Well, that's about the story. We hit some othe spots without a lot of luck, it was shoulder to shoulder, you'd be working a stretch of water and a truck would pull up and two dudes would jump out and come down next to you and start throwing away! We spent most the day in the camp taking turns pulling them out of our spot. Someone got some pictures of the cooler full- but I didn't. We had a great time! My buddy Bill, pictured above, had a great experience matching the hatch and catching some hold over or wild fish late Thursday evening. That may have been his first time seeing them come up and take a dry fly, he was ecstatic.
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Cherokee People...
Well, that's about the story. We hit some othe spots without a lot of luck, it was shoulder to shoulder, you'd be working a stretch of water and a truck would pull up and two dudes would jump out and come down next to you and start throwing away! We spent most the day in the camp taking turns pulling them out of our spot. Someone got some pictures of the cooler full- but I didn't. We had a great time! My buddy Bill, pictured above, had a great experience matching the hatch and catching some hold over or wild fish late Thursday evening. That may have been his first time seeing them come up and take a dry fly, he was ecstatic.
Monday, May 5, 2008
J Fork- More of the same only better
Hey Pablo, don't you wish you had this nice water to prospect! No pocket water here, long deep runs and big pools- which have their own challenges, but when they are on, there isn't anything better.. I was also surprised how much difference two weeks had made in the foliage. Everything was green and it gave the stream a whole different feel.
At the big pool, I caught several nice fish, one of which broke off my poorly tied tippet and had this huge salmon fly hanging out of it's mouth- it was funny, you could spot him anywhere in the pool. I was heck bent on getting that fly back, so I tied on another big fly and drifted into the pool, several fish struck at it and I lost track of what was happening, but I had hooked a fish so I started to land it and as it came in, I saw the first fly hanging out of his mouth- HE HAD TAKEN THE SECOND FLY WHILE THE FIRST FLY HUNG FROM HIS JAW! I was cracking up and elated that I was getting my fly back... this had to be documented, so as the trout settled down, I set my rod down and got the camera in place, as I went back to retrieve the trout- he was gone, he'd gotten off! I just died laughing, no one would believe this tale, but I swear it is true, and I never did get that fly back, in fact I didn't see that fish again, or maybe he rubbed the first fly out and I couldn't distinguish him any more.
Any way, there was a monster brookie in the pool and I spent too long getting into position to cast to him and finally, after multiple casts and patiently waiting for him to come back from his runs to the head of the pool, he took my big salmon fly and ran me up to the top of the pool, chasing him through a bog of leaves on the edge of the pool and then back to the middle of the pool and then under a rock which somehow I navigated around until I finally brought him into submission at the tail of the pool by some grass. Big, big trout!
After landing the monster it was closing in on 4pm so I went back to the pool where I had caught a number of brookies on top (see the upper video) and I tied on a little red humpy and took two more from that pool and decided it was enough for another great spring day! I hadn't covered hardly any water and I wished I could go back to the dry fly water I had visited two week ago, but I'd promised my wife I'd be home in time for dinner so I bushwhacked out of the gorge and up to the road, possibly wallering through some poison oak (heaven help me if I did).
That I'd better add this pic just so you could get a really good look at how nice this trout is!Delayed harvest on the south fork on a weekday is the place to be in May. It'll all end in a few weeks and I'll try my luck back on the wild waters, but for now, I'm feeling like a champion piscator on this beautiful little creek.
Saturday, May 3, 2008
Hard Days Day
I tried all sorts of flies.. you name it. No hatches..no rises. I manged to land a couple small fish.. missed a few strikes while I was using a big Woolly Bugger. It seemed like it was just going to be one of those days that you wish to soon forget, one that makes the good days all the more sweet.
I fished for quite some time, covered a lot of water. I am getting a bit "tired" of fishing rough pocket water.. makes for hard casting and tough conditions, especially when the water is high, and the fish are not looking up. I long for something along the lines of "Hog Creek" were the water S curves through the sage, and deep runs are a plenty, and so are the big Cutts.. I know, I should be content with the muddy little stretch of ditch water that I angle. I feel I am probably done fishing until June, run-off is going to be a bear.. unless... I find some nice tail water... yes... perhaps...