The Ambassador Program is an outreach program established in 2012 to augment Museum membership nationwide and to raise awareness of the Museum, its mission, and its programs. Professionals from all over the fly fishing industry have come together in support of fly fishing history, find out their story below.
A traveling angler with over two decades of experience in fishing and travel, and a decade-long role as an advisor and ambassador, she has pursued remote waters in search of elusive fish species. Through photography and writing, she has shared her unique adventures and stories. While she continues to fish globally, Rebekka now finds great fulfillment in the busy and rewarding life she shares with her partner in the foothills of the mountains.
Website: www.rebekkareddflyfishing.com
Scott Biron cut his teeth learning to tie flies and fly fish back in the 1960s in the North County of New Hampshire. He has fished many of the streams north of Route 26 in New Hampshire and his favorite the Androscoggin River. Scott is an active fly tying instructor for NH Fish & Game and is popular tying and instructing in national, international and regional shows. He was awarded a 2017 NH Traditional Arts Apprenticeship Grant and studied fly tying including Traditional New England Streamer patterns and progressed to Classic Salmon Flies. Since then he has become a Master Artist in the Traditional Arts Program. He had an apprentice working under him during 2021. Scott has a strong interest in historical NH fly tyers and their lost patterns and has published, researched, instructed as well as demonstrated many of these lost NH fly patterns. He enjoys instructing individuals of all ages in the art of fly tying and is known for including the history of these tyers and their flies in his instruction. Scott is considered an expert on large group instruction and offers dozens of classes year round. Each year he is an volunteer instructor at NH Fish & Game’s Camp Barry’s Fish Camp where he instructs over 50 campers in fly tying and fly fishing. Scott is a member of the Catskill Fly Tyers Guild, an Ambassador for the American Museum of Fly Fishing. He is a regular contributor to the Fly Dressers Guild Journal and the NH Wildlife Journal. Scott is on the Partridge of Redditch, Sprite Hooks, Cortland, Riversmith and Ewing Feather Birds Pro Teams. He is on the Ambassador Pro Team for HMH Vises. Ewing has come out with a signature series line of feathers under Scott’s name.
About Drew
Drew Chicone is an author, award-winning outdoor writer & fly designer, photographer, lecturer, and materials expert, whose passion for teaching the art of fly tying has inspired numerous how-to articles, books and detailed instructional guides. He has lived and breathed the sport since he was tall enough to sit at the vise, and his fly creations are well known and in high demand among saltwater anglers and guides across the globe.
Drew has been a FFF Certified Casting Instructor, and commercial fly tier for more than a decade. He is a designer for Umpqua Feather Merchants and is patterns are sold in quality fly shops and have appeared in US and international publications. He is the winner of the 2016 and 2017 International Fly Tackle Dealer Best in Show Saltwater Fly Pattern Award, as well as the 2014 I.F.T.D Iron Fly.
Drew recently partnered with Wild River Press books to publish 3 new titles; “Top Saltwater Flies – Bonefish”, “Top Saltwater Flies – Tarpon” and “Top Saltwater Flies – Permit” The hardcover set is available for sale at www.topsaltwaterflies.com.
Other Chicone titles include Feather Brain: Developing, Testing, Improving Saltwater Fly Patterns (2013), Baby Tarpon Flies (2017), Redfish Flies (2014), Snook Flies (2013), Essential Bonefish Flies: Andros (2013) and Essential Permit Patterns (2013).
In addition to his ongoing work as an educator, Drew ties premium saltwater flies for sale through his company Salty Fly Tying. He is the co-founder of Strip Strike University and frequently hosts destination schools and fishing adventures anywhere saltwater species swim. For more information about Drew, his latest works and hosted trips, visit www.saltyflytying.com. Chicone lives in Fort Myers, Florida with his wife Susan and their daughter Lucy.
Website: www.saltyflytying.com
“A lifelong outdoorsman, I avoided fly fishing for a long time. I thought it was too difficult. At 31 I decided to join Malden Anglers, a local fly fishing club in Saugus, Massachusetts. To say I was hooked immediately would be an understatement. I dove head first into the sport, learning everything I could. Along the way I discovered the therapeutic benefits of fly fishing as well. In 2022 I joined Rifles to Rods, a local veteran nonprofit that takes veterans out fishing. In 2023 I joined the board of directors and became their freshwater program director. We added fly tying lessons during the winter as well as casting lessons during the summer.”
Website: riflestorods.org
Harry is the owner and head guide of Berkshire Rivers Fly Fishing™, grew up fishing and exploring in theBerkshires. Harry has an extensive knowledge of Berkshire river geography as well as Berkshire history. Harry’s love of fly fishing and outdoor adventures led his travels to Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, Alaska, and Oregon, where he worked, played, and explored for more than a decade.
In all, Harry has 18 years of fly fishing experience including 8 years in Yellowstone National Park . He spends his winters researching new territories, tying flies, and steel heading on the Lake Ontario tributaries. Harry’s mission is to share his enthusiasm for the outdoors and fly fishing through his company as well as teaching clients about the importance of sustainable practices within the sport.
Harry believes that it is important for clients to also forget about the day to day while on the river and really immerse themselves in their surroundings.
Website: www.berkshireriversflyfishing.
Captain Mark Dysinger has fished the New England salt most of his life. Although he is skilled in many angling methods, he is most accomplished with the fly rod. As the owner of Flyosophy Charters, he specializes in the northeast slam of striped bass, bluefish, and false albacore. Although he guides in Long Island Sound and its surrounding waters, he is also passionate about freshwater fishing and is a recognized authority on flyfishing for northern pike.
Mark has fished extensively across North America, and his works have appeared in numerous print and online publications, including three books. He has been a featured innovative fly tyer for Eastern Flyfishing Magazine, and his Bunny split fly (aka Musky Bunny Twin Tail) is included in the “deadly dozen” musky patterns in Rob Tomes’ Musky on the Fly. Mark is a regular fixture at the northeast winter fly fishing shows, where he demonstrates fly tying techniques and shares angling insights and strategies. His enthusiasm and attention to detail make him a popular instructor, and his topical presentations are both informative and entertaining. He is an experienced teacher both on and off the water, and takes great joy in seeing others succeed. Mark’s patience and enthusiasm have positively affected many fellow anglers.
Mark resides on the Connecticut coast with his wife Anne and daughter Lucy.
Website: www.flyosophycharters.com
Camille Egdorf grew up splitting the year between Montana and Alaska, where she has spent every summer of her childhood at her family’s fishing lodge on the upper Nushagak River in Bristol Bay. During the off season, they would travel back to Montana where she went to school and fished the famous Big Horn River. At the age of 18 she started guiding for her parents in Alaska and spent the next 7 years honing in her skills not only as an angler but as an individual. Eventually, she started traveling internationally hosting groups of anglers to various exotic places including Christmas Island, Brazil, Belize, Argentina and many others. She was featured in the award winning film, Providence, by Confluence Films which was a feature length film about the piracy issues in the Indian Ocean. She was also highlighted in a YETI film called Odd Man Out which detailed her upbringing and drive for being a female angler the industry. She currently resides in Bozeman, Montana with her husband and works for Yellow Dog Flyfishing Adventures overseeing the Alaska and Christmas Island departments. She continues to travel to Alaska every year in addition to hosting trips around the globe. From a very young age, Camille knew her passion was in the outdoors and would become her life’s work. She also enjoys sharing the sport with others and being a role model for other angling hopefuls who are just getting into fly fishing.
Rachel will tell you that her introduction to fly fishing was a happy accident. While recovering from a back injury sustained wind surfing, her partner Jeff suggested she take up fly fishing. Armed with a Leonard bamboo rod, Finn took to New York’s Ausable River and never looked back.
Finn is a Federation of Fly Fishers certified instructor, and during the fishing season she is a fixture in the Adirondack guide circuit. She is the head guide at the Hungry Trout Fly Shop in Wilmington, New York, and takes clients along the many rivers, streams, and ponds found in those majestic mountains.
She is retired from her summer position guiding trips in Alaska, putting in 10 reputable years at the helm. She is a Patagonia Ambassador and holds pro staff positions for Scott Fly Rods, Airflo, Nautilus Fly Reel, and Lund Boats. She has also appeared on ESPN’s Great Outdoor Games and the Outdoor Life Network’s Fly Fishing Masters.
She is an accomplished artist whose works have been shown in New York City galleries. She has a master’s degree in fine arts from Yale University, and her passion for fly fishing is often evident in her mixed-media works. Much of her art is made for the enjoyment of her friends. According to Finn, she currently enjoys the challenge of Spey fishing and “being humiliated by Great Lakes steelhead” and steelhead from “other destinations yet to come.”
Website: www.hungrytrout.com
Brita Fordice was born in Washington State and learned to fly fish at the age of 8. Spending summers at her family house on the Stillaguamish River fed her desire to explore new fishing water, and pushed her to teach herself to tie flies at the age of 10. After college and a few years spent living and fishing in Idaho and Alaska, she returned to the Seattle in 2005 where she began working for a fly shop and guiding soon thereafter. She has also extensively fished the waters of the Bahamas for bonefish, as well as Florida for migratory tarpon.
Brita is a virtual encyclopedia when it comes to recognizing and procuring tying materials from classic and modern flies. Her guiding for the past few years has been solely based on targeting Puget Sound species such as sea run cutthroat and migratory salmon. In 2016, after almost 12 years at the fly shop Brita was offered the position of technical specialist for Far Bank Enterprises. She now spends her days answering technical questions on Sage/Redington/RIO products and guiding Puget Sound, and ties flies at night. She says it’s the perfect life for her. Brita has been a professional fly tier for many years and was an Umpqua Signature Tier as well. She has been featured in Catch Magazine, The Steelheaders Journal, and written articles featured in Southern Culture on the Fly, Flymen Fishing Co., and others.
Website: www.farbank.com
Adam grew up in the Berkshire Mountains of northwest Connecticut where he learned how to fish at an early age. Instilling in him a passion for fishing, water, and the outdoors, his both of his grandfathers made Adam his first fishing rod at a young age. Adam began guiding on the famed rivers of western Montana, where he quickly learned how to navigate a drift boat on big water. Since then, he has guided on the San Juan River in New Mexico, the Amazon River Basin of Brazil, and the Salmon River in Pulaski, NY, and served as head guide for Housatonic River Outfitters in Connecticut for five years.
Along with being a commercial fly designer and an Ambassador to the American Museum of Fly Fishing, he is a popular guest speaker and a Sage Pro Staff member. Adam is a year-round professional guide holding guide licenses in six states working on the water eleven mouths of the year. He spend his spring guiding for the West Branch Angler in Hancock, NY, the fall guiding for Lake Erie steelhead for Chagrin River Outfitters in Chagrin Falls, OH, the winter guiding on the South Holston River in Bristol, TN, and the summer guiding for Tikchik Narrows Lodge in Bristol Bay, AK.
Email: Adam.franceschini@gmail.com
Steve Galetta is co-owner and outfitter of the Bighorn Angler Fly Shop and Lodge in Fort Smith, Montana. He grew up in upstate New York, where he studied the art of match-the-hatch dry-fly fishing for selective trout. After moving to Montana for college, he never looked back, making Montana his classroom for chasing trout in moving water. “I decided to make the Bighorn River home,” he says, “because it has the longest fishing season in the state of Montana and provides anglers with the opportunity to catch fish on dry flies every month of the year.” For Steve, one of the most enjoyable aspects of working in the fly-fishing industry is passing along the traditions and history of fly fishing to younger generations. His first book, Fly Fishing the Bighorn River, was published by Stackpole Books in 2015.
Captain Sarah Gardner is life-long angler who started guiding over 30 years ago in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, and now guides off the coastal waters of North Carolina. She loves showing clients her little piece of the universe, putting them on big fish and helping them become better anglers. Sarah is also passionate about photography, videography, hunting and fitness. All these endeavors take her away from fishing in a good way, making her a better angler and keeping her from mentally burning out. When it comes to fly fishing, Sarah believes strongly in mindfulness, always paying attention to what Mother Nature is telling her, even when she’s charging a pod of breaking fish. As for pods of breaking fish, Sarah fishes for everything that swims in mid-Atlantic saltwater, including cobia, blues, spotted sea trout, red drum, false albacore, Spanish mackerel, and a variety of sharks. In addition to guiding, Sarah is an Ambassador for Sage and RIO as well as a Patagonia Fly Fishing Ambassador.
Lynne Burchell Heyer (aka Capt. Cowgirl) was born and raised on Nantucket Island, where she’s fished her whole life and where she and her husband are now guides specializing in fly and light tackle fishing. They run two skiffs in the shallows and two center consoles for everywhere else around the island. She also ties flies: some designs similar to bonefish, permit flies tweaked to work on the flats, and bigger patterns for the rip fishery and offshore.
Lynne loves fishing because she’s always challenged by the fish, the conditions, and the anglers she guides. “There is something about watching a striped bass on the flats come up and inhale your fly,” she says. “It’s personal in some way. There is so much that goes into fishing on the fly: the cast, getting the fly to move to entice the bite (what I call feeding the fish), setting, clearing the line, the fight! It can be frustrating but so rewarding when it all goes right.”
Peter is forever grateful that his grandfather took him fishing at a young age and gave him a lifelong appreciation for striped bass. As a teenager, Peter was fortunate to caddie for a gentleman from the Anglers Club of New York who taught him to fly cast, and another enduring gift was given. Today, he enjoys surfcasting and flyrodding as the situation dictates and in addition to stripers, his favorite species are false albacore, bonefish, and roosterfish. Peter is the owner of the Saltwater Edge tackle shop in Middletown, Rhode Island. He currently serves as the Board Chair for the American Saltwater Guides Asociation, and is a member of Rhody Flyrodders, Boston Flycasters, Newport County Saltwater Fishing Club and Rhode Island Saltwater Anglers.
Website: https://saltwateredge.com
Born and raised on the shores of Long Island Sound, John grew up fishing for Striped Bass and Bluefish. He worked in at his local fishing shop where he taught fly-casting instruction, tied flies, and began shore guiding in Saltwater. John attended the University of Vermont where he was the President of the UVM Fly Fishing Club and cultivated a passion for freshwater fishing. He earned his USCG Captains License during college and began guiding in the Norwalk Islands on his Center Console. Following college he worked with Fly Reel manufacture 3-TAND as a product specialist and sales representative. He has been featured in Fly Fisherman Magazine, Catch Magazine, Fly Fish Journal, and Anglers Journal. John has been a contributing author for Anglers Journal since 2014. He has also produced and directed films accepted into the International Fly Fishing Film Festival. John spends his summers guiding fly fishing float trips for Alaska’s Wild River Guides, where he is also the General Manager. He spends shoulder seasons working in Montana at Bighorn Angler managing social media operations and guiding. John has worn many different hats in the fishing industry but he finds his sense of home chasing fish with a fly rod in the saltwater.
Contact:
Email: John@Wildriverfish.com
Website: Wildriverfish.com
Southwest Florida native Capt. Lacey Kelly is no stranger to the flats. She’s spent a lifetime on the water and several years guiding for tarpon, snook, and redfish on fly and conventional tackle. For two years she ran Tres Pescados Fly Shop in San Pedro, Belize, where turquoise waters provided her with the proper backdrop for mastering permit on the fly rod. Now back in Florida, Lacey manages and guides with Florida Outdoor Experience, a hunting and fishing lodge located near Cedar Key in Chiefland. In May and June, you’ll find her in Homosassa putting clients on record tarpon. When she’s not chasing tarpon, year-round sight fishing for redfish, snook, and black drum is her specialty. Working along Florida’s nature coast has allowed Lacey to get back into guiding with a new emphasis on promoting and instructing the sport of fly fishing. Whether she’s tying flies for her next charter or fletching arrows for the next hunt, you’d be hard pressed to find another as dedicated to the outdoors as Capt. Lacey Kelly.
Peter Kutzer has been spending time in the outdoors of Vermont for as long as he can remember. Peter grew up on a small farm in Southern Vermont fishing ponds and rivers close to his back yard. His fondness for fly fishing began in the early 90’s and in 2002 he started working as a Fly Fishing Instructor and Guide for the Orvis Company’s Fly Fishing School in Manchester, VT. Peter truly enjoys introducing people to the outdoors through fly fishing and wing shooting, and it’s evident in his enthusiasm while teaching.
As an Orvis Adventures Specialist, Peter creates technique- and species-specific fly fishing schools from Vermont to the Florida Keys, the Western United States, Canada and the Caribbean. Casting techniques include single hand for trout to bonefish or two handed casting for salmon and steelhead. He is well versed in both fresh and salt water with a fly rod. While he’s not teaching specialty schools, you will see him giving casting tips on Orvis News’ Ask a Fly-Fishing Instructor.
He does a great job of making big fish look small!
Aileen Hitomi Lane, born and raised in Los Angeles, learned how to tie flies before ever wetting a line when she moved to Idaho and discovered the great outdoors.
She started her business, MKFlies, selling custom tied flies. Aileen also served as publisher for Kype Magazine, an online fly fishing magazine on ISSUU.com for 6 years. She is Pro staff for Deer Creek UK, and has appeared in the Emmy-Award winning documentary Rocky Mountain Fly Highway, narrated by Tom Skerritt.
Aileen now resides in Sedona, Arizona but still calls Idaho home. She continues to seek new waters and most recently discovered her love for fly fishing the salt when she visited her hometown in California.
Dave McCoy credits his father, who introduced him to fishing, for sparking his passion for life in the great outdoors. Dave grew up in Eugene, Oregon, which made Hosmer Lake, Crane Prairie Reservoir, and the Deschutes, McKenzie, and Umpqua Rivers his stomping grounds. He quickly discovered the thrill of having a fish on, but it was the awe of his surroundings that instilled his interest in conservation. Dave has dedicated his professional life to the fly-fishing industry and has spent the last twenty-plus years as a guide, outfitter owner (Emerald Water Anglers), conservationist, and fly-fishing ambassador (Patagonia and Costa Sunglass, T&T Fly Rod and Nautilus Reel, and Keepemwet). He is a member of the Echo/Airflo Pro Staff, an IFFF Certified Casting Instructor, and a Snoqualmie River steward for Native Fish Society. Dave is quick to note that he is nothing in his pursuits without his wife and daughter, who, without saying a word, constantly remind him why he is so inspired.
Lori-Ann has spent her professional fly fishing life making dreams come true.“Cast To Your Dreams,” is her slogan for Reel Women Fly Fishing Adventures, the company she launched in 1994 – the first company to take women all over the world to fly fish. The first woman to become an Orvis Endorsed Guide in 1990 – Lori-Ann is considered a pioneer for women who wish to explore fly fishing and a life of fly fishing.
Lori-Ann’s passion has always been casting. She enjoys sharing what the great icons in the sport have shared with her. Years spent at sport shows on the casting ponds with Lefty, Joan, Steve, Tim, Mel – all dissecting the cast before the show doors would open. She put it all together to become a champion distance caster taking away several trophies from ESPN, ISE, IFTD/ICAST and The Fly Fishing Masters. The best job she has ever had was working with Meryl Streep for four months on The River Wild. Her credit is right after Maggie, the dog.
Orvis awarded Lori-Ann with their annual Breaking Barriers Award in 2015. Lori-Ann’s fly fishing life has been an inspiration for generations to come. Her stories around the campfire, drift boat, flats boat or Zoom party reveal a life with special friendships tied to a deep tradition where your fishing friends are sacred.
In 2009 she moved to San Pedro, Belize where she now has her own guide service and fly shop, Reel Belize. Lori-Ann knows she is blessed as she shares her time between the Caribbean flats and the wild trout rivers in Southwestern Montana with her setter, Panga.
Websites: reelwomenflyfishing.com, reelbelize.com, loriannmurphy.com
Derek Olthuis was raised in North Western Montana where he learned to fish, developing a love for the outdoors. At the age of 8, while visiting family in Bozeman, his uncle introduced him to fly fishing on the Gallatin River. Derek has since had the opportunity to fish around the world chasing anything that swims, although his main loves are trout and char. His passion for fly fishing is centered in teaching others about the sport. He hopes to help everyone more fully enjoy their time on the water by helping them to become a better angler. As a guide and fly fishing instructor he hopes each client will learn and develop skills to help them better understand trout behavior and the techniques to catch them. When he is not guiding he can be found taking pictures or filming for the IF4 Film Festival. Derek is an ambassador for Loop Tackle, Kast Gear, Tacky Fly Fishing and a field tester for Orvis. If you ever see him on the water don’t hesitate to ask for or give some fly fishing advice. He believes fly fishing is a sport in which there is always something more to learn.
Al Quattrocchi (aka Al Q) has been a saltwater fly angler, fly tier and fly fishing advocate for over thirty five years. He is a passionate educator and environmentalist who has created fun fly fishing events along the coast of California to introduce new anglers to the exciting and challenging world of saltwater flyfishing. Al is a two-time, IGFA world record holder. Both of his saltwater records were accomplished in a single day with a 12 pound tippet record for Calico bass and twenty pound tippet record for White Seabass. He was recently awarded the Ross Allen Merigold Complete Angler Award by the historic Pasadena Fly Casting Club. His articles, illustrations, photography, and fly patterns have been published in many prominent fly fishing magazines across the country. He founded the popular One Surf Fly event in Southern California, which lasted nine seasons and raised thousands of dollars for non-profits and fly shops up and down the West Coast, and teamed up with Conway Bowman to co-host the Carp Throw Down at Lake Henshaw in San Diego. Al is currently the West Coast regional editor of Tail Magazine. Although Al has fished in many places around the world, his passion is still sight-fishing his local Southern California beaches in search of the ghost of the surf, the elusive corbina. He has recently self-published by Love2FlyFish Media.
Website: www.alquattrocchi.com
Steve is an outdoor and conservation author who lives and writes in the Texas Hill Country. An avid fly fisherman, his works have appeared in various journals including Trout magazine, The Flyfish Journal, Fly Fisherman magazine, American Angler, Tail Fly Fishing magazine, Texas Sporting Journal, Explore Magazine, Under Wild Skies, and many more. His short fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction has been published in Cutthroat: Journal of the Arts, The Houston Literary Review, and Pecan Grove Review.
Steve’s first published book, Casting Forward – Fishing Tales from the Texas Hill Country, (Lyons Press) has received critical acclaim; its sequel, Casting Onward: Fishing Adventures in Search of America’s Native Gamefish, (Lyons Press) will be released on April 1st, 2022.
As is a certified Texas Master Naturalist, Steve is passionately involved in promoting the preservation and conservation of the rivers, canyons, forests, and grasslands of his beloved Texas Hill Country. He is an avid hiker and world adventure traveler who has explored four continents, but who always seems to return home to the spring fed Hill Country streams of Texas.
Website: https://www.steveramirezauthor.com/
In the words of the Dog himself: “I came to fly fishing late in life at the age of 33 and I’ve tried to make up for those lost years before the fly rod ever since. My first cast was at sunset on Missouri Key en route to Key West. It was an instant addiction. Shortly after that I caught my first striped bass on a fly that I tied myself and fly fishing took over nearly every thought and free minute. I read every book about saltwater fly fishing and flies I could find and went to every fly show I could get to where I would stand for hours watching the fly tiers, asking questions and taking notes. I started tying flies commercially in 2000 with my black lab, Jack at my side. It began with a few guides I knew, then a few local shops and eventually an online store.
From the beginning the objective has been to turn out simple flies that are proven to catch fish, be durable and hopefully be part of someone’s fishing stories. The greatest rewards in all of this has been hearing back from customers about their catches on my flies and watching students in the classes I teach tie their first fly and then go out and catch a fish on it. I’ve had the opportunity to fish in a lot of beautiful places for a lot of different species with some amazing people but my favorite water is my home water on the North and South Rivers in Marshfield, MA. In fly tying and in my own fishing it has never been about the number of catches or the size of the fish…it is the stories, the experiences, the places, the people, and the fish themselves that keep me doing this.”
Website: www.muddogflies.com
Kyle has been working in the fly fishing world since he graduated from UNH. He got his start in the mountains of Colorado guiding trout fishing. Since those days Kyle has logged time managing outdoor brands, developing successful content strategies, writing, advocating for conservation and guiding saltwater through his company Soul Fly Outfitters. Kyle’s true passion for the sport is embedded deep within soulful rhythms of the outdoors. The art of the cast and the intricacies of a successful day on the water have always held his attention. Nothing is more satisfying to Kyle than getting to know a body of water intimately. Kyle’s purpose in the sport is to pass along the great tradition of conservation, and he works tirelessly to protect the resources that we all love
Matt Smythe lives with his wife and three kids in the Finger Lakes region in western New York. He grew up fishing for bass and pickerel in the lakes and outlets near his home, learned how to cast a fly rod in grad school, and has fished for pretty much anything that swims in pretty much any water since. Matt is the Director of Communications for the American Fly Fishing Trade Association, a poet, a storyteller, Army veteran, avid outdoorsman, and advocate for Tourette Syndrome awareness. He also bowhunts, telemark skis, and runs trails–sometimes competitively. He considers himself fortunate to get to travel a great deal for both work and fly fishing, and even more fortunate to meet kindred spirits who share the need to advocate for the sport we love and the places it takes us.
Rich Strolis grew up in the foothills of the Berkshires of Western Massachusettes where he cut his teeth on the plethora of smaller and larger bodies of moving water. Post college and while juggling another demanding career, he became recognized as a guide on the ever popular Farmington and Housatonic Rivers in Connecticut for the better part of 10 years. He later transitioned his work to commercial tying, speaking engagements and teaching many facets of both fly fishing and fly tying across the Northeast and Eastern seaboard. His fly patterns although based out of the Northeast, have a strong following and relevancy across the globe and have been tied and fished by many as a result of his library of online videos. He is a signature fly designer for the Montana Fly Company, which currently produces over 25 of his patterns. His patterns have appeared in several national magazines and books, including Flyfisherman, Eastern Fly Fishing, Strip Set, Fusion Tying, Caddisflies and 50 Best Places, Fly Fishing The Northeast to name a few. His first book was released in January 2016, Catching Shadows Tying Flies For The Toughest Fish And Strategies For Fishing Them which details a wide cross section of his patterns and was a top 10 seller in its first year on the shelves. Rich is currently a Pro Staff member and advisor for a wide array fly tying and Flyfishing companies including Regal Vise, Partridge hooks, Solarez UV resins, Enrico Puglisi materials, Hatch premium fly reels, and Flycraft. Rich is a very well rounded trout fisherman, but his passion lies in chasing trophy trout and various other apex predators on streamers with a pretty impressive list of locations he’s fished outside of New England. He lives in Simsbury, Connecticut, with his wife, Megan, and two daughters, Tessa and Nora.
Website: www.catchingshadows.com
April Vokey began fishing as a toddler. By the sixth grade, she was saving her allowance for weekend visits to the local tackle shop where she eventually stocked her ‘hand-me-down’ Plano box with every lure and bait she could afford.
After discovering a passion for fly fishing in her teens, April Vokey soon dedicated her entire life to the pursuit, eventually culminating in her founding Fly Gal Ventures in 2007 at age 24. The company was built on the basis of the promotion of both education and encouragement to those who looked to chase their dreams.
She has since established herself as a respected authority in the sport and has traveled the globe in pursuit of gamefish on a fly rod.
Her writing has appeared in numerous industry leading publications including Fly Fisherman, Fly Rod & Reel, and Fly Fusion magazines. Also a popular TV personality, April has been featured on the Outdoor Channel’s Buccaneers and Bones series, 60 Minutes Sports, The Steve Harvey show, Discovery Channel’s Refined, Discovery’s/OLN’s Close Up Kings, WFN’s Fly Nation TV, and her own Shorelines with April Vokey. Feeling limited by airtime, she has since branched out with her podcast, Anchored with April Vokey, a series dedicated to archiving the stories and personalities from some of fly-fishing’s most influential people. The show is one of the only fishing podcasts solely recorded in a face to face environment where April ensures to ask questions apart from the norm.
Email: info@aprilvokey.com
Websites: flygal.ca, www.aprilvokey.com
On a trip to the Roach River in Maine 30+ years ago, Scott’s father introduced him to fly fishing, which planted a seed that would lead him to
spending most of his life involved in the sport. In 1989, Scott’s dad started a small sporting goods store (the Bear’s Den) selling firearms, archery, bait and fly-fishing gear. Scott has worked there ever since! Over 20 years ago, they decided to make it fly specific, and have never looked back. They find the fly-fishing community to be an incredibly good group of people – concerned with the environment and preserving its wildlife for the next generation, as well as passing on a love of the sport. Scott and his sister now run the Bear’s Den Fly Fishing Shop, and they just celebrated the 30th anniversary of the store’s opening.
Website: www.bearsden.com
Jess Westbrook and his wife Laura founded the Mayfly Project in Arkansas in 2015. The project’s mission is to support children in foster care through fly fishing and to introduce them to local water ecosystems. This introduction to a rewarding hobby provides opportunities to have fun, feel supported, and develop meaningful connection with the outdoors. In 2016, the Westbrooks partnered with Kaitlin Barnhart, who was running a similar program in Idaho, to form the now-national project. Jess’s idea for the project came from his own use of fly fishing as a therapeutic tool to manage anxiety. In 2014, Jess and wife Laura’s son, Kase, was born. Soon after, Jess started experiencing intense anxiety attacks, which he had never had before. He had been fly fishing since he was six years old, but something changed for him when a friend stepped in to help by getting him out on the water. “I found that when I was on the river, I forgot about everything but fishing,” explained Jess. “When we are fly fishing, we are so concentrated on casting, mending, presenting good drifts, etc., that we forget about everything else around us.”
During this time, Jess began mentoring children in foster care. The timing was perfect. He was looking for a way to give back to the community through the sport that had helped him over some tough hurdles. It seemed that during a most chaotic time in their lives, foster children too could find an anchor in the outdoors. They could take a break from being worried and simply spend time in nature catching fish. They could find home rivers even while feeling like they didn’t feel have a home.
Website: https://themayflyproject.com