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Showing posts with label Warm Springs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warm Springs. Show all posts

Thursday, October 5, 2017

A little brown sugar

Ye olde brown trout face




























I had some work training at the Warm Springs Ponds today.  Checked in on the Upper Clark Fork afterward. The brown trout are not quite in the insane zone yet, but they are definitely starting to get excited to eat meat.  My carp leech to be exact.  Also, above the ponds, the cutts are eating streamers.  Yup.  I have been told a million times that cutthroat are not piscivorous by a bunch of fisheries biologists.  I guess I'm a science denier on this one but I do have tangible proof.  On the other side of the continental divide, the carp bite is still on.  However, the calm clear days are few and far between.  It's trout time in Montana.   

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Book tease: Opportunity, Montana - Big Copper, Bad Water, and the Burial of an American Landscape

I am halfway through this great book about the Clark Fork's obliteration due to 100 years of industrial scale mining. Today, I came a cross a great quote that I wanted to share. There are many analogies which seek to make this same point however, this one is my favorite:


"I tend not to trust extremist and ideologues.  It's not about preferring the middle of the road, it's that 'road' is too rigid a metaphor.  On a river, you can't afford to hug strictly the right or left bank and still hope to arrive downstream. You have to follow the current where it leads, left, right, or center.  Sometimes you have to get out and walk."



Eroded banks comprised of toxic mine waste below Warm Springs, MT

















Mine waste stream bank








Sunday, April 13, 2014

Will You Do The Trick?




This is a great song from Dr Dog's Be the Void album.  If you plan on fishing the streams around Missoula anytime soon, you may need something that does the trick.  It's tough out there right now.

Bitterroot River:
The flow is pretty huge for this time of year.  The river is closed from Woodside to Tucker due to the dangers of that low head dam.  I'm sure you could get into some fish on the Root but your going to need a boat, some nymphs and split shot, and long drive up to the forks area.

Blackfoot River:
Again, you could probably get into some fish here but it will be very difficult.  The Blackfoot is also carrying a bit of color as well.  All standard nymphs and streamers fished on inside bends and right of the banks (if your in a boat).

Clark Fork River (near Warm Springs)
The folks that run the gate opened it up last week.  The water was as big as I've ever seen it there and was carrying a bit of color.  Mill Creek was low and clear.  Weird.  The fishing was tough but I did hook into some giants.  The river becomes pretty silted by the time it gets to Deer Lodge.  Stay tuned to the RBM Chronicles as I will be posting a report on the toxic sediment mediation and bank restoration that is taking place up there and closing part of the river.

Clark Fork (around Missoula)
Huge and colored.

Rock Creek
Even the Creek got huge with the push of flows starting last week.  I bet a bunch of big Clark Fork trout moved on in with these great spawning conditions.  You'd be very limited for fish-able water if your wading but it should shape up soon, I hope.  You can go way up high.

Area Lakes/Ponds
Beavertail is fishing great.  I caught another 30+" rainbow last week and had fun losing others and getting those hits that feel like you stuck into a log.  For fat old hatchery fish, they are really fun to catch.  One of the larger ones I caught actually did a double tail-walk like a brown trout on the MO.  I yelled and laughed, more because I was surprised that the fish could do it, rather than the fact that he did.  You better go to the pond soon though because the bait fishers clean it out quick.  By the time the weather gets warm enough for swimming, Beavertail Pond should only be considered if you are physically handicapped or want to take a kid out.

I don't fish Frenchtown pond and now that it has thawed, I've got nothing to tell you until it freezes in the fall. There's ditch pickles bass in there.

Harpers Lake has to be thawed by now.  I've been meaning to get up there but it has been so windy it hasn't been worth it.  Harpers is managed just like Beavertail so, look for huge brood stock and throw a variety of buggers at them.  Harpers lake is a macrophyte dominated system so it is very clear.  It is also a natural lake and is quite pretty.  It is in a deep pothole so the wind isn't as bad down in there.  Sometimes, when it gets too windy at Browns Lake, Harpers Lake shines as a less windy alternate.

I imagine Browns is ice free too but the wind up there must be horrendous.  You got to fish early before the wind starts.  Browns Lake has always been a bit of a puzzle for me.  I want to work on that puzzle; maybe this week.

Saturday, March 22, 2014

Western Montana Fishing Reports

Rainbow in downtown Missoula
The Clark Fork (at Warm Springs):
Some of the best fishing up there is during this time of the year.  It's all about the right flies up there.  They want pink tailwater stuff right now.  Midge stuff, pink scuds, eggs, and the sot hackle sow bug rules here!  I had a 40 fish day up there last week with many of those nice browns running over 18" in length.  There were midges and i noticed one rise but nothig in the way of solid dry fly fishing yet.

The Clark Fork (around Missoula):
Water levels are down to where accessing the good winter runs is not a suicidal act.  The water is still cold and there is not a lot going on yet.  I dredged up a few right in downtown yesterday.  Normally, at this time of the year, the CF has been nymphing great for months and is starting to pop BWO's.  Not this year.  I did notice some rises to the midges yesterday.  They were too few and far between for me to cut the nymph rig off.  Flies that work include: Smaller rubber leg stones in brown/green, worms, big prince and pheasant tails nymphs, eggs.  Fish the slow winter runs still.

The Bitterroot (lower)
For the most part, you wont see me fishing the upper Bitterroot.  It can look like the Salmon River in NY up there these days and I don't go fishing to hang out in a crowd.  I do fish the lower river consistently though.  It is a different beast and most fishing reports don't give it enough attention.  I hope to shine some light on it.  The water is still big but it is clear and green.  The nymphing is fantastic right now.  I caught lots of huge pre-spawn rainbows and some great browns on the soft hackle sow bug trailed below a rubber leg stone.  This river is normally on fire this time of year.  The trout haven't even got going on the midges yet this year.  Normally, they'd have been eating them on top since Feb. then weeks of BWO's followed by all the big bugs and the crowds.  It is still a total nymph game right now, but not for long.  Stonefly nymphs that look like skwala, worms, eggs, midges, baetis nymphs, and the soft hackle sow bug rules here!

Rock Creek
If you don't mind throwing nymphs, specifically egg patterns, you can have a life changing day up at the creek right now.  Just be sure to know what a redd looks like and stay the fuck away from it!!  The big Clark Fork rainbows and cutts are staging in the lower reaches and their brown friends are right behind them getting ready to eat eggs.  The chance to catch the fish of a lifetime, all day long is there, but you have to work for it.  Nymphing heavy and deep and losing all your flies is the only way to go about it.  You have to put in some footwork too.  Get away from the other fisherman, commit yourself to a full day and you will catch fish like you never have before.  Stonefly nymphs in any size or shape, smaller mayfly stuff, worms, egg patterns, the soft hackle sow bug should be illegal on this stream!  Pinch your barbs!

The Blackfoot
The same story as the Clark Fork around Missoula.  Still big and cold from the crazy winter.  The same nymphs in the same type of water will work.

Area Lakes
I'm excited to have this as part of my report because nobody reports on the lakes and that is just stupid.  Western Montana has thousands of awesome lakes and ponds and a ton of elbow room and great fishing.  I love to fish still water.  I think it can be incredibly hard and fun.  So here it is:  the area lakes are all still frozen!  Of course, but Beavertail Pond is normally open by now.  I checked last week and it was still frozen.  There was about a foot of thaw at the edge.  I'm going back to check on it today.  Ice-out in Montana should be declared a state holiday!  I'll keep you informed.  Once Beavertail goes, the rest follow in perfect succession in relation to their elevation.  You will certainly see pictures of big, nasty, steelhead sized, brood stockers on the blog soon.  Stay tuned!