Sunday, August 14, 2011

Can't We All Get Along?


The Snake River through Grand Teton National Park is probably one of the prettiest and most unique places around to take a float fishing trip. The special use permit that we operate under (via Jack Dennis) allows me to take commercial trips here and show anglers the beauty of the Tetons while throwing flies to native trout. Many other users also enjoy the water every day, including people in kayaks, rafts, and private fishing boats. There is also a heavy presence of scenic float trips. Private companies offer raft trips down the same sections of river that we guide on, looking for wildlife and admiring the Tetons. Over the years, many of the fishing guides have experienced at least some difficulty working side by side with these commercial rafts. There has been an unspoken rivalry between between us, whereby the fishing guides are often left to feel like the commercial guides are the ones that "own" the river and its boat ramps. Small confrontations happen a few times a summer between the guides on the river, and in parking areas. Sadly, I was the random victim of vandalism on Friday, when after parking my truck and trailer at Moose (to float down to Wilson), someone in the commercial parking lot drained one of my tires, and located my hidden shuttle key and discarded it. Apparently, someone else using that parking facility has not been happy with the way in which the commercial fishing guides have been parking there. It was a totally pathetic move, and can't imagine how someone gets to a point where they would attack someone's vehicle. Upon arriving in Wilson, my clients and I were left with no vehicle, and a message from my shuttle driver that my truck had been disabled. Not a great way to end the day. To all my fellow guides reading this: be aware! I know that we will continue to use the river and its boat ramps with the highest of standards, and would never stoop to such a level. If by some stroke of luck the person that did this is reading my blog, could you just simply let us know what the problem is with our parking? Thanks...



I was fortunately able to spend the day Saturday not thinking about this entire situation. Instead, I was thinking about the stellar fishing I was having on my day off with my buddy Stan Czarniak. Here's a few shots from our marathon float. More soon!

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Fishin' In The 80's


Even though we are now entering the second week of August, area rivers are fishing like it is still early July. Although local rivers have dropped and cleared significantly over the past few weeks, they are all still running much higher than average for this date, and many of them are still far from clear. The Snake River below Jackson Lake Dam is running at 2,840 cfs, which is a great level. The water is crystal clear all the way to the confluence of the Buffalo Fork. The problem is that the Buffalo is still adding about 1,000 cfs right now and is running very silty. The average flow for the Buffalo for this date is only about 400 cfs. This is still making the Snake a very large river now. I fished today from Pacific Creek to Deadman's, and it was tough. Although we had good action on dry flies, all of the fish were very small. We did not hook, miss, spook or roll a fish over about 12". Although the Green is still fishing well, it is also running high for the date at about 900 cfs, where the average is about 500 cfs. The folks over in Idaho have finally lowered the South Fork levels to reasonable 9,000 cfs...we should see the dry fly action spark any day now over there.

I got a chance to head over to the Wind River last week to float below Dubois. As you may know, Darren Calhoun and Wind River Canyon Whitewater holds the only permit to drift and fish the Wind River below Dubois on the Wind River Indian Reservation. Darren is allowing me the chance to run a few trips over there this year with some select clients! I spent the day with Darren and two of his top guides, Cale and Marco. We made a reconnaissance run, checking out the water and a few of the boat launches. The river is still a bit too high to fish, but we had a great day anyway. Marco and Cale are great guys. Hanging with other guides for the day is a great way to learn new techniques, and discover new ways at guiding humor. One of the hardest thing to teach anglers in a driftboat is to cast forward...ahead of the boat. While Marco was on the oars with me in the back seat, Cale accidentally cast upstream into my water. Marco promptly told Cale to stop "fishing in the 80's". (It's in the past). Very funny stuff! Here's a shot from the back seat of one of Darren's boats. More soon...

Monday, August 1, 2011

A Welcome Monsoon


I just finished up a couple of days on the river with the Strazerri group. These guys come from San Diego a few times a year to throw some flies and enjoy Jackson. We hit the Upper South Fork yesterday pretty hard. The fishing over there is still not great. The flows remain at a pushy 13,500 cfs which make it a hard row to keep the boat where it needs to be. On top of that, the water is still very cloudy. We managed to nymph up a few fish, including a 16" Rainbow. We threw a large dry fly for the late-afternoon, and got a handful of Cutthroat to fall for it, with a 16" fish being the largest. We did not get a single fish in the riffles, which is usually the hot spot by late July. Not sure when the South Fork is going to pop.
We made our plans last night to head down to Pinedale and fish the Green today. The first day of August brought us some great weather to Western Wyoming...the Monsoon Flow. What does this mean? Well...we woke up today to thick clouds and light rain. The jet-stream changed and brought us a full day of clouds and moisture. My frequent readers probably know just how much I like cloudcover on the Green, especially after a 3-week run of sunshine and hot weather. The dry fly fishing really popped today, with plenty of Brown Trout looking up. Drakes and Chernobyl Ants did the trick. It looks like more of the Monsoon for this week, so hopefully the fishing holds up. The Snake looks like it is almost ready to go below Pacific Creek. I bet we are on it by next week. Here's my buddy Steve Mancini with a pair of beauties from today...a 21" and 20" Brown Trout that fell for dry flies in the rain. Great day today Steve! More soon!

Monday, July 25, 2011

Finally Some Dries!


Guiding around here these past few weeks can be summed up in one statement: staring at strike indicators. Fishing the Green, the Snake below Jackson Lake Dam, and the few trips I've had on the raging South Fork has almost entirely been done while gazing at strike indicators. Although it can be very productive, it can get very mundane on the oars looking at a pink bobber all day. After all, this is supposed to be prime dry fly country! The South Fork has been lowered to 17,000 cfs, which is still pretty high. I'm hoping we will see it get closer to 15,000 cfs soon...that would make it much easier to fish. The Green has dropped significantly this week to about 1,500 cfs as of today...a much more reasonable level to be fishing. Although there have been blizzard Drake, Caddis and Sally hatches down there, the fish have been holding tight in the high water nymphing. As these levels drop even more, look for much better dry fly action any day on the Green. The best place to throw some dries right now is on the upper Snake, between the Dam and Pacific Creek. The hatch of Sallies and Golden Stones up there today was thick. On top of that, the water is the best it has looked all year...very clear. Unfortunately, the Buffalo Fork is still putting in a muddy 2,100 cfs and making the Snake unfishable below the confluence at Moran Junction. That's all I've got...just the facts. Here's a great shot I snapped today of the beautiful Snake with the Mount Moran monolith in the background.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Making The Rounds


I've finally just completed a full week of guiding, which brought me completely around the local fishing block. With high and dirty water still plaguing this region, and clients cancelling or postponing fishing trips, I was lucky to get on the water with anglers this entire week. I guided on the Firehole, Yellowstone Lake, the Green River and the Snake below Jackson Lake Dam. The fishing on the Firehole was great. We were on the water early and there were fish eating aggressively on top. I'm actually not entirely sure what the type of Mayfly it was. I call it a large PMD...about a size 14, with a pale yellow or cream color. It's a hatch I see each season about this time. Anyone out there know what this bug is? We fished the hatch from about 9 am until 1 pm. Although it slowed down in the afternoon, the water temperatures are still holding cool enough. Yellowstone Lake fished par for the course: a handful of nice fish netted on small buggers using sink-tip lines. Although the Lake has been good, I'd probably skip the river right now. With the lake up about 3 feet, the river below Fishing Bridge is huge.
Normally this time of year, we are able to get folks on the Snake below Jackson Lake Dam to fish down to Pacific Creek, above the muddy tributaries. I gave it a shot on Tuesday. We had a decent morning on Caddisflies and saw numerous Sallies in the afternoon. Most of the fish eating up there were smaller, but at least they were taking dries. The bad news is that since I was on that section, the Bureau of Reclamation has raised the levels again to nearly 5,000 cfs. Yesterdays paper said that these flows would last until late July, and then be reduced to about 2,800 cfs for the rest of the season. This would be a great level for us. Keep your fingers crossed. All of the Snake tributaries are began to slowly drop and clear, so there is a distant light now at the end of the tunnel!
And now, on to the Green...
I put three days in on the Green this week in the campground sections. The river is dropping very gradually, but is still around 2,700 cfs. My ideal flow would be below 1,500 cfs for reference. There is about 3 feet of clarity, and tons of bugs around. Grey Drakes, as well as a variety of Mayflies and Stoneflies are abundant right now. The fish are not quite eating them yet, though. If you were to fish a large dry all day, with a Drake Cripple trailer, for instance, you may pick up a fish or two feeding opportunistically. Streamers were also mediocre...nymphing was the most consistent way to find fish right now. Fish your large Beadheads and Rubberleg Stoneflies deep with splitshot. Good luck!
Here's Bob Kolscher with a typical Yellowstone Lake Cutthroat. More soon...

Sunday, July 10, 2011

The Legacy Ranch






Some of my readers may remember a blog post I made earlier in the spring about the Legacy Ranch located in Southeastern, Idaho. It is a 671 acre spring creek and waterfowl ranch situated outside of Blackfoot, Idaho. It is currently for sale and listed through Live Water Properties, the premier real estate brokers for fishing and hunting parcels. My good friend and guiding partner Scott Smith invited me over to the ranch on Friday to guide some clients that were looking at the property. Given how limited our public fishing options are right now with high and muddy rivers around here, I jumped at the chance to go.
The spring fed ponds, creeks and sloughs extend roughly 3 miles through this pristine property. We dropped our boats into the cold, clear stillwater with our anglers to find some truly exceptional fishing. Small nymphs dropped under dry flies led us to a handful of amazing wild Rainbow trout in the net, including this 7 pound beauty at the top.
In terms of fishing on public water in the region, we are still very limited. The South Fork is still holding at a dirty 24,000 cfs, while the Green is dropping ever so slowly, but is still around 3,000 cfs. The best fishing in the area is still on the Firehole River, where higher flows are keeping the water cool. Old timers in the valley often look to the top of peak 10,450, also known as Rendezvous Bowl to tell us when the Snake will be ready to fish. Once the "bowl" is completely clear of any snow, it's time to fish the Snake they say. Well, we still have quite a way to go before that face is free of snow. I'm guessing we'll be fishing dry flies on the Snake August 5th...you heard it here first :)

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Head-Back-Tail






My good buddy Brian Hodges came down to Jackson for the weekend from Bozeman, Montana, and we were able to sneak away for a spectacular day of fishing on Sunday. Chris "Stumpy" Stump also joined us for our marathon day to the flats of No Tell Canyon. Although virtually every river, stream, creek, waterway and drainage is high and muddy around here, there are still a couple of select spots to throw some dry flies. It's not an easy venture, though. A pre-dawn start, coupled with a ton of windshield time is necessary in order to find these secret places. We timed the Drake hatch perfectly...as soon as we stepped out of Stumpy's minivan, and saw the Drake on the window, we knew that we were in for a special day. Once on the water, we immediately saw Rainbows up to 7 pounds sipping big mayflies. Brian summed it up perfectly: "Ten o'clock, thirty feet...head-back-tail, head-back-tail", which describes the motion of a trout taking a dry fly.
I wish I had a better report for the Snake, South Fork or Green right now. The South Fork is now up again to a whopping 22,900 cfs...huge bummer. I had a great day guiding on Yellowstone Lake today, and am heading to the Firehole tomorrow. Yellowstone is where it is at right now. If you've got some time to explore, break out the map and find your own No Tell Canyon :)

Don't forget to visit Brian Hodges' Doublehaul Travel to see some of the world's greatest fly-fishing destinations.

Monday, July 4, 2011

This Is Appalling!


An estimated 1,000 barrels of crude oil was released into the pristine Yellowstone River, west of Billings, Montana, on Friday after an oil pipeline ruptured under the riverbed. When will these big oil companies learn? It seems to me that if you are going to run a pipeline under a river, (especially one as special as the Yellowstone), someone would do everything possible to make sure that something like this could never happen. Early speculation is that the record runoff levels may have scoured the riverbed, exposing the pipeline which was then hit by debris.

Wouldn't you think that someone from Exxon-Mobil could plan for high water scenarios? Regardless of the fact that the spill took place well below the Yellowstone's famous trout fishing corridor, the significance of this disaster is still exceptional. It remains to be seen what the affect on wildlife living downstream will be. The Department of Transportation (who oversees the pipeline), issued a letter to Exxon-Mobil last year citing 7 seven serious safety violations along this particular line. I sure hope this company is held accountable for this. Check out the Billings Gazette to keep up with this story from a local source.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

The Runoff Rollercoaster


The Bureau of Reclamation, regional hydrologists and Jackson Hole old-timers all predicted that we were going to see all of the major rivers and tributaries peak last weekend. They definitely got that one wrong. Bright, hot weather this week, coupled with warm nights caused everything to surge over the past two or three days. Clearly, there is still an incredible amount of snow left in the high country. The Buffalo Fork surged toward 6,000 cfs yesterday, which blew away the previous record for the date. The Green River, near Warren Bridge, topped 4,000 cfs yesterday, which I have never seen. The New Fork River, near Big Piney, is also running at a record level...a muddy 7,600 cfs.
I guided my first South Fork trip yesterday with a father and son visiting from Hawaii. I prepped them for the day, and set our expectations low. The river had been holding steady for over a week at 15,000 cfs. Although the water is still not clear, it had been turning slowly from brown to green. I had received reports of fish being caught on stonefly nymphs. We threw rubberleg stonefly nymphs and streamers hard. Although the banks did not produce any fish for us, the riffles and tailouts were better. We landed 7 trout, and about a dozen Whitefish. The highlight of the day was a 20" Brown that fell for a very large, black streamer in a sidechannel. The day actually exceeded my expectations, although I think these guys may have been slightly disappointed. Either way, it was a fun day.
By late afternoon, we started noticing a lot more debris in the water and the river began to look muddier. When we got to the takeout at Conant, I checked the levels and sure enough, they bumped the river up again yesterday. It came up 2,000 cfs to a total of 17,000 cfs...a huge bummer. This late week surge has put more water into Palisades Reservoir, so they have now compensated by raising the river yet again. Our options our now dwindling again. I'd avoid the South Fork for the next few days at least, unless you are looking to do a booze-cruise. Enjoy a shot of our highlight yesterday...17-year-old angler Luke Memmer with a beauty.

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.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Native Cutthroat


One of my favorite outings on a day off (or as a guide), is to spend the day on Yellowstone Lake looking for Native Yellowstone Cutthroat trout. They are a strong, beautiful strain that takes streamers easily this time of year. Casting sink-tip lines with small black buggers is a sure ticket to success on the lake right now. When I first moved to the valley and discovered the lake, two anglers netting 40 or 50 fish a day in the 14-16" range was not uncommon. The illegal introduction of Lake Trout in the early 90's has changed this, though. Fish numbers are down drastically; a couple of good anglers may net 8 or 10 fish on a good day right now, with sizes now averaging a healthy 18-21". Fortunately, the park service is in the process of adopting new policies on how to deal with the non-native Lake Trout, and are now taking more aggressive measures to get them out of the lake.


I spent the day yesterday with my good buddy Charlie Howarth on the Lake. He had never fished it before, and was pleasantly surprised. With most rivers in the area still high and muddy, don't miss the lake right now!
The South Fork is now back down to 15,000 cfs, and slowly clearing. The riffles in the Canyon section are starting to nymph well with rubber-leg Stoneflies. The Firehole also continues to fish OK...it's still high in volume, but quite clear. Look for small Stoneflies in the afternoon. Don't be afraid to throw a streamer either. The tributaries in the valley really took a jump this week with much warmer weather and thunderstorms. Pacific Creek, the Buffalo Fork, the Gros Ventre and Spread Creek all spiked to much higher, muddier levels. We're gettin' there!

I want to thank my good friend Scott Smith for organizing the Rafter J kids fishing day that will be taking place tomorrow. Rafter J is the subdivision south of Jackson that we live in. Scott took charge with the homeowners association to come up with a plan to stock more Cutthroat Trout in our ponds for the many Rafter J kids to enjoy. You gotta turn them on young! More soon...

Monday, June 20, 2011

Still Wet


Rachael and I returned last night from a road trip with the girls to Winthrop, Washington, where we attended a friends wedding. By the looks of things around here, it has been unseasonably wet and cool still while we were gone. The high country is still loaded with snow, and area rivers remain high and muddy. The Upper Snake River drainage is at 677% of normal snowpack, and the Upper Green River drainage is at a staggering 1162% of normal as of today. This essentially means that there is an abnormally high amount of snow left for this time of year in our local mountains. Each day that the weather remains cool, or we pick up more snow, the numbers will increase. It will be hard to say for sure exactly when we will be able to fish on the Snake and its tributaries, or the Green River for that matter. Although the South Fork is now back up in volume to 17,100 cfs, it sounds like the nymph fishing is really turning on. The river is clear enough to fish, and fish are likely beginning to look for stonefly nymphs.

While on our road trip, we crossed over some very hallowed trout water, including the Henry's Fork, Beaverhead, Big Hole and Clark Fork rivers. With the exception of the Beaverhead, all of these watersheds were well above flood stage, with a muddy torrent carrying debris downstream. I had never been to Winthrop, Washington before. It is located on the Eastern side of the Northern Cascade mountain range. It's a very pretty mountain town, with the famous Methow River running right through it. Winthrop is serious Steelhead and stillwater country. Although the Methow (and every other river in the area) where also high and muddy, I was able to get some fishing in on Davis Lake for some really wild Rainbow Trout. It was good fun.
Here's a couple of shots from the trip. Davis Lake, with a lone float-tuber; the Big Hole river at Melrose, raging at over 10,000 cfs; the Clark Fork River at Missoula, at least 3 feet above flood stage...wow!

Thursday, June 16, 2011

More Options!


With the arrival of mid-June, a couple of more fishing options have opened up for us around here. The Henry's Fork Ranch, as well as Yellowstone Lake opened to fishing for the season yesterday. June 15th is always a welcome date in this region, particularly in years like this where most fisheries are high and muddy. The "Ranch" opener is a big deal with Henry's Fork aficionados; the first day on this hallowed piece of water offers anglers a better chance to stalk large, educated Henry's Fork Rainbow Trout and actually have a decent chance of sticking one.
Not much else to report around here. The Snake and its tributaries, as well as the Green River drainage are high and muddy. The South Fork has been lowered to a reasonable 15,000 cfs. This is great news...as it starts to make its transition from brown to green, it will start to fish.
The birdwatching in the area is fantastic right now. Here's a couple of shots of a beautiful Western Tanager that has been visiting our yard. More soon!

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Where to Fish?



The most asked question that I have been fielding lately from friends and readers is just where should we be fishing right now? Needless to say, virtually all of the rivers in the region are high and muddy. Most of Idaho and Montana are also facing the same issues right now. The Firehole River in Yellowstone National Park remains the best option if you want to wet a line on a moving stream. Although it has come up in volume significantly (1,450 cfs near the confluence with the Madison River, which is at flood stage), it is still clear enough to fish the good June hatches near Old Faithful. Don't be afraid to throw small streamers as well, especially in the deeper areas. Although the Henry's Fork below Ashton has had good reports of Salmonfly activity, the boat and wading traffic has been record-breaking...good luck.
Stillwater fishing is probably your next best option right now. Henry's Lake, Hebgen Lake and Jackson Lake all have been putting out decent reports over the past week or so. Yellowstone Lake will be opening on June 15th. It typically fishes very well out of the gate with plenty of elbow room.


My buddy Chris Stump and I, (along with his 2 year old son George!), headed out to Jenny Lake a couple of days ago for a test run. Fishing was good. We saw a few Cutthroat and Lake Trout on streamers, and the flying ant hatch was starting to happen as well. We saw numerous fish on top taking advantage of them.
Much warmer weather this past weekend, along with thunderstorms, has really caused a bump in water flows in the area. Check out these incredible water graphs from the Snake River above Palisades Reservoir, the Big Hole River, near Melrose Montana, the Bitterroot River near Missoula, Montana, and the Clark Fork River near Missoula, Montana. Wow!
Here's a couple of shots from Jenny Lake the other day, including young George with a Lake Trout...nice one!

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Fishin' With Currier



I had the chance yesterday to spend the day with Jeff Currier fishing Island Park Reservoir, in Southeastern Idaho. It was great fun. Jeff spent over 20 years running the Jack Dennis Sports fly shop in downtown Jackson (where I first met him), and has since left to work for himself. He is a highly talented artist and angler that has truly figured out a way to make a living doing exactly what he loves. He lives and breathes fly fishing. While spending time with him, you quickly realize that his passion for the sport is highly contagious. Jeff's angling experiences, artwork, photography and stories has allowed him to be a freelance steward for the sport. Most notably, he has caught over 275 species of fish on a fly, in over 40 countries. This is why Jeff is the go-to authority on exotic fly fishing travel.

Jeff called me this week to see if I wanted to join him on an exploratory mission. With the lower Henry's fork jammed with boats hoping for a Salmonfly sighting, and the rest of the rivers in the region high and muddy, we decide to try something different. We set out for Island Park Reservoir in hopes of hooking into some large Rainbow's. Windy conditions made for tough fishing, but we spent the day trading some truly great stories. Make sure to check out Jeff's Global Fly Fishing Blog to see what he has been up to lately.

I was able to get up on the Firehole this week as well, guiding some folks from Louisiana. The river is in great shape...flows are tea-colored and relatively low. The winds gusted toward 30 mph, which made it tough on these greenhorns though. Relentless tangles and a broken rod tip made for a long outing.

Temps are trying to climb into the 70's this weekend, which should help the runoff to kick in again. Cold nights, though, have been stalling the effort...the past two nights have seen temps in the high 20's. The Green is back up over 1,100 cfs, the South Fork is at 23,000 cfs and the Snake has been lowered to 3,990 cfs out of the dam in anticipation of the tributaries coming up any day. The most staggering stats can be seen on the Wyoming Snowpack Data website. The Snake River Basin is now well over 300% of normal snowpack...wow! Check out the other amazing numbers on this site. Will the snow ever melt?

Here's a few shots from our outing yesterday, including a classic of me with a monster sucker and one of Jeff's famous tailgate. FYI...catching a sucker of this magnitude takes quite a bit of skill on a flyrod :) More soon!