07
Nov 11

A trip to the creek

It is a tiny creek just minutes from all the money and might of Silicon Valley.  In some stretches the deepest part might be 4 inches. I have not fished this creek in a few years.  It is closer than is reasonable and I have not fished it for an unreasonable length of time.  I set out today to right this wrong and that’s what I did.

I think even The Trout Underground would approve of the expedition.  Small stream, small fish, solitude and beauty.  It was a nice way to spend a couple of hours.  A park ranger stopped me as I walked back to my car… just to see how I’d done.  “We don’t see too many fly fisherman these days.”

The fish are tiny.  Maybe as long as my finger… maybe smaller.  They are tiny, but what they lack in size they make up for in splendor, and that’s why I sought them out.

Here are some pictures from the trip.


25
Jul 11

Project GTFO, Day 3 – Return Trip

I had my last day on the water, a short session, just a couple of hours.  Landed some fish, including a couple out of a little pocket up against the bank that has been producing for me for YEARS.  Love that little slot.  Made me happy to pull a couple fish out of there.

I fished my favorite spot again today – Prospect Ave. on the Upper Sacramento River.  It is a special place.  I have a long, long history with Prospect.  I remember when there was a bridge at Prospect that got washed away one winter.  I’ll bet not even the Trout Underground can claim they remember it when there was a bridge at Prospect, but there was.

The river is undergoing reverse development.  There are old, abandoned homes along the river and places where bridges have been wiped out, but there aren’t any new homes being build, nor foundations for future bridges.  It does turn the clock back a bit.

I’ve seen this river in high water and low water and in the morning light and in the dark of night.  I’ve had good days and bad days at Prospect, but many, many more good days than bad ones.

I learned to fly fish here.  It is my home water.

If I’m good and the startup I’m at does really well, I might just get to know some bit of tropical flat in the same way that I know this place.  That would be something worth doing.

Home


23
Jul 11

Project GTFO, Day 1

I GTFO and headed North.  Got there in time to hit the river.  It was exactly what I needed.

Not big... but pretty. Love these fish.

 

And after a few hours of fishing… this…

Beer at the Dunsmuir Brewing Company


13
Apr 11

Home Waters – First Trout of 2011

It is April… APRIL and I just landed my first trout of the year.  There is something really weird about that, but there it is.  This was also the first time I’ve been trout fishing this year, so, at least I haven’t been skunked.

I’m up in Dunsmuir while my daughter is on Spring Break (from Pre-School).  I actually had to go and buy a 2011 Fishing License.  Yes… I didn’t even have a fishing license yet and it is APRIL.  Uff da.

I have to say… I’m pretty disappointed in Union Pacific.  The railroad that nearly killed off the whole river thanks to a train derailment (back in 1991) has decided to cut off the parking access that folks use to get up to Mossbrae Falls.  This is douchebaggery.

Note: My folks have lived in Dunsmuir for 42 years and they cannot recall anyone ever being injured by a train along the tracks to get to Mossbrae.  That has got to be tens of thousands of people that have made that short hike in those years.  I think that is a pretty good testament to common sense.  Union Pacific seems to think that we’ve run out of common sense to the point that we are now in danger of falling asleep on the tracks and suing them.  This is a good example of everything that is wrong with the mentality of “better safe than sorry.”  It kind of pisses me off.

Keep it classy, UP... keep it classy.

The river is beautiful.  It’s high, sure, but the color is good and the Upper Sac can be fished at very high flows so long as the color is good.  You just need a good supply of tin shot and, presto, you are fishing.

The gateway to awesomeness.

My batting average wasn’t too hot.  I hooked three very, very, very nice trout but was 0/3 before I got one fish to cooperate enough to actually come and shake hands.  Not a big fish, but, a wild, beautiful trout. That will do wonders for your mood.

Officially on the board for 2011 in the category of "Trout"

Ah… that’s nice.

 

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02
Jul 10

No Bull on the Metolius

I got to fish the Metolius with my dad.  That’s a nice day, no matter how the fishing is.

My dad said “So, what time should we meet back at the car?”

It isn’t that kind of river, I told him.  We’d fish the good water together and then we’d walk… and we’d do a lot of walking.

Lots of this on the Lower Metolius

The Lower Metolius is a different animal from the Upper Metolius around Camp Sherman.  The river above CS is skinny water and a river you can cross at will.  You can get in, wade upstream and catch a lot of little fish.  The Metolius has a reputation for being tough, but that Upper Metolius isn’t what folks are talking about.

The Lower River, on the other hand, has earned its reputation.  It is not a river you cross… you can’t cross it except by bridge or catapult.  There is a lot more river… I’m not good at math, but I’d estimate it is roughly 8 billion times bigger, give or take a billion.  There are a bunch of tribs that come in below Camp Sherman and the Highway 99 Bridge (where I think most people would agree the demarcation begins for the “Lower” river).

That there is a whole mess of water.

Fishing the the lower river is about finding spots that hold fish. Most of the river is moving too darn fast to provide anything resembling holding water for your average trout.  When you find water that slows down and provides some shelter, you’ll find some fish.  You might even find some fish eating dries.

The fish and beyond, the fish’s home.

These are some pretty fish.  I was taken with this fish… the color and spots extending to the jaw and belly of the fish.  Beautiful.

A good looking fish.

The true drama of the day is sadly lacking in photographic evidence, but I’ll relate the tale to you anyway.

At the lowest of the  best water we were fishing I was standing on a large log in front of a big eddy.  I was fishing with an indicator and weight, since below Bridge 99 weight is again deemed a worthy and acceptable way to fish.  I hooked a decent fish, about 14″ and had it near the log when a large, dark, trout-like shape appeared and began trying to eat the hooked trout.  This, of course, was a Bull Trout (or Dolly, depending on which camp you are in).  I was stunned as I watched the trout trying to avoid the big Bull (about 24-25″).  At one point I was fairly sure the Bull had the trout in its mouth, but it let go and the trout got off and the whole frantic circus ended just as quickly as it had begun.

Wow.

I fished for a little while longer using my nymph rig and then could not resist temtation any longer.  In this instance, temptation took the form of a Bucket Mouth Bow… a monster of a fly… on a 5/0 hook.  This was purchased at The Fly Fisher’s Place in Sisters (they don’t have a built out e-commerce site).

I put some 1x on, tied on that monstrosity and wondered if the thing would sink or swim.  I threw it upstream and gave it a few strips, trying to get it to sink, but it didn’t matter.  Again, the dark greenish shape came out of oblivion and tracked the big ole’ Bucket  Mouth Trout, eventually eating it right in front of me, about 5 feet away.

I was pretty much dumbstruck.  I cleared my line and the fish went down stream (where it rolled right in front of my dad), then up.  Somehow, along the way, it threw the hook, which then found the flank of the fish.  With all the  leverage in the world the fish came back toward me and went under the big log I was standing on.  There, it got me hopelessly tangled in the branches on the underside of the log.  I never saw the fish again. I broke off the fly, but I can’t be sure the fish actually survived.  My dad assures me it is still alive.  Sounds like something I might say to my daughter, even if I knew it wasn’t true.

I hope it is still out there.  Fish like that are few and far between.  I’d hate to be the last person to experience that beautiful Bull.

I can’t say I recovered from that fish.  We fished another hour or two, but I couldn’t get my head right.  I was still in shock… equal parts elated and devastated.  Such is fishing.

We both caught some fish on a tough river and we saw a bull trout try to eat my rainbow trout and then eat my impossibly large streamer.  A good day.  I got some exercise too, which can’t be all bad.

The Metolius is a beautiful river with many different personalities.  For sure it is one of the most beautiful places on earth, and that includes the white sand beaches where bonefish are found.

I’ll be back… and next time, I’m bringing my 7 wt. and more than one Bucket Mouth Trout.

Yes, I am secure enough in my masculinity to take pictures of flowers.


30
Jun 10

The King of Little Fish – Metolius Fish

I fished the Metolius today… family vacation up to Camp Sherman in Central Oregon.

Now, the Metolius is known for a couple things… being really tough and really beautiful.

Today, I found the river to be as beautiful as ever, but not that tough… at least for tiny fish.  I found the small fish in the Metolius and I caught them… all of them.

That's a pretty river.

I caught a bunch of these... a bunch.

Dry dropper... and yes, I caught a couple on that massive stonefly dry.

This is what passed for a bigger fish today.

The Green Drakes were out… all 3 of them.  The hatch was far from epic.  Still, fish were caught on the dries.

My guess is the big fish are lower… the certainly weren’t in the bit of water I was fishing, or, if they were, they were not in the mood to play.  Fun day on the water though.

Yum.


28
Jun 10

When life gives you high water

Get out yer split shot.

That water is high...

That should do the trick...

bingo.

Fishing the Upper Sac is like that sometimes.


27
Jun 10

Snakes on a River (eating trout)

When you get out there, on the water, you give yourself the chance to see things others might never see in their lives. One thing that fits into this category, I’d think, would be an Aquatic Garter Snake catching and eating a rainbow trout.

I’ve actually seen this four times.  I saw it on Hat Creek.  I saw it twice on the Lower McCloud (in the same spot in different years) and today I saw it on the Upper Sacramento River, across the street from where I grew up.

Is that what I think it is?

Well... it sure is... a Garter Snake eating a Rainbow.

Suffocated first...

Down the hatch.


12
Jun 10

Private Water Day with Dad

I know there are lots of folks who don’t like the concept of private water.  I’m even mostly in that camp.  I like public water and I prefer wild fish.  However, private waters have their place and the fishing can be the equivalent of Anglers Disneyland, not a “real” experience, but sometimes the happiest place on earth.

On my recent trip up to Dunsmuir my dad booked us a day on some private ponds at Henderson Springs.  Henderson is located about an hour east of Redding, not a straight shot from Dunsmuir, but worth  it.  There was news of a Hex hatch in the evening and that sounded pretty good.

Nice looking little piece of water.

In short… I caught more inches of fish in a day than I ever have in my life… and that’s saying something.  My dad and I figured I had at least 40 fish to the net (he had at least 30).  My smallest fish was about 14″, but most were around 20-22″ and my largest… a beast of a fish that looked like a steelhead, was 27″.  That all measures out to about 400 inches of trout.  I’ve had 40 and even 50 trout days… but not with an average size of 20 inches.  That’s pretty epic.

My friend Chip O’Brien said that fishing private water is like hunting for cows, and, to a certain degree, I have sympathy for that sentiment. Still, the fish fought hard and came in a really wide variety of colors… some with deep red flanks and some chrome like fresh steelhead. None had that washed out gray of a hatchery fish.  I hate gray trout.  They aren’t supposed to come in gray.

There were some pretty fish…

A nice Henderson Springs trout.

There were some that had some issues…

Dude, where's your fin?

Is that a cleft palate?

The fish were nice sized, there were plenty of of them and they rose to dries, took leeches, took streamers, soft hackles and nymphs.

There ended up being a nice Hex hatch, although the fish didn’t seem to be on the adults, my dad and I simply crushed them on a simple nymph pattern that also yielded my 27 incher.  My net was not big enough for that fish and that is ALWAYS a good problem to have. I didn’t take a pic of that fish in order to keep it from dying.  The fish was on the line for a while, pulling me around in the float tube and a photo seemed ill-advised.

While the fishing was fantastic, the best part was fishing with my dad all day.  As he put it, it was nice to actually fish within sight of each other all day.  When we fish one of our rivers, the Upper Sac or the McCloud, we tend to start and finish the day together, but during the middle, I tend to move a little faster and further than my dad does.  We don’t actually fish together as much as fish the same river at the same time within a quarter mile of each other.  It was great to see his rod bent so often and to be able to have a communal experience there at Henderson.

My father in a tube, poised for his next fish.

We didn’t get back to Dodge until midnight.  I felt hungover the next morning despite not drinking anything the night before.  That wrapped up my little jaunt North.  There were lots of fish caught and some really good memories made.  We’ll be heading back up North in a few weeks to stay at a cabin along the Metolius River and Grandma and Grandpa are coming too.  That should be another great experience with equal parts family and fishing.

Outta Here!


09
Jun 10

Taking my girl fishing

Ever since we got up here to Dunsmuir, my 3.5 year old daughter has been asking to go feed the fish at the hatchery.  So… we did that today.  Lots of bows, a few browns and concrete pens with twenty-five cent fists of pellets.

This is where truck trout come from.

After we ran though our change, we went to check out the spillway at Siskiyou Reservoir, where the Upper Sacramento officially begins.  It is spilling over the top of the dam at Box Canyon and it is pretty clear where the high water is coming from.

This is where the high water comes from

As we left the dam  I asked my dad if he knew of any bluegill ponds.  He said sure, we just passed one.  We turned around to check it out.  I love getting my little girl on some bluegill and thought it would be a good way to spend some of the morning.

Pretty as a little pond can get.

I had my 4 wt. in the car so went to  break it out… turns out it wasn’t my 4 wt., but my 10 foot 9 weight.  Well… you fish with the rod you have, I suppose, so I put a 5 wt. line on it and made do.  It worked just fine.

Simply, this is awesome.

We were surprised when the first fish to come in wasn’t a bluegill or little bass, but a rainbow trout.  That fish threw the hook before my daughter could get to it, but the next few fish she got to hold the rod and bring it in the last 4 feet.  She loved looking at them in the net, touching them in the water.  She had a great time, which was the point.

Her first brown.

At some point in the future, maybe 20 years from now, when someone asks her, “How long have you been fishing?” it is my hope that she’ll simply say “I don’t know… I’ve just always done it.”

Sometimes, being a parent is pretty wonderful.