Jonathan hoists his big 27" male brown trout before release. |
This time we would be fishing a good 4-5 days after some
major precipitation, which prompted us to dream of large trout.
We fished down on the lower part of the stream and found
plenty of salmon holding here and there in each deep pool, pocket and run. We witnessed
several nice fish fishing blasting on through, even when the stain of the high
water period had almost completely worn off….No trout were spotted.
The boys and I stuck to fishing buggers, even when we could
see a few reds that had been made by salmon in a few of the gravel sections
nearby. Of course, by the time this blog is posted, the increased number of
salmon and spawning activity will no doubt change that. Eggs will be in high
demand!
Ethan worked the head of a pool, swinging a large lead eyed
rabbit strip streamer, where he could just make out the dark shapes of several
nice fish. Jonathan decided to work a few pockets and seems in the lower end of
the pool area, prospecting with an olive woolly bugger for what might lurk in
each little nook and cranny.
Ethan hooked up several times, but couldn’t seem to keep a
fish on. Some he thought were foul hooked and they popped the fly quickly. A
few others he said took the fly but he didn’t get a good enough hookset. That’s
fishing.
Ethan rests a female king salmon before its release. |
Jonathan, who had been quiet for the past half an hour or
so, finally yelled “fish on!” and after just a few minutes I could make out the
telltale signs of a large brown trout pulling hard near the surface. Not soon after, I slid the net under a
gorgeous 27” inch kyped out male brown trout – the first trout of the fall for
the Bradfields.
The rest of the afternoon we kept at it, trying to find the
right location and drift to put our flies in front of a few willing fish. Only
Ethan came away with a nice female King salmon in the last hour. It was a fresh
fish, with a little glint of silver here and there.
Not bad for the early part of October. Let’s just hope we
can get out a few more times this fall. Fishing should continue to get better
and better, especially as the ever increasing numbers of salmon start to spawn.
Thanks in part to Streamwalker Nets for making these fish possible!