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Breakfast on Wednesday was French toast made with the some of the last
of Jacci's homemade bread and bacon. By mid-morning I had loaded my rod and gear into the back of VT's truck and we took off down Brokaw Boulevard toward the main stem of the Big Rock. We hit pavement in McLeod and turned to the south. The Big Rock was sheathed in a succession of small ranches. Each had its irrigation allotment and the green of the alfalfa fields starkly stood out from the surrounding low cliffs that were spattered with sage and brown grass. The higher slopes were pine covered and as we moved up the valley we were soon in the dry forest also. We paused at Natural Bridge Rec Area and then proceeded past the inholdings of guest ranchers and vacation developments. Another short stop to check out Falls Creek campground and then on to the public water upstream. We topped a rise and suddenly the river commanded us to stop. A pullout appeared and we tumbled out of the Toyota and suited up. VT scrambled down to the pocket water immediately below the truck and I walked a hundred yards down to where the bouldery run began. I tied on a olive Stimulator and on my first cast was tight to a small brookie. Then a rainbow of about the same size followed. I cast upstream along the slack water near shore. I followed the drift of the fly for a while, turned my head to check on VT's progress, turned back and saw that the fly was gone. Quickly tightening my line I felt the throb of a fish bigger than the 9 inchers I had just taken. The fish ran out to mid stream and headed down toward VT. Its vault from the water revealed the pink flank of a rainbow. VT was approaching me now and I told him I had a nice fish on. He watched me as I snubbed the fishes run and a few seconds later I eased a 15" rainbow into my net. Finally. This was more like the Montana I had imagined. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0248a.jpg First "Big" Fish's Home VT headed upstream into the braided riffles that stretched above the rapids we had been fishing. I stayed on my rock and continued to cast. When no more fish responded I too headed upstream, first crossing the river in a shallow spot. I took a few more fish, bows and brookies at the runs head and then fished the banks, undercuts and mid-stream depressions in the riffly water above. Unlike the West Big Rock, where fishing the water seemed to be an exercise in futility, the main stem seemed to hold fish right where you'd expect fish to be. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0258a.jpg Riffles The river divided around a large, low island. The majority of the water was flowing to the island's east but a smaller part flowed around the willow lined west shore of the glorified gravel bar. As I was clattering along the high bank to get in casting range of a nice pocket of green water there was an explosion of water to my left. All I could see was a dark brown form hidden by the willows off about 50 feet from where I was standing. Suddenly I was wishing for the bear spray that I had left in the cup holder of the Tundra a couple hundred yards downstream. But one more surge and the brown form revealed itself as lacking in either claws or a slathering, purple, fang rimmed mouth. Instead the improbable hat rack of a moose's antlers preceded the equally improbable bulk of the rest of the moose up the bank. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0249a.jpg We're Not in Wisconsin Anymore, Cosmo. The moose stopped and stared at me. I tried to read some meaning in its body posture but my expertise in moose ended with the occasional sighting of a highway moose on the road up to the Boundary Waters. I edged slightly away to the rim of the high gravel bank. The moose appeared unconcerned and began to munch on some of the surrounding vegetation. I fumbled with my camera bag, trying to dislodge the camera from its plastic ziplock baggy without scaring the moose. But the moose didn't seem to care. I had the camera out and shot a quick picture, expecting the animal to bolt at any instant. But he seemed to have no intention of bolting. I snapped picture after picture, cursing my lack of optical zoom on the Canon. Finally I began to edge away, picking up a stick first to... what... defend myself against half a ton of charging moose? But the moose didn't seem to be the charging kind and maybe even yawned as I disappeared into the willows on the island's center. When I got to the river's eastern run I found VT casting to the far bank. I told him there was a big moose just the other side of the willows. When I told him it was a bull and not a cow he seemed relieved. It turned out that the moose to be concerned with this time of year were cows with calves not big, angus-like, willow munching bulls. Who knew? By silent assent VT kept on fishing up the riffles while I fished the riffles back toward the rapids by the truck. I continued to take fish. Brookies and bows. When I got down to the rapids I rock hopped the shore and cast into the pockets behind the boulders picking up the occasional 10 inch rainbow on a yellow Madam X. I kept waiting for VT to appear and when he didn't I walked up the road toward where I assumed he would appear. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0256a.jpg Montana Exotic http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0261a.jpgmg] Pocket Water A little way from the river I found myself strolling along the shores of a beaver pond. But it was a far cry from the muddy brown ponds back in Lincoln County. There were luxuriant weed beds on its bottom laced with weed free alleyways with what appeared to be a marl bottom. What it most closely resembled was a spring pond back in northern Wisconsin. And there were the rings of rising trout speckled over its surface. What the heck, I took a cast, leaving on the Madam X I had been using in the river. Expecting the fish to flee in terror from that monstrosity, I was instead rewarded with a splash and the tug of a 9 inch brook trout. I continued to take fish, all brookies except for one slightly larger rainbow, until I had worked the pond over from end to end. I then walked back to the truck, no VT, and then back up the road, past the pond to where I finally met him walking the gravel back toward me. In response to my query he replied that he hadn't done that good, which surprised me since his skill far surpasses my own. And he seemed quiet as we drove back down past the vacation developments of the lower river. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0259a.jpg Beaver/Spring Pond When we got back to the cabin we held a conference on the fate of the rest of the day. After a lunch of Hot Sausage Lentil Soup It was decided that, even minus the day's expected mountain storms, we would take the drive over the Swingley Road to Livingston. There we would enable my 8 year old son Mason's fading addiction to trains with a visit to the Railroad Museum and then maybe hit the Yellowstone where it flows through town. Vt announced that he would follow us in his truck to make sure we made it. And then he would continue down into Yellowstone for the rest of the week. Awkward silence. Oh. Fumbling for words, I ascertained that we weren't forcing him out with our general Clevelandishness. Instead he said that being this close to the waters of the northeastern section of the Park had just been too much for him. That he had considered a day trip down there but the 7 hour round trip for a few hours fishing just didn't make sense. And not spending time at those places that he loved made even less sense. And we had to agree. These trips we make are, after all, excursions into not only new country but also into countries of memory and expectation. There is no rational need to be in a small cabin in Montana or along a cutthroat river in YNP. But there is an emotional need. And in the end it is that need that gives us the rationale for these forays. So it was with a high degree of regret but also of understanding that we parted with our science teacher from Baraboo. Then we loaded up the car and took off down the Swingley Road. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0262a.jpg The Swingley Road The road was actually better than expected. It skirts the feet of the Absarokas, twisting and climbing/descending past small ranches and farmettes. Then it makes one long slow drop into the Paradise Valley, with Livingston to its immediate left. I hovered outside the train museum while Jacci and Mason took the tour inside. It is directly opposite Dan Bailey's fly shop and when they emerged we went in to look the place over. When we left I had the info that the warm water closures had not made it that far upriver. So, after a stop at the local grocers, we drove down to the riverside to see if there was a place to fish. We ended up at a boat landing near the town dog walking park. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0263a.jpg Local Culture We had been warned that this was big water and it was. It flowed chalky blue, several hundred yards wide past the parking lot. Jacci rigged her rod and I got Mason and me set up and we clambered down the bank of the river. We fished the edges, as VT had advised us, and I was rewarded with a couple of swirls at my hopper pattern. But I was overwhelmed by the unfamiliarity of the scene. That and the shards of glass that were on the shingle beach, apparently washing down from the old landfill the dog park had been built on, made the experience uncomfortable. After a short while we reeled in and set off back down the Swingley road to the cabin. We were back on family time. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0264a.jpg Homeward Amidst the Alpenglow Geo.C. |
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![]() "George Cleveland" wrote in message ... ...We were back on family time. Once again, you raise the bar. Wolfgang |
#3
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![]() "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "George Cleveland" wrote in message ... ...We were back on family time. Once again, you raise the bar. Wolfgang yeah, pretty work, indeed. that first shot of the "first big fish's home" is one of the finest compositions i have seen by a roffian. yfitons wayno |
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