images by jason jagger

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Viewing 20 posts - 1 through 20 (of 32 total)
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  • #7985
    jason jagger
    Member

    lets start with rising trout for now.Not too many in the low resolution
    file right now,but will convert more soon.

    #67153
    Zach Matthews
    The Itinerant Angler

    These are good, Jason, but would you care to give us a little context?

    #67154
    cole m.
    Member

    Those are awesome!

    #67155
    jason jagger
    Member

    Zach sorry,I was in a hurry…First one is on a pond,eating callibaetis,all
    the rest are on a tailwater,mostly this fall.I think the first one was on Catchmagazine,but the rest are not published.
    I posted a thread on the drake,and will try and not duplicate it?

    #67156

    Fantastic shots .. Big fan of your photos!

    #67157
    lee church
    Member

    Zach
    I posted a thread on the drake,and will try and not duplicate it?

    Entirely different joint over here but introductions are nice too.

    #67158
    Avatar photoTim Angeli
    Member

    Jason,

    Good to see you on this board.  I never get tired of seeing your photos…they are decorated the walls of my apartment at school and my parents house.  Don’t worry about duplicating what you put on the Drake, this is a very different crowd.

    #67159
    jason jagger
    Member

    Thanks Tim,and Corey-congrats on the Midcurrent piece.
    I’m from northwest Colorado,been guiding some,still seasonally.I
    always wanted to get images that were different,but still represented
    our sport.
    Here are some from last October…

    #67160
    Avatar photoTim Angeli
    Member

    #4 from that group is absolutely awesome!  Aside from the light spot

    #67161
    Avatar photoMike McKeown
    Member

    Great, Awesome, Brill… I mean really, they are some of the best I have seen… I loved them in Catch…

    But how??? a little insight would be awesome…

    #67162
    jason jagger
    Member

    Mike-volume is an effective tool-take thousands,get 5.Learn how close
    you can get to a fish without a flyrod,and still be comfortable,sitting
    preferably.Hope for a hatch,hope the rocks aren’t as hard as the last
    place,and once in your spot-don’t move for hours.
    The minimum focusing distance on your lense is important-expensive
    prime lenses in 300mm plus can only start to focus after 12-15ft.They are tack sharp on the football field,but its hard to see a BWO from 6 yards.

    #67163
    Avatar photoJohn Bennett
    Member

    The hard part is the waiting, and hoping for a rise in clear enough water. Got everything but clear water, few of our streams get that clear, so seeing them as they come up is difficult 🙂

    Very nice jason.

    Re lenses.
    The perfect lens might be the Canon 100-400 L. 400mm with a MFD of 6 feet. Another good lens might be the 300mm f4, its MFD is about 4 to 5 feet I beleive.

    This year I plan on trying again with the 500mm f4 and 66mm in tubes. Should get the MFD down to around 6 or 7 feet.

    #67165
    jason jagger
    Member

    john-the 100-400mm is the one I use the most,but also a 70-200mm
    w/1.4x teleconvertor.I’ve tried the extension tubes,makes the AF
    sluggish,and you lose an aperture or two.I try and use nonIS
    lenses,or turn it off,prefer a monopod.No filters,(sometimes a circ. polarizer) no hoods,let the light in!
    Here are some bonefish/pelican shots from venezuela,competition
    at its finest,minnows lose both ways.

    #67164
    anonymous
    Member

    Welcome to the

    #67166
    lee church
    Member

    Great stuff.

    #67167
    Avatar photoJohn Bennett
    Member

    Yeah, it’s a struggle.
    So many variables to contend with and alot of hours sitting waiting possibly on nothing if theres no insect activity 🙂  Been there, done that 🙂   Then you get the days when you have the time and you get a hatch but nothings in range, or fish arent rising 🙂  Then you get the days where it all comes together including sunlight and the fish/bugs get active and then you think to yourself.

    What the help am I doing, theres big fish rising to dries and Im watching it???????

    Lol.
    Seriosuly the biggest hurdle here is water clarity. Only a few small streams are clear enough that you get to see the trout rising in time and they tend to be Brookies. Where I fish for Browns its not as clear and they normally hit fast, by he time they register with youreye and you hit the shutter its happened. :'(.

    #67168

    Sick work man!!!……. like the others, I am a big fan.

    I look at your pics and always think a few things –> patients, persistence and how much work it must take to capture the images. Excellent work, you have made many fishers stoked.

    Thanks for posting the hows and the whys…. interesting stuff and thank you for your insight.

    Looking forward to seeing more of you work in the future.

    #67169
    jason jagger
    Member

    my local tailwater opens April 1,looking forward to that.Hopefully not
    too much algae.Some more insight…

    #67170
    Avatar photoChad Simcox
    Member

    Welcome to the board Jason, great shots! I don’t know how you do it, personally there is no way I’ve ever been able to put down the fly rod and start shooting. Especially when fish are rising like those shots.
    What river opens up April 01? Yampa? The Pan?

    http://society6.com/grainfarmer Fly Fishing and Landscape open edition Photography prints.

    http://grainfarmer.vsco.co/ iPhone photos
    http://instagram.com/chad_simcox Instagram

    #67171
    Eric DeWitt
    Member

    Awesome… glad to have another “pro” hanging around here.  

    Do you have a website of any sort with more of your stuff?

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