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Didn't hear from you. The weather was rough a few days before we went
out on the spit, and extremely windy for most of that week. Not many hikers came out. Looked like new snow down pretty low on the Olympics from our perch. Spectacular skies, clouds etc.. Lots of naval action in the straits. Eagles. Where did you end up? Dave |
#2
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On Apr 21, 5:06*pm, DaveS wrote:
Didn't hear from you. The weather was rough a few days before we went out on the spit, and extremely windy for most of that week. Not many hikers came out. Looked like new snow down pretty low on the Olympics from our perch. Spectacular skies, clouds etc.. Lots of naval action in the straits. Eagles. Where did you end up? Dave Hey Dave: Yeah, the weather turned bad (torrential rains) on our drive up from Portland along the coast, so we changed plans and went over the Cascades to Eastern WA. Found a couple nice places to cast on the John Day....landed a couple small trout (enough to christen my new rod and justify hauling it halfway around the world), but the vision of a nice two-day immersion fishing event vaporized into road miles. |
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On Apr 24, 1:35*am, riverman wrote:
On Apr 21, 5:06*pm, DaveS wrote: Didn't hear from you. The weather was rough a few days before we went out on the spit, and extremely windy for most of that week. Not many hikers came out. Looked like new snow down pretty low on the Olympics from our perch. Spectacular skies, clouds etc.. Lots of naval action in the straits. Eagles. Where did you end up? Dave Hey Dave: Yeah, the weather turned bad (torrential rains) on our drive up from Portland along the coast, so we changed plans and went over the Cascades to Eastern WA. Found a couple nice places to cast on the John Day....landed a couple small trout (enough to christen my new rod and justify hauling it halfway around the world), but the vision of a nice two-day immersion fishing event vaporized into road miles. Ahh. Too bad but hope your sojourn in the Oregon steppe helped. Whenever i travel in Europe or to East Coast I get this boxed in feeling, claustrophobic. Sometimes only burning a tankful in wide open country is what it takes to feel right again when i get back home.. Next time you consider the John Day i would let it be ROFF-known, as there are a couple of Roffians who know this river pretty well. I am not one of them. Take care. Dave |
#4
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On Apr 26, 2:22*am, DaveS wrote:
On Apr 24, 1:35*am, riverman wrote: On Apr 21, 5:06*pm, DaveS wrote: Didn't hear from you. The weather was rough a few days before we went out on the spit, and extremely windy for most of that week. Not many hikers came out. Looked like new snow down pretty low on the Olympics from our perch. Spectacular skies, clouds etc.. Lots of naval action in the straits. Eagles. Where did you end up? Dave Hey Dave: Yeah, the weather turned bad (torrential rains) on our drive up from Portland along the coast, so we changed plans and went over the Cascades to Eastern WA. Found a couple nice places to cast on the John Day....landed a couple small trout (enough to christen my new rod and justify hauling it halfway around the world), but the vision of a nice two-day immersion fishing event vaporized into road miles. Ahh. Too bad but hope your sojourn in the Oregon steppe helped. Whenever i travel in Europe or to East Coast I get this boxed in feeling, claustrophobic. Sometimes only burning a tankful in wide open country is what it takes to feel right again when i get back home.. Next time you consider the John Day i would let it be ROFF-known, as there are a couple of Roffians who know this river pretty well. I am not one of them. Take care. Dave Yes...you hit the 'burn a tankful of gas' nail directly on the head. Despite having the appropriate gear and flies in the trunk, the forces that push us down the open highway took over, and SWMBO and I ended up spending most of the two days I had allocated to standing streamside waving a stick behind the wheel, aimlessly watching the landscape move by, chalking up miles. It was only when the map showed the river diverging from our route that I got a bit anxious about not doing ANY fishing that we pulled over, she read a book, and I did that old thing of fishing where I was, rather than where the fish probably were. It was with an immense sense of relief and regret that I saw a rise near my fly...relief that there were indeed some fish in this particular pool....regret because it was guaranteed that with a little pre- research, I could have targeted a better stretch of stream and gotten more bang for my buck. My consolation is that I am booking an entire month this year to spend in Sweden, hanging out at a streamside cabin, with only two objectives; catch as many diverse fish as I can, and to finish that bottle of whisky before I fly back home. --riverman |
#5
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On Apr 27, 10:42*pm, riverman wrote:
On Apr 26, 2:22*am, DaveS wrote: On Apr 24, 1:35*am, riverman wrote: On Apr 21, 5:06*pm, DaveS wrote: Didn't hear from you. The weather was rough a few days before we went out on the spit, and extremely windy for most of that week. Not many hikers came out. Looked like new snow down pretty low on the Olympics from our perch. Spectacular skies, clouds etc.. Lots of naval action in the straits. Eagles. Where did you end up? Dave Hey Dave: Yeah, the weather turned bad (torrential rains) on our drive up from Portland along the coast, so we changed plans and went over the Cascades to Eastern WA. Found a couple nice places to cast on the John Day....landed a couple small trout (enough to christen my new rod and justify hauling it halfway around the world), but the vision of a nice two-day immersion fishing event vaporized into road miles. Ahh. Too bad but hope your sojourn in the Oregon steppe helped. Whenever i travel in Europe or to East Coast I get this boxed in feeling, claustrophobic. Sometimes only burning a tankful in wide open country is what it takes to feel right again when i get back home.. Next time you consider the John Day i would let it be ROFF-known, as there are a couple of Roffians who know this river pretty well. I am not one of them. Take care. Dave Yes...you hit the 'burn a tankful of gas' nail directly on the head. Despite having the appropriate gear and flies in the trunk, the forces that push us down the open highway took over, and SWMBO and I ended up spending most of the two days I had allocated to standing streamside waving a stick behind the wheel, aimlessly watching the landscape move by, chalking up miles. It was only when the map showed the river diverging from our route that I got a bit anxious about not doing ANY fishing that we pulled over, she read a book, and I did that old thing of fishing where I was, rather than where the fish probably were. It was with an immense sense of relief and regret that I saw a rise near my fly...relief that there were indeed some fish in this particular pool....regret because it was guaranteed that with a little pre- research, I could have targeted a better stretch of stream and gotten more bang for my buck. My consolation is that I am booking an entire month this year to spend in Sweden, hanging out at a streamside cabin, with only two objectives; catch as many diverse fish as I can, and to finish that bottle of whisky before I fly back home. --riverman A worthy goal, indeed. On my to-do list. cheers oz |
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On Tue, 27 Apr 2010 20:42:15 -0700 (PDT), riverman wrote:
On Apr 26, 2:22*am, DaveS wrote: On Apr 24, 1:35*am, riverman wrote: On Apr 21, 5:06*pm, DaveS wrote: Didn't hear from you. The weather was rough a few days before we went out on the spit, and extremely windy for most of that week. Not many hikers came out. Looked like new snow down pretty low on the Olympics from our perch. Spectacular skies, clouds etc.. Lots of naval action in the straits. Eagles. Where did you end up? Dave Hey Dave: Yeah, the weather turned bad (torrential rains) on our drive up from Portland along the coast, so we changed plans and went over the Cascades to Eastern WA. Found a couple nice places to cast on the John Day....landed a couple small trout (enough to christen my new rod and justify hauling it halfway around the world), but the vision of a nice two-day immersion fishing event vaporized into road miles. Ahh. Too bad but hope your sojourn in the Oregon steppe helped. Whenever i travel in Europe or to East Coast I get this boxed in feeling, claustrophobic. Sometimes only burning a tankful in wide open country is what it takes to feel right again when i get back home.. Next time you consider the John Day i would let it be ROFF-known, as there are a couple of Roffians who know this river pretty well. I am not one of them. Take care. Dave Yes...you hit the 'burn a tankful of gas' nail directly on the head. Despite having the appropriate gear and flies in the trunk, the forces that push us down the open highway took over, and SWMBO and I ended up spending most of the two days I had allocated to standing streamside waving a stick behind the wheel, aimlessly watching the landscape move by, chalking up miles. It was only when the map showed the river diverging from our route that I got a bit anxious about not doing ANY fishing that we pulled over, she read a book, and I did that old thing of fishing where I was, rather than where the fish probably were. It was with an immense sense of relief and regret that I saw a rise near my fly...relief that there were indeed some fish in this particular pool....regret because it was guaranteed that with a little pre- research, I could have targeted a better stretch of stream and gotten more bang for my buck. See, this is what I just don't understand - one could have been at work, one could have been at home doing chores, one could have been at a funeral (either as guest or recipient), but folks get concerned about what they _didn't_ catch...oh, to be sure, you aren't alone with your concerns - you are apparently in the majority...but I still don't understand it... My consolation is that I am booking an entire month this year to spend in Sweden, hanging out at a streamside cabin, with only two objectives; catch as many diverse fish as I can, and to finish that bottle of whisky before I fly back home. Er, "that bottle"....so, IOW, _A_ bottle...as in _one_ bottle_...as in "one bottle in one month"....sweetsusieonabrasspole...well, I'd suggest that you start drinking on the day you get there rather than on the night before you leave... HTH and enjoy the trip, R ....I mean, really...fishin' and drinkin' go together like...like...like, well, fishin' and drinkin'... --riverman |
#7
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On Apr 24, 3:35*am, riverman wrote:
On Apr 21, 5:06*pm, DaveS wrote: Didn't hear from you. The weather was rough a few days before we went out on the spit, and extremely windy for most of that week. Not many hikers came out. Looked like new snow down pretty low on the Olympics from our perch. Spectacular skies, clouds etc.. Lots of naval action in the straits. Eagles. Where did you end up? Dave Hey Dave: Yeah, the weather turned bad (torrential rains) on our drive up from Portland along the coast, so we changed plans and went over the Cascades to Eastern WA. Found a couple nice places to cast on the John Day....landed a couple small trout (enough to christen my new rod and justify hauling it halfway around the world), but the vision of a nice two-day immersion fishing event vaporized into road miles. When I saw that you were on the John Day, I thought you might have had the experience that rattles trout fishermen........ Casting a nymph or streamer to tailwater, expecting to hook onto a nice trout, when you get a SHOCKING, POUNDING strike and the fish tears down, across, up, across, and down -- over and over, until you finally net a .......... 14 in. smallmouth bass. You thought you had a 5 lb brown and got a 1 lb bass. But you got a ten ton thrill. cheers oz, who wishes it could have happened to you |
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