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#1
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Mark Tinsky wrote:
Last nite I went back to a dam on the Mo to check out the large rises I had seen from the dam walkover the nite before as I was leaving. snip Nice TR, Mark. Sounds like a day to remember. Was that 22-incher a rainbow, also? -- TL, Tim ------------------------ http://css.sbcma.com/timj |
#2
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Mark Tinsky wrote:
Last nite I went back to a dam on the Mo to check out the large rises I had seen from the dam walkover the nite before as I was leaving. snip Nice TR, Mark. Sounds like a day to remember. Was that 22-incher a rainbow, also? -- TL, Tim ------------------------ http://css.sbcma.com/timj |
#3
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Last nite I went back to a dam on the Mo to check out the large
rises I had seen from the dam walkover the nite before as I was leaving. I spent most of the day tying flies and had made some green neons with a small cdc wing and some olive sparkle duns. I got there around 6 30 and fish were rising tho all I saw were a sparse hatch of those neons things. I put on some 4x and a dryfly and threw at them. This was big water as it was right below the dam. Somewhat flat but with lot s of swirls from the strong current which ran underneath. Basically it was throw the fly out and wait. Well nothing took the fly and after about 10 mins I could see why! What I took for rises were actually salmon comming near the surface and frolicing in this big pool. Some of them started to breach and were they big , probably around 6- 8 pounds. I cut the 4x back to 3X and put the wooly bigger back on. Deciding with the remaining daylight I d rather fish for trout I hustled down the river moving quickly thru a couple small riffles to get to the water I favored. In the beginning of the riffle I picked up a nice fat 18" bow and soon after a smaller 12. I moved down about as far as I could go and after a couple casts threw to the right into some deep slower water. I was rewarded with an immediate take and then it was off to the races. The line whipped thru the slow water so fast it couldn t catch up with itself and while part of it was still in front of me off in the fast riffle to the left a large fish leapt clear of the water and tried to shake the bugger. What a fish ! He ran all over the river and eventually I played him back into the slower water and even then I had trouble getting him to the net. He measured 22" and was very heavy. He was exhausted and I spent 5 mins moving him back and forth thru the water until he could swim off on his own. A fish I hope I ll remember for a long time. I headed back to the first riffle which I rarely fish as dark was descending and picked up 2 more in very fast water. Usually I by pass water running this swiftly as it s hardly worth throwing a nymph into this sort of maelstrom but they seem to like the bugger fine in these conditions. It was now dark and a full moon was coming over the mountain behind the dam. There was no wind and the nite was cool but waders and a tee shirt sufficed. I decided to go back and watch the salmon for awhile and smoke a pipe. They were swimming right next to shore and porpising all over. Some guys were there fishing bait and I asked them if they were after the salmon. They demurred and said they were after the rainbows that were following them around. I still had the Bugger on so I figured what the heck. I threw at the fish sporting close to shore and sure enough I had a take. I set the hook and whatever it was just headed out and there was nothing I could do to stop it but hold on. Well into my backing the hook popped out and never got to see what is was I had hooked but whatever it was, it was big , strong and my imagination can fill in the details for the future...... I did fish for another 1/2 hour or so in the dark without any more takes. I followed some of the advice given here about keeping more slack in the line so the fish could turn and hook himself and it resulted in more consistent hookups. I m grateful to those who offered this. Tonite I m thinking about going back and using some of the PIke fly s Chas Wade graciously gave me on the Glacier Clave. Perhaps the Salmon maybe interested in them..... MT |
#4
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In article , "Tim J."
wrote: Mark Tinsky wrote: Last nite I went back to a dam on the Mo to check out the large rises I had seen from the dam walkover the nite before as I was leaving. snip Nice TR, Mark. Sounds like a day to remember. Was that 22-incher a rainbow, also? yes MT |
#5
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Mark Tinsky wrote:
... Most of a tantalizing TR snipped ... Tonite I m thinking about going back and using some of the PIke fly s Chas Wade graciously gave me on the Glacier Clave. Perhaps the Salmon maybe interested in them..... I've caught a few silvers on half size versions of Blackbeard, no luck with the bunny patterns, but I don't understand what sort of salmon these are. Do you know what species, or what lake they use for an ocean? 6-8 pounds is a bit large for kokanee(sockeye), even in Montana, but it's a bit small for kings(chinook). Maybe they're silvers(coho)? Try something bright, red, orange, pink, even white, but not large, under an inch long. Chas remove fly fish to reply http://home.comcast.net/~chas.wade/w...ome.html-.html San Juan Pictures at: http://home.comcast.net/~chasepike/wsb/index.html |
#6
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Hi Mark! Very interesting report. The MO sounds great.
bruce h |
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