Saturday, June 22, 2019

Summer Solstice at the FRC

One tradition we try to always keep is to celebrate the longest day of the year with a fishing trip. Usually we meet somewhere in the afternoon, fish till dark, then fish a little bit more, then promise to remember to bring our headlamps next year so we can see walking back to the car. This year, we avoided that and met in the early am at the FRC. Rob said he'd be there about 7:30, so I planned accordingly, then got a text from him at 7:00 that he was there. I was going to complain, but then realized that as long as it takes him to get his rods set up and flies tied on (plural for him even when singular due to his double vision), he'd still be on the bank by the time I arrived.

It was a beautiful morning, little wind for most of it despite the forecast, but the fish were not as cooperative as our last visit. We started pulling buggers/leeches. I had one to the net quickly and a couple more strikes, Tom and Rob had a few strikes but no hookups. It was pretty slow.
All mine were cookie cutter twins of this one
There were some midges flying around, but not a lot of surface action from the fish. With the buggers slow, I decided to fish Tom's Snowcone Chewy Chironomid with a size 20 midge trailing it, right on the bottom (17 ft down). I promptly had a couple more fish and several strikes, then nothing more. And that was the way the morning went. Along the way Tom and Rob both hooked and landed a beast of a fish for each.
Tom pulling a beast from his cartoon net...
Tom's fish came unhooked while he was netting it, but swam away so slowly that
Tom got the net back under him before it could get away
I ended with seven to the net, all "little" guys, 18" to 19" long, fat and feisty. A couple on a size 10 or 12 thin black leech, one on Tom's chewy chirono (black, size 12) and the rest on the gray, size 20 midge. Not the non-stop action of a small stream, but a decent morning with some big fish. With summer here, we'll be looking more to moving water for the next few months.
Rob's big one - is that a trout, or a pig with fins?

Tuesday, June 11, 2019

"On the way home" from work...

With Father's Day upcoming, I asked my wife if I could have an early Father's Day present and stop at a favorite local stream on the way home from work. She said yes, and so I went. Evening sun, bugs on the water, fish rising everywhere, it was about as good as it gets. Left work at 16:30, was in the water at 18:10, and had my first fish (plural) about ten seconds later. Yup, it was a double.

Fished double psycho, size 14 on top, size 18 below most of the evening. Although the psychos did their job, the most popular "fly" was the red strike indicator, with one or two swirls on it almost every cast for much of the evening. After about the tenth fish to hand, a local appeared out of the grass at the top of the run I was in and started fishing. He had a fly rod, but I think I was up to a couple dozen before I saw him land one fish (the only one I saw). He fished down towards me, walking in the shallow side where I normally catch a lot of fish. He got to me and we chatted a bit. He had what looked like a mosquito, fishing it wet. I showed him the pyscho, talked to him a little about the caddis, offered him one, which was declined, and then he continued downstream. Not the most skilled fisherman, but it was good to see someone tossing flies instead of drowning worms. His fishing didn't seem to hurt anything, as I ended up getting 54 out of the first long run, including a number right where he had walked.
Typical rainbow for the evening
With so many hits on the strike indicator, I briefly tried a dry dropper with an elk hair caddis up top, but there was nary a swirl on the caddis, and my size 18 dropper wasn't getting down without the heavier fly above, so I went back to the double psycho for the rest of the evening. Those familiar with this stretch of river know that it flattens, shallows, and spreads above the first run, and the fishing slowed a bit as I worked my way up through, still finding fish regularly, but not so frequently.
Back to the psycho
It was looking to be a typical evening fishing this quarter mile stretch, finding about 75 fish or so. As the sun was setting, I got to the last few holes, which are often hit or miss; tonight they were a home run! Fish everywhere, consistently at the larger end of the size range for the evening (8" to 10"). I quickly broke 100 and they were still coming in the fading light. As I was approaching the visibility limit with my sunglasses (I always forget to carry my regular glasses along to fish a little longer in the low light), I needed one more to arrive at a nice, prime number. Second cast into the last run, the indicator went down and I reached my goal. Tally for the evening - 113 to hand, about 20 percent at the small end (5" to 6"), 25 to 30 percent at the high end (8" to 10"), the rest in the middle. Every one of them on the psycho (well, I'm pretty sure I flossed one on the indicator, but besides that, every one...). I love that fly. I love that river. Happy Father's Day!
Last light on a nice little rainbow


Saturday, May 11, 2019

Finally fishing in 2019...

Pretty sad when it is May before a fly hits the water, but late snows and lots of overtime at work had kept all my flies dry this year until today. I had just been looking at my fly boxes in the storage room looking at my box of hoppers and longingly remembering the slow rise of some huge rainbows at Nunya last year. A couple hours later, Tom called just as I was returning from my last errand of the day. He was at Ensign Ranch near Cle Elum and was going to stop at the Fighting Rainbow Club "on the way home" to Wenatchee. Would I like to join him? Hmm, wife and daughter in New York, empty calendar, give the WhatToDo a quick spin, and guess what?
Twenty minutes later I was on the road. Tom was across the pond in his float tube when I arrived. Risers all around him, fishing chironomids shallow under the indicator, he landed several while I readied my gear. Soon I was out to join him. First cast as I was kicking to where he was, I had a take down, which I missed. Thus started a great afternoon of fishing. There were some times when things slowed down, but if you found a rising fish and tossed your fly within a few feet of the rise, at least half the time you'd have a grab and a chance at a hook-up. The little guys were 16" to 18" and full of fight, making a number of long runs along with some acrobatics.
There were also a few big guys, like this 22" beast that I couldn't hold up for a picture because my hand wouldn't fit around it.
We switched to buggers when risers slowed down, but I eventually switched back to chironos later in the afternoon when I found more risers. Tom caught seven standing at the takeout while I kicked around trying to find one. I should have gone in with him. Temperature about 80F, light wind, lots of willing fish. Couldn't ask for a better afternoon, or a better first outing of the year. Hoping for more to come.

Friday, November 23, 2018

Black Fishday - Northern Edition

The day started out like any good Black Fishday should - cold, snowy, foggy, with slick roads. We headed south and east from Wenatchee to fish one of the ditches we had visited a couple years ago. Approaching George, the ice fog was so thick we could barely see where to turn to head towards the freeway, and though the roads weren't bad, there were a number of cars that slid off the road the night before (like the UW marching band bus near George the night before; too bad for the Cougars it wasn't the UW football team's bus that slid off the road...). We took a break for breakfast, and by the time we hit the ditch, it was a balmy 38 degrees or so, almost tropical compared to the 18 degrees from our last visit.
The #7 meal pays off again!
The first deep run was full of large fish, at least a dozen 15 to 20 inches that we could see, but they quickly spooked and weren't interested in our flies, so we started downstream. As with the previous visit, we saw many good sized fish, that seemingly spooked when we were 50 yards away, and caught the little guys that weren't yet as wise. The water was quite a bit lower than our last visit, so it was hard to tell if there were fewer fish, or they were just more easily spooked. We fished about a mile and a half of the ditch, and found fish mostly all along, but not in nearly as great a number as our previous visit.
A pretty day fishing the ditches
We we considering fishing all the way to another road crossing, but just past halfway there, Tom realized he was missing his second rod from his fancy Fishpond pack. And not his cheap Okuma reel/TFO rod (like I fish with all the time). It was his Sage/Ross. Ouch. The clip holding it in had come out earlier, and this time he didn't realize it came off for a long time. So we turned around to see if we could by chance find it somewhere in the thick grass along the banks. We searched where he had fallen in a hole with no luck, so I suggested a point a few hundred yards upstream where he slid into the water when crossing below a hole where I was fishing. Success! After a bit of searching he found it buried in the grass. Our spirits were bright despite the mediocre fishing and the steady rain that was now coming down. They were about to get brighter.

Back at our starting point, there was one thing left to do - Tom had to catch a fish from the bridge. Casting from 25 feet above the water into a bit of a wind was hard, but Tom finally got the correction right for how the line drifted to the right as it settled and dropped it right in the channel where we could see a good-sized albino trout feeding. No luck from the albino, but he did get a decent little guy.
The traditional bridge fish
With success from the bridge, we were about ready to leave, but I encourage him to throw a few more casts towards the bigger fish. The albino continued to ignore his fly, but a couple casts later, he hooked a big boy (or I should say, girl, as you will see in the photo later). With his 5x tippet, he passed on my suggestion to just lift it up like he had the last one, and instead handed me his rod while he climbed down to the streamside below the bridge. Once there, we executed a masterful pass of the rod while keeping as much tension as possible on the line. I reached the tip down so he could hold the line and keep tension, then I pulled line out of the reel and lowered the rod to him. He let me get tension on the fish again and reeled in the slack, and finally I let go of the line and Tom quickly took in the little bit of slack. I then climbed down and netted his fish, a 20-inch beast!
A big fish is always a reason for a big smile, especially when caught from a bridge
While taking the picture she proceeded to drop a ton of eggs - a fall spawning rainbow! That's a new one for us.
Uh, your fish is losing something Tom. It's about a half pound lighter than the previous photo.
So to sum up, a good, not great day (at least until the bridge at the end!). Most fish on small buggers/leeches, a few on a scud. The big lady was on a snowcone red chironomid, which was also a popular fly today drifted from above alongside the bank. Though we were hundreds of miles away from Rob, it was good that see that all the Merrill boys were able to have a successful Black Fishday!


Black Fish-day: Southern Utah edition

The day after Thanksgiving is Black Friday for some, but Black Fish-day for Merrill boys.  Since we were in Southern Utah we decided we could leave after dinner yesterday and drive home to fish with Rick and Tom, or we could just make the 20-minute drive to Leeds Creek.  Proximity won out so off we went late this morning to Leeds and the namesake creek flowing from the northern slopes of Pine Valley Mountain.

It was a beautiful sunny day with temps in the 60's.  Probably a bit more comfortable for us than for Rick and Tom today, who frequently are out in the snow, sleet, hail, or rain doing their best to avoid hypothermia.  Company was good today and the fish were cooperative though the creek was brushy.


Helping Jeff into the brush, er, creek

With me were Natalie's husband Brad and his dad, Jeff who fished with me in Wenatchee when they visited in June.  Leeds Creek is a brushy creek and the section we fished today was no exception.  I had a Renegade on, no surprise, Jeff a Royal Wulff, and Brad with an elk-hair caddis.  We all wanted visible flies.  Sometimes that was to be able to see them on the water and other times it was to find it in the trees.

Jeff watching the fly

We climbed into the creek and after fighting a bit of brush Brad & I had caught a couple of the beautiful Bonneville cutthroat trout.  Jeff went next and managed to have a number of fish to the fly and landed his first Bonneville today.  He also became better acquainted with some Leeds Creek brush.

Jeff's first Bonneville cutthroat 
I had an enjoyable day and was able to get a few extra casts when one of the Scherck crew was in the "penalty box" trying to get their fly out of the tree.  A good host would probably have been helping them but I've been fishing too long with my brothers and a fly in the brush means I'm back in the water for the "power play".

Rob with a "power play" Bonneville cutthroat 

We spent about three hours on the water (and in the brush) and as the sun went behind the mountains we climbed out of the creek and wandered a bit through the brush until we got to the road to walk back to our parking spot.  A short drive home, through the car wash so Mary will let me continue to take her minivan fishing, and it was turkey noodle soup at Grandma's before heading the the theater for a traditional movie night with the kids.

Happy Black Fish-day to all!

Saturday, September 8, 2018

Fishing Our Way Home II

We spent the night in Dillon, met our guide at the fly shop the next morning, and headed to the river.
It was an absolutely gorgeous fall day, but despite our guide's best efforts, the fishing didn't match the day. Pretty water, but not a lot of trout were found, and those that were found were less than giant sized. That's the way fishing is sometimes!
We drifted by some pretty real estate also.
By the end of the drift, we were less concerned about fishing the Big Hole and more interested in whether we would have time to visit Poindexter one more time before we headed to Missoula that night. We got off the river late, and by the time we were back to the fly shop and our car, it was about 45 minutes to sundown. No problem. We made it to Poindexter about 30 minutes before sunset, and there were several cars in the lot. Grabbing our rods we practically ran downstream and started fishing the later part of the run we had fished the previous night. With dark approaching fast, we speed-fished, hopscotching each other up the stream searching for the most willing fish. We found a few but not like the night before. Voices distantly heard from upstream and fresh bootprints in the mud made us think we were probably fishing behind someone. As dark approached, we hit fresh water and had a little last flurry of action. Then it was sadly time to leave Poindexter so we could get to our hotel and get a little sleep before our final day fishing our way home.

We decided to give head home by way of Nunya (all roads lead to Nunya when Tom and I are together). It being a Saturday, and arriving midday, we were not sure what we we would find. Bad news. Several vehicles, a couple guys camped and getting ready to head out fishing said there were two other groups already out. Not what we were hoping for. But resourceful brothers that we are, we found our way to a part of the stream free from fisherman and found some rainbows that matched the browns we had found in Poindetxter.
Nice Nunya bows

Beautiful fish
That's a Montana-sized smile!
After a couple hours, we decided to call it a day. While I wouldn't say we were tired of fishing after more than a week, we were satisfied enough to be able to head for home with big smiles and no regrets.

Thursday, September 6, 2018

Fishing Our Way Home

Dover had to spend time with his wife on her birthday, Rob was meeting his wife, but Tom and I were free to take a couple days to get home. We chose to head home via Dillon, Montana. We drove to Idaho Falls Wednesday night, then arose early for the fairly short drive to Dillon, where we visited a local fly shop to get information, to buy some flies, and to set up a guided trip for the next day. We were directed to Poindexter Slough, a nearby side channel/spring creek adjacent to the Beaverhead River. We arrived mid-morning and tried fishing some of the funky ways that the shop had suggested, without success. With some fish rising, we soon were fishing hoppers right against the grassy banks.
Poindexter Slough browns
Yup, that was better. Tom caught two nice browns slurping hoppers, and I missed a couple. We ran out of water, and wanted to give the Big Hole a try, so we left with the idea in our minds that we might come back and give it another shot in the evening. The first place we stopped on the Big Hole was a dud. The second place we found a couple fish above the bridge. My first was a native Montana grayling, a surprise to me when I brought it in.
Native Montana grayling from the Big Hole
Tom worked upstream, found some small ones in a side channel, and was surprised by a 17-incher. We continued upstream, but fish were either not there or not willing. With evening fast approaching and the fishing in the Big Hole less than stellar, we bailed and hoped to catch the last few minutes of daylight at Poindexter Slough. Arriving about 45 minutes before sunset, we walked downstream about 15 minutes and started fishing back. We were in the same water we fished in the morning, but  with low light and our confidence in the hoppers, the results were much different. We took turns, one fishing until a fish was caught, then yielding the hole to the other. We were never waiting more than a few minutes for a turn. We raised a fish at almost every bank, big fat browns, feeding on our hoppers with reckless abandon.
An average sized Poindexter brown
We like this place!
We came to a bank where I had missed one in the morning. I pointed to a large tuft of grass and told Tom I was going to pick one up there. First cast upstream, it drifted down, and was grabbed by a nice brown at the exact spot where I had missed it earlier in the day. The light was fading fast, but the fishing wasn't slowing down. We had each landed more than a half dozen fish, all big, fat brown up to 20-inches. In the twilight, Tom broke his fly off in a fish and decided to call it a day. I continued fishing, and caught a couple more, mostly by sound rather than sight.
Yes, it was pretty much that dark when we quit
At the last hole at a railroad bridge where we would get out, I heard a splash and missed one on the left, cast into the middle, another splash and another miss. After a couple more casts, I sensed a problem and sure enough, found the last splash had also taken my fly. With it pretty much full dark, phone flashlights were very helpful, and as we climbed out of the stream and walked back to the car, we marveled at the amazing hour we had just had. An evening like that is something special that you just hope will happen again sometime. Maybe tomorrow night...