Well, I damn near don't make the opener. But the night before, I'm able to re-load and head north after burning rubber home from Craig four days ago and tending to the Fort. There's no traffic this time of night, just antelope trying to hit me as I crawl through Wyoming. What a roller coaster week. 
I pull the late-nighter and make the Millionaires parking lot by 7:00 am on 2-3 hours sleep. Not recommended, but in a blur, I'm here. Half blind and wore out before I ever slip on the waders.
My head is still somewhere else besides the Ranch. My body objects to every step. My fly isn't in clear focus. On this morning I don't belong anywhere else though.
Just a few steps in, I look down, and what the hell? It's a big brown drake. I even see a few more. Must be leftovers. That's promising, but there's little else. I stay at the downstream tip of the upper island for a while then proceed to work my way down Main Street. Perfect. Nobody else here. There's already some . . . guy . . . fishing the sweet spot between the lower islands. But a couple hours in, all I've caught is cold. Its nippy this morning. No bugs, no heads.
A little before 11 there's a few big bugs. This time green ones. I get a couple of big eats and blow those. A couple of beat up smaller ones salvage the morning. This isn't green drake water, but I don't have it in me to move up river to the faster water where all the gulls are going at it.
The warm clear evening brings the other big drakes, brown ones, on opening evening. I can't recall the last time I've had both drakes in the same day, and never on opening day. There's some fish up for about 3 hours before dark, though not as many as one would expect given the number of bugs. I blow most of these too, but manage a couple to hand. So not a bad opener given how I got here.
The second morning starts out looking pretty nice, and when I hit the water at 8:00, there's dead pmds in various stages all over the water. Some fish occupy the lane between the two lower Islands and I get some eats before it's over by 10:00. The wind rips, and that takes care of that. The gulls work green drakes later in the morning, but I never see a fish take one. It's a blowout until evening.
The wind lays down, and here come the brown ones again. Quite a few of them. Again, there aren't a ton of fish taking them, but enough. And then there's this one. The gulps are different than the other eats I'm seeing. I get the eat and it's instantly obvious it's a different class of fish. Two complete empties of the reel, and I get out of the current to shore.
So this third morning I'm not going to be late and miss those pmds. Right. I'm on the water at 7:00, but it's a different hatch. Brown Drake's are all over the place at 7:00 in the morning! What the hell is this about? The fish aren't on them other than a couple of smaller ones splashing around, but the gulls are making a scene and the water is really loaded. Must be leftovers coming out of the trees from the big hatch last night. I see no sign of pmd's like yesterday. The brown drakes are done by 8:30 or so, and I'm done by 10:00 because the wind has come again.
This evening there's a light to medium west wind blowing across the pool. The gulls are finally beginning to get active about 7:00 pm. 7:30 and the water is covered. The wind won't lay down and the surface stays choppy, so only the gulls are eating. 9:00 and it finally lays down a little. There's some one-timers. The bugs are as thick as I've ever seen them. It's surreal. No steady rising fish though. Its just weird. Sure has the appearance of low fish counts.
I get up a little late this morning, but make it to the river at 7:45. Not a breath of wind. But, not a breath of bugs either. No brown drakes, no gulls, no pmds. A quiet, glassy, dead river. I struggle to understand, but I guess no one ever will. Maybe that's why we do it, because we'll never quite figure it out, not even close.
![]() |
| 22 heavy |
This evening there's a light to medium west wind blowing across the pool. The gulls are finally beginning to get active about 7:00 pm. 7:30 and the water is covered. The wind won't lay down and the surface stays choppy, so only the gulls are eating. 9:00 and it finally lays down a little. There's some one-timers. The bugs are as thick as I've ever seen them. It's surreal. No steady rising fish though. Its just weird. Sure has the appearance of low fish counts.
I get up a little late this morning, but make it to the river at 7:45. Not a breath of wind. But, not a breath of bugs either. No brown drakes, no gulls, no pmds. A quiet, glassy, dead river. I struggle to understand, but I guess no one ever will. Maybe that's why we do it, because we'll never quite figure it out, not even close.
So it's 8:15 am. Waiting on a morning hasn't worked yet. I can wade out and make Vernon by 9:00, and I do. It's a 20 minute, one mile walk up to the rock, which puts me there at a perfect 9:20, when the hatch started daily last year. I make it to the minute. It ain't happening. I guess the red flag was that I was the only vehicle at Vernon when I got there.
My final night back at millionaires, and the gulls make a 7:20 appearance en masse. Out of nowhere, there's a hundred. Then quickly several hundred. They coincide with the first bugs. The hatch comes off pretty good, but it's short-lived. Tonight it's over at 9:00 despite perfect calm conditions. Bugs gone, birds gone. There's a couple of one timer small fish rises, and that's it.
![]() |
| I guess there's worse places for shitty fishing. |
![]() |
| This is the flow at Vernon. A little elevated, but still clear and wadable most places. |
![]() |
| And this is the Ranch. Higher than the last couple of years, but about a normal flow. And it's been steady since the opener. |





















No comments:
Post a Comment