Tag Archives: bank

The Small Stream Closer (Plus, Excuses You Can Use To Justify Your Own Fly Fishing Failures)

Shielded by a bush, rod pointed behind me, I knee-crawled up to the bank of the stream, hunched down, carefully poked my head around the branches, and watched every brown trout in the pool scatter.

Instantly.

This, I realized, was going to be harder than I thought.

The Old Small Stream Ain’t What It Used To Be

It turns out life happens even while we’re somewhere else (who knew), and in this case, Stream Y – so happy to give up its brown trout in the spring and summer – turned miserly as winter closed in.

Going down in flames, but classy - a Phillipson Bamboo Fly Rod makes even failure pretty

Going down in flames, but classy - a Phillipson Bamboo Fly Rod makes even failure pretty

As I watched a half-dozen small-stream trout disappear (as if they’d been beamed up to the Enterprise), I realized the snow was falling again, so instead of simply being cold and fishless, I was about to become cold, fishless, and wet.

If that sounds as good to you as it does to me, then this may just be your blog post.

As The Options Narrow…

With the general trout season about to close, I thought about flogging the McCloud, but frankly – with fly fishermen reporting catches of big trout on big dries – it seemed a little obvious.

You know, too normal.

And besides, the same pair of small streams I’d been fishing all year beckoned; I’d never fished either stream this late in the year, and I wondered what was happening at altitude.

Were the brown trout spawning? Were bugs hatching? Would streamers work? After a couple storms, were some of the dirt roads even passable?

(Answers: Not really, no, not in my hands, mostly)

Stream Y - the last look this year <sigh>

Stream Y - the last look this year

In truth, I’ve been on a small stream jag the last couple seasons, and I found little reason to stop now.

If you’re happy catching 7″-10″ trout in the summer, why not in the fall?

Which is how I found myself crawling around in the mud and leftover corn snow, wondering how the hell I was going to catch a trout when I couldn’t even get close enough to properly spook them?

Normally, this is the moment when I drag out the camera and take pictures, figuring the fishing isn’t going to get any worse while I’m being artsy, and it might just get better.

Sadly, I’d cheated myself of even that escape; I’d left my digital camera at home, and was reduced to taking pictures with my low-quality (and definitely non-waterproof) cell phone camera.

I forget, so you suffer. That’s symmetry for you.

The Part Where I Make Excuses

No fly fishing trip is complete with an exhaustive list of excuses reasons why the fishermen failed/succeeded in the face of overwhelming odds, and here’s mine:

  • The riffles and current tongues that provided overhead cover (and plenty of bites) earlier in the year were largely vacant; the brown trout had moved to slower (and clearer, and tougher) stretches of water.
  • The leaves on the bushes and trees were gone (depriving me of cover), and the water was low, so the trout were spooky. Damned spooky.
  • I didn’t see a single bug or terrestrial, so the trout simply weren’t looking up.
  • The brown trout were spawning/had spawned/were about to spawn, and were uninterested in feeding
  • The water was extremely cold and hurt my hands, so I was happy I didn’t catch many fish

Ultimately, two deranged very smart brown trout fell victim to my cunning presentations, and while I’d love to suggest I solved the spookiness problem through some kind of Darwinian adaptation, the truth is less impressive: I just made longer casts.

(I didn’t say I was proud of it or anything, but it worked.)

Of course, there is a Big Fish story lurking here somewhere – a monster in the 11″ range which zipped out of a log jam, grabbed the black rubberlegs streamer I was dangling, and ran right back – wrapping me up and breaking me off in the process.

Other blogs talk about big fish - but we show you exactly where they live...

Other blogs talk about big fish - but we show you exactly where they live...

When you’re down, it seems even the trout know to kick you.

Lucky To Be Here

That said, I felt lucky to get what I got. In one sense, I was lucky to be there; it was sleeting when I arrived, but by noon it had grown colder, and by two, it was snowing.

When I finally left, I wondered if this was the storm that would close the road.

Even if it doesn’t, the next one might.

One the drive out, the truck skidded and slipped on dirt road, and I figured I might be the last fly fisherman to spook those trout until June or even July of next year.

Once, I entertained thoughts of skiing into this stream and fishing it long before others could get there, but the distances are daunting. And hell, I’m not even sure if the roads to the road are plowed.

Soon (very soon), the meadows will fill with snow, and they’ll stay that way for better than half the year, and the trout will go on about their lives largely untroubled – until one day the snow melts and a strange shape looms above them, waving a long, skinny stick.

If the romance of that escapes you, then check for a pulse.

Saturday Fishing Trip with Lee

Woke up at 4:45 am on Saturday morning and was heading out to the lake by 5 am with my father in-law Lee Esslinger. He was in town from Burlington, Iowa to help us move out of our house and we figured we could sneak in a little fishing trip before everyone else woke up!

So less than an hour from slumbering out of an 80 degree cozy bed and we are out on the water greeted by 36 degree air temperatures and no sunlight peaking over the horizon yet. Now this time of year I would much rather be out fishing in the afternoon as the water temps warm up just a bit, but we only had a small window of opportunity and boy did we make the most of it!!!

Lee put on a fishing clinic! His bait of choice was a white/chartruese Bomber A crankbait, slow retrieved from the bank back to the boat.

Golden Trout


Hybrid Bluegill


3.5 lb rainbow trout


Pesky Smallmouth Bass


I had to get in on the action a bit as well, but Lee caught most of the fish and I enjoyed just driving the boat and taking the pics!
17 ounce male bluegill


golden trout



And Here are some pics of the biggest fish of the morning. It was a 24 inch rainbow trout pushing nearly 6 lbs! These fish arent supposed to live around here, but we have several lakes with sustaining populations of trophy rainbow trout!





We stayed out a little longer than we were supposed to, but still made it back into town by about 9:30 am and spent the rest of the day moving boxes and furniture. Its a shame that so many get buck fever this time of year, because the fishing is phenominal!

Small Stream Reflections, And Why Fly Fisherman Sometimes NEED a Trout

At some points in your life, a little reflection is needed. Here’s why it should happen on a river.

The next step's a doozie.

The day before trout season opened in 1999, I ditched the Silicon Valley and moved to a tiny mountain town with its own trout river. I spent a chunk of that trout opener just sitting on the bank and watching the river go by, wondering just what the hell I’d gotten myself into.

Then, on the first day of the new millenium (1/1/2000), I fly fished Baum Lake (not much was open in the winter back then) – despite doing some things the prior evening that I did not discuss with local religious leaders.

Due to the hangover, I don’t remember a lot about that trip, but I do remember catching a fair number of Baum’s stockies on a BWO dry, which is a pretty good way to start your next 1000 years. At that point, I had no idea just what the hell I was getting myself into.

Today, I’m packing for Ethiopia, making yesterday’s trip to a small, never-fished-by-me stream – my last as a childless angler.

A couple times after I moved to Dunsmuir, I toyed with the idea of becoming a trout bum/writer/largely single guy, but never did quite pull the trigger. And frankly, I’m happy about that.

I greatly admire people like John Gierach, a man who decided to fly fish for a living and then made it happen (and does so without the posturing, false bravado, and suspiciously compensatory behavior that marks so many who take that route).

Still, admiring someone doesn’t necessarily mean following in their footsteps, and while I’m aware my new adventure represents a right turn from an earlier, more carefree existence, it’s not The End of An Era or anything remotely that dramatic.

Still, it is a moment that demands a little bank sitting, wondering just what the hell I’m getting myself into this time.

Fly fishing trips will do that to you. They force the rest of the world to recede, yet still invite you to ponder the imponderables – a neat trick for any sport.

I’m also aware that when I start thinking too deeply in the above vein, maybe it’s time to simply go fishing.

Which I did.

The Schedule = The Fishery

Due to the madness that has become life, I haven’t fished much lately, and yes, I badly needed to go despite a schedule suggesting zero tolerance for fun.

That’s why – the day before I left to start my pretty-much-around-the-world trip – I ran to a nearby small stream I’d found by accident earlier in the year, but hadn’t fly fished.

Small, pretty and almost certainly unfished.

The Wonderdog sure remembered our previous trip, and his first act – after marking every tree near the truck – was to spot the rings of a rising trout in a pool at the bottom of a small gorge.

I’d seen those rings too, but I didn’t gallump down the hill at speed and plunge headlong into the pool after the trout.

Naturally, he caught nothing, but quickly got over the disappointment after finding the bones of a recently deceased deer.

Thus, the key differences between fly fishermen and retrievers are revealed (stealth and a gag reflex).

Sure he's happy - he smells like dead deer.

I knew in advance there would be no big trout, and there was a chance there would be no trout at all.

That’s inherent in any fly fishing trip (especially one already severely constrained by distance and time), but the thought was a little punishing this time.

I hadn’t fished recently, and because this was something of a turning point in my life, I needed a trout to make the occasion. Any sized trout.

Needed one.

Just one…

Thanks. I needed that.

Deep breath.

With all the uncertainty ahead, it’s nice to know that dogs still roll in dead things, undiverted streams still flow during droughts, trout still eat dries, and fly fishermen can get their heads screwed on straight through the simple act of catching fish.

A portrait of the fly fisher as a newly young man

Working my way upstream was a challenge in stealth, casting, and yes, Wonderdog management, but I managed to land another half-dozen little trout, the biggest of which might have gone seven inches.

I didn’t care of course – this year I’ve been on a small stream jag which pretty much guarantees a dearth of “Slab of the Month” entries.

It also guarantees a slower-paced fishing experience, one which invites some odd photographic experiments, including those which find your tiny point-and-shoot camera half submerged in the water:

Why not experiment with your camera?

Or even fully submerged and looking up, trying to approximate what a handsome, local, small-stream fly fisherman might look to a trout:

Is this what trout see right before they're unhooked and released?

An hour after I started, I was finished.

Deadlines called, bags needed to be packed, people needed to be met, and I ended my last outing as a childless fly fisherman wondering if my daughter would find the same peace on small streams filled with tiny, largely ignored trout.

She’ll see plenty of running water (I’ll see to that), but will she ever find her way to a stream in the middle of a busy day, turning over stones, watching for telltale shadows on the stream bottom, rolling her eyes as her dog plunges into a fishy looking pool, and desperately wanting just one single trout – confirmation the world isn’t tilting wholly off its axis?

Cleary, the future is filled with little certainty. And a lot of possibility.

What trout see?

See you on the Stream, Tom Chandler.

And So It Goes

FISH NOW - BLOG LATER
It's Just Too Good
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.. We'd tell you about it but you wouldn't believe it. The Madison River is elbow-thick and everyone is catching.
.. Enjoy the party, make new friends, give everybody room, spend some time on the bank, have a nip, discuss the differences in Cuban's and Nicaraguan's, join the conga line, but above all remember your manners - it's not life or death!
.. The willow bottoms of Duck Creek and Grayling Creek have fewer folks and more fish. This must be the stuff of stories.
-------

Low-Flying Aircraft: Why Austrian Fly Fishermen May Want to Wear Hard Hats

You know you’re having a bad day when you finally shrug off your responsibilities, get out on the water for a little fly fishing, and relax… Ahh, the peace… The tranquility… The light plane that almost crashes on your head

A fly fisherman fled for his life when he landed something planely a lot bigger than he’d bargained for.

The Robin plane crashed into the bank of the trout lake in Porta Westfalica, Germany, shortly after take off when it clipped a tree with its undercarriage.

Amazingly, the pilot and three passengers walked away from the mangled wreckage with barely a scratch.

“I could see this plane right overhead and it lurched as it hit one of the trees,” said fisherman Felix Ackerman on the other side of the lake.

“It dropped like a stone and the poor chap on the bank underneath it had to run like hell to get out of the way,” he added. (Click here to see a picture of the plane, which is pretty well mangled.)

Maybe tomorrow will be a better day.

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)
-------
.. 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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Big Brown Trout on the Bow River Today ~ August 4

Jim and a Bow River Brown TroutGlenmore to Policeman's Flats
Air Temperature: 12° C ~ 54° F
Water Level: 1.363 m
Water Flow: 122.20 m3/s

Jim (Coquitlam) is a repeat customer of sorts. We had made arrangements to get him out on the Bow River last summer, but circumstances led to a cancellation being necessary. Plans were again made to get him out this summer but it looked like nature might conspire to keep him off the Bow once again. Last night, Jim called to let me know that just east of Calgary where he was hunkered down, a huge thunder storm was letting loose. We discussed the conditions on Bow (poor) and the forecastJim's Bow River Brown Trout (rain, rain and more rain) and decided that Jim should think it over for awhile. Jim mulled it over and called back to say that we should probably go ahead since he didn't know when he might have an opportunity fish the Bow again. When we got to the river this morning, it was raining steadily and the river was quite dirty, with visibility at less than a foot, and as luck would have it, the rain continued until about 2 pm. The plan today was to throw streamers at the bank and it proved to be a decent choice. Jim had many hits throughout the day and ended the day with three brown trout and one rainbow. The fish we landed today were all a good size with these two browns easily falling into the "hefty" category!

[tags]trout, brown trout, bow river[/tags]

Big Brown Trout on the Bow River Today ~ August 4 is a post from: Clearwater Adventures Fly Fishing

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Long Time Comin’


I was quite pleased with my bream success. I had decided on a target of a 12 pounder this year and of course I had met my target on the first fish. A twelve pound bream may not be big by national standards but it's a good fish for here in the NorthWest these days.

My tench target was more ambitious. I wanted a NorthWest 'nine' again and while I knew it would be difficult, it certainly is possible as I've proved in the past. As it turned out though, it was going to be a lot more difficult than I expected. May ended with no tench at all to show for my efforts and I was already lowering my sights. "An eight will do" I told myself.

Why the tench wouldn't come out to play was a mystery but I took comfort in the fact that most other people were struggling to catch them too. Indeed I never even saw a tench on the bank right through May and early June though they could be seen rolling in several places. The weed was one of the big problems. It's grown up much thicker and faster than usual this year and it isn't hard to spot the reason why. This lake usually has upward of a hundred coots living on it but this year I've never seen more than a dozen. The tufted duck are thin on the water too and with so few birds eating the weed it has grown out of control.

Where are all the birds then? Well that's another mystery but I'm guessing that the very cold winter has seen a lot of them off. With the water frozen for several weeks they will have struggled to find food and I expect a lot of them died.

The lake's been very busy too. The controlling club have stocked a lot of carp and the no-hopers who can't catch in a natural water have flocked to it. Every swim is now occupied every weekend - am I glad I work shifts and can fish midweek!
I've fished a different swim every trip, partly to try and find some feeding tench and partly to find an area where I could present some bait without it becoming buried in the weed. I nearly had a success last week when, after fishing hard and feeding maggots for eight hours I fanally got a bite - only for the hook length to part inexplicably in the middle. I was getting desperate and lowered my sights still further, first to a seven pounder and then to a tench - any tench!

Today, at long last I put a couple on the bank. I fished a deeper area - again to try and avoid the weed and as a result I expected to catch bream. I wasn't disappointed there, taking two bream in the night topped by a big-framed male fish. Both of the bream took mini boilies which pleased me rather since I've switched to a new, fruity flavour and this was the first time I've tried them. I was getting quite a few line bites early in the night and picked the two bream up both before midnight so I thought I might be on for a big hit. The clear sky and nearly full moon put paid to that though, all activity drying up once the white face was on show.
In the morning I started to get line bites to the maggot rods at around ten. This went on for some time until at mid-day the first rod was away and I pulled in a plump five pounder. I've never been so pleased to catch such a modest tench but there was better to come. An hour later I struck into a better fish and after a very hard scrap slid the net under a 7lb 14oz female.

I caught two pike too, one of them a double so it was a nice mixed bag.

Things That go Beep in the Night



It's that time of year when I pack away the pike rods and try for something else and as usual, my choice was going to be between tench and bream. It's been a cool, wet spring so far and coming after a particularly cold winter that made me decide to go for the bream first. Tench are certainly catchable just now but I really prefer to do my tenchfishing in warmer weather when I think they are much more on the feed.


It was to be a two-night session this one, monday and tuesday nights to be precise. The carpers that occupy this lake 24/7 seem to favour wednesday onwards so I expected to have my choice of swims and I wasn't disappointed. There were two other anglers set up when I arrived but it's a big lake with room enough for thirty or more so I got the swim I wanted and it was well away from the others. I did get some company as I was setting up though. A family of swans arrived with the cygnets riding shotgun on their mother's back, it was comical to see them hopping on and off as if they were getting the bus home.

The tackle was in a bit of a state to be honest. I hadn't had time to sort it out beforehand and I decided to do it on the bank after the usual rigmorole of plumbing, putting out a marker, clipping up, spodding (for two hours) and setting up the bivvy etc. etc. By the time I'd got everything done I was quite surprised to find that it was after eight in the evening, no wonder I was feeling hungry! Creamy chicken and mash for tea, that was lovely and with the rods out I could settle in for a peaceful evening.

Noises in the Dark
I was fishing three rods, one with maggot and the other two with mini-boilies and corn fished on helicopter rigs. All three were set up with tight lines and heavy bobbins. This makes for quiet fishing since line bites are often not detected this way but it had another advantage. Tench and bream give quite different bites when you're fishing this way. The strong, bold tench always scream off, stripping line from the baitrunner and making the alarm scream but the bream give drop-back bites and often take no line at all.
Sure enough, at around two in the morning the indicator on the middle rod fell slowly to the ground. I pulled into the fish and knew at once that this was a big bream.
12lb 5oz and my biggest from this particular lake, I was well pleased. It had taken two mini boilies hair rigged on a size 12. I put that one back and immediately had a take on the other rod. Sadly though it didn't stay connected when I pulled into it.

The rest of the night passed uneventfully and the day dawned cold and windy. It's normal to pick up a tench or two in the morning when bream fishing this lake but for once this didn't happen and the indicators held motionless for hour after hour. I was pleased really, because as the day wore on it got wetter and wetter. The showers turned to steady, heavy rain and by mid afternoon thunder and lightening paid a visit too. I managed to dart out in between the lengthy showers to bait up, recast and tidy up the general swim but it was never long before another burst of the wet stuff had me running for cover. It was awful, I felt like a prisoner.



The only bright moment of the day was when a green woodpecker came down and started foraging in the undergrowth nearby. These birds are very shy and hard to spot but I even got a picture of this one - albeit a poor one.


Disappointing Conclusion

The rain stopped shortly before dark and the sky cleared which meant that the temperature plummetted. It was a cold night alright and I had to stay wrapped up in the bag all through it. Just one indication, almost certainly a bream since it was a drop-back but by the time I got to the rod it had stopped. I reeled in to try and find out why - it was obvious, the hook was blunt. I must have turned it on a stone whilst reeling in and not spotted it. Attention to detail Eric, that's what catches fish!
I suppose it could be the combination of lots of cold water entering the lake and a cold night that put the fish off. I rather think though that it was just the old bream enigma that did me. No-one has ever really got to grips with this species, though some may claim they have. Does heavy baiting work? Who knows, it didn't this time.
No tench again on the final morning. That's very unusual for this lake but at least it means I made the right decision in going for bream in the first place. I ended up with a good fish, albeit just the one, and that's better than a blank.



Fishing Memories

bow-river-sunset

Memories of Days Gone ByI was in the south end of the city today for a visit to my parent’s house, turkey dinner and all the fixings always entices me. I returned to one of my favourite spots on the Bow River to try my luck and work up an appetite. This particular hole has rewarded me with many monster trout in the past. I remember walking in and tying up a Buzz Bomb or a Panther Martin and hammering trout after trout after trout. It was that good! If the lures were not working I would grab the flies from the tackle box and tie them to a six inch piece of fishing line. I would tie up two flies, usually a bow river bugger and a royal coachman onto my spinning gear. I would use a bell weigh attached to the bottom of the set up and fire that out into the river, bouncing the rig along the bottom and picking it off carefully as to not snag up. That would catch me fish for sure, sometimes very big fish.

I returned today with high hopes and a back pack full of gear. I sat on the bank and watched the water flow by as I tied a hook onto the end of my dull green fishing line. The river had me thinking of all the fish I hooked and landed from that hole. Big browns, fat rainbows, and even some huge rocky mountain whitefish were landed with ease and grace at this location. The area was perfect for trout, a nice gravely bottom with good cover and deep to boot. You knew fish were there and I knew how to catch them. I finally tied up and cast far outwards where the hole began to sink, should be fish in there I thought. Many casts’ later and no fish. Time to switch hooks to spinner bait. The rooster tail went on and outward but still nothing. I sat back and watched the river wondering where the fish were. I never even saw one trout’s snout, or even a dorsal fin for that matter.

I keep it going after the short break and still no luck. I was puzzled and a bit confused at the lack of action. After all this was my hole, I knew it like the back of my hand. After walking up and down the river several times I decided it was time to go get that turkey dinner in me. Back in “the good ol’ days” I would have walked out of my hole with at least four or five fish hooked and landed but not today. The river has changed in this hole, the once prime spawning grounds of the brown trout has vanished into thin air. Actually it was blown out by the nasty flood of 2005. Gone are those days of massive browns from this hole. It’s sad really but that is how nature works. There is little cover left and quite shallow.

The memories will still be with me as long as I live. I will move on and find another fishing hole to call my own. I know other fishermen and women can relate to this article. If you have a favourite fishing hole you would like to share with us than feel free to write a comment and share your story here. I know I would personally like to hear it! Until we meet again on the river, may all your fish be LARGE.

Post from: Bounty Fishing Blog