Sunday, August 26, 2012

Metolius River (Upper), OR

Back-to-back weekends on this river! My life sucks! The original plan was to spend the whole week in Central Oregon but work had other plans. My family was staying at Eagle Crest Resort in Redmond, OR so I couldn't resist stopping by to fish a couple hours on the way home. Hit the holes I know and see what I could do. I caught a rainbow this time so that makes a trip!

Read this for more info.

Summary:
Location: Metolius River, Camp Sherman, OR, located about 100 miles (2 hrs) east of Salem, and 20 min from Sisters, OR
Time: 9am - 7pm
Rod: 5 wt w/ floating line, 5 wt w/ sinking tip
Tackle: 8 black stone nymph, 18 rainbow warrior, 18 zebra midge, 18 copper john hybrid, 10 Clark Stone, 10 Rogue Stone
Fish:2
Species: White Fish & Rainbow
Biggest Fish: 12"
Smallest Fish: 11"
Rating: 9/10



Saturday, August 18, 2012

Metolius River (Upper), OR

The river I fish the most. People may think I'm crazy or others just recognize the peer love I have for this place. My buddy and I needed a fixing and so down I drove meeting him in Portland. If I haven't said it before there is nothing easy about fishing this river. With time, patience, and a bit of luck you will have success though. I have fished this river since I could hold a fly rod in my hand. I've fished it when it was stocked and have continued to fish it since it became a protected river. What makes this river great is not only the reward of catching possibly one of the hardest fish to catch, but the scenery, smells, and locals that complete the experience. I know of few places you can catch a red-band rainbow trout, German brown, brown, rainbow trout, white fish, kokanee, brook trout, or dolley/bull trout all on the same river. Enfisizing the German brown and red-band rainbow. Two of the most unique and beautiful fish you will ever catch.With that said this would be one of those trips I caught only white fish!

Read this for more info.

Summary:
Location: Metolius River, Camp Sherman, OR, located about 100 miles (2 hrs) east of Salem, and 20 min from Sisters, OR
Time: 9am - 7pm
Rod: 5 wt w/ floating line, 5 wt w/ sinking tip
Tackle: 8 black stone nymph, 18 rainbow warrior, 18 zebra midge, 18 copper john hybrid, 10 Clark Stone, 10 Rogue Stone, 8 black and brown Pat's Stone, 16 lighting bug, 18 rainbow warrior
Fish: 4
Species: White Fish
Biggest Fish: 14"
Smallest Fish: 13"
Rating: 8/10

 No trout so you get Puppies!

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Taneum Creek, WA

As where many of my trips this summer, I wanted to find new places to fish and new places to explore. On gazetteer this river had been marked as a place you could fish and I drove by it several times on my way to the Yakima or somewhere out east. It came to the point where I wanted to finally check it out. A little bit tricky to get to but well worth the trip. This has already been marked as a place to return next summer. Besides fishing, I also learned this area provides great mountain biking, hiking, and dirt biking as well. Never being here before my friend and I got to the river and just started heading up. Checked out the campground and kept it on our list as a place to come back to. It was dark mind you when we pulled in, sometime near 10pm, typical to most of the times we had showed up to camp on Fridays before. There were signs for other places and we kept treking. We ended up at Elk Meadow, there is no designated place to camp, a large field (later we discovered it was the weekend of a meteor shower), seclusion, and we were relatively close to one of the forks of the river.
The next day we discovered how small the river was, at least for that time of the year. There wasn't much opportunity to fish but the couple pockets we found had one or two little guys in each. We made are way back down river to where the two forks meet. Here a bridge crossed the road and the river doubled in size but still remained less than 20 or 30 feet across. There were however many deeper pools and much more opportunity to fish although still very limited. Fishing each one, climbing through a few log jams to get to the next, and walking down to another campground we had a fun an relatively successful day on the river. This fish were not picky and so anything that was small and floated worked well.

Summary:
Location: Taneum River, near Thorpe, WA off I-90 west of Ellensburg.
Time: All day
Rod: 5 wt floating line
Tackle: Elk hair caddis, purple and traditional parachute adams, misquitos, and multiple other little duns and caddis'
Fish: 10+
Species: Rainbow and Cutt Throat
Biggest Fish:10"
Smallest Fish: 4"
Rating: 7.5/10

 The Meadow
 Caught the biggest fish under there!


 Buddies Best Catch!

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Foss River Lakes, WA

In my years at college I had heard that hiking the Alpine Lake Wilderness between Stevens and Snoqualmie Pass can produce so great Alpine Lake fishing. Also in my years of college it had been talked and talked about going back packing. I had scouted this trip out a long time ago know that in a 7.5 mile (one way) hike I would pass 5 fish-able lakes. I did my research too and confirmed that many of these lake if not all at one point had been backpack planted with fry and would have many fish in them.So then, one fine Friday afternoon a friend and I headed out after work to go see what this hike was all about. Set back after set back put us in the parking lot sometime near 8pm. Knowing that we wanted to set up base camp at the third lake (Copper) and with a reasonable climb ahead we set off. In hindsight, I would say this was terrible because the moon was bright and the weather was much cooler than the hot days. However, I would not be wise to recommend it either. Needless to say we made it otherwise I wouldn't be writing this blog!
The second day we did a quick hike over to Malachite were I fished for a half hour or so, running into a man camping alone. Then, we ventured back to Copper to fish for a little and a day hike up to Big Heart. On the way we stopped, swam, played and fished at little. Finally we moved onto Big Heart where I got in my float tube and drifted around for twenty minutes before we had to turn around and return to camp.
Trout Lake:
Great lake and 1.5 miles in offers a great day hike but I never got to fish it.
Malachite:
Often overlooked was the only lake I hooked and landed a fish. It was a spawning cutt throat, as much as I wanted to get a picture the man who was trying to take it couldn't figure my camera out, and I wanted to let it go before I disrupted her spawning. She was gorgeous though!
Copper Lake:
Best lake to camp at, was very beautiful and had lots of fish. Wish I had spent time fishing in the evening when the hatch was on and the fish were feeding. I fished only in the day with a spinner. This fish would bite my gold swivel but never the hook.
Little Heart Lake:
No sign of fish but a nice place to play in the snow.
Big Heart Lake:
Crazy beautiful but again no sign of fish.

Go here to read more about the hike.

Summary:
Location: Alpine Lake Wilderness
Time: All day
Rod: 5 wt w/ sinking tip & light weight spinner
Tackle: Brown wolley bugger, black wolley bugger, casey special and a chartreuse with black speckle dick nite.
Fish:1
Species: Cutt Throat
Biggest Fish:12"
Smallest Fish: 12"
Rating: 9/10


 Big Heart Lake
 West Fork Foss River
 Delta Lake
 Copper Lake
 Copper Lake
 West Fork Foss River



Copper Lake

Little Heart Lake