of each other. The film crew, photographer and Costa folks shared a sense of accomplishment having all arrived safely after the months of planning that went into this trip. Our goal was to track down some fly fishing guides we’d read about who chase Permit, widely regarded as the most difficult fish to catch on a fly rod.

These guides are leading the fight to protect Belize’s fish rich waters from the development boom that’s trickling down the coast. They’ve done well of late, getting catch and release protection for Tarpon, Bonefish and Permit, but there is much work to be done. We’re particularly interested in the Permit because in Florida, our own backyard, we’ve got zero protection for them; more on that later. We’d find the first guide on our list, Lincoln Westby in a place called Hopkins.

PART ONE, HOPKINS

We drove more than four long hours on bad roads in the rain through the forests of Belize to get to Hopkins. The spouse of one of our crew had sent some mix CDs along, the theme from Star Wars (oddly appropriate with the lightning storm on the horizon) blared as we crossed narrow bridges and took detours caused by the enormous amounts of rain that had been falling for the past couple of weeks. A beautiful, exhausting drive finally came to leg-stretching end when we pulled up to a bar called King Kasava in Hopkins. Lincoln was waiting for us, a Belikin beer in his crushingly strong hands.

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Project Permit

Sunday, June 6th, 2010

Permit are as spooky as hell and are thus widely regarded as the most difficult to catch on a fly rod. If you do get a shot at one, you might go dumb and blow it. Or you might make a great cast to an uninterested fish or sneeze and scare away every Permit on the flats. Or you might get lucky and hook one that makes such a long and fast run that your tackle melts. Whether or not you land one, you’ll likely spend days, months, and years thinking about it and yearning to do it again. “Obsession” is truly an accurate way to describe what this fish will do to your grey matter.

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Expedition Belize & Project Permit: Aaron Adams of the BTT

Saturday, June 5th, 2010

Permit are often referred to as one of the most elusive game fish that swims, captivating salt water flats anglers for years in their quest to catch them. And yet, little is known about them. What are their spawning and migration patterns? How healthy is the fish population? What regulations are needed to ensure adequate stock for future generations? Why do they piss me off so much when they won’t eat my obviously well placed fly? How can someone go 13 years without catching one and still get excited to go try again?

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Expedition Belize & Project Permit: Permit Pursuits by Chico Fernandez

Friday, June 4th, 2010

This is your year—¡Caramba!—to catch a permit on the flats. The right timing is the first step.

by Chico Fernandez.

It’s often said that the weather never gets too hot for permit on the flats. Even in the high heat of summer, when most bonefishing is done early and late in the day, permit are seen tailing during the middle of the day, in weather that is too hot for many fly fishers—particularly if you come from up north and are not used to 90-plus temperatures and high humidity.

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