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The Kamchatka
Peninsula has long been shrouded in mystery.
Only since the disintegration of the Soviet Union
have we begun to understand that what lies behind its jagged North
Pacific coastline - the most abundant and biologically diverse population
of wild rainbow trout, salmon, and char that has ever existed on
Earth.
During Russia's Tsarist period, Kamchatka existed
in the minds of Europeans as nothing more than a blank spot on the
map and rumors of a land abounding with natural resources. In 1724,
curiosity, a sense of adventure and the booming European fur trade
persuaded Peter the Great to commission an eastward exploratory
expedition. The leader of that expedition, Vitus Bering and his
crew were to become the Lewis and Clarks of the eastern hemisphere.
The results of their expedition are famous, having led to the founding
of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatksy and ultimately the discovery of Alaska
by Europeans.
Centuries went by and not much
changed on the peninsula. Then in 1991 the cold hard borders
of the Soviet Union melted away. At that moment, serious flyfishers
everywhere spun their heads in unison toward a distant peninsula
on the North Pacific shore. Kamchatka had been a closed military
zone for the previous century (it’s where the Soviets kept
their nuclear subs), making it a de facto 160,000 square-mile wilderness
preserve with no roads or development of any kind, and very few
people. Looking westward, across the shallow Bering Sea from Alaska,
anglers had long wondered if Kamchatka, at the same latitude and
with the same climate, might harbor similar populations of trout
and salmon. Sure enough, the early rumors filtering in from the
first intrepid explorers hinted of rivers and volcanoes of intense
grandeur; landscapes rife with fish and wildlife. Those in the know
started making plans.
Kamchatka today, while mapped, remains
basically the same; wild, spectacular, inviting. But
words simply don't do Kamchatka justice - it has to be experienced
first-hand to be fully comprehended.
The Fly Shop® has been
going to Kamchatka since the mid 1990's, and today we spend
a good chunk of our lives seeking out the best fly fishing opportunities
it has to offer. Rivers like the Zhupanova, Sedanka, Tigil, Pirozhnikova,
Turuscheva, Ozernaya, Kalgauch, Kvachina, and Utohlok have become
famous over the last decade and were pioneered under the auspices
of The Fly Shop®.
Whether your passion is for
softly presenting traditional dry flies to free rising rainbows,
swinging big streamers for bone-jarring grabs from trophy-sized
trout and kundzha, or you're addicted to the intense rushing surface
take of a fish on a mouse pattern, The Fly Shop® invites you
for a week (or two or three!) of fly fishing that will overload
your senses, hit you with adrenaline, and leave you with unforgettable
cultural experiences.
Our camps are in equal part
fittingly rustic and ultra high-tech. Our Russian outfitting
partners are masters in their field and are respected as such among
their peers. Our North American camp directors are consummate professionals
who've gravitated toward Kamchatka out of the same sense of adventure
and pursuit of high quality angling that has led you to think about
going there now. And our staff at The Fly Shop® will pull out
all the stops to advise, coordinate, and insure that you experience
the same Kamchatka that keeps us and our guests going back year
after year after year...
We’re completely smitten by Kamchatka. It humbles us; reminds
us of why we fly fish; of why we devote so much of our time, our
resources, and ourselves to seeking contact with those elegant creatures
called rainbow trout - because they live in beautiful places.
The time is now to make a pilgrimage to Kamchatka, the
new epicenter of wilderness fly fishing. Give us a call, we'd love
for you to feel it.
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