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#1
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![]() "JR" wrote in message .. . bugcaster wrote: Describes the latest trip to the Deschutes. I did not see anyone hook up, but later learned that a few had caught fish on the same day. What section did you fish? We fished upstream from Maupin off the bank last weekend. We hit a couple good places that have produced fish in the past, but it was just a slow day. I've heard that the folks downstream did better, down by Beavertail. The Rainbow Room seemed friendlier and it demanded much of our attention after fishing. |
#2
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On Sun, 31 Oct 2004 13:23:55 -0800, "bugcaster"
wrote: "Peter Charles" wrote in message .. . FINALLY, I wet a line. Blustery, cold, swirling winds -- oh ya, nice day. I wanted steelhead, Describes the latest trip to the Deschutes. I did not see anyone hook up, but later learned that a few had caught fish on the same day. The ratio was not good, and with my struggle on the spey rod, it was not likely I would have been one to hook up. You have to believe it is possible, and I was struggling with that concept. The highlight was stopping in and getting some advice from John Hazel in Maupin, and buying his DVD. I have watched the RIO video, and like the Hazel DVD much better. The production is improved by the use of slow motion and the excellent photography. I resisted buying a Loop, but my brother bought a Blue Loop rod. I've decided to sell my 13' 4" Hardy Elite when I get around to taking photos. I'll soon enjoy a Blue Loop also. Nice choice on the part of your brother, the 12'4" 8/9 wt. (1284) I mentioned is a Loop Blue, also have the 7116. Very nice rods. Our problem here is that the low September water levels haven't brought the fish in so we're swinging to empty water. At one point the fly wasn't riding right and I pulled it up for a look-see. Had a big sucker scale stuck to it. So I did hit a fish, FWIW. Don't get talked into a Windcutter for it, get either the Loop Adapted system, the new Loop Quattro, or an Airflo Delta. I have a Windcutter 7/8/9 on the 8124 and it sucks. Today, if I let enough running line out so that the line didn't come up hard on the reel, the T-8 head wouldn't complete the turnover. I'd get a laser loop going out, then the whole thing would drop into the water with 10' to 15' of the tip still folded back. If I pulled in just three feet of running so that the line would come up hard on the reel, then that shock was enough to get the tip rolled out. I was using the T-8 (green) tip along with Tip 2 -- not the best combo. Had no such problem using the Airflo 9/10 Delta + T-7 tip on the Daiwa. Rolled out as nice as you please every cast. Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
#3
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bugcaster wrote:
"Peter Charles" wrote in message ... FINALLY, I wet a line. Blustery, cold, swirling winds -- oh ya, nice day. I wanted steelhead, Describes the latest trip to the Deschutes. I did not see anyone hook up, but later learned that a few had caught fish on the same day. What section did you fish? I went to the Siletz last Sunday with a friend from Corvallis. No steelhead, though each of us had one brief hook-up. We weren't skunked though; each of us also caught a single sea-run cutthroat, both of them on Caballeros. A twenty-one incher for my friend (his largest ever), and a 13-incher for me. What lovely bright fish they are! Oddly, one of the most fun parts of the day was spent looking down off a bridge watching a group of drift fishermen work a deep pool full of chinook. They caught 2 in the half hour we watched. There were maybe a dozen people (a couple of families and a few single guys) along a 30-foot stretch of gravel bar, with 4 or 5 lines in the water. It was a quiet friendly communal activity, with no sense of "combat fishing." Looked like a whole lot of fun, actually. The fish were much brighter than I had expected, too, that far upstream. Several dozen fish were spawning in a flat just upstream, and I'd seen a half dozen decomposing carcasses just downstream, but the fish taken from that pool had only a touch of darkness to them. JR |
#4
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bugcaster wrote:
"Peter Charles" wrote in message ... FINALLY, I wet a line. Blustery, cold, swirling winds -- oh ya, nice day. I wanted steelhead, Describes the latest trip to the Deschutes. I did not see anyone hook up, but later learned that a few had caught fish on the same day. What section did you fish? I went to the Siletz last Sunday with a friend from Corvallis. No steelhead, though each of us had one brief hook-up. We weren't skunked though; each of us also caught a single sea-run cutthroat, both of them on Caballeros. A twenty-one incher for my friend (his largest ever), and a 13-incher for me. What lovely bright fish they are! Oddly, one of the most fun parts of the day was spent looking down off a bridge watching a group of drift fishermen work a deep pool full of chinook. They caught 2 in the half hour we watched. There were maybe a dozen people (a couple of families and a few single guys) along a 30-foot stretch of gravel bar, with 4 or 5 lines in the water. It was a quiet friendly communal activity, with no sense of "combat fishing." Looked like a whole lot of fun, actually. The fish were much brighter than I had expected, too, that far upstream. Several dozen fish were spawning in a flat just upstream, and I'd seen a half dozen decomposing carcasses just downstream, but the fish taken from that pool had only a touch of darkness to them. JR |
#5
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Oh ya . . . no fish.
Shoulda stayed in bed . . . Peter This sounds like my entire fall for stripers. Wind, wind, or no fish no fish. We had 2 weeks of North winds that ruined a key part of the fall run. But hopefully this week will turn fish on again, and be a little more fly friendly. A 14' 2 hand rod might be nice as well. -- Rob |
#6
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![]() "Peter Charles" wrote in message ... FINALLY, I wet a line. Blustery, cold, swirling winds -- oh ya, nice day. I wanted steelhead, Describes the latest trip to the Deschutes. I did not see anyone hook up, but later learned that a few had caught fish on the same day. The ratio was not good, and with my struggle on the spey rod, it was not likely I would have been one to hook up. You have to believe it is possible, and I was struggling with that concept. The highlight was stopping in and getting some advice from John Hazel in Maupin, and buying his DVD. I have watched the RIO video, and like the Hazel DVD much better. The production is improved by the use of slow motion and the excellent photography. I resisted buying a Loop, but my brother bought a Blue Loop rod. I've decided to sell my 13' 4" Hardy Elite when I get around to taking photos. I'll soon enjoy a Blue Loop also. |
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