Top

Author: Bruce_Staples

Fly Fish Food Jimmy's / Articles posted by Bruce_Staples (Page 207)

Yellowstone Park 6-25-13

Fishing is holding up well with PMDs and caddisflies making the Madison River a destination.  Firehole River is beginning to warm, but fishing is holding up.   Some of the best current streamer fishing in the Park is on the Lewis River.  Be ready to fish around boats and canoes heading into Shoshone Lake.   Best  way to avoid this traffic is to fish in the late afternoon and evening.  Green drakes should be hatching on the river below Lewis Lake.   We are heading into Bechler Meadows tomorrow where river and Boundary Creek should be in good shape for dry fly fishing.   Sallys and PMDs should bring fish to the top to feed.  Expect a report later this week.

 

 

Share

South Fork 6-25-13

Big stoneflies are hatching  in good numbers on the river at least as far as Burns Creek.  Golden stoneflies and yellow sallys are coming out, too.  So it is time to enjoy this great event in a  year when low water may have impact on fishing later in the summer.  Flow out Of Palisades Dam remains at 12800 cfs, the same as it has been since mid-June.  Flows will likely drop later this summer.

Share

Cardiac Canyon-Bear Gulch

 

Bear Gulch

 

Here is another Cardiac Canyon location sure to get you away from the crowds. It’s now a bit late in the year to fish the big stonefly hatches here, but consider putting it on your “have to visit” list for next year’s stonefly season.  If you do, you could witness one of the densest giant stonefly hatches anywhere as well as rainbow trout as large as anywhere else on the river with a few brown trout to boot.  To get there, take the Mesa Falls Scenic Route (Idaho Highway 47) east from Ashton. Drive past the Three Rivers area a few miles to an ample turnoff on the left where the old Bear Gulch Ski area use to be.  From here an old service road passes an abandon ski lift and ends within one hundred yards of the river.   That distance is completed on a good trail, and here the river looks almost like a big pond.  It hosts some of the biggest trout in the entire river. On getting to the river you will hear the roar of rapids above and below this almost still water.  Above and below the river  cascades, but holds runs and pockets good enough to hold numerous trout. Some boats holding eager anglers may come through, but not in numbers found in Box Canyon, the Riverside Campground to Hatchery Ford section or especially the Warm River to Ashton Reservoir section below. This time of year you can enjoy an afternoon caddis hatch dense enough to cause what Mike Lawson labels “bronchaddis.” You will also experience fish taking PMDs in various parts of the life cycle. Presenting a dry golden stonefly pattern could still be effective.  But coming soon is a most interesting way to enjoy the big and vigorous trout present.  That would be with terrestrial insect patterns, and afternoon are the best time of day to be here.  Soon hoppers in uncountable numbers will abound the grassy slopes.  Ants and beetles will be scurrying everywhere. And those big trout will be near the banks waiting to pick all these off.   All this activity will continue  maybe to the first week in October.  From where you first reach the river a trail goes upstream along the steep bank.  I prefer to follow this upstream and fish the bank side runs, pockets, and the overhangs this time of year. Yes, there is good water downstream, but in my experience going upstream you will encounter more of it.   Go far enough and you could approach the fabled “Surprise Falls”, that capsizer of  unobservant boaters.  Speaking of boats, after the giant and golden stoneflies go through, you are likely to see very few boats, and those you see are mainly sight seeing tourists or kayakers coming down from the Grandview access just below Lower Mesa Falls.   Speaking of walk-in anglers, you will also see fewer of them after the big stoneflies have gone through.  I usually wade wet during summer months, but you can easily pack waders in by choice. At least a six-weight system with stout (3X) tippet is best for the powerful water here.  Bring that camera!

Share

Yellowstone Park 6-22-13

We fished the river in Bechler Meadows Thursday.  Purple camas bloom is at its peak.  Fishing was tough considering the effort we put in.  Water is quite low for this time of year, but some fish responded to wet flies.  Good dry fly fishing should begin soon beginning with isoperla and PMD activity.  Hopefully green drakes and brown drakes will appear next.  And yes, mosquitoes are out in the usual good numbers making DEET a valuable commodity.  Bring  a raincoat because t-showers are common this time of year. We were hit by one that dropped air temps about 25 deg. F and made rain go sideways.   So glad I was wearing a pair of Simms Goretex Pac-Lite pants to ward off wind and rain.  What a terrific product for when weather acts up!   Come in and look these over.

Share

Yellowstone Park 6-18-13

We will be in Bechler Meadows tomorrow, so expect a report on the results of fishing the river. Right now run-off is leaving all Fall River Basin streams, so we will be looking for the emergence  sequence beginning with isoperla stoneflies, PMDs, green drakes and on to brown drakes.  The Ashton Forest Service Office tells us the Flagg Ranch Road is open at least to the Targhee, Bridger-Teton National Forest border at the far end of Grassy Lake.  Now it is possible to walk into Beula Lake to enjoy cutts responding to damselflies.

Share

Henry’s Fork 6-18-13

Now is a good time to go back to the Cardiac Canyon reach with dry golden and giant stonefly patterns. The giants and golden hatches went through big time a few weeks ago, and fish have had a chance to digest those eaten.  Fish remain conditioned to look for these, so a good strategy for such as Hatchery Ford, around the Mesa Falls area, and Bear Gulch is to present them.  You may not get into quite as many fish as during the peak of these hatches, but you will surely have good results.  Cardiac Canyon keeps you away from crowds on the Harriman-Last Chance reach above looking for responses to green drakes, caddisflies, and PMDs and from the crowds on the river below responding to the gray drake hatch.  Speaking of green drakes, they’re ramping down on the lower river and yet to make  a major appearance in the Last Chance-Harriman part of the river.

Share

Small Streams 6-15-13

Big fish are where you find them.  We have a report (pictures and all) of a 27-inch brown coming out of the Portneuf River above Lava Hot Springs. Here are a few other small streams that hold big browns: Robinson Creek,  Camas Creek, South Fork of the Madison River (Montana), Duck Creek, Grayling Creek, and Gibbon River (Yellowstone Park), Warm River, Stump Creek and Crow Creek ( all in season), lower Grey’s River (Wyoming).  The same could be said for Willow Creek, Cranes Creek, and Gray’s Lake Outlet up until the early 1990s when drought and other actions diminished them. There may be a few left in these waters, but nothing like in years gone by.

Share

Southwest Montana 6-15-13

Fishing on the Madison River below Hebgen Lake is really shaping up. Big stoneflies are beginning to hatch early, caddisflies are giving great PM fishing and PMDs are emerging big time.  Streamers are working during low light conditions. And because  insect activity is beginning earlier than normal, crowds are down.

Share

Still Waters 6-15-13

Chesterfield Reservoir is down at least ten feet from full pool. But fish are taking damselfly nymphs with enthusiasm. But enjoy fishing there soon because further draw-down is coming and could warm this reservoir enough to slow fishing.  Twenty-Four Mile Reservoir offers the same good fishing through using damselfly nymphs but the threat of for draw-down is much less.  Fishing is good on Daniels, Hawkins and Treasureton reservoirs for the same reason: damselfly activity.

Share