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Steelhead
Got out of town last Wed and headed 300 m over the mountains to SW
Washington. Just got home, . . . from some good fishing, lots of iced up line and a little work. I'll do a trip report in a day or two but here are the basics: One 18-20+ inch wild steelhead released on a #14 green beadhead (from fly exchange). One at least 24-28" wild steelhead released on a #8, mottled green brass conehead bugger, (fought for 25 plus minutes before I could release it), and another steelhead hooked/broke off on same conehead bugger pattern. Finally, one very fat Brown (about 18") released, on a size 8, mottled green conehead bugger. All taken late afternoon/early evening. How truely strong and wonderful these wild fish are. The river had serverly flooded in early January. Lots of changes. Very cold camper at nite. This is the best I have ever done with steelhead. The river is the Touchet, a few miles below Dayton. Dave |
Steelhead
DaveS wrote:
.....the basics: One 18-20+ inch wild steelhead released on a #14 green beadhead (from fly exchange). One at least 24-28" wild steelhead released on a #8, mottled green brass conehead bugger, (fought for 25 plus minutes before I could release it), and another steelhead hooked/broke off on same conehead bugger pattern. Finally, one very fat Brown (about 18") released, on a size 8, mottled green conehead bugger. All taken late afternoon/early evening. How truely strong and wonderful these wild fish are. Look forward to the report. You nymphing the beadhead and swinging the bugger? - JR |
Steelhead
On Feb 23, 6:09*am, JR wrote:
DaveS wrote: .....the basics: One 18-20+ inch wild steelhead released on a #14 green beadhead (from fly exchange). *One at least 24-28" wild steelhead released on a #8, mottled green brass conehead bugger, (fought for 25 plus minutes before I could release it), and another steelhead hooked/broke off on same conehead bugger pattern. Finally, one very fat Brown (about 18") released, on a size 8, mottled green conehead bugger. All taken late afternoon/early evening. How truely strong and wonderful these wild fish are. Look forward to the report. *You nymphing the beadhead *and swinging the bugger? - JR Yes, per the beadhead nymph, but that take was after I had run the nymph thru the pool and out to the tailout where i let it hang for a bit. The bugger I was swinging, then in the end of the swing letting it bounce along the bottom in a circling eddy where the bottom is deep but the edge is an abrupt root wad that I climb up into. Dave |
TR: Steelhead
On Feb 22, 11:57*pm, DaveS wrote:
Got out of town last Wed and headed 300 m over the mountains to SW Washington. The river is the Touchet, a few miles below Dayton, on a little farmland I own. The river had severely flooded in early January. We needed to re-cover a neighbor's main irrigation pipeline and fix breaks in the road on my sugar dike. We cleared the permission hurdles so we could correct the situation, Thursday AM was spent marveling at how much work a big Cat can do in a few hours. Need to plant some wheat bunch-grass there before Spring. Bad news/good news. So where did the water over-top my dikes? Right next to my camper. It chewed into the dike side but luckily only came up 2 of the 3 RR ties I put the camper on. Come summer the camper goes up on the sugar dike. Thursday evening I fished the nearest pool, with a Coal car, and then some big wetside jointed barbell things in pink and in black. Nothing. Tried orange. Nope. Then said screw it, At least I can get a trout, and went to a #14 green beadhead (from fly exchange). The head of that pool had changed a lot from the high water. Too much tree debris piled up to work it like I did last fall, so I needed to roll cast it lots. The take was after I had run the nymph all the way thru the pool and out to the tailout where I let it hang for a bit. The take was soft, and the fish was easy to fight and release in the shallows of the tail of the pool. The fish was a 18-20+ inch wild steelhead, good looking, but tired I think. Retired for the day to cook some food, warm up and get some sleep. Friday I mostly explored up and down the river with the farm kid, seeing which holes survived, looking for new holes, and good water, and trying to puzzle out how the river would settle out. No fish. Went out again Friday evening, fished 3-4 places. . . nothing, but did see some possible cougar tracks in the mud left by the flood. Managed to get really cold and really appreciative of my sleeping bags. Same story Saturday until evening. Saturday evening I could do nothing wrong. I tied on a #8, mottled green brass conehead bugger, with a muddler-type head behind the conehead. I climbed up onto a couple of logs and a large root wad where i could short-cast the bugger into the fume at the head of this very deep pool. No luck, so after a while i started risking longer casts (lots of long branches and roots to avoid) across the fume, into an eddy that started a swing downstream and across then in the end of the swing letting it bounce along the bottom in a circling eddy where the bottom is deep but the edge is an abrupt root wad that I had climbed up into. I covered the water pretty good. Then, when the bugger was in the eddy there was a take, not a blast, but good and firm. I set the hook and then started a pulling match, with this fish alternately running out into the middle of the rushing current, and then trying to knock me off against various stuff. After a while I started to wonder if I really wanted this fish to stay on. He didn't come fully out of the water but his main strong move was to come out of the depths fast, flap his tail real strong at or near the surface and then powerfully sound. Over and over. I looked at my watch and 25 minutes later got the fish close enough to unhook with the tip of my rod. Neither his ventral or adipose fins were clipped so It was a native 24-28" wild steelhead. Actually I think it was bigger but fact is I did not measure so I really do not know. This is the largest steelhead I have ever caught, but honestly I have caught damn few. After calling my wife and sputtering gibberish for a while I went back to the pool and hooked another steelhead same conehead bugger pattern. This time I was not so lucky and I broke off on one of the brush tangles. I continued to fish using the same bugger pattern Finally, I hooked one very fat Brown (about 18") which put on quite an aeriel show (yeah, I know Browns are not supposed to jump) which I also released. This fish looked like he had the bulk of a 4x6 beam, but was not that long. Browns are legendary on this river, not having been stocked for maybe 10 years, but very rare. I think this might be the same one I hooked and lost on a mouse or crayfish fly last year. Who knows. Kicked back Sunday. Walked the river. Made some plans. Signed on for half a pig. The Palouse wheat is greening up. Noticed lots of equipment being worked on. People starting to talk to me like I am a neighbor. Would I talk to so and so (a wetside Island legislator) about a farm issue? etc. I like these people. Set out for home thinking of when I can come back. Anyway thats my report. For a guy who does't catch many large fish and damn few steelhead, It just doesn't get any better. I don't think I could easily kill one of these wonderful wild fish. Dave |
TR: Steelhead
On Feb 23, 5:50*pm, DaveS wrote:
On Feb 22, 11:57*pm, DaveS wrote: Got out of town last Wed and headed 300 m over the mountains to SW Washington. The river is the Touchet, a few miles below Dayton, on a little farmland I own. The river had severely flooded in early January. We needed to re-cover a neighbor's main irrigation pipeline and fix breaks in the road on my sugar dike. We cleared the permission hurdles so we could correct the situation, Thursday AM was spent marveling at how much work a big Cat can do in a few hours. Need to plant some wheat bunch-grass there before Spring. Bad news/good news. So where did the water over-top my dikes? Right next to my camper. It chewed into the dike side but luckily only came up 2 of the 3 RR ties I put the camper on. Come summer the camper goes up on the sugar dike. Thursday evening I fished the nearest pool, with a Coal car, and then some big wetside jointed barbell things in pink and in black. Nothing. Tried orange. Nope. Then said screw it, At least I can get a trout, and went to a #14 green beadhead (from fly exchange). The head of that pool had changed a lot from the high water. Too much tree debris piled up to work it like I did last fall, so I needed to roll cast it lots. The take was after I had run the nymph all the way thru the pool and out to the tailout where I let it hang for a bit. The take was soft, and the fish was easy to fight and release in the shallows of the tail of the pool. The fish was a 18-20+ inch wild steelhead, good looking, but tired I think. Retired for the day to cook some food, warm up and get some sleep. Friday I mostly explored up and down the river with the farm kid, seeing which holes survived, looking for new holes, and good water, and trying to puzzle out how the river would settle out. No fish. Went out again Friday evening, fished 3-4 places. . . nothing, but did see some possible cougar tracks in the mud left by the flood. Managed to get really cold and really appreciative of my sleeping bags. Same story Saturday until evening. Saturday evening I could do nothing wrong. I tied on a #8, mottled green brass conehead bugger, with a muddler-type head behind the conehead. I climbed up onto a couple of logs and a large root wad where i could short-cast the bugger into the fume at the head of this very deep pool. No luck, so after a while i started risking longer casts (lots of long branches and roots to avoid) across the fume, into an eddy that started a swing downstream and across then in the end of the swing letting it bounce along the bottom in a circling eddy where the bottom is deep but the edge is an abrupt root wad that I had climbed up into. I covered the water pretty good. Then, when the bugger was in the eddy there was a take, not a blast, but good and firm. I set the hook and then started a pulling match, with this fish alternately running out into the middle of the rushing current, and then trying to knock me off against various stuff. After a while I started to wonder if I really wanted this fish to stay on. He didn't come fully out of the water but his main strong move was to come out of the depths fast, flap his tail real strong at or near the surface and then powerfully sound. Over and over. I looked at my watch and 25 minutes later got the fish close enough to unhook with the tip of my rod. Neither his ventral or adipose fins were clipped so It was a native 24-28" wild steelhead. Actually I think it was bigger but fact is I did not measure so I really do not know. This is the largest steelhead I have ever caught, but honestly I have caught damn few. After calling my wife and sputtering gibberish for a while I went back to the pool and hooked another steelhead same conehead bugger pattern. This time I was not so lucky and I broke off on one of the brush tangles. I continued to fish using the same bugger pattern Finally, I hooked one very fat Brown (about 18") which put on quite an aeriel show (yeah, I know Browns are not supposed to jump) which I also released. This fish looked like he had the bulk of a 4x6 beam, but was not that long. Browns are legendary on this river, not having been stocked for maybe 10 years, but very rare. I think this might be the same one I hooked and lost on a mouse or crayfish fly last year. Who knows. Kicked back Sunday. Walked the river. Made some plans. Signed on for half a pig. The Palouse wheat is greening up. Noticed lots of equipment being worked on. People starting to talk to me like I am a neighbor. Would I talk to so and so (a wetside Island legislator) about a farm issue? etc. *I like these people. Set out for home thinking of when I can come back. Anyway thats my report. For a guy who does't catch many large fish and damn few steelhead, It just doesn't get any better. I don't think I could easily kill one of these wonderful wild fish. Dave Congratulations. Makes me (almost) wish I were back there. Glad to see there are still a decent number of steelhead getting up the river. I have heard some horror rumors about walleye in some "lakes" behind the dams getting to smolts and young steelhead. Any truth to that? cheers oz, back from Florida (through Memphis Sat night -- ugghhh) |
TR: Steelhead
On Mar 1, 8:59*pm, MajorOz wrote:
Congratulations. *Makes me (almost) wish I were back there. *Glad to see there are still a decent number of steelhead getting up the river. I have heard some horror rumors about walleye in some "lakes" behind the dams getting to smolts and young steelhead. *Any truth to that? More in the Tuncannon than the Touchet. The guys who really know dryside steelhead on this forum are Bob W. and JR. RW seems to have a handle on the trips in Idaho. Maybe as the political **** calms these guys will post. It would also be good to get some TR reports on the Coastal rivers in WA and ORE. Don't know about the walleye thing. Never caught a walleye, don't fish lakes much, in fact cannot recall fishing a "real" lake in the last 4-5 year4s. Yesterday i did fish an old sal****er log pond running out the low tide into Blakely Harbor. One take in the spill pool but then zip. What predates on what is a real tangle and what intros do to the fishing opportunities versus saving indigenous strains is a whole nudder lebel. Example; when i was a kid my home waters were Farrington lake and the string of mill ponds along the Lawrence brook, a fresh to salt trib of the Raritan River in New Jersey. At the top of the quarry were LM Bass, but the real excitement were the native Eastern Chain Pickerel, the largest of which grow in the garden State. Pork rind frogs tossed with my father's Majestic bamboo fly rod from a home built kayak/Barnegat Sneak-box. Vicious, sharp toothed predators, found in the Lilly pad/pickerel weed back corners of the ponds and lake, sure to feed my confidence that I could survive as a north-woods trapper when high school was over and I left my rural Jersey home, even then in its death struggle with sprawl. Now, someone introduced Northern Pike to Farrington Lake. They have flourished to the extant that a Pike from the lake is now the State record and . . . you know next time i get back there i want to chase em. And in case someone says, "...well big deal, that Jersey, blah blah...." Well i can assure you that fishing is still taken very seriously in jersey and a lot of work and money goes into keeping a lot of choice fisheries viable. I guess there is no easy answer (native vs intro) except maybe that wouldn't it be special if we could have it all ways; save the natives, optimize the ops. Dave |
TR: Steelhead
On Mar 2, 1:21*pm, DaveS wrote:
On Mar 1, 8:59*pm, MajorOz wrote: Congratulations. *Makes me (almost) wish I were back there. *Glad to see there are still a decent number of steelhead getting up the river. I have heard some horror rumors about walleye in some "lakes" behind the dams getting to smolts and young steelhead. *Any truth to that? More in the Tuncannon than the Touchet. The guys who really know dryside steelhead on this forum are Bob W. and JR. *RW seems to have a handle on the trips in Idaho. Maybe as the political **** calms these guys will post. It would also be good to get some TR reports on the Coastal rivers in WA and ORE. Don't know about the walleye thing. Never caught a walleye, don't fish lakes much, in fact cannot recall fishing a "real" lake in the last 4-5 year4s. Yesterday i did fish an old sal****er log pond running out the low tide into Blakely Harbor. One take in the spill pool but then zip. What predates on what is a real tangle and what intros do to the fishing opportunities versus saving indigenous strains is a whole nudder lebel. Example; when i was a kid my home waters were Farrington lake and the string of mill ponds along the Lawrence brook, a fresh to salt trib of the Raritan River in New Jersey. At the top of the quarry were LM Bass, but the real excitement were the native Eastern Chain Pickerel, the largest of which grow in the garden State. Pork rind frogs tossed with my father's Majestic bamboo fly rod from a home built kayak/Barnegat Sneak-box. *Vicious, sharp toothed predators, found in the Lilly pad/pickerel weed back corners of the ponds and lake, sure to feed my confidence that I could survive as a north-woods trapper when high school was over and I left my rural Jersey home, even then in its death struggle with sprawl. Now, someone introduced Northern Pike to Farrington Lake. They have flourished to the extant that a Pike from the lake is now the State record and . . . you know next time i get back there i want to chase em. And in case someone says, "...well big deal, that Jersey, blah blah...." Well i can assure you that fishing is still taken very seriously in jersey and a lot of work and money goes into keeping a lot of choice fisheries viable. I guess there is no easy answer (native vs intro) except maybe that wouldn't it be special if we could have it all ways; save the natives, optimize the ops. Dave I agree. If we could have the best of both worlds without the **** from either....... For instance, it would seem that the coastal Oregon rivers would be ideal habitat for smallmouth bass, but would raise hell with the natives. I have caught a number of stripers from the Umpqua and it doesn't seem to affect the salmon. It is hard to tell, in advance, if an intro species will hurt a native. Rainbows and Browns haven't seemed to hurt natives in the Rockies. But I wouldn't want to see them come into the Donner and Blitzen river running off Steens Mt. in Oregon, where there is redband cutthroat. Crystal ball? cheers oz, doing tailwater later this week |
New Steelhead and Salmon Floats are here!
Just to let everybody know... The new line of steelheader floats are here
for you! If you will be river fishing for Salmon this fall, you may need these as well. If you just trout fish hit "Back Page" on the bottom of the page. http://www.trout-floats.com/big_boys.htm Thanks, Michael. "MajorOz" wrote in message ... On Mar 2, 1:21 pm, DaveS wrote: On Mar 1, 8:59 pm, MajorOz wrote: Congratulations. Makes me (almost) wish I were back there. Glad to see there are still a decent number of steelhead getting up the river. I have heard some horror rumors about walleye in some "lakes" behind the dams getting to smolts and young steelhead. Any truth to that? More in the Tuncannon than the Touchet. The guys who really know dryside steelhead on this forum are Bob W. and JR. RW seems to have a handle on the trips in Idaho. Maybe as the political **** calms these guys will post. It would also be good to get some TR reports on the Coastal rivers in WA and ORE. Don't know about the walleye thing. Never caught a walleye, don't fish lakes much, in fact cannot recall fishing a "real" lake in the last 4-5 year4s. Yesterday i did fish an old sal****er log pond running out the low tide into Blakely Harbor. One take in the spill pool but then zip. What predates on what is a real tangle and what intros do to the fishing opportunities versus saving indigenous strains is a whole nudder lebel. Example; when i was a kid my home waters were Farrington lake and the string of mill ponds along the Lawrence brook, a fresh to salt trib of the Raritan River in New Jersey. At the top of the quarry were LM Bass, but the real excitement were the native Eastern Chain Pickerel, the largest of which grow in the garden State. Pork rind frogs tossed with my father's Majestic bamboo fly rod from a home built kayak/Barnegat Sneak-box. Vicious, sharp toothed predators, found in the Lilly pad/pickerel weed back corners of the ponds and lake, sure to feed my confidence that I could survive as a north-woods trapper when high school was over and I left my rural Jersey home, even then in its death struggle with sprawl. Now, someone introduced Northern Pike to Farrington Lake. They have flourished to the extant that a Pike from the lake is now the State record and . . . you know next time i get back there i want to chase em. And in case someone says, "...well big deal, that Jersey, blah blah...." Well i can assure you that fishing is still taken very seriously in jersey and a lot of work and money goes into keeping a lot of choice fisheries viable. I guess there is no easy answer (native vs intro) except maybe that wouldn't it be special if we could have it all ways; save the natives, optimize the ops. Dave I agree. If we could have the best of both worlds without the **** from either....... For instance, it would seem that the coastal Oregon rivers would be ideal habitat for smallmouth bass, but would raise hell with the natives. I have caught a number of stripers from the Umpqua and it doesn't seem to affect the salmon. It is hard to tell, in advance, if an intro species will hurt a native. Rainbows and Browns haven't seemed to hurt natives in the Rockies. But I wouldn't want to see them come into the Donner and Blitzen river running off Steens Mt. in Oregon, where there is redband cutthroat. Crystal ball? cheers oz, doing tailwater later this week |
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