Meanderings

Stalking trout with dry flies. Floating, wading, and camping along the rivers. Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming. Winter trips to Mexico.



Nov 2, 2020

Spawning browns and onion fields

The huge "bucknasty" browns are all on the gravel beds doing their thing.  The 14" and under juveniles are eating blue-wings in the hatch riffles.  Every shallow riffle had big spawners doing their thing.  Little guys were rising all afternoon right up through sunset.  Water super-low at 30cfs.

Spawners loaded up above this hatch riffle

Full of rising fish

All about this size

Early on

Of course

Couldn't keep 'em off of this one

Another riffle into a pool loaded with risers

30 CFS.  There was one October that was magic at this flow
This flat was full of rising fish on the drive out


Fading light.  The last image. Seems appropriate.  Fading.  The season.  

One disturbing observation.  A lot of the big browns had white fungus on their bodies.  I also saw a couple dead ones, and some dead carp, both covered with the fungus.    Apparently it happens.  I didn't see it in autumns past.  This is from the Idaho Statesman this past January:

Local anglers are concerned about an unusually high number of dead fish in the Owyhee River this winter. The fish are white, making them easy to spot as you look across the river.

I spoke with Dave Banks, a district fish biologist who manages the Owyhee River for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. Banks and his colleagues have identified the culprit — a water mold called Saprolegnia.

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“This mold is something that’s always in the water,” Banks said. “But when fish become stressed and get cuts and scrapes during the spawning season, they become more susceptible to it. We do see a few fish die from it every year, but this year is the most I’ve seen.”

Unfortunately, the dead fish are large, adult brown trout — fish that make the Owyhee a trophy trout stream and attract anglers from across our region. Browns are nearing the end of their spawning cycle, which means fish are more tired and stressed than usual. Spawning also causes openings in the skin — females scrape their bodies against the river bottom while building nests, and males aggressively nip at their mates and each other with sharp teeth — where the mold can cause its deadly infection.

There is a silver lining, though. The mold isn’t affecting juvenile fish, which is good news for future populations. Rainbow trout haven’t been impacted, either — they are sterile in the Owyhee, so spawning injuries aren’t a concern.

“We don’t anticipate this will have a major impact on the fishery,” Banks said. “There are still lots of healthy fish, and it’s not affecting younger fish that will fill in the adult population going forward.”

There’s not much anglers can do for now. Banks said Saprolegnia doesn’t have any known impacts on humans, but since browns are catch-and-release only, harvesting infected fish isn’t an option anyway.

All in all, it’s a bummer, but it looks like this fish kill shouldn’t be too harmful in the long run.

Nov 1, 2020

Day Three

And I'm out.  The wind was howling when I arrived this morning.  Not much early love on the leech, and any bug on the water would have been blown to Boise.  After fishing the Indian Rock pool from the far side and wading back across, I went to climb up to the road and noticed a bunch of noses in a scum hole.  I hate scum holes, but I stopped to look.  They looked like dinks, but one on the bank side had a decent sized tail.  I hate scum holes, and this one was also covered in leaves.  It was a mess. 

I clipped off the leech, clipped back the tippet to about 15 inches so I could maybe cast it into the wind, and tied on a black Adams that I might be able to see.  It wasn't easy, but I got some eats.  They weren't dinks!  They only rose from under the thickest leaves/scum.  How they ever saw my fly is a wonder to me, but they did.  What they were eating remains a mystery too.  

That was about the day.  I got a few fish from the top of the riffle at the head of the run on the way out.  The wind died down completely by mid afternoon, and I could see some caddis and BWO's on the water, but didn't see any fish on 'em except for a random one-timer here and there.  Strange.

November 1, and I'm still fishing in warm sunshine!  Might as well go check the 30 cfs trickling Owyhee tomorrow.  I'm as close as I've been in a year, and likely as close as I will be for another year.  

Yuck.  But there were a bunch in there.

Not dinks

Plopping it down

Messy

Could see a bunch of nice ones I didn't catch



Lots of bugs up top late afternoon.  No risers.


Oct 31, 2020

Shadows

Stayed a bit further upriver today.  K then J.  Fewer fishermen too.  Sunny and 65.  Hatches were a bit opposite of yesterday.  Had some BWO's when I arrived at 11.  They all but vanished mid afternoon, only to reappear again late.  Shadows on this east-west stretch were later too.  Speaking of shadows.  I had some big shadows eat my soft hackle.  Had some big shadows hooked on my soft hackle.  Had some big shadows hooked on the leech.  Some days the bear eats you.  I had more eats than yesterday, yet far fewer fish to hand, especially early.  Still a busy and productive day though.  Finding it hard to leave the nice weather, comfortable wading, roomy river, and active fish.
Late morning shadows

Good spot according to these two


Morning risers river right

Needed some changes for the slow flat water

Morning sweet spot

Mid afternoon plan
Setting sun


Evening shadows

Still the fly of the day!


Oct 30, 2020

Desert Oasis-East

Its been just over 7 years since the fire and debris flows of 2013.  Sediments have been flushed, thousands of plants replanted, flows are clear, and its full of trout!  300 cfs and the wading is easy.  No muck.  Sunny and 70.

They liked the little wiggly for a couple hours before the hatch. Then there were just enough BWO's and caddis, and just enough risers, to get the afternoon going.  The magic hour was 3 to 4, when the sun dipped behind the mountain where I fished just below Indian Rock at 121P.  Always a fish or two to cast to.  The whole canyon was busy, but this run kept me busy all day.  Fish seemed on the thin side, but strong nonetheless.  


Early fish at the head of the run



Still some leaves, and slight coloration



Same as yesterday, only a #16.  All I needed.

Fading light was good


Oct 29, 2020

Point of Rocks

Back to the Preserve this morning.  Stayed until nearly 3:00 with mostly smaller fish up in the same areas I fished yesterday.  Hatch was much more sparse.  Didn't see many of the big bank feeders, and it got a little busy, so I headed down to the point.  Shoulda gone sooner!  Wasn't many bugs.  Hardly any.  But, there were some nice fish coming up right in the parking lot run.  They were looking for any bug floating down, right up until sunset.  Hooked a few bigs on the floating leech late.  All weeded. Might have to give it another visit, but for now, the Boise is next.

Flat calm

All over this dun in an 18.  Kick!

Perfect evening

Not refused

The place to myself

Got a few like this in the evening light


Oct 28, 2020

Preserved

The Preserve is still preserved, but I had to make sure before winter!  Arrived around 2 the first afternoon and went upstream for a check.  A sparse hatch started about an hour in, if you can call it that.  The fish did!  They ate every bug that came over them, like it was the last supper, or more accurately, the last mayfly hatch of the season.  I saw one mahogany amongst the big olives, or thought I did, so I tied one on.  They ate it up.  Opportunity, recall, or a size match?  All of the above.  No selectivity.  Spooky as hell, but not picky.

Next morning I went to check out the lower Preserve above Loving Creek.  Nothing happening until about 12:30 other than some leech-eaters.  Yup, they ate that thing.  The bigger fish mostly waked after it and refused it though.  I fished one waking on top, within a couple inches of the surface, just over the weeds.

The afternoon hatch had a few more bugs per square yard than yesterday, but still sparse.  The fish were appreciative of anything.  They came out from wherever the hell they hide (weeds!) and ate most of the afternoon, really steady for a couple hours.  I was even choosy for a time.  #18 Mahoganies were the flies of the day, although I don't recall seeing any.  The trout went after 'em, on 5x, fished upstream!  An upstream windy period of a couple hours probably helped with that.

They're not MO trout, Ranch rainbows, or even Armstrong kings. I can get my little hand around 'em.  But, they rise when given the chance, and there isn't any clearer water anywhere.  Low flow, at 85 cfs.  And damn that water is cold! (40-45) Hardly anyone here though.  Sunny and 50's by afternoon. Just my trademark brown shirt.😄 Visual flight rules.  Lots of fish.  Hell ya!

A tour:

First Approach


Looking up toward the cripple run



Two day winner







Still some killer moose on the prowl



Day two stand-out in the breeze



Nice ones all along this bank




The 'ole weeping tree flat


Mouth of Loving Cr. on the way out