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#1
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In the morning Jacci whipped up some Campers' Breakfast, a
conglomeration of potatoes, eggs, swiss cheese and bacon. This after having pot roast the night before. This was not shaping up as a big weight loss trip. Then VT and I suited up for the 3 mile hike to the Meadows. VT wore his breathable waders and wading boots and took a few flies and a lanyard of essentials and a small backpack with rain gear and two bottles of water. I, on the other hand, loaded a backpack with my waders, wading boots, full vest and net, water filter bottle and a few snacks and stuff. It probably weighed 25 lbs! I also strapped on my bottle of bear spray. What a strange feeling, to be "arming" myself in self defense. I hadn't done anything like that in... never. I've carried plenty of shotguns and rifles in my life but other than a pocket knife I've never carried something with the thought of inflicting damage on an attacker. The aerosol made me feel more like a poseur than anything else. But the Forest Service wrangler who was putting horses out to pasture in the Service barn by the cabin had said that hikers had reported a grizzly in the Meadows recently. So weighed down with the accoutrement's of my hobby and by a can of bear protection the size of a big can of Off, I set my feet on the trail with VT. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0234a.jpg Manicured Trail The trail started off almost manicured. Other than having to dodge the occasional horse dropping we wandered up and down an easy trail. Even after we crossed into the official wilderness the trail seemed civilized. We crossed a bridge that hung over a bouldery section of river and then began to switchback up the side of a low mountain. VT is younger and in better shape than I am. I was puffing pretty hard by the time we reached the trails high point. As we rested in a grove of trees, hiding from the 80 degree sunshine another wrangler came by with an empty packhorse. He told us it would all be worth it in 30 minutes, when the Meadows came into view. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0239a.jpg Exposed Slope http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0243a.jpg Meadows in View Eventually the trail started down and there spread before us were the storied Meadows. They were framed by mountains, with the highest lying snow patched in distance at their head. To the west were the limestoney cliffs of Lion Mountain, pockmarked with caves. To the east were low slopes who hid the bare peaks we had seen at the top of the trail. VT was ready to fish almost as soon as we arrived. He was casting a red Humpy, which had been his go to fly almost from the start. Soon he had a small brown. I, on the other hand, struggled into my waders and boots and slipped my heavy vest over my sweaty shoulders. Stringing up my rod and tying on a Madam X, I walked up about 200 yards above VT and began to fish. Nothing. I crossed over to the east bank and began to fish down towards VT. The water was crystalline. There were alleys through the weed beds and even some patches of bare sand and gravel. After changing from the X to a scud to a Pass Lake I still had caught zip. VT walked by and reported a handful of small browns and cutts caught. There were also at least two other groups of hiker/fishermen that passed by, including a guy with a bear bell wearing Golden Retriever. Finally I saw a rise. The fish was about 50 feet straight across from me, near the opposite bank. I had returned to the Madam X, this time a yellow one instead of the olive I had used before. A few drifts and it was engulfed. A small rainbow (I checked for the slash marks under the jaw... none there). Another fish rose, this time a little closer and the Madam took him. Then another fish came in, but this time it had the throat if not the spotting pattern that revealed at least some cutthroat ancestry. The rises had stopped so I walked up stream towards VT. He had also had a flurry of activity on mostly small fish but, like me, it had slowed and stopped. We decided to try the fast water near the end of the Meadows. All this time the clouds had been building up to the west, mostly hid by the mountains but still going from the white cumulus of the morning to those of a grayer sort. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0247a.jpg The Meadows and Gray Clouds Building We fished the outlet. I lost a smallish fish. Then the thunder started to announce that the clouds had gotten their act together. The other groups passed us, on their way out. Finally caution won out over my fishing jones and we decide to high tail it also. I quickly shed my gear and we started up the steep climb away from the Meadow's valley. Before we reached the top it began to rain. We trudged along. I bloviated to VT about how at least this mud wasn't like the mountain gumbo of Colorado that soon encased your feet in 10 pound dirt boots. The mud then began to stick. I walked over the same bare stretches of trail that had cooked us on the way in, hunched and cold. My rain gear was keeping me dry enough but with each peal of thunder I stuck my neck further into my jacket, my face pointed down, afraid that if I looked up the mountain I would see what... ? The mighty hand of Jehovah (or Zeus) poised, lightning bolt in hand, to chortingly strike me down? I don't know. But I didn't want to look up that slope and see doom... so I didn't. And then it began to hail. So what do you do. Stand in a grove of trees and become lightning bait or risk being on an exposed slope and have the ice batter you to pulp. What good now, you with your little can of pepper juice, small man? But the hail didn't increase to the size of softballs or golfballs or even marbles. Instead it was almost of a slushy consistency. And soon it stopped all together. Other than slipping on some of the more sloping sections of trail, where the half inch of mud sheared free from the layer of dusty trail that underlay it, we negotiated the remaining section back to the bridge in very fast time. And on the other side the rain became a drizzle. We were soon passed by an outfitter with some dudes who were, what else, all duded up in new cowboy clothes. How the horses, especially the one carrying the young kid, would negotiate the slippery trails above was on both our minds. Then we were passed by two fishermen going up with no more equipment than I would wear wading the Prairie on a warm June evening. And then two girls passed us going up wearing the cheap, clear plastic rain jackets, the kind they sell for 99 cents at Wally World. And I was left wondering, did I make much ado about nothing, up there on the slopes above the West Boulder? We made it back to the cabin. The rain came down the valley in occasional vollies of showers. We tied some flies. Jacci cooked dinner, this time steak with carrots and mashed potatoes. After dinner, while VT and Jacci sat and talked, I announced I was going fishing. The horrible feeling was building in me that I had traveled 1200 miles and I was only going to catch a few small trout. Smaller and fewer than I could catch a few miles from my front door. I went waderless, rock hopping the boulders that bordered the stream up from the cabin. I had a small Bivisible tied on my leader, with a red underbody. VT pronounced it a Soldier Palmer when I showed it to him later. It took my first brown, about 7 inches long, in the riffle water a hundred yards from the cabin and then a second, about 9 inches, in the water stilling at the foot of a rapids, just above that. Then the short dusk ended. Sitting on the porch that evening VT and I decided we'd try the main stem of the Boulder the next afternoon. And maybe take a trip to Livingston when the afternoon storms rolled in. Geo.C. |
#2
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On Wed, 16 Aug 2006 22:46:20 -0500, George Cleveland
wrote: In the morning Jacci whipped up some Campers' Breakfast, a conglomeration of potatoes, eggs, swiss cheese and bacon. This after having pot roast the night before. This was not shaping up as a big weight loss trip. Then VT and I suited up for the 3 mile hike to the Meadows. VT wore his breathable waders and wading boots and took a few flies and a lanyard of essentials and a small backpack with rain gear and two bottles of water. I, on the other hand, loaded a backpack with my waders, wading boots, full vest and net, water filter bottle and a few snacks and stuff. It probably weighed 25 lbs! I also strapped on my bottle of bear spray. What a strange feeling, to be "arming" myself in self defense. I hadn't done anything like that in... never. I've carried plenty of shotguns and rifles in my life but other than a pocket knife I've never carried something with the thought of inflicting damage on an attacker. The aerosol made me feel more like a poseur than anything else. But the Forest Service wrangler who was putting horses out to pasture in the Service barn by the cabin had said that hikers had reported a grizzly in the Meadows recently. So weighed down with the accoutrement's of my hobby and by a can of bear protection the size of a big can of Off, I set my feet on the trail with VT. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0234a.jpg Manicured Trail The trail started off almost manicured. Other than having to dodge the occasional horse dropping we wandered up and down an easy trail. Even after we crossed into the official wilderness the trail seemed civilized. We crossed a bridge that hung over a bouldery section of river and then began to switchback up the side of a low mountain. VT is younger and in better shape than I am. I was puffing pretty hard by the time we reached the trails high point. As we rested in a grove of trees, hiding from the 80 degree sunshine another wrangler came by with an empty packhorse. He told us it would all be worth it in 30 minutes, when the Meadows came into view. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0239a.jpg Exposed Slope http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0243a.jpg Meadows in View Eventually the trail started down and there spread before us were the storied Meadows. They were framed by mountains, with the highest lying snow patched in distance at their head. To the west were the limestoney cliffs of Lion Mountain, pockmarked with caves. To the east were low slopes who hid the bare peaks we had seen at the top of the trail. VT was ready to fish almost as soon as we arrived. He was casting a red Humpy, which had been his go to fly almost from the start. Soon he had a small brown. I, on the other hand, struggled into my waders and boots and slipped my heavy vest over my sweaty shoulders. Stringing up my rod and tying on a Madam X, I walked up about 200 yards above VT and began to fish. Nothing. I crossed over to the east bank and began to fish down towards VT. The water was crystalline. There were alleys through the weed beds and even some patches of bare sand and gravel. After changing from the X to a scud to a Pass Lake I still had caught zip. VT walked by and reported a handful of small browns and cutts caught. There were also at least two other groups of hiker/fishermen that passed by, including a guy with a bear bell wearing Golden Retriever. Finally I saw a rise. The fish was about 50 feet straight across from me, near the opposite bank. I had returned to the Madam X, this time a yellow one instead of the olive I had used before. A few drifts and it was engulfed. A small rainbow (I checked for the slash marks under the jaw... none there). Another fish rose, this time a little closer and the Madam took him. Then another fish came in, but this time it had the throat if not the spotting pattern that revealed at least some cutthroat ancestry. The rises had stopped so I walked up stream towards VT. He had also had a flurry of activity on mostly small fish but, like me, it had slowed and stopped. We decided to try the fast water near the end of the Meadows. All this time the clouds had been building up to the west, mostly hid by the mountains but still going from the white cumulus of the morning to those of a grayer sort. http://fishskicanoe.tripod.com/geopics/IMG_0247a.jpg The Meadows and Gray Clouds Building We fished the outlet. I lost a smallish fish. Then the thunder started to announce that the clouds had gotten their act together. The other groups passed us, on their way out. Finally caution won out over my fishing jones and we decide to high tail it also. I quickly shed my gear and we started up the steep climb away from the Meadow's valley. Before we reached the top it began to rain. We trudged along. I bloviated to VT about how at least this mud wasn't like the mountain gumbo of Colorado that soon encased your feet in 10 pound dirt boots. The mud then began to stick. I walked over the same bare stretches of trail that had cooked us on the way in, hunched and cold. My rain gear was keeping me dry enough but with each peal of thunder I stuck my neck further into my jacket, my face pointed down, afraid that if I looked up the mountain I would see what... ? The mighty hand of Jehovah (or Zeus) poised, lightning bolt in hand, to chortingly strike me down? I don't know. But I didn't want to look up that slope and see doom... so I didn't. And then it began to hail. So what do you do. Stand in a grove of trees and become lightning bait or risk being on an exposed slope and have the ice batter you to pulp. What good now, you with your little can of pepper juice, small man? But the hail didn't increase to the size of softballs or golfballs or even marbles. Instead it was almost of a slushy consistency. And soon it stopped all together. Other than slipping on some of the more sloping sections of trail, where the half inch of mud sheared free from the layer of dusty trail that underlay it, we negotiated the remaining section back to the bridge in very fast time. And on the other side the rain became a drizzle. We were soon passed by an outfitter with some dudes who were, what else, all duded up in new cowboy clothes. How the horses, especially the one carrying the young kid, would negotiate the slippery trails above was on both our minds. Then we were passed by two fishermen going up with no more equipment than I would wear wading the Prairie on a warm June evening. And then two girls passed us going up wearing the cheap, clear plastic rain jackets, the kind they sell for 99 cents at Wally World. And I was left wondering, did I make much ado about nothing, up there on the slopes above the West Boulder? We made it back to the cabin. The rain came down the valley in occasional vollies of showers. We tied some flies. Jacci cooked dinner, this time steak with carrots and mashed potatoes. After dinner, while VT and Jacci sat and talked, I announced I was going fishing. The horrible feeling was building in me that I had traveled 1200 miles and I was only going to catch a few small trout. Smaller and fewer than I could catch a few miles from my front door. I went waderless, rock hopping the boulders that bordered the stream up from the cabin. I had a small Bivisible tied on my leader, with a red underbody. VT pronounced it a Soldier Palmer when I showed it to him later. It took my first brown, about 7 inches long, in the riffle water a hundred yards from the cabin and then a second, about 9 inches, in the water stilling at the foot of a rapids, just above that. Then the short dusk ended. Sitting on the porch that evening VT and I decided we'd try the main stem of the Boulder the next afternoon. And maybe take a trip to Livingston when the afternoon storms rolled in. Geo.C. Ack!! A couple of quick edits. In this part of the TR I refer to the West B------ River and the B------ River. Of course I was nowhere near the B------ River nor to any of its parts. We were on the BIG ROCK RIVER and the WEST BIG ROCK RIVER. I apologize for my senile utterings. Also Jacci informs me that we had steak, salad with homemade croutons and American fries. Not mashed potatoes and carrots. I'm so ashamed. Geo.C. |
#3
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![]() George Cleveland typed: snip What good now, you with your little can of pepper juice, small man? (I just liked this line.) This is fun! Keep 'em coming, George. -- TL, Tim --------------------------- http://css.sbcma.com/timj/ |
#4
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Wonderful trip report, George. Thanks for taking me there with you.
Dave |
#5
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![]() "George Cleveland" wrote in message ... In the morning Jacci whipped up some Campers' Breakfast, (snip) Geo.C. excellent. yfitons wayno |
#6
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![]() "George Cleveland" wrote in message ... Outstanding George, -tom |
#7
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![]() Tim J. wrote: George Cleveland typed: snip What good now, you with your little can of pepper juice, small man? (I just liked this line.) This is fun! Keep 'em coming, George. -- TL, Tim Absolutely excellent. Steve |
#8
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On Wed, 16 Aug 2006 22:46:20 -0500, George Cleveland
wrote: In the morning Jacci whipped up some Campers' Breakfast, [snip] Very nice George, I can't wait to get out that way. -- Charlie... http://www.chocphoto.com |
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