This was sent to me by the Underground’s Director of Stealth Montana Fisheries sent this to us, and given the odd snarky comment, is clearly Underground Material.

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Yesterday another perfect golden fall day. Missoula’s Hipness Ordinance requires us all to own floating craft (skis too, but that’s for another season), and they were all on display yesterday.

A healthy slug of rafts and drift boats rolled up [Highway Number redacted] yesterday morning. Yours truly was apparently the only person in the queue who missed the memo about Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks electro-shocking my favorite stretch of the [Famous River Name redacted].

Proving that ignorance is bliss, I pulled into a favorite parking spot, overjoyed at the lack of trailers there. Little did I know.

The sunny calm day spelled Tricos. I pulled out the severely underutilized new ULA reel, affixed it to the Winston Boron 5-wt, and tippeted out with some new highly praised (and even higher-priced) 7x.

Stylishly (and ignorantly) I stumped down to my favorite Trico haunt. On they way I walked within 10-feet or so of a Pileated woodpecker, the red-crested natural model for the laughing, animated “Woody.”

I interrupt this report for an observation: Everyone knows what electro-shocking survey boats do to the fishing.

Observation #2: Everyone is wrong.

Fish – big rainbows to be specific – ate Trico spinners in the fly fisherman-less shallows for hours. The only way I would have even known the shocking boat had just defiled my stretch was that a guide, pleasure boating his lady downstream, told me.

He also helpfully mentioned that some big fish were working right where I was. See, those guides are GOOD.

The ULA performed flawlessly: the fish ALL ran into the backing so the large arbor was helpful and you know how smoothly the Streamworks drag operates. The tippet was strong and supple and has me pondering splashing out for some in heftier sizes.

It was one of those “you should have been there” days. But, honestly, I’m happy no one else was.

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