Monday, June 28, 2010

colorful colorado



greetings from the Creekside bunkhouse.

guests are here and are all over the place. we've been busy guiding, trips almost everyday, usually a morning and an afternoon trip. we've been putting some fish in the nets, giving backslaps and handshakes, and getting a little grease. i've met some great people while fishing.

this whole guiding thing? let me elaborate. alarm goes off at 6:20 am. snooze at least twice, sometimes three times, so that takes me to 6:36 or 6:44. into the shower, teeth brushed, contacts in, arrive at the EDR (employee dining room) around 7:10. grab a glass of o.j. and a plate of whatever's for breakfast. jesse's never had a breakfast stomach so just a small snack here. check the water flow of the creek and the river, write current flow on the flow board. put up the flags, get the brooms. sweep the lodge's front and side porch, steps and around the steps. sweep a couple bridges and the deck of Palmer (game/tv room). sweet another walkway then another deck and another set of stairs. on monday, wednesday and friday, get the fire house out and spray down the alley. sweep what the hose don't get. by this time hopefully i've been filled in on who i'm fishing with and where we're fishing. go get the trucks from the pit, make sure they're clean, then go get my fishing gear from my car and/or room. get some coolers ready for the guests. if necessary, grab a few flies from the lodge. mingle with guests and wait around until they're ready to hit the water. drive to the guests' station, rig up and start fishing. fish from 9 or 9:30 to 12:30ish. drive back to lodge, eat lunch, determine afternoon schedule. clean trucks, reload coolers, put waders back on, leave lodge by 2:00. fish from 2:00ish to 6:00ish, drive back to lodge. eat dinner. clean trucks, clean coolers, put trucks back in the pit. done.
fishing has been hot. when i arrived, flow in goose creek was roughtly 500 CFS. now it's down to 73. awesome level. perfect. hatches have started and fish are rising like the sun. we're stinging fish on a big stonefly dry called the designated hitter. also getting love on the good ol adams parachute, blue wing olive parachute, elk hair caddis and schroeder's caddis. nymphs working well are green copper johns, stoneflies still, a fly called a dirty bird and also the bird's nest. we should have strong hatches for another 2 to 3 weeks and then i think we'll be midging for a while.

i netted a five pound chromer for a guest yesterday and this morning had a beautiful 18" cutbow take a DH on the last cast of the morning. schwing!

the rio has been fishing well too. that's Boone and i's go-to spot to fish. i've been fishing two flies almost all the time - DH's with an elk hair dropper or a DH with a bird's nest dropper. Boone often elects to drift nymphs over rising fish, despite criticism from the other guides.

did an exploratory mission up to the upper stretches of Goose Creek and found some wild cutties which was great. just an amazing spot in the wimuniche wilderness. hike-in only. awesome.
on any given night at the bar in town there are 6 to 15 guides there. we've all befriended each other and share reports over banquet beers. a fun atmosphere for sure. some of the older guys have been guiding and fishing a long time. like, a lot longer than i've been alive. i try to listen closely when they get deep and/or philosophical. brain sauce, that is.

that's all for now, dish duty tonight. today i received my first paycheck since september of 2009. much needed. i hope everyone is well. tight lines and cold beers to all.
the river is why.

Friday, June 18, 2010

worst day of guiding to date:

after fishing for 4 morning hours filled with spooked fish, 15 foot casts, missed sets, tangles and lost flies, finally get my man a fish in the net in the afternoon session. i give a yell, a big pat on the back and a handshake, followed by a "well, what d'ya think of that?!"

my man gives one quick grin then says, "let's get another one."

yup, no problem.

guides' day off tomorrow. cold. beers. being. consumed.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

"That was the best NJ I've ever had."

After six straight days of guiding, Saturday had come and it was the Guides' day off. Friday night found us at the bar with no alarms set in the morning, so we weren't the first ones on the river Saturday morning, but I'll be damned if we weren't the most excited. After a quick breakfast, my fellow guide Boone and I fished the ranch's section of the Rio Grande, landing a good number of browns and a few rainbows, mostly on stonefly nymphs or smaller, olive nymphs. It was a good day already. Finished with the Rio for the day, we elected to continue fishing on The Creek - Goose Creek.

Goose Creek is the ranch's money water and it runs literally thirty feet from where I rest my head. Station Road follows the creek from its confluence with the Rio nearly 7 miles upstream, with station markers every half mile or so. It's a gorgeous road and allows for vehicle-viewing of the creek and its terrain. We elected to fish a stretch we hadn't seen in a while, station 10. Around station 9, the creek heads out of a large meadow and into the trees, with plenty of drop-offs, rock walls and run to keep any angler busy.

It turned out to be a frustrating afternoon on the creek for myself. I lost a few rigs in the trees and had to re-rig several times. I'm sure Wilkie or Pete can attest to my attitude after breaking off a double nymph rig. But spirits were still high and the day was still fairly young, so we continued on. I put a couple pretty, but smaller browns in the net and Boone landed a couple as well.

It was getting to that time in the late afternoon/early evening where beers sound pretty damn good and as we had already stung some fish that day, we could easily leave with no regrets. Keep fishing or not - it seems this crossroad often finds an angler. In my experience, either road leads to good and fine things, but more fishing always holds the potential for more fish, so we kept moving up.

Finally we agreed to fish just a few more holes and we spotted a good looking run upstream. The light was just right and as we approached I spotted a fish. As I slowly neared, it appeared to be a good sized fish. It was Boone's turn on the stick, so we discussed the drift and watched the fish for a minute then he eased into position. A roll cast later and the fish remained. We watched the fish as he false casted and laid one down right on target.

The flies and indicator floated and then stopped. "There he is!" I said as Boone set the hook and the water erupted. Immediately the fish went upstream and then headed across, heading right for a blown down tree on the other side of the creek. The reel screamed. The fish went up and around the tree as Boone raced upstream, then across and down, following the fish, hoping to keep it out of the massive tree whose branches provided countless opportunities to break a fine tippet.

Into the branches the fish went. I had crossed the stream myself by this time, net in hand. The indicator stopped moving and then moved upstream and finally out of the tree. Then the fish went back upstream, around the tree and down again, Boone in tow behind. Straight downstream it went from there and the reel screamed again. I plowed through the tree for the second time, downstream of Boone, but the fish passed me and continued down. We had navigated the first obstacle and laughed in surprise as the line stayed tight.

Across the fish went. Then across again. I got downstream of the fish as it turned upstream and headed for the undercut bank below from where we casted from. Into the bank it went. Expletives were exchanged and hurried discussion of what to do next. "Get it out of there!" I yelled, water at my waste. Boone reeled down and we had the fish leadered again, full side pressure. The indicator stopped moving and I slowly moved to where I could put the leader between open fingers. I followed the leader down, felt the tippet and kept going. "Careful! it's 5X!" Boone shouted. I passed the first nymph and knew the fish and the dropper were close. Then I felt the tail. One shot would be all I would get to tail this fish and it slipped through my hands, out from the bank and downstream.

The fish was still close so I picked up the net again and made a swipe. Tail and a third of the fish went in the net and then out. And downstream it went again and the reel yelled yet again. The memory of a blown netting that would've been Wilkie's first steelhead came into my head as we chased downstream and the line lengthened.

We exchanged yells of where to move the fish, but the fish's downstream course would not changed again. More line came off the reel and the fish continued down. We exchanged an 'Oh fuck' look and followed. My walk turned into a run as Boone navigated rocks, holes and trees from the bank. More line came off the reel and the leader was long out of sight. I could only see fly line in the distance and more snags, blow downs and the like as I jogged downstream, losing sight of Boone and the fish.

I could see his rod tip high and a slight bend in the rod still but things were not looking good. Again, my blown netting came into my head as the realization that this fish was probably not going to get into the net took over both of our thoughts. Still we followed.

I ran as fast as I could, hoping to find that indicator and the leading and finally caught up to it. And then, through the trees I saw the fish. Head downstream, tired and right below the surface, the fish wasn't swimming, but going as fast as the main current. I then realized what I had to do. I ran hard one more time and the fish was even with me. A few more strides and I plunged into the river, sticking the net right in front of the tired fish. And in it went.

I had him in the net and headed for the bank. When I got there, I let out a loud yell, followed by a few more. A few moments later and Boone came into view and I saw his face as he realized I had netted the fish. And what a fish it was.

A few pictures later and the fish was gone. Fist bumps, laughs, yells and Holy Shits later, Boone looked at me and said, "That was the best NJ I've ever had!"

As summer fishing finds us all, wherever we are, I hope you all find tight lines, bold beers and good NJs - Net Jobs.

Friday, June 4, 2010

FISHIN

i have been doing some fishing since i arrived at the 4UR. in this past week i have been doing some guiding.
there have been fish in the nets. at the Lost Lakes, above, we caught brookies and yellowstone cutthroat, below.
i've been guiding on Goose Creek, below.
Boone and Andy with a Goose Creek chromer, below. the creek is high and the fish are deep, but they are happy and are willing to take many big, buggy, flies. black rubber leg stoneflies work well, as do marabou flies.
a favorite spot of Boone and mine to fish is Walton Creek. it flows out of Walton Pond and save for this pool below, is about 4 feet wide max. in it are happy browns and the occasional cut-bow. this male took a stimulator real slow like.
Charlie Pepper likes brookies and i like Charlie Pepper:
this brown Boone and i stalked in a backwater-sidechannel and it came up and took a blue wing olive on a first cast.
classic Goose Creek chromer:
the dinner bell tolls...