Rambling’ Notes: Its here.

This season has been a little rougher than others. But my favorite time of year is here. The river has dropped back to her normal flow, the fish are moving about the system on a rhythm, and the bugs are starting to hatch. The Autumn, the Fall…the Late Season is upon us.

Some things recently in my life are making me relocate to south central Idaho for the off season. There I will be working on the south fisheries and a few tours down there to start exploring it. But I am also looking at working towards guiding other states and rivers beyond the Yakima for trout. I will always guide the Yakima River, it is near and dear to me. But I want more, as an angler personally, as an angler professionally, and as a guide. I want more challenges, more water to row and read, more clients and people to share the places and fish with, and I want to spend the next 30-40 years doing it. I never planned to only be a Yakima River guide and spend my career here solely. It is time to expand move on to other waters, and return to the Yak during the time of year when she is at her best.

That time is now. The late season fishing has begun. Today was a tougher fishing day in the upper canyon with the weather, but every day can’t be stellar. We had wind, no bugs, over worked fish from the weekend, and my boat was heavy. Lotta dude in the boat today…but the fishing required extra attention and work. I walked the boat back up runs several times to try new lanes, different flies, and give anglers more chances. Whether we caught no fish or 50 fish I would have done the same things today. Changed flies 12 times, tried different nymph rigs, threw multiple dries, double dries, it was just tougher today, still produced fish, missed some nice ones, but it wasn’t a stellar day and my body ached afterwards, and my brain had been fried by the trout. So I needed to get my shit right after. So I drove to the Cle Elum and didn’t even set camp, just grabbed my gear, still in my waders from the trip since 7 am, and walked up to the first riffle. Fish in 3 casts. I proceeded to lose myself for the next 2 hrs in dry fly fishing for trout with October Caddis and Blue Wing Olive dries.

This evening was especially wonderful as I got into over a dozen trout over the 2 hrs I fished and I landed a 22 inch rainbow after an amazing take and battle. I waited until dusk, just to see if I could get into it with a big trout.

This fish ate 3 casts after I had landed his 15 inch friend in the same spot. I figured…what the hell, they usually hang out together…3rd reach cast across 3 currents, 30-35 feet upstream at roughly 45 degrees. A sweet log jam right next to the deep seam on the river left edge of the run…it’s fucking juicy. There is a soft cushion just ahead of the root ball of the log…a foam line, and a slight drop off into the seam. It’s perfect. The cast isn’t easy, and most anglers I see don’t fish it the way I do. Most go from a down stream angle, unfortunately the fish can see you at that angle.

A more technical cast and method of approach produced an amazing trout today. The fish hammered the fly, I initially thought it was a cutty, but then it turned down river and took line, about 20 feet, then turned back upriver and held deep trying to break me off in the rocks. I could feel the line hit gravel. I started to turn the fish back and forth trying to disorient the fish and get it to rise up in the water column so I could have the advantage. A technique learned from Molly Semenick. The fish came up in the water column…then jumped and I got to see the creature! A huge male with a deep pink stripe flashing in the setting sun reflecting on the river surface. I was mesmerized and hooted very loudly as the trout ran back up the run and tried to get upriver. I back peddled out of the thigh deep current and turned the trout down river. It took the hint and screamed down river jumping once as it went by me. I had slack for a moment and thought I had lost; but the fish came into the slow water below me and I took the opening and closed the gap on the fish. When I went to net it spooked and pulled line almost straightening it in my hand and I grunted loudly at the power. I countered by pulling the trout back into the fast water and rocking the rod tip back and forth to tucker the beast out. I succeeded. The trout yielded and I was able to embrace this gorgeous 22 inch rainbow. A huge male, with a magenta band down the center, deep dark spots with leopard markings near the tail but perfect round circles near the snout. The trout weighed close to 4lbs, and filled the net completely. I was overjoyed with the encounter. I quickly removed the beat up October caddis dry from the nose plate, a perfect hook set for once. I released the fish almost as quickly as I had netted it. No photo required. That was my fish. We shared that moment. Just me, the river, and the trout. I felt blessed, if there is such a thing. To bare witness and battle such an animal and to be humbled by the fight against angler that it put forth. A worthy adversary we made for each other. I tipped my hat, lit up a J and walked back to the truck.

For a moment…all was right with the world and there was nothing but river…angler…and trout.

Tamarack

Rambling Notes: from the river

I’m swinging in my hammock riverside. The big bend on the upper canyon, below the first big canyon wall…the big eddy…you know the spot. I can just make out the canyon walls across the river facing towards the north. The constellation Cassiopeia has glided up the sky between the two adjacent cliff edges splitting the night sky perfectly from this spot for someone to watch the stars. It’s why I set my hammock up so far from where I make camp for the clients. This is my spot…my little secret…my treat to myself when I sleep riverside here.

My clients slumber over yonder. An older couple but young in life. Almost retired, active, older kids with kids younger than mine. Very fun, have travelled the world, and fished it. Incredibly polite, energetic, understanding, and very complimentary. My hospitality has been nothing but commented on. I’ve been told multiple times today weather changing flies, running lines and laps with a fully loaded boat, talking constantly about my passion, and getting incredibly excited with fish, that I’m doing a great job. To the point where I was like you guys aren’t messing with me. And no. With clients that have fished with as many guides and as many places, I have been nothing but thankful and humbled by today. With a river that tested my patience slightly, and a tired body, I have had an amazing work day.

Dinner was short, and I had planned on fishing with them as the sun set. But they retired as it got dark, with Dave giving the river a quick glance and mumbling to himself before deciding against it…I giggled…out loud and cleaned up camp quietly and secured the boat for the evening. Casting a few times to a few small fish I had watched sip emergers while making French dips. As the sun set and the light grew almost too faint to see a fly…I heard an immense rise as I walked to my hammock. It made me stop…ponder if I could get to it quietly and if I did hook it, if I could contain myself in the moment…I know myself too well and could not. So I listened quietly as he slurped two more times…loudly…to the point where I swear I heard someone in the tent yonder shuffle with the same intention I had just concluded against. A slight tinge of hope that I would see someone stumble forth headlamp on looking for a fly rod and a caddis to skate. Hmmm…the late season makes me greedy for trout. It’s bad.

The river slips, slurps, slides, and sloshes in the background, the foreground a song of crickets and other insects. I can hear deer on the hill, and owls hooting and screeching to each other across the canyon. There’s a slight breeze, light like a breath, warm but a bite from time to time when it shifts and wafts off the river. It’s just warm enough that wool cloths a puffy, hat, socks, and a wool blanket are enough. It’s probably the last night for it. I’ll enjoy it. It’s also one of the last days out of waders so that fucking sucks, but at least fall season is wicked.

Breakfast will be amaze balls in the am. Pancakes and jam, eggs, bacon…OMF I could eat. I’m hoping to land some larger fish, but what’s new. We had some really nice fish today but didn’t get a lot of completions. But what’s new. Still wicked fun. I just got back from Montana and missed so many fish I don’t really wanna talk about it. Terry is gonna shit when he finds out.

Fishing is really picking up and the upper river is gorgeous right now. Got the 7th open. I’m gonna watch the stars a bit more before nodding off. Damn caddis are flying all over my face with this iPad light. Little shits. Damn fish out there slurping them with the bats. Little shits.

Tamarack.

It’s time.

It’s time….The funky fresh time of the season that is by far the tastiest of jams when it comes to grooving down the Yakima chasin troots…the Autumn. Commonly referred to as the late season in my boat. It’s by far my favorite time to fish, guide, and do generally trout bummy stuff. Already the evenings are cooler and the days shorter…I can smell it, feel it, sense it slowly creeping in. The cold tendrils of Autumn in the evening, the mist off the river in the morning as air temps and water temps pass each other on the thermometer. Later mornings, waking up with the river, sleepy fish, aggressive for food during the day, trout back on a schedule…and fishing much..much later than 5 am.

So far the only real downside to living so far from the Yakima River is that I don’t get to see the river every day…but then again…I am headed to Montana on Monday before returning to the homewater…and it’s a much closer drive. I’ve been wanting to hit the MT area since the last time I did. And a quick trout bum trip with angler peeps is a perfect way to recharge batteries and get into the late season.

I’ve spent the better part of my professional angling focused on the late season fishing on the Yakima River. I know the upper river in the fall better than most…and that’s through hard work, trial and error, and damn near every day riverside in the late season over the past several years. The Yakima is a different river in the late season. A fishery that tests anglers, and rewards them for perfection. It’s quite frustrating and fulfilling at the same time. I have more fun in the fall than any other time of the season…and if you’ve gone down river with me anytime of the year…that’s a tall order to fill. But the Yakima in Autumn does a few things that really get the angling juices flowing.

Flows

The flows drop…controlled for returning salmon, but the flows in the fall represent a more natural feel to the Yakima. Riffles, drop offs, structure, and proper trouty looking water starts showing up all over the river. Fish are no longer forced to the deep depths of the river or the banks trying to escape the high summer irrigation flows while still getting food. Flows drop and expose trout more, the fish tank gets smaller so to speak. Places where there were 3800 cfs now have 900-1500cfs and those 800-1000 fish per mile are a little more compacted in the river. They pod up, feed on a schedule, move about the system more freely, and seek and search out places to feed heavily before the winter temps set in and fish go into a type of hibernation. The annual flip flop of flows, or drop of irrigation water out of the system, is the start of this whole shindig.

Fish

Fish in the fall are able to move more. They move in relation to food, salmon, predators, and holding water. Every morning fish move into areas of the river where they can have easy access to food. As the day wanes they retreat back to their holding areas to rest for the evening. Every day it gets colder the more ferocious they get until the water temps force them to hold and rest most of the day. By mid November they are trout-sickles but the days leading up to that can produce some amazing fishing related episodes.

Bugs

Oh dude do we have bugs in the late season. The tail end of the Shortwing Stonefly Hatch, the Cranefly Hatch, Mahogany, Cahill, and BWO Mayfly Hatches, multiple species of Caddis, including the big October Caddis. Plus salmon eggs and flesh, streamers…especially crawdads, all of it on the menu. Things hatch on a schedule, fish move in relation to them, you can target fish in all sorts of water, using multiple bugs throughout the day, and you can have a lot of fun headhunting fish and figuring out which fly they want and how they want it. Plus you can skate shit and it’s the only time of the year that it works consistently. Mmmm.

Guiding

Its groovy in the late season. Full days are back on the calendar, you can spend 8-10 hrs riverside and catch fish all day. River camping is also wicked fun in the fall. Guiding becomes a really fun challenging experience that makes me get out all the tools and tricks. Different angles of approach, stalking and walking on fish, using the boat to spot hop, getting out of the boat and knee deep in the river again. Changing casting angles, cast types and techniques, longer drifts, perfect drifts, longer leaders, smaller tippet, multiple fly changes, timing drifts to trout eats, hopping out of the boat and netting fish 20 yards down river, fish getting into backing, huge slurps, aggressive indicator drops, and very very cranky fish. There’s nothing like the fall fishing on any trout river but the Yakima is one of my favorites because of its technicality and spooky AF fish after all that summer time pressure. It’s not easy to put 20-30 fish in the net on any river…but I have found it’s easiest for me as a guide in the fall. And that doesn’t come without a lot of work on everyone’s part. I invite all my clients to come back in the late season. I also have many clients that consistently come in the fall because of the experiences we’ve had together. The Yakima River in the late season will make any angler better…no matter the skill level or experience. These fish don’t care…all are equal in the eyes of the Yakima Trout in the Autumn…all equally in for an ass kicking if the A game is not brought.

The stoke is very high this year. It’s been a rougher season for my beardy face. And I’ve moved and am taking on more water and other guiding next season…so I’m looking forward to the familiar schedule of the fall fishing season. Plus I get to camp for basically 2 months straight and guide and fish my ass off for the next 60-80 days. That may not sound awesome to some…pshhh. Camping, showering outside, colder temps, smelly waders, coffee with grounds in it, lifted burn ban, riverside nights, 8-9 hrs of fishing a day, missed fish, landed fish, big smiles, damp 20’s, firm handshakes, trout handshakes, and a general lack of that ‘normal’ 9-5 life, replaced with all things trout, fly, and rod. Ya…it’s not for everyone…but it’s all I’ve ever wanted.

I hope to see you out there this late season. Take a trip if you like, full days, half days, walk and wades, it’s all up for grabs and the fishing rarely disappoints in the Autumn. It’s by far the most consistent time of the year on the Yak. And with the forecast for flows and weather…it’s looking pretty damn spectacular. Especially after the warm water of the summer.

There are dates open, but it fills fast. And it’s good all the way to Halloween Day on the Yakima River and sometimes even into November. I’ll be back on the Yakima Thursday the 30th. My tiny house get delivered to the homestead next week, so I’ve got to get ready for that…plus I am trying to sneak to Montana for 2 days too. But once I’m back it’s all Yakima until the season ends and I plan on fishing and guiding every day I can!

Hope to see ya riverside.

Tamarack

It’s almost here!

Well the summer is finally leaving! Smoke is starting to clear, temps are dropping, and the river is returning to normal flows.

We’ve got roughly 80 days of trout season left here on the Yakima River. I’ve got availability over that time but the late season always fills up fast.

Give me a call, send an email, or yell at me riverside, to get on the calendar and enjoy the best time of the year to fish the Yakima River with fly and rod.

The Autumn approaches…get your gear…let’s go chase some trout!

Tamarack

Countdown to Autumn

Tis the tail end of the summer. The dog days, the final push before everything simmers down and we get to that sweet funky fresh time of fishing in Autumn. Don’t get me wrong…I love fishing in the summer, even this summer with it’s not so cool attitude and Smokey demeanor. But the summer on the Yakima is not even in the same realm of the Autumn here.

The late season is my jam. Fall is by far my favorite time to fish and guide. I see a lot of familiar faces in the fall…and the more experienced, or higher caliber anglers…tend to venture forth in search of Yakima River Treasures. The entire tone of the river changes as the summer leaves us. The Yakima calms back down…she returns to her normal flows. The fish, after being hammered by heavy irrigation water, hot water temps, and lots of traffic and pressure, start to return to a schedule. A routine if you will. They react to their environment like a proper trout…because their home is finally back to normal. The Yakima is not a large river. It’s barely a medium sized river and the 3 months of high flows…I really don’t count them. It’s high, hot, and heavy…super fun, but as the summer wanes the fishing shifts to early mornings only these days, and fish go deep in this river, and some never come up off the bottom the whole summer.

When the flip flop occurs, and the dams shut down for the season….the Yakima goes back to her normal self. It’s like the dams aren’t there, and the river is as free as it can be. The fish know and feel this too. Once again the fish are able to move about the system, feeding, swimming, resting. They aren’t pushed around by the heavy summer flows and can move freely throughout…and they do. Trout in the fall have one thing on their brain…as do all other critters. Winter is coming. Trout start to feel the water temps react to the overnight air temperatures getting lower. This triggers trout to start prepping themselves for the winter cold, hibernation, and general trout-sickle conditions. Luckily the Yakima River has some amazing hatches and as the water temps start to go back to normal fluctuations, the hatches return…and the fish respond.

The trout will start to wake up and move about to their daily feeding areas, some will hold on to key areas that they’ve decided to stay in for the winter as things get colder too. But fish will move to areas where they can gorge on food and get fat for the winter. This is seen when the salmon show up and fish follow them around the river eating eggs and flesh as the salmon do their thing. Trout will also do this for other food. Like Craneflies.

The Cranefly Hatch is the first Autumn hatch. It typically hits its peak when the air temps get back below 75 consistently. I’ve already seen some flapping around…but they aren’t the ones I’m referring too. There are a few species of cranes, some aquatic, some terrestrial. The big aquatic ones happen usually the 2nd and 3rd week of September. They are algae eaters when in the larva stage. They are a big leggy mess of food for troots. And ovipositing females are better than stoneflies…because fish eat them better here over stoneflies…at least in my opinion. That’s mostly because trout will eat cranes on the skate.

There is nothing like skating a dry fly and getting a fish to chase it and hammer the absolute shit out if it. It’s like streamer fishing and dry fly fishing got wicked f’ed up one night after fishing together and decided to make a dirty baby. It’s almost not fair how much fun it is. But truly, I’ve got clients that will tell you, cranefly fishing is f’ing silly. It beats skating October Caddis simply because I don’t have to be in waders for it. I hate waders…and shoes.

Fish are hangry in the Fall. And they show it by chasing food down, eating aggressively, and testing anglers skills by needing damn near perfect presentations and good trout playing skills. Inexperienced anglers…that’s your heads up…you will get tested in the Fall on the Yakima. Typically trout will eat cranes anywhere in the river. Because those leggy morsels fly and flop all over the damn place. I’ve seen cutties literally come clear out of the water and snatch cranes out of the air dudes…it’s sick, it gets my shit going, and makes me all tingly. They cranes get active around 10 am, and we fish them until about 2pm if things are good.

Get a drag free drift over the water you’re reading…then at the tail end of the drift…just start skating the fly. Enjoy.

The next hatch is the Mahogany, Light Cahill, and BWO Mayfly Hatches. And they can all happen at the same time and last from mid September to mid October. They are like most mayflies, needing overcast, low barometric pressure days, rainy days, and days where things take a bit to warm up. They usually come off in the late afternoon…after they’ve percolated down there. This is why nymphing Copper Johns in a size 16 in the Fall can be money during the mid day prior to the hatch.

Look for riffles, and when things are cooler both in air and water temp, fish tend to be in the slower water and tail outs of riffles. Waiting for the food to come to them. Lazy troots. I like an Adams in Cream or Red or Wine colored , size 16 for my Cahills and Mahogany’s. You can get fancier…but the fish need more of a better presentation over a wicked cool new fly. I use a 12 foot 5X for my mayfly stuff. When the water is smaller fish can see you easier…so longer casts and varying angles of approach is best. Stalk the fish. Read the water…wait…watch…and then cast. You may see a fish rise…we typically do…but just because you don’t doesn’t mean they aren’t there and won’t eat a mayfly. The reason I use this method is because if you beat the water in the Fall…you will spook every fish in the river. Don’t cast over the water. Fish smarter not harder so to speak. And in the fall…fish will just move to another spot if too spooked. And they’ll tell all their friends as they leave.

The BWO hatch happens a little later in the Autumn typically. BWO’s really like the damp days. Look at back eddies and slow seams on riffles with small size 18 Emerger style patterns. Paras. Fish sip on these little bugs, and sometimes that little nose…is a really big ass trout. Rainbows really like BWO’s and they eat them like uppity rich folks to be honest. Super sneaky, with their noses up, only showing their nostrils when they break the surface…the smaller the rise…the bigger the troot. Hehehehe.

Then we have the caddis. There are a few that hatch in the Fall evenings. Like the Spruce Moth…not actually a caddis, bit a cream colored size 14-16 caddis will do the trick. Late September usually. Or the Silver Sedge…my personal favorite, as it’s a larger size 10 dark brown caddis with a dark fuzzy olive body. It has some cool white colorations on its wings that it gets its name from. It’s in early October and I use a size 10 moose hair caddis with dark angora dubbing and light hackle wrap on the body.

But everyone knows the big guy in the Fall…the October Caddis. It’s big here…like a size 8-6. It has dark brown wings, a fuzzy, rusty, sometime bright orange body, big legs, and long antennae. It hatches like a Stonefly. It crawls up along the bank, pops out of its casing on the rocks, and flies up do to its thing. Fish key in on the hatch as bugs will fall in the slower water along the edges of the river, they will also pick them off as they move towards the bank. Swinging wet flies during the early evening before the hatch can be super fun. And skating big dries as it gets dark makes for some amazing end of the day fishing.

The Fall is a fun time to fish the Yakima that is for sure. It’s the time of year where I am at my best as a guide. I know the Yakima River in the Autumn better than most…and I can say that with the utmost confidence. I’ve put more time into figuring out the late season fishing than any other time of the year on the Yakima. It’s still the only time of year where I’ve got into over 30 trout with clients during a trip. It’s consistent, it has never been bad for me in 12 years, and to this day it’s when I put the most consecutive trips on the calendar. Last year I worked almost every day, and fished almost every day myself either prior or post trips. I can’t get enough of the Fall fishing, and we get roughly 60 days of it…might as well fish every one that you can.

So that leads us into the sales pitch. Book a trip for the Autumn on the Yakima River! September is filling up fast…and October will go quick. It always does. Come let me show you what the Yakima River is all about in the Fall. Plus the colors change, you can wade your ass off, we go back to full days of fishing, French Dips riverside for lunch, overnights with campfires again…mmmm….I can smell it already.

The Countdown to Autumn has begun!

Tamarack

Mornings Still Open!

I am back on the Yakima Wednesday:

I’ve still got the mornings of August 17th and 18th open! Big eats on dries, cooler temps in the morning, off river before the floaters and tubers get out…home by lunch and back in the AC…I mean…it’s how I fish the summer, come get some early morning trout in…it’s better than coffee…trust me.

Voluntary Hoot Owl Restrictions

Urgent: I will be on voluntary Hoot Owl Restrictions until further notice.

Water temps are still too hot for afternoon fishing. We are still seeing 70 degrees by mid afternoon. I will only be doing early morning trips and off water by 2pm from now until conditions change.

Trips on the schedule will be moved to morning start times if they haven’t already. If you are scheduled for a float and can’t do the morning you will receive an email about rescheduling or cancelling.

If you have questions please contact me. Hoot Owl benefits the fish by not pressuring and stressing them out during hot water temps where trout have a harder time recovering.

Thanks,

Tamarack

Available Dates

Hey anglers,

We’ve still got some warm water temps. Gauges are still reading 72 by the mid afternoon. Overnight air temps are finally dropping back down into the 50’s at night so the morning water temps are dropping back into fishable ranges.

I’ve got the following dates open this week for Morning Floats!

August: 15th 16th, and 18th are still open this week!

Early Morning trips typically mean you’ve got the river to yourself, bigger fish eat wicked early, and um….dry flies. Most morning floats you’ve got your biggest trout before 7 am! Better than coffee let me tell ya.

Come see what summer fishing before the river fills with tubers, floaters, other anglers, and the mid day heat, is all about.

Call, email, or message to reserve today!

Tamarack