Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Driving For Dollars


From a guiding standpoint, it has certainly been a tough, slow start to the fishing season. Cold, wet weather during April and May, coupled with an enormous snowpack and raging muddy rivers has put local fishing guides behind the eight ball from a work standpoint this season. Unless you are lucky enough to be licensed on the Henry's Fork, area fishing guides are experiencing a lean start to the 2011 season. With the Snake River and Green River running very high and muddy still, there are not many options yet on places to take eager clients. The South Fork is slowly turning on, as levels drop, and the water clears. It is by no means "on fire" yet...deep, weighted nymphs being drifted through murky water is the name of the game over there now. That leaves us with Yellowstone. I'm fortunate to be a licensed fishing guide in Yellowstone National Park. The good news is that the Firehole River, as well as Lewis and Yellowstone Lakes are all fishing well right now. Despite this, it is harder to convince clientele to pull the trigger on these trips. Although wading the Firehole, or fishing the lakes has been productive, most folks that arrive here want to float the big rivers. Depending on where we are heading, you are looking at least an hour and forty-five minute drive...maybe as much as two hours and fifteen minutes...each way. This adds up to a ton of windshield time. I'm happy to have the work, and good fishing, but they are long days.

1 comment:

Forsythe Clemson said...

I love driving and hitting the open road. I live for cruising the interstate lines and seeing the view.
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