Today, I finally got the chance to fish an upper part of river that I
have been eyeing for years. My brother
in law and I planned on a later float- hopefully hitting the prime reaches, at
dusk when the big fellas come out to play.
We had to go today to miss the cold, rainy forecast for the next few
days. Up here- in God’s Country summer
keeps teasing us. The water turned out to be nothing like I thought but so much
better. Two different juvenile bald
eagles acted as our escort for much of the time- the first bailing when I would
assume, we entered the territory of another far bigger juvenile eagle. The silence was startled only by grouse,
kingfishers and a huge commotion that we could only assume was a moose. I suppose it could have been a deer lost in
the marshy goodness but it is prime moose territory and considering the tight
quarters we were really hoping it was not a bear.
Most people are still chasing trout- with stellar results on brook trout
from what I hear. We decided to load up
for smallies and pike. This water is
epic- lots of fish holding water. We banged
the banks, fished midstream holes….it turned out to be good casting
practice. The river is loaded with
timber which made standing while casting in canoe interesting to say the
least. Many people would be discouraged by our lack of success but I got more
excited. I have been looking for a river
to be a project for the summer and I have finally found it. Many return trips are going to be in the works. Lucky for us my brother in law has a tiny
bladder and we had to pull over for him to put some needed water into the
stream. My new set up is all A’s and it
finally got a chance to dance.
Before I keep going I know these stories about the fish that got
away. And people always say it is for
real and most times you just shake your head at another good fish story. BUT BUT I did lose the biggest smallie I have
ever seen on the end of my rod- I fish that will haunt me for years. We decided not to bring a net and as I
dropped to lip the fish….she turned tail and laughed. My hands shook for a long time after
that. Tying on new flies and casting proved
to be daunting since my hands were shaking and my eyes focused like I had been
hitting the whiskey like a good Irishman.
Exploring new water is so much fun.
Every turn was new; every side channel into the lily pads, every ox bow
was a hidden jewel. I felt like Lewis
and Clark and if was not for the occasional signs of humans- I would have
believed. I cannot wait to return and get this water dialed in. This trip has renewed my spirit for
exploration. New water, new adventures….hopefully
next time I will play the fish right with a grip and grin at the end. Because no matter what fishermen say landing
fish is still an important part any fishing trip. Photos coming soon…