First 5 days on the MO, and the last 5 days of fall, or summer really. It's been near 80 every afternoon under sunny skies with warm winds. I've savored every bit of heat, 'cause my only source of it outside between now and June will be in Campeche. River is low, weedy, and a little on the slow side.
Early morning, pre-hatch streamer fishing has brought a few big fish. I'm mostly sight-fishing to them. They're not rising, and there's no bugs, but I can spot 'em in calm shallow water. One cast usually works. They break for the fly leaving a V-wake and a swirl. It happens fast. Hold on baby.
Mid to late morning has some rising fish to olives just before the wind comes up. Seems like the two coincide within minutes. Then its tough for a while until evening when some fish rise again. I've hooked a few steelhead-like fish, even landed a couple-three. Most of those have come on the leech or Kreelex. There's more garden variety 14-18 inchers on the dries, with an exception or two. Contrary to the fly shop buzz, I'm finding the big fish in super-slow water. Either on the shallow edges, or right in the middle of the deepest holes. I guess there aren't enough bugs to get them to hold in much current. Yet.
I took a little side trip on the middle day to a nearby prairie river I scouted a little last fall. It was a nice break, and different. Saw a couple of nice fish, and the intel says there's more, but never hooked any of 'em. It's a tailwater of sort, so I need to go back and find different access maybe.
Rumor has it there's some storms coming overnight. Rain. Snow next week. Cold. Fall turning to winter. I'm staying for a taste of it, to see if it turns into BWO madness. Hell, even just a good hatch and some big fish up regularly. I have the gear ready. The bugs. The rain jacket. The layers. Gloves. My brain, well, it'll just have to deal with it now because I'm afraid there's no turning back.
I'm sure going to miss summer, and Indian summer. (can I still say that?😛)
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First morning to a favorite run |
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No wind! |
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To Myself |
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High Bridge island. An easy wade to it. |
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Don't know how this stud stayed against my hand. |
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A Bull Pasture sunset |
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Weeds help to hold 'em a little |
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Dry fly fish |
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If a brassie is the larval form of a Mepps spinner, then the Kreelex is the streamer form of a Mepps spinner. They've been eating it! I used to fish these for salmon in the 1980's, we just called 'em Flashabou streamers. |
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Have to have a big ole sunset fish at Lonetree with the truck in the background, right? |
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Clear, warm evenings |
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The "Almost Dun." I finally learned what it's called! Been a baetis killer here for years and years. |
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The prairie river |
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Really low, but wadable and fishable at 150-ish cfs |
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Bridge pool, or pretty close. They're always good/ |
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Froggy water |
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Riffle-pool. |
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This bluff pool made me think of Bob, and some of his prairie waters. Lots of hunting and scanning. |
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It got impossible to spot fish once the sun started to sink. |
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Back "home" at the ladders. Skinny! |
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This tank was steelhead-like at about 22 inches. I had the camera zoomed in and didn't know it. Doh! |
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There were a bunch rising here, in the ole glory hole. |
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And on both sides of the riffle |
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The smoky skies made for a better hatch morning. |
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Typical dry fly fish |
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The side channel was ankle deep. Good luck approaching one of the huge fish holding in it. |
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Fish were Silver Creek-like spooky. I mean, gone! One or two casts. Big wakes. |
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This surface swimming mini-leech got some killer eats |
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This is where I often fish. Not this year, not until I got down around the bend |
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This tree is always glowing this time of year. |
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More spooky shallow water holding some pigs |
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Tis the season for the still-unexplainable Sri Lanka emerger |
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There's one on the Mepps, errrr, Kreelex. |
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This deep slow pool was kind to me |
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Chromer |
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Here it comes. The first clouds I've seen in a week. The PHD run glowing and hosting evening risers. |
Jim
ReplyDeleteOh, do I envy you-----one fantastic outing, were you using a 5 wt. or 6wt 9ft.? How much fishng pressure does this area receive? Really impressed with images--thanks for sharing
I use rods that are 8 feet or slightly less. Been throwing a 5 weight because I can do both streamers and dries with it. Same leader and floating line, just change the tippet. Yes the Missouri River is pounded, one of the most crowded rivers in the West. However, it's a zoo for a reason! The fish are extremely spooky right now. I had fish scooting away from me in every direction today.
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