Visit this link for a brief account of my first fish landing since my lone steelhead out of the Jon Bon Jovi hole at Bella Coola. Fished with some sparkly lures in the morning then moved to long plastic worms and different sparkly lures in the afternoon (I know, I can't match the fishing lingo that litters this blog). Lunch consisted of salami sandwiches, beef jerky and bottled water. Water temp was very warm, as Fayette County Lake is fed by a neighboring coal plant. I didn't find out until after the trip that it's best to long-arm the fish in pictures, creating the illusion that the fish is bigger than it really is. FYI, this was a 2-3 pounder.
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Thursday, March 25, 2010
Good Week of Steelheading in One Morning
I went up to the mighty Met this morning to try and get a last steelheading trip in before the river closes. It ended up being an EPIC day!
The day began with a 5 am #7 from the East Wenatchee McDonalds. (Remember, Rick... Orange Juice!!) Drove up the Methow valley a ways and began to get ready to fish. As the waders were going on, I got an urge.
After visiting the local gas station to drop off a package, I returned to find two guys in the hole I wanted to access. They were on oppposite sides of the river from each other, so I dropped way down in the hole and fished the tail out. As I was walking in, the spey guy just finished landing a steelie and as I settled into the run, the gear guy above me landed another. It was looking good!
I proceeded to hook four fish in the tail out and land two of them. Casting was a pain with trees behind me, so when the spey guy left, I got out, crossed the bridge and took his spot opposite the gear guy. There was a nice flat rock about knee deep that I stood on. From that rock I hooked 10 more steelies in the next 3 hours. Landed seven of them. The landing was much better on the far side of the river as was the casting.
The fish further upriver were much larger than the lower river fish (at least from my randomized sampling). Four of the fish were over 30" with the largest going about 32". All natives, no hatcheries, so I couldn't convince Elisabeth that this was just a long trip to the store for fish.
All in all, went 9 for 14 on a half day. Finished fishing at about noon and called it a day!
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Fighting Rainbow Club
Ninety minutes on the water yesterday afternoon for seven nice rainbows. Water temp 46 degrees. Purple egg sucking leech, 6mm peach colored bead pegged with a toothpick 1-inch above hook (thanks Heath and Nancy!), and prince nymph were successful. Wind came up strong the last half hour I was there (5:30-6:00)
A great reward for attending the cleft palate team meeting in Yakima!
Friday, March 5, 2010
Methow Magic!
Rick, Tom and Brian Anantatmula (sp?) went up to fish the Met today. The morning started with the traditional #7 Breakfast at McDonalds. Orange juice was the morning beverage of choice for those who would hook fish today.
Fortunately for me, the day was to belong to Tom. Six fish were hooked and three were landed. Tom managed to hook 5 and land all 3! 2 Natives were landed (see pic below) as well as one fish for dinner in the smoker tomorrow.
I will say that there is nothing quite as exhilarating as an indicator dive that is followed by a rod tip raise that meets with resistance, a head shake and a run.
Interestingly, it was the hatchery brat that put up the best fight going airborne over 5 times!
2009-2010 has been an outstanding steelhead year in NCW.
Fortunately for me, the day was to belong to Tom. Six fish were hooked and three were landed. Tom managed to hook 5 and land all 3! 2 Natives were landed (see pic below) as well as one fish for dinner in the smoker tomorrow.
I will say that there is nothing quite as exhilarating as an indicator dive that is followed by a rod tip raise that meets with resistance, a head shake and a run.
Interestingly, it was the hatchery brat that put up the best fight going airborne over 5 times!
2009-2010 has been an outstanding steelhead year in NCW.
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