Photo credit: Aaron Swanson
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Photo credit: Aaron Swanson
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Thursday was spent stacking fire wood, making camp, catching up, relaxing, and shopping for food and any last-minute fishing supplies. The weekend meals started strong and never looked back. That night we had a great codfish, rice and asparagus dinner and told lies around a well-stoked fire. We had a hearty breakfast in the morning, rigged our rods and were on the water by noon. Fishing was restricted to a catch and release area on Friday, but at least we knew there were quality fish in every run we hit. Without consisent surface activity, it all nymphing all the time. Action wasn't on fire by any means. My uncle lost a beast of a brown after a long fight and the group scored a handful of stockers. Aaron salvaged the afternoon by nymphing up two nice holdover brown trout from fast water.
Photo credit: Aaron Swanson
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Back around the fire that night, the Guinness and single malt flowed generously as we rehatched the day and planned the next. The annual cheese and cracker spread and fresh top neck clams from Long Island Sound were tough acts to follow. However, the showcase dinner of the trip was next and consisted of fire-grilled steaks, steamed brocoli, and baked potatoes that were buried in hot coals for an hour. Rightly so, good food and drink are such an integral part of the weekend.
On Saturday morning at 6 AM, I was woken by the official siren announcing the start of the season. We wouldn't be on the water for a few more hours; there were bacon, egg and cheese sandwiches to make and a camp that needed tightening up before the forecasted monsoon coming our way. The river was still where we had left it and we weren't bound by a catch and release area anymore. To our surprise, there wasn't a soul at the familiar run we visit every year on this day. The fishing remained spotty, but a handful of feisty rainbow trout fell to a smattering of nymph patterns like golden stones, pheasant tails, princes, and green caddis larvae.
We soon changed locations and found a pod of fish that sealed the deal for an epic weekend. One small pool produced five trout in a relatively short time, and three of those hadn't seen a stocking truck in a while. Aaron was up first and got a stocker rainbow out of the way on his first drift and lamented that he wasted his turn on it - he was right. I was up next and stuck a holdover brown on my second drift using a size #16 pheasant tail, mimicking the hendrickson nymphs found in our seine samples. It turned out to be my best fish of the weekend and I was more than happy. Derrick's turn produced a rainbow trout unlike any other we caught over the weekend; it was in top notch condition. My uncle then plucked another stocker before the next few anglers lost rigs to structure. When it was my uncle's turn again, he hooked what he briefly thought was a log until it started to move. The fight that ensued was a heavy weight battle that lasted for a couple long minutes. Derrick eventually netted the beast that was dubbed 'Tollbooth Willy'. It was a phenomenal brown trout that had a great story to go with it. It was not only the best fish of the trip, but of the last several opening days. It was an awesome moment to have the whole group experience the catch and release of a specimen like that with no one else around.
Photo credit: Aaron Swanson
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Photo credit: Aaron Swanson
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Rain started to fall and everyone knew it wouldn't stop until morning. We pressed on to yet another pool void of anglers and Derrick came tight to a fish that had been in the river for a while. It was a beautiful brown trout that ended the fishing portion of the weekend on a high note. The weather however, soon took a real turn for the worse. The thermometer fell into the 30's, the wind started to howl, and the rain came down in buckets. I won't mention names, but it was gnarly enough out there to make two of the group leave camp, and then there were three. Natural casing hotdogs cooked over a 40-year-old Coleman grill was the last dinner of the weekend. We kept the fire roaring and hunkered under a pop-up tent that was worth its weight in gold. The last of the scotch gave us false warmth and a little after midnight, we crawled into our tents and hoped they would be up to the task. By morning, it had rained over two inches and rendered the river unfishable, even though that really wasn't on the docket anyway. Some water infiltrated the tents, but we were in good shape considering. Drying our gear, slowly breaking down camp and eating the rest of the food filled our last day of the trip. Each of us spends a good amount of time fishing throughout the year, yet not nearly enough camping. There will be plenty of all-day benders on the river over the weeks to come, but it will be another year before we have a weekend like that again. That's why we savor camp life.
Photo credit: Aaron Swanson
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A great post.
ReplyDeleteYou post some wonderful photos.
Steaks look awesome, as do the trout.
Very nice job. Looking forward to the vid...
ReplyDeleteGreat post, great tradition and incredible fish. That was one heck of a brown but I think I drooled most over the steaks.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing.
Passinthru Outdoors Blog - Sharing the Passion
Thanks, all!
ReplyDeletethat's livin' baby......dosen't get any better than that...waterworker
ReplyDelete"On the water by noon..."
ReplyDeleteI like that! Shows where your priorities are.
Very nice post.
Hey Kierran-
ReplyDeleteGot a question for you... how come there is a siren opening the season if you are allowed to fish the day before? Is some water closed and some not?
Great post as always.
Scott