Category Archives: Fall Fishing

Preparedness

IT'S COMING SOON
A Week And A Half
perfect timing
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.. After a day on the water it's just plain common sense to relax at the neighborhood watering hole. The neighbors are there. The pros are there. The visitors are there. The women are there. A cold one is mandatory.
.. Or, dullards take note, go to the vise in anticipation of the bright moon. Given the weather forecast, and the slowly cooling waters, and the increasing exuberance of the fish; a mouse or three might be in order.
.. The big fish from Hebgen Reservoir ought to hit the popular aquatic parking lots in numbers just about the time the bright moonlight revisits our skies. The timing for the Madison River this year is neigh unto perfect!
.. There is some discussion among us crazies that use this monster fly - "is it the silhouette or is it the wake?" Our cousins across the pond have settled on the wake solution and have a most un-mousy mouse. Their fly is reminiscent of the Bomber so familiar to steelhead aficionados. Can you say riffling hitch?
.. The fisher folks in New Zealand are already calling this the year of the mouse because of the population explosion of invasive mice, and the mouse eating trout down there. And they have the necropsy's to prove it.
.. There is a good crop of mice here too this year. The coyote numbers are down. The perfect spring provided both warmth and wet that yielded good forage, (the wet was hard on the baby grouse though.) And, too, the lingering salubrious weather has allowed frisky behavior among the rodent population as they expand their feeding territories, (along the river banks where grass stays greener longer and seeds mature later.).
.. In New Zealand it's the Beech Tree Seeds: here it's the grass seeds. The rodents of our meadows are feeding voraciously - so will the trout!
.. We've always used a mousy silhouette. This year we're going with all three. An English Torpedo Mouse, a Black Bomber, and a Yellow Headed Mouse. Just one at a time, mind you.
.. Now then, can fly fishers in the neighborhood forgo a night or two at the pub? We'll see.
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Fish The Moon



the moonlit madison
a dimpling nose
touches air

Pleasant Surprise

THE RAIN:
GENTLE AND SOFT
Went To The River In P.J.'s
caught fish
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.. Our second cup was interrupted by a knock on the door. The gray dawn and a spry young neighbor suggested a quick dash.
.. We went. No socks, light poncho, small box, trusty rod, no donuts. Perfect preparation!
.. No visitors at the gate: quick wave, onward. The Madison River glowed in the sparse dawn light. We beat the rain to Madison Junction, but not the bugs. They were awake and cavorting in the half light: diminutive diamonds above a mirror.
.. The sparse hatch of 'littleuns' was just enough to wake up the trout. Caught 3 without retying - bad practice, good fun. P.J.'s soaked, back home.
.. Time for a late breakfast.
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Ask The Experts

SWALLOWS & OSPREYS
They Tell More Than We Know
big wallpaper edition
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.. The rivers are whispering loudly. The birds tell us where to - AND - how to fish. We're out the door and back to the hole, (Baker's Hole.) The fish are just plain exuberant!
.. It's a couple weeks early - maybe more but, we're going head hunting. The big-n- ugly box is going to get a workout.
.. It's going to be a long day. The water will thrashed to a froth. We'll exhaust our self. The neighbors will giggle - unless we bag one. RUNNERS-HO!
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Low & Slow

FISH THE OBVIOUS
Catch The Fish
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.. They are not big but they are feisty! The residents are waiting to dance with you. The cool, clear, low, and under fished waters of Grayling Creek are a wonderful destination right now.
.. The Yellowstone National Park sections of this quaint little creek are running just a bit low and it's an easy read.
.. The slicks are beautifully defined. The dark water is easy to find.
.. There are still some hoppers, caddis, and scattered mayflies all day. The sun and shade hits the water differently by the hour. The trees and bluffs create shadows that invite probing. Get there now.
.. Just about any attractor in size 8 - 16 will draw some action. Follow it with a nymph and the fish will find you. We like the "Royals" this time of year - Humpy, Coachman, Wulff.
.. We're having a quick breakfast. Then up the road to visit the fins in that bit of water just north of the park line. There's a culvert pool we know of with at least one pretty girl in it.
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Slightly Off Center

FALL FLIES FOR
THE MADISON RIVER

The Big-N-Ugly Box
they work wonders
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.. Fall is when the trout in the Madison River are at their intellectual peak. They have seen flies from the four corners of the earth and rejected most of them. They have refused the offerings from both sage fishers and first-timers. They have figured out just what real food looks like.
.. The fish are experimenting less and gobbling more. They've seen it all - almost. The flies below all work well for galling a trout on the Madison River. They work best in the Fall when a sack of groceries is on the mind of sex crazed trout. The combination of impending winter, (less food,) and the urgency of procreation, (more energy used,) join forces to make the following flies worthwhile - starting now.
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(All images are huge - just click on them.)
.. Thunder Creek. When was the last time you heard someone recommend that old fossil? Who do you know that fishes it? They are either very good liars or just plain secretive. The trout in the Madison River haven't seen many of these. They usually eat the ones that they see. Fish it on the swing. Let it straighten out. Wait a little while then strip it in real fast. Old ways. This specimen, (rust, dead head cement and all took a nice fish at 7-mile bridge last October.)
.. Original Olive Matuka. These are tied commercially but their sales are way off. Although infrequently used these days, there is probably one in your fly box. There may be several. They most probably are unused and forgotten. Drag one out and give it an honest try. The early morning is a good time for the darker ones. Dead drifted or stripped downstream in the undercuts may just surprise you.
.. Chenille Matuka. Bright and boisterous, this variant is also tied commercially. It looks too gaudy for most "serious" fishers. It is a visual disaster in just about any fly box. It's not on the lips of the romantic poets of Yellowstone lore. Yet this variety is as good as or better than the original. The tail is splayed and provides nice action in the depths of dark pools. Sizes up to #4 and 4XL are not uncommonly found stuck in the noses of eager trout in the willows below the Highway 191 bridge.
.. Bead Head Rubber Legs. There are a bazillion rubber legs flies. They have secret names as well as commercial names.
.. They can be "Silli" - "Spooky" - "Madisoned" - "Fireholed" - and "Henry's Forked."
.. We use several of them this time of year and all are just grand. This one may be the grandest of all. It gets down quick and is good for 'snap-casting' right above the big roll that ended with a baby splash just over your left shoulder. The combination of long hackle, wiggly legs, copper wire. and a prickly body are often irresistible when slow-drifted across the bottom of a dark pool at sunset.
.. Guide's Secret Rubber Legs. Not a secret any more. Seven or eight years ago this pattern was hidden in dark places and fondled frequently in anticipation of Fall fishing. There are many variations of this fly: the chenille, the number of legs, the head and tail treatment, the size and hook. All seem to work just fine. There are now many commercial versions. Some of the local, (Cameron, Ennis, West Yellowstone,) versions are still proprietary. So be it.
.. Hackle & Legs. Here's another rubber legs pattern that has been embellished with long widely spaced palmered hackle. This one can be made to float with enough goo, or what ever is your favorite flotant. On still, or slick, water in the light of a Gallatin Moon, (July, August, September,) The many dimples create little lenses that allow the light to be seen. Strikes can be explosive - especially after a slight twitch.
.. The fly can also be drowned or fished on the swing in the film or down deep. It reminds us of an augmented Wooly Worm. It's good for a change of pace and is an excellent conversation piece.
.. Woolly Worm. The poor thing: fallen into disuse and disgrace. Often mentioned in the same sentence as the San Juan Worm. The Fall sizes and variations are not within the traditional range for this old sweetheart, (how many do you have?) Sizes in the 2 - 6 range are not uncommon. Long hooks are used by the neighbors. Red buck-tail is used for an afterburner. Very long, (for hook size,) hackle is the norm for this time of year. Traditional yellow and black are frequently the choice for the area around the Barns Holes and the Local Hole. More often, the last couple of years has seen hot orange or bright rust being chosen for the big water just above the estuary on the Madison River.
.. Pheasant & Blue. This streamer is a staple along the Washougal River in Washington and on the upper Clearwater River in Idaho. The pheasant rump feathers are popular in both steelhead and salmon fly patterns. Fishers on the South Fork of the Snake River in both Idaho and Wyoming have used this pattern for a couple of decades to take large migratory cutthroat trout. This pattern is now finding it's way into secret stashes of some of our neighbors. We've not used it but they swear by it - and at it.
.. Brindle & Hen. This popular fly from Northern California locations around Hoopa, Eureka, and Salyer has been modernized by the recent explosion of color in chenille. Similar in form and function to the classic Brindle Bug this fly is not just another pretty face. Tied with a heavy wire under-body it bounces through deep riffles with undulating sex appeal and is hard to resist by submarines parked in the dark spots during mid-day. This is a useful probing fly when tied with no underwire support and the action is leech or eel like. Just the groceries a fresh-run fish is looking for.
.. Bead Head Glitter Nymph. This monstrous cousin to the standard pheasant tail nymph is persistent in the repertory of the big-fish catchers in the neighborhood. It's easy to tie in sizes 4 - 8 and makes an excellent fly for the low clouds and bright overcast days of late September and October. It has nearly replaced the Casual Dress in our box and we don't regret it. Bleached goose biots are becoming rare these days. White will work just fine - or do some yourself.
.. Sinking Hopper. It's just about time for the sheep to call it quits on their hopper box. The feather merchants have run low on their stash and will soon begin touting the flies of fall. Grasshoppers in the high country continue to grow and molt through the first couple of weeks in October. A hard frost will "knock 'em down." A couple of warm days, (even after snow,) will kick some life into them. Drowned, this fly is a nearly irresistible morsel for the big resident trout and a rare treat for the lake run fish of the Madison River.
.. Many of our strangest neighbors use this as a dropper behind a big streamer such as a Woolly Bugger, Egg-sucking Leech, Chamois Leech, or a Brindle & Hen. Common practice is to soak the little dickens in water for a day or two and let the river do your shopping for you. Foam patterns are just too hard to sink - they can be retired now.
.. Dark Spruce Fly. This classic has persisted despite the hawking of "more modern" flies. There are many variants and they seem to be quietly proliferating. We prefer ours tied a bit on the sparse side and choose to use a barred furnace hackle tip of a mahogany color rather than the traditional golden badger hackle.
.. This pattern is old, (1918 - 1919,) and was originally called the Godfrey Special. It was a premier sea-run cutthroat pattern for over half a century. It is still seen along the Madison River, and steelhead streams most everywhere. This is just the tonic for jaded trout around Baker's Hole and the Barns Holes.
.. Furnace & Red. This fly has been a staple for our Fall and Winter fishing since sometime in the late 60's. A couple of dozen were a gift from a fly fisher in Pocatello, Idaho. He may have "invented" it.
.. The name was roughly translated as "BOB'S FLY" - Google shows nothing quite like it by that name. It's a dark fly that is sometimes stripped cross-current at night or in the twilight. It's caught a few big fish. A few of the ancient neighbors here and in I.F. use a similar fly - with different names. (The eyes are Herter's NOS. We have zillions of them and used to think they were important - works just as good without them.)
.. The Little Brown Trout. Dear to the hearts of Montanan's that love our cutthroats. There is a satisfying surge of glee, (it arises somewhere between the epitome and id,) when one of these little flies gets eaten. This old pattern is seen in most fly boxes and is only occasionally used. It is special only in the hearts and minds of ancient neighbors that remember what a glorious bit of water the Snake River was without the scourge of the invasive Brown's. Fish it like the little streamer that it is. Shallow riffles, deep undercut banks, and deep slicks are it's prime hunting ground. Even the Browns will eat it.
.. Stonefly Nymph. They live here. They get dislodged. They float around in the water column and get eaten all year long. Of course they are a Springtime religion, but the trout will eat one that's floating by. Often the older neighbors tell us to "hit 'em in the nose." That's good advice if you know where the noses are.
.. The mundane task of systematically covering a run in the Fall is a bit tedious. It is also rewarding when using any of the many stonefly imitations. Like a dog with a bone, the fish grab it, shake it, and hold onto it with a fierceness like unto a virgin prom queen in the back of an S.U.V.
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.. Baker's Hole Bugger. Straight from Blue Ribbon Flies & Whiskey Creek Fishing comes a fly designed specifically for the water around Baker's Hole. It's a fly that has been "making the rounds" for a few years and shows some staying power. Although supposedly designed "for Brown Trout" the fly is just fine for pricking hungry trout of any stripe.
.. A couple of the neighbors are aficionados of this fly and have already shortened it's name to "Baker's Bugger." They fish it all year long. The fly uses standard Brindle Bug chenille and a two toned tail similar to the Brindle and Hen. These long-tailed buggers have been getting more attention during the last decade. Probably a good reason for that.
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.. P.S. Don't forget your Mouse. Fishing in the park is open until 10:00 PM.

Neighborhood Watch

IT'S NOT
LeHARDY RAPIDS
Indicative - Not Definitive
8 gig sdhc, many clicks
they're here
(1422 x 987 - big enough to tell it's a fish)
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.. The neighbors are a strange bunch. They take their children to a culvert to watch fish jump. They sit in the dirt. They sweat and swat mosquitoes. They keep their dogs out of the water. They count fish in the air. Peculiar behavior - but they're good neighbors.
.. Some of them spend many hours at it. They exercise their trigger finger on motorized cameras. They click away in the hopes of catching a fish in the air.
.. They time the jumps by the simple technique of counting. They look silly. The cameras become sweat and grime coated. And then, wonder of wonders - a fish jumps into the frame. Not professional photography - but fortuitous and fun.
.. This neighborhood shrine is visited this time of year, (and for the next 60 days or so,) in order to judge the run from Hebgen Lake up Duck Creek. It's not a fancy fish weir like the one on the Madison River. It is, however, the source of neighborhood folk tales and a barometer for the upcoming fishing. It looks like this Fall is going to fish good - (barring unforeseen circumstances.)
.. A few folks fish in the pool just below the rip-rap. They don't do as well as the folks that fish the next 4 pools downstream. It seems that by the time the fish get close to the rapids they have just one thing on their mind - jump and run.
.. The Montana Department Of Fish Wildlife & Parks is familiar with this locale. They know it's a favorite stopping spot for fishers on their way elsewhere. They have posted a sign warning about the dangers of invasive species transport.
.. The neighbors usually fish from the bank. A few wade the shallows downstream from the big bend. Most are in sneakers and shorts. They throw the sneakers in a washer and dryer and squirt them with 409. They know.
.. Right now the water is high, swift, cool, and the catching is good. There are lots of ants, mosquitoes, beetles, and hoppers. Cool foggy and drizzly mornings will produce a sparse mayfly hatch. The caddis are here and sometimes in good numbers.
.. The holding pools are well defined and the slick waters are often near undercut banks with vegetation overhanging them. The fish are willing. The neighbors friendly. The elbows dense, and the view can be exciting.
.. A few hundred yards downstream and the fish are more friendly, the elbows thin out, the vegetation thickens, and the catching improves considerably. This time of year it's a good idea to keep a few big and ugly flies in your assortment. Gobbling the groceries is a favorite pastime of the runners before they hit the spawning beds.
.. It's advisable to tread gently and walk well away from the steep dry banks. Erosion is a problem - as is crumbled banks and an unexpected dunking.
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They’re Everywhere

FISHERS & HOPPERS bite the bullet and make friends
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.. The word is out: fish the Gallatin River.
.. Saturday was a perfect day! There was a cool morning with low overcast. Then a bright midday with high overcast. By 6:00 P.M. the clouds thickened and the temperature dropped.
.. Little bugs in the morning, hoppers through the midday doldrums, and caddis in the evening. All this was spiced up by ants, beetles, spruce moths, damsel & dragonflies, and exotic license plates.
.. The parking areas at Bighorn, Fan Creek, and even Bacon Rind, were occupied. Not full, mind you, but "with car."
.. Pull-outs were filled throughout the park section of the Gallatin River. Some Condominiums with wheels were parked in the narrow sections and caused a slowdown in the afternoon leapfrogging from hole to hole.
.. Mostly the neighbors decided that this was the day - and was it! The fish noses were in the air all day.
.. They attacked twigs, foam, leaves, biologicals, and artificials with abandon. It was not quite a popcorn frenzy but the action was satisfyingly brisk.
.. After our recent outing to the mosquito infested jungle of the S.W. corner of Yellowstone National Park, it was pure joy to fish where a gentle breeze kept the mosquitoes at bay. And, thankfully, a breeze gentle enough so that casting was pleasant.
.. We're counting on the weather gods and a bit of voodoo to bring us another day just like it was yesterday.
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.. Yellow and gold and amber have crept into the vegetation color palette.
.. Things are drying and dying. The lichen has lasted longer this year than most years: it too is beginning it's Fall recession.
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.. We've eaten our second helping of spuds, a full pound of bacon, three eggs in an omelet with ham and cheese, and finished our second pot of coffee. That might get us out the door.
.. Off we go to do battle with little bits of water that are known to all and fished by none. We'll return with a report similar to this - Amphritite willing.
.. Now for a second, albeit it smaller, breakfast and a wee bit more coffee; just for drill.
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It’s Early But . . .

ANTICIPATION
Get Streamers Tied
listen to the worm folks
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.. A nice 22" buck Rainbow Trout was taken on a worm at the Duck Creek Highway 191 Culvert Pool yesterday. It was bright, feisty, and very colorful. It was cooked on a grill in foil with lemon, sage, and bacon grease - the flesh was on the pinkish side.
.. Bigger fish were not landed, and several were seen jumping up the little water fall debauching from the corrugated pipe.
.. Reports from the worm-tubers around the Grayling Creek Estuary highlight the catch of fish of the same class. Gulper fishers continue to comment on the bright fish of good size taken from the narrows up to the mouth of the river on the Madison Arm of Hebgen Lake.
.. So we quickly dug out the "big & ugly" boxes and took inventory. The streamer stash was also examined for completeness and diversity. The mouse collection was scrutinized for possible additions.
.. It's not quite time to expect the submarines in any number - but the anticipation of the fleet is always good for the visceral juices.
.. We mention this now, (while the fishing is still just a bit on the easy side,) so that the best excuse for a stint at the bench will be foremost in the cerebrum. Just in case anyone asks.
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(As always, images are giant - wallpaper if you choose.)

Accommodating Neighbors

ALWAYS THINKING OF US
Bugs At The Ready
madison now - gallatin tomorrow
Click on image for detail.
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.. We have genuinely thoughtful neighbors. They have installed some bug attractors just for us. It was a most congenial act and we appreciate it.
.. The attractors are just two doors down the street and just one of many provided by the good neighbors in our town.
.. These attractors function from dusk to dawn and gather up the nocturnal critters. We inspect the areas around the attractors nightly for trout food. This gives us insight into the type and density of critters that the fish will dine on during the following day or week.
.. It's now apparent that the Spruce Moths are beginning their evening ballet and although the density is still a bit low, they are here in numbers sufficient to cause "Acute Awareness Syndrome" in the local piscine population.
.. The Madison River is generally about a week to 10 days ahead of the Gallatin River in density of Spruce Moths, though this can vary on a year to year basis.
.. Right now there are occasional sighting of the bug in the lower reaches of the Gallatin River. They will soon be in the Yellowstone National Park section.
.. Depending on the Madison River water temperature, (just a bit warm right now,) catching will pick up with the addition of the moths to the hoppers already proliferating.
.. Fish the Madison River now, at dawn or dusk into dark. Fish the Gallatin River tomorrow and more through the next couple of weeks at the same times. Catching should be good with the Fall smorgasbord now being offered to the trout.
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