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Posts tagged: fly fishing a small stream

Adventure Is Where (And How) You Find It (or, A Year In The Life of a Fly Fishing Dad)

September 2, 2010, by Tom Chandler 14 comments

The turning points in our lives are marked by moments we may or may not have seen coming, but cannot miss.

Some are big noisy affairs, some are quiet moments, yet they’re so deeply ingrained in our heads we can’t forget them.

You never know what you'll find fly fishing a small stream

You never know what you'll find fly fishing a small stream

Which is why on Sunday – when I found myself sitting on an old stump alongside a tiny stream, drinking water and scribbling in my notebook – I suddenly remembered I’d fished a half-mile further up this same stream a little less than one year ago – just before leaving for Ethiopia to pick up Little M.

Back then – with my world threatening to spin off its axis – I was simultaneously melancholy, excited and yes – scared shitless.

I desperately needed to catch a trout, and I happily did (several of them, actually), restoring a much-needed sliver of “normal” before things really started spinning.

Which, for a while, they did.

Adventure, But Micro

Life has settled a bit since then, which is why the whole affair wasn’t much in my mind last Sunday.

All I really wanted was a little adventure – but needed it to happen in a handful of hours.

In moments like that, we sometimes make decisions about what we really want instead of what we think we want, an odd reality that bears some examination (perhaps from a couch).

It might be a matter of lowered expectations driving a simple realization; we have little to lose (in this case, time), and with so little at stake, we throw the hail mary.

Which is how I found myself scrambling up a steep, rocky, crumbling streambank and disappearing up the mouth of a tiny, willow-packed tributary stream – something I’ve been threatening to do for years.

Fly fishing a small stream

It didn't look like much, but then, suddenly, it did...

There’s a stretch of a small stream I’ve never fished, despite driving by it a couple hundred times over the last decade (typically on my way to “better” water).

Last year, I fished this same stream but farther up the watershed, and discovered better water than I expected – and slightly bigger trout.

Where it empties into a larger tributary – in full view of a road – the stream doesn’t look like much.

In fact, it looks like crap.

Which is why I’d written it off, while still wondering – as we all do – if it might just fall under the heading of “Undiscovered Treasure.”

For the first 100 feet, it didn’t.

Dense willow thickets clogged the streambed (despite their necessary place in the ecosystem, I have zero love for willows), the water was shallow, and lacked good holding depth.

The good news? All that soon passed.

The willows thinned a bit, and while grunting my way around yet another thicket and up a sheer rocky bank, I found myself face to face with a pretty little plunge pool – one deep enough to hold a decent trout.

Bingo.

Fly fishing a small stream

Zero points to the Undergrounder who guesses where my first 10+" trout came from...

At the moment, I remember being irritated about stumbling so close to the pool before seeing it, wondering if I’d spooked everything bigger than algae.

One way to find out.

On the second cast, a seven-inch trout thought it saw lunch, and my adventure was paid in full – with another good chunk of stream to fish before I ran into a dirt road, which I’d use to hike out.

Some days, the hail mary pays off.

The Reality

I’m not suggesting big trout and blanket hatches of monster bugs – the stuff of today’s rock & roll adventure fishing videos.

A Yellow Sally

Small & Pretty - like everything else on this stream

If they made a video about this adventure, you’d have to use elevator music for the soundtrack.

It’s the kind of place where a double-digit length trout would (and should) elicit a gasp from a small stream fly fisher.

It’s the kind of place – frankly – that doesn’t attract much in the way of attention these days.

Equally frankly, I’m pretty damn happy about that.

Better & Better

As I worked my way up the very steep, very narrow gorge, the pools grew a little bigger in size – as did the trout – but the real victory lay in finding myself on a stretch of water that probably hasn’t been fished in years.

No footprints. No garbage. No broken branches. No easy, sensuous casts. No big fish. And definitely no trail.

The biggest trout I caught were in the 10″-11″ range [gasp] – the product of three particularly stellar pools.

A good-sized rainbow for a small stream

Big fish, little creek

One pool looked, felt and fished exactly like a scaled-down model of a popular Upper Sacramento River spot.

Another felt so recognizably “Great Smoky Mountains National Park” that I took a picture to send back to Ian.

Near the top – where the road crosses the creek – signs of humanity became apparent; a couple pools had been “enlarged” by piled rock dams, a byproduct of swimmers looking for cool water during the summer heat waves.

No matter; I was a couple hours into the adventure, so I was tired and hot, and ready for a short writing break, which is when the memory of my last fly fishing trip as a non-dad popped up in my brain.

I sat and marveled at life for a bit, finished my notes and started hiking down the little-used dirt road, eventually running headlong into a jacked-up pickup driving up the road.

After hearing nothing but the click of grasshoppers and the buzz of dragonflies for hours, the loud Dodge diesel motor sounded like the end of the world, and the driver threatened to complete the analogy by waiting until he was 40 feet away and flicking the truck towards me for a second, suggesting he’s probably a real asshole in every other aspect of his life too.

Welcome back from your adventure, mo-fo.

Welcome back to civilization.

The Actual Fishing Report

I couldn’t tell you exactly how many I caught – I’m not focused enough to be a good counter – but I can say I got four in the 10″-11″ range [gasp]), and many smaller trout.

It’s even possible these trout retain almost their original native genetics (it seems unlikely this stream has ever been stocked), though extensive stocking just downstream of the tributary probably means I’m courting an illusion.

So be it.

After all, it’s my adventure, not Fish & Game’s.

Wildflowers

The wildflowers were still out

Due to the density of the willows – and the need to climb more than a few rocks (where a long fly rod is a liability), I swore off my “never shorter than 8′” fly rod prohibition and fished a very soft 7′ 3wt Diamondglass fly rod.

It’s smooth and accurate – in other words, pure fun – and also not especially delicate, which is an overlooked quality in a stream like this.

I mostly fished the Underground’s standby dry fly – the Beetle Bug (think ‘Red Adams’), but a Hare’s Ear Parachute worked about as well (though it didn’t last all that long).

Despite the cool temperatures – highs were in the mid-60s – I waded wet, and because of the hump up the tiny canon, spent most of the time covered in sweat.

The water temperature was 58 degrees and I was wearing pretty much all synthetics, so a quick dip in a deep pool (after I fished it) sucked all the overheated bits right out (and in a single, breathtaking, shrinkage-packed moment).

Adventure, The Sequel

I wanted adventure and I got it, though it helps if you’re willing to redefine the word to mean what it needs to mean, especially given the size of the stream and the trout.

And yes, it’s hard not to see this little trip as completing some nice, neat circle. After all, a year ago, I sat on the bank just upstream, wondering what lay ahead.

A year later, I can see adventure’s still possible, especially since my adventures never really were of the “travel for 28 hours and get falling-down drunk” variety.

Fly fishing’s what we make of it, and if a pair of trips to the same small stream happen to bookend a year in the life of a new dad – with all that entails to the dad – then I’m willing to designate both trips as “memorable.”

At least before moving on to make more memorable trips.

See you at the turning points, Tom Chandler.

It’s New To You: Fly Fishing a Stream For The First Time

July 25, 2010, by Tom Chandler 9 comments

If you’re not excited the first time you fish a stream, then consider checking yourself into the hospital for a brain scan.

Not knowing what’s around the next corner is a gift enjoyed only once on a stretch of water, and every yard of it should be savored.

After all, the next time you fish it, you’ll know it (well, at least you’ll remember the bits where you caught fish).

fly fishing a small stream

This day, I hauled out a rarely fished toy - a 7' 3wt Diamondglass. Big fun...

That the “new” stream in question is less than an hour from your house – a place you saw and wondered about, but never explored – is a bonus.

A big bonus.

New Stream, Same H2O

Of course, water obeys the same laws no matter where you go, so while the stream may be new to you, its stream hydraulics are pretty much hardwired into your brain.

Apparently the trout are hardwired too, because they eat the same Beetle Bug fly all the other small stream trout eat.

Rainbow trout

Big fish of the day (except for the really big fish of the day - see Wonderdog story below)

At times, the prehistoric beauty of the tiny canyon threatens to root you to the spot for fifteen minutes at a time.

Yet that sense of wonder is quickly replaced by the fly fisherman’s predatory response: there’s a seam, there’s a bucket, the trout will be here and there and there…

You get the picture.

Small Stream fly fishing

One of the least-fishable - put plenty photogenic - stretches.

I caught trout from almost every pool – the biggest maybe breaking the ten-inch mark – and found myself in a reasonable facsimile of heaven: gorgeous little stream, gorgeous little trout, gorgeous little (rugged) canyon.

With one tiny wrinkle.

Wally the Wonderdog – mostly recovered from his Brush With Death (it was nothing a quick $1K couldn’t fix) – tended to charge into the pools (cooling off and looking for trout) before I had a chance to fish them, which put a damper on the bite.

In one choice pool – which shaded to a deep, mysterious, emerald green in the middle – I got him to stand on a rock while I made a cast.

When a small stream shades to a dark, emerald green (a sign of depth), you never know what you're going to find...

Just as I lifted the Beetle Bug off the water, a fish swirled at it – a fish that moved an impressive of water.

The 12″ trout I’d been looking for?

I false cast three times off to the side, setting up mentally for what was sure to be the Big Fish Cast of The Day, and Wally the Wonderdog – ever alert for a chance to remind me his head is mostly bone – leapt off the rock and on top of the long-gone swirl.

The Wonderdog is capable of many things, but a clean, Olympic-style entry into the water isn’t one of them.

When 80 pounds of bone and gristle smack the surface, a lot of things happen, none of which are good for the fly fishing.

OK. I lost this one, but I know where that big fish lives.

And I’ll be back.

Wally the Wonderdog, post-dive

Wally the Wonderdog anxiously scanning for rising fish to chase

Upcanyon Calling

It had been a tough, largely sleepless week for both the Wonderdog and his owner, and while I would never publicly admit to weakness, it is possible we both hit the wall after a couple hours of climbing up and down boulders in the 90-degree heat.

So when we reached an impassable, rocky stretch that required more climbing than the Wonderdog clearly had left in him, we simply headed back to the truck.

I usually open the doors and give the interior of the truck a few minutes to cool down, and while I stood around and fed the Wonderdog hot-to-the-touch dog treats, I realized this was only the first step of the adventure.

An unfished (by me) half-mile of stream stretched out below me, and dog only knows how much fishable stream I’d find upcanyon.

In other words, I know where I’m going the next time I get an afternoon free.

See you on something new, Tom Chandler.

Fly Fishing a Small Stream for Brown Trout (or, How Knee Pads & Rattlesnakes Made the Fishing Report)

May 18, 2009, by Tom Chandler 16 comments

It’s when I was knee-walking my way closer to the edge of the meadow stream that I literally stumbled across a pair of truths.

First, I formerly owned (and lost) knee pads for just this sort of thing, and by tomorrow morning, I was probably going to wish I’d bought another pair. (To the tune of several aspirin, this prediction came sadly true.)

And second, there is a kind of meadow flower that – after it blooms and the seed pod dries – sounds a lot like a rattlesnake when your fly line brushes against it.

The first realization was of the slow-dawning kind, but the second landed a little harder; when you’re on your hands and knees and think you hear a rattlesnake 1.5 feet to your left, the thought process flows quickly, as does the urge to simultaneously levitate and soil yourself.

Steve Bertrand fly fishes the meadow stretch of a small stream

Steve Bertrand fly fishes the meadow stretch of a small stream

Later, I demonstrated the rattlesnake doppler plant to Steve Bertrand, who couldn’t see the seed pod from his location, and you could tell he didn’t entirely buy my explanation until I physically pointed out the plant.

The whole episode reinforces what I’m starting to believe about myself (at least at the start of every new fly fishing season); I’m not a slow learner as much as a forgetful one.

We didnt slaughter em though we did catch a lot. And it was fun.

We didn't "slaughter 'em" though we did catch a lot. And it was fun.

I seems my capacity for re-learning things is only outstripped by my ability to forget them, and I suppose the glass-half-full view is that every day offers people like me a fresh, new perspective on the world.

At least that’s what I’m going with for now.

Fish on. Note the knee-height positioning of the photographer (ouch)

Fish on. (Click image for a 1440 x 900 wallpaper version)

Fly fishing one of the freestone sections of the stream

Fly fishing one of the freestone sections of the stream

The Fly Fishing

Steve Bertrand and I abandoned our adult responsibilities (he’s a fishing guide, so he has damned few of those), and fished a small stream that alternately runs through tiny canyons and grassy meadows, figuring the water flows there would be better than in those on the bigger rivers.

We were right, but in truth, that’s simply sophistry. I wanted to fly fish a small stream, and this one has all the goodies; brown trout, freestone sections, meadow sections, and yes, it’s not exactly what you’d call a “well known sporting destination.”

If this doesnt give you goose bumps, you may be dead.

If this doesn't give you goose bumps, you may be dead.

That may be due to the smallish size of the trout (our biggest went 11″), but more likely, it’s just a small stream in a remote stretch of the county, and it takes a little too long to get there given the size of the fish. At least that’s how most people seem to feel about it.

Because this was all about fun and not efficiency, I fished the same 8′ 5wt Phillipson Peerless bamboo fly rod I used on the tiny Montana Cutthroat meadow stream of a year ago, and while most of the world would have trotted out a 2 or 3 weight for this kind of work, I’m happier with a softish 4 or 5wt, reasoning that a little insurance in the big wind/big fly department is a good thing.

Plus, they’re just more fun to cast.

You gotta love the reddish amber color of the Phillipsons

You gotta love the reddish amber color of the Phillipsons

In the end, we more or less caught trout in all the places you’d expect we would, and though I wouldn’t say the trout were technical (they weren’t), they are damned spooky, and demanded a little stealth on their approach.

They’re wild things after all, and it’s in their best interest not to be seen. By contrast, most of humanity’s doing stranger and stranger things in a bid to be noticed, and of the two, the trout seem to make more sense.

Hey, I get to cath one (and only seconds after painfully lurching to my feet) (photo: Steve Bertrand)

Hey, I get to catch one (and only seconds after painfully lurching to my feet) (photo: Steve Bertrand)

Steve started fishing a dry and dropper, but quickly relented on the dropper part due to snags and the realization that I was getting bit fairly often on a small stimulator.

Later – on the meadow section – we went with a flying ant, which was as reliable as it always is on these waters. (How many do you have in your box?)

The red spots on some brown trout look so much brighter than theyd possibly need to be.

The red spots on some brown trout look so much brighter than they'd possibly need to be.

Almost everything we caught was a brown trout (even in the freestone stretches), and all had that undeniably lumpy (orange peelish) brown trout feel to them.

Naturally, when the light got right, Steve Bertrand and I went to a specific spot on the meadow with the intention of catching and photographing a nicer brown trout, so Bertrand promptly caught two rainbows, and I was forced to fire him on the spot.

Rainbows occupying the slower water of a brown trout stream? Stop the madness!

Rainbows occupying the slower water of a brown trout stream? Stop the madness!

What photographer wants to work with talent who can’t catch trout (the right trout) on command?

Later – when the light got even better and we both caught nice, red-dotted brown trout – I forgave him his clumsiness.

Apparently I’m the fickle artist type.

I’m in the middle of a couple big weeks, yet I’d consider taking a human life to get back out to that stream (there are two more sections we didn’t even see). Still, with a Web site & email program to launch for a client and two more online marketing boot camp classes to teach, any fishing will probably take place closer to home.

See you on a small stream, Tom Chandler.

The Montana Road Trip Continues: Small Stream Day in Montana

July 10, 2008, by Tom Chandler 5 comments

After three hectic days speed-floating Rock Creek and a couple days catching way more fish than god intended on Georgetown Lake, [name redacted] and I were ready for something a bit more… genteel.

Or pristine. That sounds suitably elitist.
Fly fishing a small Montana trout stream
Acting on a tip from a biologist friend, [name redacted] and I headed for a creek reputed to hold Westslope Cutthroats that might – just might – be a little bigger than the water would suggest.

I like tips like that.

They suggest good fish, but are couched in terms that embrace the small stream reality, which is pretty scenery, challenging casting, and (typically) smaller trout.

Pink elephant flowers
These blooms looked like little pink elephant heads.

It’s not as if big trout are required, but I’m still human, and all things being even, I’ll fish the stream with the bigger trout (rumored bigger trout), especially if it’s not trashed, overrun with fishermen, or flows through a superfund site.

In this case, [name redacted]‘s tip proved accurate.

Within 20 minutes, he’d landed a cutthroat in the 15”-16” range (that’s a good range). By the time we finished, we’d landed several in the 11”-13” range, and popped another approaching the first fish in size.

Westslope cutthroat trout
An average picture of an above-average 12″ trout

Plus lots of little ones. Really, really pretty little ones.

And to do it, we were forced to throw dry flies on a jewel-like, largely unspoiled, uncrowded stream.

(Cry for me, Undergrounders.)

Fly selection wasn’t critical, but fly placement was. Everything from a Golden Stone to a Beetle Bug caught trout, but only if the fly was carefully placed in the slower water near the bank.

The creek was still swollen with runoff, and the trout hadn’t yet filled the mid-stream slots.

Fly fishing a small Montana trout stream
Fishing a trout stream from a patch of wildflowers? It was a hard, hard day.

No matter; accurate casting was needed, but frankly – after a couple days on the “heave it for distance” lake, accuracy was fun. Damned fun, especially when you’re holding something sweet in your hand – in this case an 8′ 5wt Phillipson Peerless.

It’s a rod [name redacted] described as being nothing more than “pure fly rod – no bells, whistles, hinges, technology, or stupidity.”

I took that as a compliment, and like most Phillipsons, the rod did its job beautifully.

Meanwhile, [name redacted] – who owns plenty of really nice fly rods – latched onto my 8.5′ 4wt Diamondglass, fishing it the next three stream days (he said it was a great rod, and in a bitter, cynical fashion I told him “of course it’s a great rod – it was discontinued late last year”).

neck slashes on a cutthroat trout
How do we know it’s a Cutthroat?

Spending a day on a small stream – especially a productive small stream – does things for your mental state that lakes and fast-moving drift trips simply can’t.

The weather was warm and sunny and breezy, and I felt like I could lay down in the tall grass and wait for the day to start over and fish it again.

Montana trout stream and wildflowers

Naturally, I didn’t do exactly that, but I did fish another small stream. That report’s coming soon to an Underground near you.

See you on the river, Tom Chandler

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