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Posts tagged: rainbow trout

California Fish Stocking Order Raises Rural Hackles

November 26, 2008, by Tom Chandler No comments yet

California
Fish & Game recently agreed to halt stocking of non-native species
entirely in response to a lawsuit designed to force them to evaluate
impacts of stocking on native species.

Some suggested it was a
huge overreaction designed to put pressure on those bringing the
lawsuit, but in any case, California Fish & Game has now agreed to
revise its stocking practices, and a judge signed off on an order allowing a modified stocking plant that still looks pretty over the top.

Rural areas – often dependent on tourism – seem particularly irked, and though I haven’t heard from anyone in Siskiyou County yet, John at the Northern California Hiking Blog put together a list of area waters that won’t be stocked with non-natives, and we’ll see how that sits with the locals (the statewide “no-stock” list can be found here):

Siskiyou County and nearby:
Boulder Lake East
Boulder Lake West
Cabin Meadow Lake
Caldwell Lake # 1
Caldwell Lake # 2
Calf Lake
Campbell Lake
Castle Lake
Cold Creek
Dobkins Lake
Duck Lake Big
Duck Lake Little
Elk Lake Little
English Lake Lower
Fox Creek Lake
Granite Lake Green
Gumboot Lake Lower
Hancock Lake Big
Mill Creek Lake West
Paradise Lake
Rock Fence Lake
Russian Lake Upper
Sacramento River, South Fork
Seven Lake Lower
Sky High Lake Lower
Sky High Lake Upper
Taylor Lake
Telephone Lake
Toad Lake
Trail Gulch Lake
Virginia Lake
Waterdog Lake
West Park Lake Lower
West Park Lake Middle
Canyon Creek Lake Upper, Trinity Alps
Brandy Creek
Fall River Lake

A
few of the places I fish are on the list, and in a few cases, I’ll be
saddened to say bye-bye to some of the local Brookie populations. On the other hand, we may see fewer fishermen where the stocking truck no longer goes, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing.

What isn’t clear to me is if stocking of “native” species will go on unchecked as suggested by this sentence on the Fish & Game Web site: “The order does not address the stocking of native
fish into native waters.”

I’d suggest a 12″ rainbow isn’t a “native” fish in a creek where 6″ fish are the norm, but we’ll wait and see how this plays out.

See you behind the hatchery truck, Tom Chandler.

fish stocking, stocking trout, rainbow trout, native trout, non-native trout

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Fly Fishing as a Substitute for Reality: An Afternoon on the (Sunny) Upper Sacramento

November 20, 2008, by Tom Chandler 8 comments

Regular readers know I badly needed some river time, and when the gray, drippy olive weather looks to be setting in like a sack of wet cement, you don’t want to miss your shot at what could be acres of rising trout.

What I’m going to say next won’t surprise any of my fishing buddies: only minutes after jamming my gear in the truck and leaving my house, the skies cleared and the sun appeared – an occurrence common enough that the local Undergrounders have developed an acronym for it: it’s a “NOWE” (Non-Olive Weather Event).

My less-generous friends would say I “Tom’d” the hatch (and no, it isn’t a compliment).

The Upper Sacramento River in Fall
Later – near Dunsmuir – the sunny weather made for nice light.

Fair enough. After all, we’re fly fishermen, which means we start whining when the rain stops and the warm, happy sun emerges.

In short, we aren’t exactly the poster children for mental health (at least not in the outdoor sense). Glancing apprehensively at a clearing sky might seem normal to us, but it’s the kind of behavior that’s likely a source of concern for our families.

Still, when you need the river time, you don’t let something like a little sunny weather stand between you and a trout, so Steve Bertrand and I found ourselves way downriver (somehow reasoning the BWO hatches down there are more reliable in sunny weather, though how we arrived at that I can’t honestly say).

We hiked past a lot of attractive-but-riseform-free water, eventually finding ourselves on a very flat, very shallow, very technical stretch of water I hadn’t fished in a year (and for good reason).


We interrupt this fishing report for an artsy-fartsy picture.

It’s the kind of place where simply easing yourself into casting distance means the fish can and will stop rising. Of course, we knew that, so we tried the old ploy of picking a spot and standing still for 20 minutes.

One minute, the trout seemingly believe you’re an oddly shaped predator, and the next, you’ve become new piece of cover, and voila – they’re rising cautiously again.

Well, on a cloudy, rainy day they’d start rising cautiously again.

On a sunny day – with only a few #20 BWOs floating by – the best they do is rise sporadically, and with long dead periods in between. Catching a single trout tends to put the rest of them down, and given the thinness of the hatch, that could mean they were down for good.

A roy Palm Emerger fly
A Roy Palm Emerger worked where the parachute didn’t – especially once coated with a little Frog’s Fanny.

I caught the only trout I had a real shot at, and in an odd moment of synchronicity, Bertrand bagged his just upriver, and at times our drags were whirring in unison.

My trout was a 14″ specimen with a messed-up lip but an expansive mid-section, and Bertrand’s went a couple inches longer (though I still contend mine was “smarter,” and therefore counts for more).

Upper Sacramento River Rainbow Trout
Odd lip, but he’s got the Upper Sacramento color.

Steve had a shot at another fish and got him to eat, but didn’t get the hook in him. The hatch – never good to begin with – faded rapidly into memory, along with the rising fish.

In the fly fishing sense, that’s the end of the story.

And I was fine with that. Better than fine, actually.

A nice trout is a nice trout, and time spent on the river isn’t time spent at a computer monitor.

At some point in the recent past, I’d started waking up to the idea that the world’s being overrun by yahoos and buttheads, most of whom seem happy to follow the loudest, most-vicious voices in the crowd instead of thinking for themselves.

That trout rise for a while and then stop – simply because it suits them – feels refreshingly, well… real. It’s possible fly fishing remains interesting to me after 30+ years because I play the game in somebody else’s ballpark, and do so by their rules, which are never entirely clear at the time.

It’s intriguing stuff, and you can’t embrace it when it works for you and then whine endlessly about it when it doesn’t.

See you on the river, Tom Chandler.

The Upper Sacramento River

fly fishing, fishing, upper sac, upper sacramento river, bwo, blue winged olives, rainbow trout

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Fly Fishing Your Home Waters: Why It’s Good Even When It’s Bad

August 7, 2008, by Tom Chandler 12 comments

Your home waters are your home waters, and if you lack a possessive sensibility surrounding them – even those stretches you haven’t seen in years – then you’re a better man than I.

Of course, the Upper Sacramento River is my home water, and yet – because of work and trips – I haven’t seen the thing in close to two months.

An Upper Sacramento River rainbow trout
One cast, one fish. To preserve my perfect average, I should have stopped there.

Naturally, you don’t whine about fly fishing places like Montana and Maine, but because you know your home waters well, you’re keenly aware you largely missed the Pink Alberts, early summer’s “secret” big spinner falls, and that your annual trip to a Big Fish Stretch You Don’t Talk About Online is way overdue.

Time for all that later. Tuesday evening, I couldn’t take it any longer, and headed to a nearby stretch – something I’ve fished as much as anything on the river.

The Great Gear Search

While my fly fishing gear is scattered around the floor – bits of Montana and Maine still attached – I got to the river with pretty much everything (except hemostats, which I needed, and the BWO/midge box, which I didn’t). I did remember my roll cast – the most underrated, underused, can’t-live-without-it cast on the Upper Sacramento.

Feeling contemplative, I brought Raine’s hollowbuilt 8.5′ 5/6wt quad.

It’s a rollcasting machine, and while I hesitate to mention it – fearing Raine will remember he loaned it to me and want it back – I will say it kicked butt on water where most seem tempted to haul out their 3wts.

The Hollowbuilt Quad bamboo fly rod: a roll casting machine
Raine’s hollowbuilt quad and a reel I use simply because I like the way it looks.

On the Upper Sac, indiscriminate use of light-line fly rods isn’t always rewarded, and there are days when I wonder why a reasonably tapered 6wt – the “normal” trout rod just a couple decades ago – isn’t still the standard.

But then, it’s entirely possible that’s just me retro-grouching; I’ll leave that to a later post.

Steve Bertrand met me in the turnout, which was good since I’d brought a big ziplock bag of surplus potato salad from the Shasta Summit Century (a guide care package).

Being in a basically wiped-out mood, I was happy to watch for a while, though if I didn’t crow a teensy bit about connecting with a 12″-13″ rainbow on my first cast, I’d probably be dead.

I caught a handful more during what looked like a sparse, mixed hatch that could have included PEDs, caddis, and midges.

Given my preference for presentation over bugs, I caught all my trout on a #16 Quigley Cripple, and after catching a couple on a small caddis, Bertrand eventually tied on a Quigley Cripple that had been mauled so badly in a prior use that I shortened the name to “Quig” to reflect the loss of materials.

Upper Sacramento Brown Trout
Lots of color, little trout: Bertrand’s brown tout.

He quickly used it to connect with a small brown trout, which probabably came from the lake through Box Canyon dam, though it always fires my imagination: is there any significant brown trout reproduction on the Upper Sacramento?

I’m checking it out, and will let you know.

Fish question aside, it was the kind of laid-back evening you enjoy on your home waters when you don’t have anything to prove, or a body count to meet, or a deadline for going home.

You’re just there, waiting for something to happen, realizing that sitting quietly and watching the river stream by means something is happening, though it might fall under the heading of “internal dialog” instead of “big hatch of bugs and large trout.”

There is more local fly fishing headed the Undergrounder’s way, though where that fly fishing will happen is anybody’s guess.

I’m in a strange mood surrounding fly fishing; getting someplace remote feels more important than the fishing itself, which suggests another hike into the mountains.

See you somewhere, Tom Chandler.

The Montana Road Trip Continues: Georgetown Lake, and Culinary Breakthroughs

July 6, 2008, by Tom Chandler 8 comments

Rock Creek – and its flying squadrons of stone flies – disappeared in the rear view mirror last Tuesday, and [name redacted] began the in-car briefing for what could happen at the Underground’s next Montana destination.

Georgetown Lake, fog bank
Georgetown Lake, Montana. Not a lonely place.

Because we found 27 boats bobbing on a single arm of the lake when we arrived, I’m going to assume Georgetown Lake isn’t exactly a secret either.

Why were we there?

In fairness, [name redacted] warned in advance it wasn’t exactly a pristine fishery.

In fact, he said we’d see a lake carpeted with other fishermen.

But when a fishing buddy says “we could hit the damsels, the callibaetis, and even the giant lake caddis – and maybe catch a 20” brook trout,” you tend to forget the parts about crowds.

The road to Georgetown Lake
Montana features a lot of sky. I’m calling it “Lotta Sky Country.” Catchy, eh?

After all, fly fishermen are largely about potential – reality runs a poor second in our fevered brains – and selective memory is a key part of the package.

Where was I?

Oh yeah. Back to Georgetown Lake, where the Stuart Mill arm opened the day we arrived.

Ignoring the hordes of other fly fishermen, we slid [name redacted]‘s little drift boat in the water, and… started catching trout.

A lot of trout.

My damsel-esque streamer made it exactly 1/3 of the way through my first retrieve before something grabbed it.

That something turned out to be your standard 12” rainbow trout, though fishing slowed dramatically after our fish fish; it took nearly 2/3 of the next cast to hook up with a nice 16” specimen that ran me all around the boat.

A Georgetown Lake rainbow trout
A Georgetown Lake rainbow (apparently one of many).

Crowds? What crowds?

I’d love to mold this report in words that highlighted my considerable skill at fly fishing, but in truth, of the 27 boats in the Stuart Mill arm, a good 1/8 of them seemed to be hooked up at any one time.

The fishing was good enough that [name redacted] and I started casting our attentions about in a search for bigger trout, and “stupid easy” was a phrase I later used to describe the fishing to the L&T. (Yeah, we had cell phone coverage, and yeah, I miss the L&T. What of it?)

[Name redacted] and I aren’t exactly body counters, and we can’t tell you how many trout we caught, though we can say one was a brookie, though instead of the fabled 20” brookie, he was a 12” fish who twisted off before we got the net under him.

I do know this (and I’m putting it in writing for the first time): it got a little boring.

Callibaetis, Georgetown Lake
A Georgetown Lake Callibaetis, courtesy’ someone’s shirt.

You may have read the short story about the fly fisherman who dies and finds himself on a beautiful stream where he catches big fish on every cast.

Eventually, he discovers he’s not in heaven, but in hell, and while nobody would confuse Georgetown Lake with the fiery pit, there is an element of truth to the idea that good fishing is good, great fishing is great, but too-much, too-easy fishing is neither.

Fortunately, the next day’s fishing was tougher, and the days after were tougher still.

We managed to catch plenty of trout – including a 17” Brookie and a fair number of similarly sized rainbows – doing all the usual lake things (speed-stripping a streamer seemed to always work, and the grabs were good, clean, vicious fun).

A 17\
A 17″ brook trout — the Official Char of the Trout Underground.

Spicing the trip were the daily electrical storms, which lit up the Pintar Range like no fireworks display ever could, and a side trip down a culinary back alley where trip leader [name redacted] almost met his maker.

The prior day we’d rolled into nearby Anaconda for lunch, and made the mistake of ordering the “special” at a restaurant that I won’t name for fear of reprisals.

It sounded good on paper, though in truth, we’d have been better off if we’d eaten the paper instead of the sandwich.

That was bad, but it lead to what can only be described as a Huge Culinary Advance in the State of the Hot Dog.

The Slaw Dog’s Younger, More Dangerous Brother

My reader’s know of the Underground’s affection for the slaw dog – that heart-stopping collection of dog, bun, mustard, onions, chili and cole slaw.

Lacking almost all those ingredients – but craving the rich, tasty goodness of a slaw dog – [name redacted] and I hit upon a substitute.

In retrospect, it wasn’t the best decision we ever made, especially as [name redacted] foundered on a man-sized helping of our new creation, hovering for several hours in the twilight zone between life and death. Eventually, his gastronomical shock troops gained the upper hand and order was restored, but even a near visit from the Grim Reaper leaves its mark on you.

What could cause so much suffering? What simple lunch could push a human being to the brink, there to stare into the never-ending abyss?

Undergrounders, we introduce the Bacon-Wrapped Hot Dog:

The Bacon-Wrapped Hot Dog

The Bacon Wrapped Hot Dog – like nuclear weapons – should never have been developed.

It’s a harmless, friendly appearing snack, but like those fruity-smelling South American plants that lure you in, then bite your fingers off (I read about them in the checkout line), the Bacon-Wrapped Hot Dog looks gentle, but bites hard.

You’ve been warned.

The Fishing Stuff

This being a fly fishing blog and all, I suppose a quick (yet detailed) rundown of – you know – fly fishing gear is in order.

First, we caught trout at Georgetown on:

  • Many different Damsel nymphs
  • Many different Callibaetis nymphs
  • Many different streamers
  • A couple different dry flies
  • Many different other assorted flies

Now that we’ve established the technical nature of the fishing, all that’s left is to comment on the gear, which included:

  • Clear Camo sinking lines
  • Floating lines
  • Lines that were supposed to do either, but didn’t

The Underground’s rod preference ran to the Raine 8.5′ Hollowbuilt Quad prototype, though what turned out to be the real star of the show – the 9′ 6wt Orvis Zero Gravity fly rod I reviewed a long time ago.

Everyone who cast the Zero G loved its feel, responsiveness and ability to cover serious quantities of water (without assuming the identity of a broomstick), but derided the too-small grip (“I’ll buy it when they make it an adult model” quipped one).

In an age where you find people trying to fling streamers into the wind with 3wts, the oft-forgotten 6wt fly rod deserves a little overdue fly rod love (and some day, I may write that essay).

My word processor tells me I’ve gone beyond 1000 words, and anyway, [name redacted]‘s standing by the door, rod tubes in hand,

I haven’t yet written up our side-trip to a small tributary stream, where we caught three Westslope Cutthroat trout in the 14”-16” class (astonishing size for the small river), but I will.

You’ll hear more as soon as I get back, which is looking like late Tuesday.

See you somewhere in Montana, Tom Chandler.

Big Bugs on the Upper Sac: The Fly Fishing Reports Keep Flooding In…

June 6, 2008, by Tom Chandler 5 comments

Fishing five times in the last seven days should imbue me with a relaxed, "I’m getting it all done" feeling, but in truth, I’m still straining at the leash.

Everything is breaking loose simultaneously, and a barrage of choice means no matter where you go, you’re missing something somewhere else (as if the laws of physics could somehow be repealed for fly fishermen).

Steve Bertrand on the Upper Sacramento River 
Steve Bertrand looks calm, but then, he’s a guide, so he’s got lots of time to fish.

Still, I’d heard tantalizing reports of evening hatches of big bugs (and big trout) on the Upper Sacramento, and in fly fishing’s universal gesture of hope, found myself on the river tying on a #10 parachute.

Big bugs often equal big fish, and last night a big bug was a ticket to a splashy take on pretty much every cast… from small fish.

Catching 7" trout on every cast might be somebody’s idea of fun, but after you launch a couple out of the water with a hook set, you start to feel a little greasy, like you were conning elementary school kids out of their lunch money.

So Steven and I moved upriver in pursuit of bigger fish, and though we never got on them (like we did last year), I did land a 14" chunk and lost another about the same size.

It wasn’t the epic big fish night, but it was still trout eating big dries (which means it was damned fun), and we fished hard enough that I only stopped long enough to take two photographs.

Interestingly, the "same" trip last year netted us many big fish, and it happened prior to Memorial Day, when the river was lower than it is even now — a good lesson for those of us who expect the river to run like the Swiss train system.

For those making the trip, the river’s very fishable, but don’t accept that as license for doing stupid things; crossing isn’t a given, and while the flows are coming down, it ain’t summer yet.

The Gear

After fishing the 8.5′ Steffen glass rod on Tuesday, I thought I’d drag along the Orvis prototype 8.5′ 5wt Helios fly rod and see how the two compared.

Orvis Helios 8.5' 5wt fly rod 
Looks like it’s floating, but it’s sitting on a rock

The Orvis Helios is a fabulous rod — unbelievably light and very zippy — and I can understand why they keep winning awards for the thing.

Still, my low-modulus casting stroke is seemingly hardwired into my genes and tomorrow’s trip will involve fiberglass, though I’ll freely admit graphite manufacturers are finally building a little "feel" into their rods.

Good for them.

See you somewhere (I’m hitting a just-opened alpine brookie lake tomorrow), Tom Chandler.

Technorati Tags: upper sacramento river,upper sac,orvis helio,fly rod,green drake,rainbow trout,fly fishing the upper sacramento,fishing report

The Underground Catches Little Fish: Aims High Tomorrow

May 31, 2008, by Tom Chandler 1 comment

It’s Saturday evening; back from the Upper Sacramento River Exchange’s annual fundraiser, I’ve got just enough time to post a quick pic from today’s fishing trip before getting the gear ready for tomorrow’s:

small creek rainbow trout
A little rainbow trout. Cute, eh?

I put in a couple hours on a small, small stream, and caught small, small trout (biggest was 7 inches).

This stream’s still running a little high, so I went scouting. Turns out the road to Gumboot Lake is clear, and the lake’s ice-free. Looks like it’s been that way for a while.

The backcountry’s opening up my friends, and tomorrow’s attempt at a high altitude stream promises much — both in trout or adventure.

See you way up high, Tom Chandler.

Technorati Tags: fly fishing,fishing,fishing report,rainbow trout,small stream

A Nice, Quiet, Calm (FRUSTRATING) Day Spent Fly Fishing Lake Siskiyou

May 18, 2008, by Tom Chandler 7 comments

With all the weirdness lately, I wasn’t looking for a Punishing, Bruising Fly Fishing Trip Into the Bowels of Hell Itself.

Instead, calm and serene sounded pretty damned good — and the Upper Sac and its tributaries were moving some serious water — so in a classic example of finding what I thought I was looking for, ended up on Lake Siskiyou.

Steven Bertrand provided the transportation (boat), and we basically didn’t catch fish when we visited the "usual" uplake spots, though I have to say I still looked pretty good doing it.

Lake Siskiyou 
Siskiyou is calm place (OK, not so much on weekends).

Later, we motored to our best smallie/bluegill water, where apparently fish and frustration waited for us in equal doses.

On one brushy stretch, I did manage four grabs on a popper in a matter of minutes, though in ample testament to my laid-back state and the lack of any predatory edge, I only boated one smallie.

Orvis Zero Gravity
Shameless tupperware plug: the 9′ 6wt Zero Gravity is a nice streamer rod.

Soon, the open-water rises started, and we spent a couple hours chasing trout eating… well, we’re still not sure what they were eating.

The surface film was littered with flying ants, and we pounded up a few grabs from very spooky trout on ant patterns, but we didn’t get bit far more often than we did, creating a suspicion that we didn’t quite get it right.

Midges? Mayfly nymphs? Who knows.

Trout rise rings
This is what we were chasing later; rise rings, usually coming in groups of 3-4. 

Ultimately, we both missed a handful of takes on ant patterns, and the trout were typically spooky.

They’d create two to three barrel-sized boils before disappearing again, so catching them involved leading them — difficult when you’re never entirely sure which direction they were headed.

I finally hooked and fought a nice trout for several minutes (he just took off every time he saw the boat), and then — like so many unexplained moments in life — the hook just came out.

wormtracks 
And, as the sun sets slowly in the West…

The Gear Guy

I fished poppers and dry flies using Chris Raine’s 8.5′ 5/6wt hollowbuilt quad prototype, and while it throws a popper nicely with a DT6 line, Next time I’ll try it with a DT 5.

When fishing the wide-open expanses of a lake, I can quickly find myself casting 70 feet while thinking I’m throwing 45 feet, leading me to wonder what the hell happened to my backcast.

I also fished a Corltand Clear Camo sinking line on a 9′ 6wt Orvis Zero Gravity, and while people who fish streamers a lot suggest throwing the fastest tapered rod you can get your hands on, I’m happier throwing a mid-flex rod.

That could mean I’ve stumbled on an essential truth overlooked by the rest of fly fishing, but it’s more likely I’m a little hardheaded about my gear.

So be it.

The Weather

Damn, it’s hot up here. With many of the local rivers absolutely blown out by snow melting (fast) in near 100-degree temperatures, I’ll likely be back on Siskiyou sometime this week, this time trying a little harder to crack the code.

Naturally, you’ll be among the first to hear about it.

See you on the lake, Tom Chandler.

Technorati Tags: siskiyou,lake siskiyou,lake fishing,fly fishing,fishing,smallmouth bass,rainbow trout,flying ants,fly rods

Are We In Heaven Yet? (The Underground Catches Many Big Trout In Stunning Setting)

April 18, 2008, by Tom Chandler 20 comments

The words “big trout” excite a fly fishermen’s nervous system, and in a way that’s all out of proportion to their caloric value.

You start wondering about things like that, and the next thing you know you’re digging through texts about the psychology of our hunter-gatherer forebearers, and eventually you just give up and go try to catch a few big trout, which is a lot easier when you know where they are.

Bamboo fly rod fighting a big trout
A 20″-22″ trout puts a big bend in Raine’s 8.5′ hollowbuilt quad prototype.

Local guide Wayne Eng – sensing I needed a break from the regular beatings meted out by the Upper Sacramento – called and suggested a scouting trip to a private pond.

I’d fished it before, and done well; a fair number of nice trout, and always one big fish.

It’s small, it’s centered in a tiny alpine valley, and later in the year it can get a little weedy. The pond’s been “enhanced” in terms of size, but because that happened years ago, you can’t tell.

Tom Chandler fly fishing a pond
That’s me late in the day, speed stripping a streamer (Wayne Eng photo)

Over the years, the edges have softened nicely with weeds and cattails, and the trout — which can’t really reproduce in the lake — were initially stocked in small and large sizes.

Wayne said it hadn’t seen any new fish for over a year, and frankly, I wasn’t expecting much. The cormorants had been hammering the smaller fish, and there’s always the threat of a winterkill when spring’s late in coming.

At least we can scratch the winterkill theory:

A big, colorful, rainbow trout
The trout were all like this; shoulders like WWF wrestlers.

My final body count was in the vicinity of ten fish. My two smallest went 16″-17″ and my biggest was somewhere in the vicinity of 22″-24″ (most were around 20″).

Naturally, I lost a few – they’d get their big heads in the weeds and that was it – and several real torpedoes chased a streamer I was speed-stripping, which was enough to stop my heart.

broadmouseWayne was oddly focused on catching a big trout on a mouse pattern, and he worked it to death in an attempt to prove… well, I can’t imagine what.

He got a few to swirl at it, but never hooked up, and sometimes it happens that way; you’re fly fishing in pursuit not of fish or bragging rights, but to prove an obscure point.

That you catch fewer fish doesn’t much matter, and besides, once you figure catch & release into the mix, it’s clear the pursuit the actually is the point.

The Fish & Gear Portion

All my trout (and two of Wayne’s) were caught on the prototype Hollowbuilt Quad (8.5′ 6wt) loaned to me by Chris Raine, and it handled throwing weighted streamers in the wind about as well as you could expect any rod to.

Bamboo fly rod; hollowbuilt quad by Raine

When I took it apart at the end of the day, it was still arrow straight. In the space of a single afternoon, I think we inflicted several year’s worth of abuse on the rod, a fact which will hopefully put the myth of bamboo’s fragility to the sword.

My first trout ate a small wet fly that looked a little like the water boatmen the trout were chasing.

The fish was huge, and 1/3 of his length was head. His jaw was hooked like a salmon’s and I put him back in the water, couldn’t quite grasp the size of him, and decided I could probably stop for the day without any qualms.

Big rainbow trout, wayne eng
One of Wayne’s bigger fish

I didn’t of course — fly fishermen just talk about doing that stuff to reinforce the perception of our elevated moral sense — and after a while, I started channeling Ian Rutter because I had the sudden urge to speed-strip a rabbit zonker streamer.

On the second cast, a big fish hammered it and tailwalked a good ten feet before throwing the hook.

A minute later — with adrenaline still pumping through my system – another monster trout freight trained it from the side and because I saw the whole thing happen, I instinctively set the hook hard, immediately breaking the 3x tippet.

Rainbow trout on a bamboo fly rod
One of my streamer trout doing his best to break my fly rod.

That’s when I sat down for a few seconds, took a few deep breaths, and reminded myself I wasn’t fishing for bass with a flipping stick and 20 pound test.

I hooked several more on the streamer, and almost as much fun were the fish who followed it and swirled, but never ate it.

Watching the wake of a 22″ trout approach your streamer — and doing nothing about it — is an effective test of your nerve, and after the streamer bite died, I was actually pretty relieved to go back to slow-stripping a nymph.

broadsmalltrout
A streamer trout. Thanks Ian.

Yeah, What is the Point of It All?

This was a rich, weedy pond that at one point hadn’t been much of a fishing hole, and while the fish in there were mostly stocked, they’d survived several years — long enough to lose their hatchery drabness and mangled fins.

In the larger picture, they were pretty damned lucky trout; they’d gone from a concrete runway to a wild place where they’d never actually be hungry, and if trout look up at the surface of the water with anything approaching wonder, they’d see a breathtaking mountain view staring back at them.

Wayne Eng fly fishing near Mount Shasta
Wayne Eng hooked up (in more ways than one)

It’s a great place for fly fishermen to play, and yes — you have to go where the big fish are to catch them — but I get the feeling that bragging too much about the monster trout I caught would be a lot like going to a strip club and bragging about all the boobs I saw.

It’s fun, it’s diverting — and maybe it’s an example of the way the West fished before we screwed it up — but given the number of big fish swimming around in the thing, even a pretty bad fly fishermen could walk away thinking he’s a real predator.

See you on the water, Tom Chandler.

Technorati Tags: fly fishing,fishing,rainbow trout,big rainbow trout,big trout,fly fishing for trout,fly fishing stillwater,bamboo fly rod,raine hollowbuilt quad fly rod,damned straight

In Event of Emergency, Break Glass. Grab Fly Rod. Go Fishing.

February 7, 2008, by Tom Chandler 7 comments

Fly fishing the Upper Sacramento River in winter
Fly fishing the Upper Sacramento River in winter isn’t always about the bugs.

In the middle of a gray, snowy winter, the phrase “making hay while the sun shines” acquires a patina of meaning that simply doesn’t exist on your average warm, summer day.

I don’t know if an itch to go fly fishing instead of working necessarily qualifies as an emergency, but it damned well felt like one. We haven’t exactly seen an overabundance of sunny days, so when one appears, you fail to take advantage at your own peril.

An Upper Sacramento Rainbow in late afternoon light 
Does the lack of this constitute an emergency?

So I grabbed a fly rod and skis, packed the Lowe winter day pack, and loaded the tail-wagging Wonderdog into the Bronco.

The ski trip in was all downhill, so I had ample time to focus on Wally the Wonderdog’s tendency to chase me downhill, then cut in front of me when he got ahead (think it’s that hunting dog instinct).

shadowportrait
A portrait of the writer as a shadow.

Still, I arrived sans face plant, got unpacked, put on waders, rigged the 8.5′ 4wt Diamondglass rod, and watched.

And watched.

No risers, though there were midges on the water. If prior winters are any indication, we’re past the point where you can count on an olive hatch, though you shouldn’t necessarily count them out either.

 A Diamondglass fly rod
This is one cool midge rod. Sadly, it isn’t being made any more.

For once, I was prepared. The 8.5′ 4wt Diamondglass rod is ideal for this kind of technical winter fishing, and I tied on what’s been a killer midge for me — a glass bead variant of the Yong Special.

It’s a nothing fly — basically black sewing thread wrapped on a hook to give the body a taper. I add a pearl glass bead to imitate a detached blackly larvae (found in huge numbers way downriver), but figure the glass bead won’t hurt even in the absence of blackflies.

I tied it behind a BWO parachute, and fished one short stretch of river for about 90 minutes.

The result was a pair of hookups; the fish in the picture above simply came unbuttoned, but the 16" rainbow below — photographed after the light was gone from the canyon — made it all the way to hand.

coldrainbowtrout
Curse the poor quality light; it’s another rose-colored Upper Sac Rainbow

After releasing the fish, I kinda wish he’d come unbuttoned too; my hands stung like I’d been playing catch using a porcupine as the ball.

In fact — once the sun disappeared behind the canyon walls, everything got kinda cold, and with my sun-and-trout-related emergency deftly averted, I packed up my gear and started the slog out.

The long, uphill slog.

Which I would do again in an instant, though today I actually do have to work.

Every winter, there comes a time when I’d basically kill to see just one Green Drake get eaten by a trout, but that kind of electric moment is months away.

Instead, there’s a spare elegance to fishing in the winter, provided you meet the cold, the snow and the tiny flies on their terms instead of yours.

See you on skis, Tom Chandler.

thetracksback
Halfway up the hill.

Technorati Tags: upper sacramento river,upper sac,fly fishing,fishing,midge,yong special,rainbow trout,ski ‘n fish

Winter Fly Fishing the Upper Sacramento: He Catches Big Trout — I Play Fish Paparazzi

December 10, 2007, by Tom Chandler 8 comments

Fly fishing the Upper Sacramento River in winter can mean fishless days — but it can also mean big rainbow trout.

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