I hit the water today with Adam and unlike last week we didn’t encounter any steelhead. However, Adam and I hooked a total of 7 brown trout. We only landed 3 but we called it quits early. I’m sure had we stayed we may have seen a few more fish. They didn’t seem picky as far as what they were eating, but pink string leeches, egg sucking leeches, and even an intruder all got the browns attention. If swinging wet flies doesn’t work dead drifting egg flies and nymphs can be a very effective method. I wouldn’t suggest using the same nymphs used for inland trout fishing. Flies for lake-run trout need to be tied on heavy wire hooks. Ten pound trout will straighten a light wire hook with ease. The kings are mostly gone and there are good numbers of coho and brown trout around. I’m sure there are some steelhead somewhere, but as long as the browns are eating you won’t here me complaining.
Lake Run Brown Trout
SE Wisconsin Tribs
I made it up to the Milwaukee River this past weekend and was glad to see a few steelhead get hooked and even showed a couple the boots. Saturday morning just as the sun was climbing over the horizon my friend Bret set the hook into a small steelhead dead drifting an egg pattern. These fish that return after only one year in the big lake usually weigh around 2-5 lbs and can be good fun if your fishing six or seven weight rods. I have noticed over the past few years that these fish tend to show up earlier than the two year fish. More than half of the steelhead I’ve caught or seen caught in October in southern Wisconsin have been one year fish.
But then again one of my biggest steelhead was caught late October of last year, so that doesn’t mean the big one isn’t out there early in the run. About twenty minutes after Bret released his fish he set the hook into another one. Only this time seconds after his line came tight a chrome steelhead erupted from the pool below him. As soon as the fun began it had ended. The hook came free and the fish got away. After resting the pool for a few minutes we rotated spots and I began to swing my orange bunny strip right below the riffles. It took a little while, but eventually a steelhead grabbed my fly and made a good run, and the first time it rolled toward me the hook came out. At the next spot I was able to make it happen when a 8 lb chromer took my fly on the go mid swing! Those are my favorite takes. By the time you realize you have a bite the fish has already peeled 50 ft of line off your reel! It looks as though the best of fall fishing is about to begin.
It’s always tough to find solitude on Wisconsin’s tributaries during peak run times, but it’s not that bad when the guys who show up at your spot are your buddies. When we ran into Adam and Karsten we did what good friends should do, and all shared the run like civilized people.
Floating the Arkansas River
The Arkansas river valley is one of my favorite places in the state of Colorado. The high mountain lakes and creeks seem to never end and never see any crowds, and the mighty Arkansas River also provides anglers (and rafters alike) with countless opportunities. This summer I was lucky enough to have access to a thirteen foot Hyside with an oar package. I spent the Summer trying my hardest to learn how to row. With numerous mistakes under my belt, including a cracked oar, I think I finally began to get the hang of it by the end of August (and I still suck).
Throughout my adventures this year, we had some nice trips on the mellower sections of the Arkansas below the town of Salida. The average fish on this stretch is between 11-13″ and consists mostly of Brown trout. There are some huge fish found all over the Arkansas drainage, especially the Rainbows, but I have yet to land one of these beasts. Here are a couple trout we caught this summer that are worth mentioning though:
High Mountain Cutthroat
One of my favorite things to do here in Colorado is hunt for high mountain Cutthroat. This summer I spent some time traveling to different lakes with friends and family searching for these beautiful Trout. There is nothing that compares to the feeling and majesty of a high mountain lake. You hike for a while, and when you get there the Trout are already rising. Watching these trout gracefully rise and take big stimulators will make anyone explode with anticipation. Although it took forever for the lakes to thaw, they finally came around…and so did the Cutties. Here are some pics from a couple of my favorite lakes in North Park:
Latest on the Pebble Mine
The votes are in. In nearly one week the people of Alaska will hear the results of their attempts to put a stop the proposed pebble mine project. Read more here http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9Q5LTCO0.htm
If anyone is not yet familiar with the pebble project I would suggest doing a bit of research. This proposed open pit copper and gold mine would be the largest to date and would leave a huge hole in the Bristol Bay watershed. There would be a 4.3 mile long reservoir filled with chemical waste that would forever rest near the headwaters of one the last salmon strongholds in the world! There would also be development through much of the most beautiful country in U.S. and Canada to accommodate the many semi loads of equipment that would be traveling to the site. Along with new highways there would be many bridges, pipelines, and power lines that would cost billions and take many years to develop. If you would like to see less salmon and fresh water and more, power lines, highways, pipelines, dams and toxic reservoirs vote for the pebble mine. Or if you’re smart you can fight to save our fresh water and an ecosystem that depends on it. Fresh water is worth more than all the copper and gold in the world. Unless of course we learn to live off drinking chemical waste, which there will be plenty of if the mine is developed. One more thing I’d like to note is that the companies promoting the Pebble Project are FOREIGN companies. The U.S. would see improvements on the cost of the resources extracted from the mine but in the end we lose our natural resources while other countries get rich. Visit http://www.savebristolbay.org/ to find ways you can help.