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#1
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Okay, first of all, I took a dive (on dry land, fortunately) that
would make Frank proud. Trucking back to the road at a good pace along the streamside path, my Korker caught a lump of grass, and I pitched forward. Tried to get my leg under me again, but with the added weight of wading boots & Korkers, I just didn’t clear the lump; and I was going down as if someone had grabbed both my ankles. And I mean going down fast. Often, these little experiences happen in slow motion, but I was 6’’ from the ground before I knew what was happening. I had the presence of mind to toss the rod clear just before my chest slammed into the rock. Damn, I haven’t hit the ground that hard since I was much younger. I didn’t even get my arms down to break my fall; it was chest, meet earth. Oof. Had to sit up & take stock of myself after that one; but except for some right side chest pain on deep breaths, I seem to have suffered no lasting ill effects. Needless to say, I’m told it was a quite amusing spectacle for the non- participants. Next, it was friggin cold on Sunday morning. Yeah, I knew this in advance and dressed accordingly, but even with all of the warm gear, the chill was beginning to seep through by the time Mr. Sun crept over the horizon. The mist off the river, as always, was beautiful in the morning light. By 9 or 10, we were starting to peel off the layers. Also, Storytellers in Pulaski was closed. WTF? First the C&M goes belly up, now this? We were reduced to dinner at the Altmar Hotel which, no aspersions intended, is a fine place to eat lunch. Lastly, kudos to the NYDEC for the rule changes and enforcement for the ffo stretch. No more lead chuckers using fly rods to circumvent the intent of ”ffo”. A couple guys got busted while we were there. The ffo stretch was noticeable less crowded and more pleasant. It was a pleasure watching other guys actually fly fish for a change. Joe F. |
#2
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On Tue, 21 Oct 2008 06:43:42 -0700 (PDT), rb608
wrote: [...] Lastly, kudos to the NYDEC for the rule changes and enforcement for the ffo stretch. No more lead chuckers using fly rods to circumvent the intent of ”ffo”. A couple guys got busted while we were there. The ffo stretch was noticeable less crowded and more pleasant. It was a pleasure watching other guys actually fly fish for a change. Joe F. I agree with all that - and glad that the fish cops are still on patrol to enforce the new regs. We saw almost none of the carnage of past years - with the notable exception of the scene at the trestle (which was still just as ugly as always). Speaking of enforcement officers, apparently I *almost* got in trouble at the very top of the upper FFO section one afternoon. I was standing about 20 feet below the wire denoting the end of the legal fishing zone when I saw a salmon roll less than five feet above the wire. Unbeknownst to me, Paul had just spotted a fish cop with a video camera trained on me - probably just waiting for me to cast upstream of that wire. I had just rolled out about a 30 foot cast to the middle of the river when I saw the salmon above the wire, so I pulled the line up and in one motion aimed towards that salmon above me - and promptly draped about five feet of leader over the wire. Whoops! Once I got the leader off the wire I gave up on that salmon. Paul said the fish cop put his camera down with a look of disgust ;-) /daytripper (bad casts happen) |
#3
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On Tue, 21 Oct 2008 06:43:42 -0700 (PDT), rb608
wrote: Okay, first of all, I took a dive (on dry land, fortunately) that would make Frank proud. Trucking back to the road at a good pace along the streamside path, my Korker caught a lump of grass, and I pitched forward. Tried to get my leg under me again, but with the added weight of wading boots & Korkers, I just didn’t clear the lump; and I was going down as if someone had grabbed both my ankles. And I mean going down fast. Often, these little experiences happen in slow motion, but I was 6’’ from the ground before I knew what was happening. I had the presence of mind to toss the rod clear just before my chest slammed into the rock. Damn, I haven’t hit the ground that hard since I was much younger. I didn’t even get my arms down to break my fall; it was chest, meet earth. Oof. Had to sit up & take stock of myself after that one; but except for some right side chest pain on deep breaths, I seem to have suffered no lasting ill effects. Needless to say, I’m told it was a quite amusing spectacle for the non- participants. [...] I missed replying to this part earlier: the three of us spent a day early in our stay down in the DSR, looking for the bulk of the run (which, we determined, was way back upstream already). In any case, on the walk down to the Meadows Pool, Dave P. slipped on the trail and did a complete full layout in a mud hole the likes of which I've rarely seen. This stuff was like really thick vanilla pudding and the hole was at least half a foot deep - so when Dave finally arose, his entire front was completely coated with the stuff, from hat to boots. It was a hilarious spectacle to behold. When we came to a small side flow Paul and I kept walking, but Dave stopped there to try to shed about ten pounds of mud. The two of us were already fishing for a half hour and he still hadn't caught up to us yet, so while Paul kept fishing I walked back on the trail to find Dave. Eventually I found him, mostly cleaned up, and dragged his sorry, muddy self down to the Meadows... /daytripper (I gotta get me a fishing camera ;-) |
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On Oct 21, 5:12*pm, daytripper wrote:
On Tue, 21 Oct 2008 06:43:42 -0700 (PDT), rb608 wrote: Dave P. slipped on the trail and did a complete full layout in a mud hole the likes of which I've rarely seen. It's all fun and games until somebody loses an eye. :-) As a continuation of the slipping and falling theme, I'll add that I was having a lot of trouble keeping my footing in the water on Saturday & Sunday. I'm usually quite sure-footed, and I was beginning to consider the passing years as the reason for my unsteadiness until I gave some serious thought to my Korkers. They're pretty old, and almost half the studs are gone; but I thought the many that remained would do the job. In taking a critical, strategic look at them, however, it was clear that the studs I relied on most were among the missing. By Sunday afternoon, I ditched 'em & relied on the felt soles. The difference was amazing. No wonder I was slipping, I was walking on bare rubber. The wading boots alone brought me back to comfort & confidence. Shoulda done that the first day. Joe F. |
#5
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On Tue, 21 Oct 2008 16:55:33 -0700 (PDT), rb608
wrote: On Oct 21, 5:12*pm, daytripper wrote: On Tue, 21 Oct 2008 06:43:42 -0700 (PDT), rb608 wrote: Dave P. slipped on the trail and did a complete full layout in a mud hole the likes of which I've rarely seen. It's all fun and games until somebody loses an eye. :-) As a continuation of the slipping and falling theme, I'll add that I was having a lot of trouble keeping my footing in the water on Saturday & Sunday. I'm usually quite sure-footed, and I was beginning to consider the passing years as the reason for my unsteadiness until I gave some serious thought to my Korkers. They're pretty old, and almost half the studs are gone; but I thought the many that remained would do the job. In taking a critical, strategic look at them, however, it was clear that the studs I relied on most were among the missing. By Sunday afternoon, I ditched 'em & relied on the felt soles. The difference was amazing. No wonder I was slipping, I was walking on bare rubber. The wading boots alone brought me back to comfort & confidence. Shoulda done that the first day. Joe F. Dave P. didn't come equipped with studs. He spent the entire time on straight felt - and all but the last day, the dam was running at 750CFS, and by my calculations there was nearly double that flow from the lower FFO section and below due to runoff from the tribs (it had rained fairly heavily before our arrival). So the wading wasn't easy (unlike the extraordinarily low flows we all experienced last year). While I didn't spend a lot of time observing how well going studless was working out for him, the only time I detected severe slippage was on that trail ;-) I bought these a couple of years ago and couldn't be more pleased with their performance. They stick like a kitten on curtains, are very durable, and the straps are much more secure than the laced models. http://korkers.com/product.php?recKey=28 The first thing I did when they arrived was to unscrew all the carbide studs and blue LokTite'd them back in (that's my O/C side talking). I checked them at the end of our week, the third season I've used them: still haven't lost any studs, and only two of the studs need replacing, so I've ordered a bag of replacement studs (10 for $6). I originally had bought a pair of the push-through studded Korkers cleats, not being knowledgeable about such things. After one day on the river I had lost over a dozen studs! Korkers customer service told me to return them to the retailer and they'd credit his account, and recommended the threaded model above... /daytripper |
#6
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On Oct 21, 9:33*pm, daytripper wrote:
the dam was running at 750CFS, and by my calculations there was nearly double that flow from the lower FFO section and below due to runoff from the tribs (it had rained fairly heavily before our arrival). IIRC, we had 335 cfs. Very manageable. I bought these a couple of years ago and couldn't be more pleased with their performance. They stick like a kitten on curtains, are very durable, and the straps are much more secure than the laced models. Thanks for the rec. I'm wondering if I could retrofit mine to accept the screw-in stud replacements. OTOH, maybe I'll just spring for a new pair, tho I'm pretty good at the laced model. BTW and FWIW, we're looking at 10/23 thru 10/26 next year. Wanted the week after Col. Day, but Malinda was booked. Joe F |
#7
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On Tue, 21 Oct 2008 18:44:15 -0700 (PDT), rb608
wrote: On Oct 21, 9:33*pm, daytripper wrote: the dam was running at 750CFS, and by my calculations there was nearly double that flow from the lower FFO section and below due to runoff from the tribs (it had rained fairly heavily before our arrival). IIRC, we had 335 cfs. Very manageable. I bought these a couple of years ago and couldn't be more pleased with their performance. They stick like a kitten on curtains, are very durable, and the straps are much more secure than the laced models. Thanks for the rec. I'm wondering if I could retrofit mine to accept the screw-in stud replacements. OTOH, maybe I'll just spring for a new pair, tho I'm pretty good at the laced model. BTW and FWIW, we're looking at 10/23 thru 10/26 next year. Wanted the week after Col. Day, but Malinda was booked. Joe F I don't think there's any practical way to retrofit the soles, the receivers for the studs are molded into the material, and in any case you'd have to find something to act as the receiver. I'll pass on those dates to Paul - our trip coordinator ;-) It sounds a little later than might be optimal - would you consider staying at the Salmon Heaven lodge if you could get in a couple of weeks earlier? It was roughly $45/nite there. It might be just a tiny bit more upscale than Melinda's - but you'd get used to it quickly ;-) /daytripper |
#8
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On Oct 21, 9:55*pm, daytripper wrote:
I'll pass on those dates to Paul - our trip coordinator ;-) It sounds a little later than might be optimal - would you consider staying at the Salmon Heaven lodge if you could get in a couple of weeks earlier? I agree that it's past optimal, date-wise; but we have a long history and friendship at Malinda's that I'd hate to give up. Also, the steelhead fishing picks up a bit as the salmon fishing winds down, so that's not a totally bad thing. Still, I'd expect her to tire of the whole thing eventually. She works pretty long hours between the lodge & the shop. I've given an alternate location some thought & considered the SHL for when Malinda throws in the towel. How many rooms do they have there? I'd hate to book rooms & block you out for the dates. We do have a standing policy of never going up on Columbus Day weekend because of the crowds, & usually shoot for the week after rather than the week before. Joe F. |
#9
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On Tue, 21 Oct 2008 20:26:04 -0700 (PDT), rb608
wrote: On Oct 21, 9:55*pm, daytripper wrote: I'll pass on those dates to Paul - our trip coordinator ;-) It sounds a little later than might be optimal - would you consider staying at the Salmon Heaven lodge if you could get in a couple of weeks earlier? I agree that it's past optimal, date-wise; but we have a long history and friendship at Malinda's that I'd hate to give up. Also, the steelhead fishing picks up a bit as the salmon fishing winds down, so that's not a totally bad thing. Still, I'd expect her to tire of the whole thing eventually. She works pretty long hours between the lodge & the shop. I've given an alternate location some thought & considered the SHL for when Malinda throws in the towel. How many rooms do they have there? I'd hate to book rooms & block you out for the dates. We do have a standing policy of never going up on Columbus Day weekend because of the crowds, & usually shoot for the week after rather than the week before. Joe F. I'm fairly sure Salmon Heaven has 6 guest rooms, ranging from the largest that sleeps 6 to the smallest that sleeps two. All have their own bath room with shower. I've never been up there during Columbus Day weekend, but given how many peeps are there on the other weekends in October, I don't doubt it'd be the wrong weekend to be fishing the Salmon ;-) I think you might see more fish the weekend before vs the weekend after, but with weather/rainfall playing a big factor who knows for sure. If it ever comes to the point that Melinda throws in the towel, don't worry about displacing us out of Salmon Heaven. The owners once scrambled up a camper for us to stay in for a weekend when a group over-stayed in our scheduled room :-) /daytripper |
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