The Day of Days
Monday, 17 December 2007
6/14/07
There are two (silly, I admit) number goals that I set for myself each season. I'm not a numbers guy (anyone who has spent any time at all guiding cringes at that term) but I do like having quantifiable accomplishments that I can get excited about. I want to have a client catch a trout over thirty inches and I want to have a double that measures at least four feet combined. Much of this is luck and if I do not reach these arbitrary benchmarks I do not lose any sleep. But if nothing else, it gives me something extra to hoot and holler about on the river and getting demonstratively excited is one of the things that keeps me vibrant and upbeat throughout the long season. Today both of those goals were attained in the span of an hour.
It was one of those days where most everything seemed to fall into place. I was paired with a couple of guys who can really lay it down and happen to be a pleasure to spent nine hours with as well. We drew the furthest beat from camp, a difficult stretch of river at normal flows not to mention during high water with treacherous wading and limited structure. If you go there with inexperienced clients, you are in for a long day, but it does hold some serious pigs. If you can get a cast to him, the fish of a lifetime lives there. Today we found him.
Of Alcohol and Albacore
If I've had better domestic fishing trips, I can't remember them. Blitzing Albies, fish from the beach, pool and locol luches at the BT, fantastic food and one questionable movie night. Others have made posts on the forum, but now, you get to the REST of the story... k: Read more » Excuses For those sad souls who can't get the angling monkey off their backs and have chosen to live well above the seasonal freezing line, winter can easily slide into a cornucopia spilling over with bountiful excuses. Much like the traveling charlatan preacher for whom the mind is willing but the flesh is weak - we want to fish, but all that whiteness, especially when it's traveling horizontally past the window, is a daunting thing. Read more » Loop Tuft EmergerChuffer![]() Here's one for the quick and dirty set. My version of the Loop-Tuft Emerger. It's the bastard love child of the CDC Loop Wing Emerger and the Sparkle Dun, and it's a great fly for selective trout. Read more » The Day of Days6/14/07
There are two (silly, I admit) number goals that I set for myself each season. I'm not a numbers guy (anyone who has spent any time at all guiding cringes at that term) but I do like having quantifiable accomplishments that I can get excited about. I want to have a client catch a trout over thirty inches and I want to have a double that measures at least four feet combined. Much of this is luck and if I do not reach these arbitrary benchmarks I do not lose any sleep. But if nothing else, it gives me something extra to hoot and holler about on the river and getting demonstratively excited is one of the things that keeps me vibrant and upbeat throughout the long season. Today both of those goals were attained in the span of an hour. Read more » ExcerptHigh Country![]() watercolor by Jeff Currier The sun is high overhead as I step out of the trees, drop my pack and flop down on the grass, watching the wind send long ripples across the lake. Bear, my grey-muzzleed companion, quenches his thirst in the cool water We've been hiking all day and while my legs and lungs feel the mileage, the thick pine canopy shielded me from the intense summer sun during the hike from the trailhead. Exposed now to its golden warmth, I feel languid and dreamy. We have all weekend to fish, I think to myself, as I close my eyes and drift off. I awake to see that Bear has started fishing without me. He is stalking the shallows, ears perked forward, his head snapping left and right as slick cutthroats dart away at his approach. I can t help but smile. This is exactly why we hiked for five hours, climbing 4,000 feet, to fish this remote alpine lake. Nobody's here to complain about him spooking the fish. Read more » Featured ArticleBeginningsby Tom Bie
IT STARTED WITH A CAST, an offering, that didn't get hooked in the willows behind you or the pine tree overhead but instead sailed out above the water and landed near the intended zone, near enough anyway, that something took it. Whether or not a fish was hooked matters little. It was a proposal, and was accepted, drawing you across a threshold of gratification from which you would never fully return. Read more » |
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