Its funny how things work. All summer long I couldn't wait for fall and winter to arrive, for the big rivers and lakes to be more fish-able, for the weather to arrive and bring much needed water. However during the recent celebration of the 25 days of fishmas ( where i recap my 25 best fish of the year), i found myself missing some of my high country fishing locations.
During the warmer months of the year i love heading up to streams and lakes above 8k feet, many above 10k! I am able to beat the heat, and experience some of the best fishing of the year. Its all about perspective though. There are no monster fish at 10k feet, on the crest of the sierra, a monster there is an 18" Trout. the beauty and quality of the fish, the beauty of the mountains, and just being out in remote country alone, makes it worth it.
I tend to head in search of Golden's once June arrives. This means long hiking trips into granite filled mountains. It means gasping for air at 11,000 feet while hiking 5 miles to reach a secluded lake. Having the warm summer air in your face, starring into the glacier blue depths of a lake that sits nestled at 10,800, beneath the staggering granite peaks, well, its a very wonderful feeling.
Even if you don't find yourself a golden, you can always find some hungry brookies, that will literally chew your hopper to bits. No joke, I've watched as after 15min my brand new hopper is torn to shreds and all that remains is some scrap foam and a hook! Its always a blast to try and pull a sierra slam, or a grand slam, or my favorite, the ultra slam. If your skilled enough, there are several locations, with enough work, where you can catch ; Golden trout, cutthroat, rainbow, brown and brook trout. Its nearly impossible, but it can be done. Last year, i managed to catch a Golden, rainbow, Brown, and brookie all in the span of 8 hours. It wasn't easy, and the rainbow actually came on luck as i was waiting for my water taxi to arrive!
There are a few locations you can go to get some truly amazing Trout, but they all require back breaking hikes. Marlette is a fun lake to travel to. It seems so close, nestled between Tahoe and Carson. Yea, try again, its a 5 mile hike, with a 1500ft elevation change. Unless of course you feel really crazy, and do the front of the lake, which is only about 1.5 miles, but a 2000 ft elevation change in that short distance. Marlette is big, 1.5 miles long, and 50ft deep. Its a Catch and release only lake, barbless hooks required. However, its a blast to fish with hoppers in august, and has some rainbows and brookies that reach 22", which for Trout at 8k feet, is pretty dam impressive!
So as they snow falls, the days end a 4pm, and I'm stuck out at pyramid lake, praying for my big take, ill be thinking of you Sierra high country!
Friday, December 19, 2014
Thursday, December 11, 2014
Disappoint on the East Walker river
On Sunday i decided to take a break from Pyramid lake, and head out to one of my most favorite rivers, the East walker river. As usual i was in for beautiful scenery, and remote open river, but i was in for an unfortunate surprise.
The river suffered from one of the worst drought winters in decades. It brought flows to just a trickle during the hottest part of the summer. Usually in July and August, flows average 150-300 cfs, keep water temps below 70* most of the summer. The last few years, the river has managed to hold about 125-150cfs during the peak heat, which has let the river survive our hot summers. This year though, flows ranged between 50-100cfs, which lead to sustained water temps of 77* being recorded well into the Nevada side. This temperature is lethal to trout.
While these temps managed to stay just cool enough on the California side, and the first 9 miles of the Nevada section of river, beyond that appears to have been severely impacted. Impacts where minimal on the stretches left unhurt, but once your travel below the Elbow, fish loss may have been as high as 50%, with as much as 95% of fish over 18" not surviving.
Typically, this time of year, in early December, with my spin cast rod in hand, i cant count on an amazing day. Usually I'm able to land several 16-20" Brown trout, with just as many chasing my Lil Cleo rainbow pattern lure. Ive watched hungry 22" browns literally plow there way onto shore in pursuit of my lure. This time tho, not a single fish over 12". I did catch several small browns, which gives me hope! This is my second trip out to the river since fall begin, with similar results the first time. Other sign indicate the fish are gone. Planted rainbow trout often don't survive long in the river, they either become food for the browns, or are so picked on by them, they die. This time, i notice every rainbow i caught was very healthy, no stress marks or attack marks, and in plentiful numbers. That means no big fish to crowd them out. Also the population of crayfish was much higher than i have ever seen it! Those guys also usually end up as food, suggesting the big hunters are not there.
There was some good news, i did see several fresh Redd's, suggesting some browns had spawned on the lower river, which was great news! If the big fish are gone, than at least some fish remain. Its also possible as the water temps rose, the fish moved up the river to get to cooler water. The optimistic side of me prays this is what happened, and when spring flows return, the fish will work there way back down the river.
Needless to say, Sunday was a sad day. The river i love fishing, the river that helped breed my catch and release side, the river that helped me get into fly fishing, the river that taught me there was just more than the Truckee river in my region, may have suffered a serious setback. A river that once carried 18-24" in every single hole, a river that brought the chance of amazing fish on every single cast! Not a total loss, but a painful one nonetheless. Hopefully winter brings us lots of snow, and the river is able to begin to recover, and return to greatness!
The river suffered from one of the worst drought winters in decades. It brought flows to just a trickle during the hottest part of the summer. Usually in July and August, flows average 150-300 cfs, keep water temps below 70* most of the summer. The last few years, the river has managed to hold about 125-150cfs during the peak heat, which has let the river survive our hot summers. This year though, flows ranged between 50-100cfs, which lead to sustained water temps of 77* being recorded well into the Nevada side. This temperature is lethal to trout.
While these temps managed to stay just cool enough on the California side, and the first 9 miles of the Nevada section of river, beyond that appears to have been severely impacted. Impacts where minimal on the stretches left unhurt, but once your travel below the Elbow, fish loss may have been as high as 50%, with as much as 95% of fish over 18" not surviving.
Typically, this time of year, in early December, with my spin cast rod in hand, i cant count on an amazing day. Usually I'm able to land several 16-20" Brown trout, with just as many chasing my Lil Cleo rainbow pattern lure. Ive watched hungry 22" browns literally plow there way onto shore in pursuit of my lure. This time tho, not a single fish over 12". I did catch several small browns, which gives me hope! This is my second trip out to the river since fall begin, with similar results the first time. Other sign indicate the fish are gone. Planted rainbow trout often don't survive long in the river, they either become food for the browns, or are so picked on by them, they die. This time, i notice every rainbow i caught was very healthy, no stress marks or attack marks, and in plentiful numbers. That means no big fish to crowd them out. Also the population of crayfish was much higher than i have ever seen it! Those guys also usually end up as food, suggesting the big hunters are not there.
There was some good news, i did see several fresh Redd's, suggesting some browns had spawned on the lower river, which was great news! If the big fish are gone, than at least some fish remain. Its also possible as the water temps rose, the fish moved up the river to get to cooler water. The optimistic side of me prays this is what happened, and when spring flows return, the fish will work there way back down the river.
Needless to say, Sunday was a sad day. The river i love fishing, the river that helped breed my catch and release side, the river that helped me get into fly fishing, the river that taught me there was just more than the Truckee river in my region, may have suffered a serious setback. A river that once carried 18-24" in every single hole, a river that brought the chance of amazing fish on every single cast! Not a total loss, but a painful one nonetheless. Hopefully winter brings us lots of snow, and the river is able to begin to recover, and return to greatness!
Thursday, December 4, 2014
Patience at Pays off.... Hopefully
This fall, with severe drought plaguing us in the Sierra Region, I have been left with very few fishing options compared to normal years. I can usually count on fishing the Truckee river, the East Walker, and many small creeks. They are all far to low to risk the fishes health. However, i have on option, that provides and irresistible allure.... 25lbs Cutthroat trout!
With the amazing emerald jewel just 45 minutes from home, a 27 mile long graveyard for the Truckee river, Pyramid lake currently contains some of the best Trout angling on the entire planet. What makes it so special is the ability to catch large fish, from shore! Casting spoons, or slinging buggers, could easily get you a 10lbs, 15lbs or even a 25lbs cutthroat. Personally, they are not usually the most stunning in beauty, nothing like a fall brown, or spring bow', but sometimes, these cutties can be on fire, and truly beautiful! Its their size, the fight, and the possibility of a 20lbs cutthroat on fire, that draws me to this lake.
You are probably thinking to yourself, this guy is an idiot for considering fishing anywhere else! why pass up the chance at 36" cutthroat, for 20" Browns on the East walker? Well, its simple really. First, i consider myself a good angler, but not a pro. I can catch fish with the best of them, but I'm not they guy who can go to Pyramid and catch 10+ fish a day slinging buggers. For me, it takes some work. And that often means standing on a ladder for hours, and hours, and oh, a few more hours. Sometimes not getting a tug for 3-4 hours straight. when is 45*, wind gently blowing in your face, and your feet going numb, it can get a little, tiresome!
But i am hanging in there. My biggest fish of the season is about 24", although i have lost several fish that would have been over 30". Thanksgiving weekend really tested my resolve. On Thanksgiving day, i lost a 10lbs+ fish on my spin cast rod. Friday i stood from 7am, to 3pm, in wind that reached 60mph gusts. I watched the blue waters around me become littered with tumble weeds, and a huge dust storm arise at the north end of the lake. But nothing special on my line. On Saturday, i sat in cold winds, and cloudy conditions, from 7am to 430pm. Just as i was getting ready to leave, rain showers arriving, i got the tug. A big one to, probably 15lbs, quickly ripped line from my spool, until my knot broke, and my line fell slack. It was so heartbreaking! Finally on Sunday, i stood in the rain, all day, soaking cold to the bone, slinging flies all day, hoping, hoping, and nothing came.
I am hoping all this patience pays off. If i land the 20lbs fish of my dreams, all this will be worth it. But until then, i question my resolve, and once spring arrives, if i haven't landed at least a 10lbs fish, it will be very difficult, with water back in the river, to keep at it! I will be out there this weekend though, search hing for my hog!
With the amazing emerald jewel just 45 minutes from home, a 27 mile long graveyard for the Truckee river, Pyramid lake currently contains some of the best Trout angling on the entire planet. What makes it so special is the ability to catch large fish, from shore! Casting spoons, or slinging buggers, could easily get you a 10lbs, 15lbs or even a 25lbs cutthroat. Personally, they are not usually the most stunning in beauty, nothing like a fall brown, or spring bow', but sometimes, these cutties can be on fire, and truly beautiful! Its their size, the fight, and the possibility of a 20lbs cutthroat on fire, that draws me to this lake.
You are probably thinking to yourself, this guy is an idiot for considering fishing anywhere else! why pass up the chance at 36" cutthroat, for 20" Browns on the East walker? Well, its simple really. First, i consider myself a good angler, but not a pro. I can catch fish with the best of them, but I'm not they guy who can go to Pyramid and catch 10+ fish a day slinging buggers. For me, it takes some work. And that often means standing on a ladder for hours, and hours, and oh, a few more hours. Sometimes not getting a tug for 3-4 hours straight. when is 45*, wind gently blowing in your face, and your feet going numb, it can get a little, tiresome!
But i am hanging in there. My biggest fish of the season is about 24", although i have lost several fish that would have been over 30". Thanksgiving weekend really tested my resolve. On Thanksgiving day, i lost a 10lbs+ fish on my spin cast rod. Friday i stood from 7am, to 3pm, in wind that reached 60mph gusts. I watched the blue waters around me become littered with tumble weeds, and a huge dust storm arise at the north end of the lake. But nothing special on my line. On Saturday, i sat in cold winds, and cloudy conditions, from 7am to 430pm. Just as i was getting ready to leave, rain showers arriving, i got the tug. A big one to, probably 15lbs, quickly ripped line from my spool, until my knot broke, and my line fell slack. It was so heartbreaking! Finally on Sunday, i stood in the rain, all day, soaking cold to the bone, slinging flies all day, hoping, hoping, and nothing came.
I am hoping all this patience pays off. If i land the 20lbs fish of my dreams, all this will be worth it. But until then, i question my resolve, and once spring arrives, if i haven't landed at least a 10lbs fish, it will be very difficult, with water back in the river, to keep at it! I will be out there this weekend though, search hing for my hog!
Saturday, November 29, 2014
Winter weather finally arriving, but will it be enough this year?
We are finally seeing some winter weather pushing into our region, which is goo news for our drought stricken rivers. The not so good news is the size of the storms are falling apart. Lets keep our fingers crossed that they continue to flow this way.
This year is off to a much different start than last winter. Our mountains are much whiter than last Thanksgiving. However, in terms of total precip, we aren't much better off yet. Its very hard to predict what winter will hold for our region, but there are some predictions out there right now, here they are:
- El Nino is still likely in play, but it will be a weak El Nino
- GFS models are indicating a 200% December for the California/
Sierra region
- Our winter is likely to be an 85-95%, if El Nino really kicks in,
as high as 125%
Although none of this is fact, things look very mixed right now. A nice trough has set up, looking to bring a big storm in mid week this week, hopefully delivering 2ft of wet snow to the mountains. Then it looks as though a ridge of high pressure will build back in for a week or so. After that, it appears we will get more storms. At this point,as much as im trying to be optimistic, things aren't look wonderful. The bright side is, we almost definitely wont be as bad as the 35% winter we had last season!!
Keep your hopes us, our fisheries will surely be impacted by yet another dry winter. A 100% winter will at least hold us over one more year, and spare the majority of rivers/ lakes from total loss. a 120% or greater will get us moving in the right direction. a 200% winter would be our silver bullet, but don't hold your breath for that one. Anything less than a 90% winter though, spells catastrophic results. A bad winter, will likely mean a total, or near total loss of the Truckee river, the East walker river, many lakes will be in danger, like Frenchmans, Boca, Prosser, Stampede, and S
pooner, and im sure many more.
Feel free to leave your predictions, and lets see if they come true in the spring! put the % you think we will end up at!
This year is off to a much different start than last winter. Our mountains are much whiter than last Thanksgiving. However, in terms of total precip, we aren't much better off yet. Its very hard to predict what winter will hold for our region, but there are some predictions out there right now, here they are:
- El Nino is still likely in play, but it will be a weak El Nino
- GFS models are indicating a 200% December for the California/
Sierra region
- Our winter is likely to be an 85-95%, if El Nino really kicks in,
as high as 125%
Although none of this is fact, things look very mixed right now. A nice trough has set up, looking to bring a big storm in mid week this week, hopefully delivering 2ft of wet snow to the mountains. Then it looks as though a ridge of high pressure will build back in for a week or so. After that, it appears we will get more storms. At this point,as much as im trying to be optimistic, things aren't look wonderful. The bright side is, we almost definitely wont be as bad as the 35% winter we had last season!!
Keep your hopes us, our fisheries will surely be impacted by yet another dry winter. A 100% winter will at least hold us over one more year, and spare the majority of rivers/ lakes from total loss. a 120% or greater will get us moving in the right direction. a 200% winter would be our silver bullet, but don't hold your breath for that one. Anything less than a 90% winter though, spells catastrophic results. A bad winter, will likely mean a total, or near total loss of the Truckee river, the East walker river, many lakes will be in danger, like Frenchmans, Boca, Prosser, Stampede, and S
pooner, and im sure many more.
Feel free to leave your predictions, and lets see if they come true in the spring! put the % you think we will end up at!
Monday, March 24, 2014
The Future of our rivers; dealing with more fisherman
One of the biggest challenges our regions rivers will face in the coming years is the increase in population. this will affect our rivers in several different ways, from increased number of fisherman, to increased water usage, to increased pollution. the question really is how do we deal with these factors, as fisherman?
There are several ways the growth in the future will affect the eastern sierra rivers and creeks. One of the most obvious will be the impact of more fisherman on our rivers. with more people, will come more people who want to enjoy the resources around them. this brings a very unique challenge of how to continue to enhance our fisheries while dealing with the increased amount of people. Most fisherman out there are not catch and release conservation minded. the average fisherman only fishes several times a year, keeps fish they catch, and only travels short distances. this presents are great opportunity in solving this challenge. here are several ways i believe we should move forward in the state of Nevada, and the Sierra mountains.
1. Fishing sticking programs- Fishing stocking has very mixed results. most stocked fish tend to only survive a few weeks, tops. this means stocking thousands of trout in a region where they may not be fished is a waste. Fishing stocking is very expensive, and requires a lot of resources, from collecting eggs to raising brood.
* i believe one of the keys to managing the future will be more targeted stocking. we need to enhance local places to fish, local ponds. since most people don't travel far, it will keep close to home, while preserving rivers like the East walker. If you have fisherman who would be removing trophy fish fishing local ponds, versus fishing our blue ribbon rivers, its a winner! this requires NDOW to review some of the places, or quantities that are stocked. should remote, or non-visited places be stocked?
2. Increased Protective Regulations- Some of our local rivers already contain good regulations. Many people don't like fishing regulations ( i know lots of fisherman who hate barb-less hook regs) and regulations can be tough to enforce. However merely having them in place, and visible ( signs at entry points) will mean most fisherman will follow them. Catch and release and low limit regs really do work. So do barb-less regs! I personally believe that single barb-less can be dangerous, therefore I'm ok with just barb-less regulations. Creating large sections of river that are protected will allow for more, healthy fish on our rivers. The Truckee river should be Barb-less hooks/ limit 2 under 18" for the entire stretch of river. allowing a few fish to be removed will mean bigger fish for the rest of us, and keep big healthy breeders in our river. most people who keep there catch end up keeping large fish. by having a size limit, it will keep more large fish in our rivers! there are several bodies of water in our region that could use more protection, such as the West walker, the Truckee river, the West Carson to name a few.
Take a look at a local restoration project
3. Restoration and preservation- this to me is key. if we do not work to restore and preserve more of our rivers, then fishing will not get better! since 2002, the Nature conservancy has restored 11.5 miles of Truckee river ( including the current project, to be completed summer 2014). That means there are now 11.5 miles more of river that was essentially unfishable a decade ago. there goal is 20 miles of river restoration, but there are easily 15-25 more miles of river that could be restored or enhanced. just think, if 20 more miles of river were restored, in 30 years, there will be so much more mature, healthy river for everyone to fish. there are tons of places that could use restoration ( full reconstruction of the river or stream) and enhancement ( minor improvements to increase habitat) some rivers that could use a full blow restore, are the West walker river, basically east of Topaz, and some of the upper stretches above 395. The Truckee is another great example, from sparks east, there are still many miles of channelized river. Many rivers could see small projects that would be inexpensive that would help with erosion, increase habitat, and provide for better fisheries, from the little Truckee, to the east/west Carson, to the Owens river.
Nature conservancy - check out there work on our local rivers!
4. Education- the final key is public awareness. most fisherman out there have no clue what is going. they don't know about catch and release, conservation, or restoration, and the problems our rivers face. Most people aren't aware of the up coming challenges, so the only way to move forward is to work to educate people. there are many ways, and i think the key is for our local organizations, TU, the Nature conservancy, NDOW, to help people understand. simple, easy to understand brochures should be handed out at public events, on what the challenge is, and how to fix it. social media, and public relation is key to building support and knowledge of making our rivers a better place!
If local fisherman aren't united in moving forward, nothing will be accomplished. we all want the fishing in our region to be amazing. doing nothing about it is not an option. hoping things will get better is also not an option. this year, the Truckee river take limit was reduced from 5 fish to 3 fish. This is a step in the right direction. more can be taken, fisherman like you must get interactive. i know our first response is to become defensive over our favorite places to fish, but that wont solve what will come, change! Come join us at the Truckee river fisherman
There are several ways the growth in the future will affect the eastern sierra rivers and creeks. One of the most obvious will be the impact of more fisherman on our rivers. with more people, will come more people who want to enjoy the resources around them. this brings a very unique challenge of how to continue to enhance our fisheries while dealing with the increased amount of people. Most fisherman out there are not catch and release conservation minded. the average fisherman only fishes several times a year, keeps fish they catch, and only travels short distances. this presents are great opportunity in solving this challenge. here are several ways i believe we should move forward in the state of Nevada, and the Sierra mountains.
* i believe one of the keys to managing the future will be more targeted stocking. we need to enhance local places to fish, local ponds. since most people don't travel far, it will keep close to home, while preserving rivers like the East walker. If you have fisherman who would be removing trophy fish fishing local ponds, versus fishing our blue ribbon rivers, its a winner! this requires NDOW to review some of the places, or quantities that are stocked. should remote, or non-visited places be stocked?
2. Increased Protective Regulations- Some of our local rivers already contain good regulations. Many people don't like fishing regulations ( i know lots of fisherman who hate barb-less hook regs) and regulations can be tough to enforce. However merely having them in place, and visible ( signs at entry points) will mean most fisherman will follow them. Catch and release and low limit regs really do work. So do barb-less regs! I personally believe that single barb-less can be dangerous, therefore I'm ok with just barb-less regulations. Creating large sections of river that are protected will allow for more, healthy fish on our rivers. The Truckee river should be Barb-less hooks/ limit 2 under 18" for the entire stretch of river. allowing a few fish to be removed will mean bigger fish for the rest of us, and keep big healthy breeders in our river. most people who keep there catch end up keeping large fish. by having a size limit, it will keep more large fish in our rivers! there are several bodies of water in our region that could use more protection, such as the West walker, the Truckee river, the West Carson to name a few.
Take a look at a local restoration project
3. Restoration and preservation- this to me is key. if we do not work to restore and preserve more of our rivers, then fishing will not get better! since 2002, the Nature conservancy has restored 11.5 miles of Truckee river ( including the current project, to be completed summer 2014). That means there are now 11.5 miles more of river that was essentially unfishable a decade ago. there goal is 20 miles of river restoration, but there are easily 15-25 more miles of river that could be restored or enhanced. just think, if 20 more miles of river were restored, in 30 years, there will be so much more mature, healthy river for everyone to fish. there are tons of places that could use restoration ( full reconstruction of the river or stream) and enhancement ( minor improvements to increase habitat) some rivers that could use a full blow restore, are the West walker river, basically east of Topaz, and some of the upper stretches above 395. The Truckee is another great example, from sparks east, there are still many miles of channelized river. Many rivers could see small projects that would be inexpensive that would help with erosion, increase habitat, and provide for better fisheries, from the little Truckee, to the east/west Carson, to the Owens river.
Nature conservancy - check out there work on our local rivers!
4. Education- the final key is public awareness. most fisherman out there have no clue what is going. they don't know about catch and release, conservation, or restoration, and the problems our rivers face. Most people aren't aware of the up coming challenges, so the only way to move forward is to work to educate people. there are many ways, and i think the key is for our local organizations, TU, the Nature conservancy, NDOW, to help people understand. simple, easy to understand brochures should be handed out at public events, on what the challenge is, and how to fix it. social media, and public relation is key to building support and knowledge of making our rivers a better place!
If local fisherman aren't united in moving forward, nothing will be accomplished. we all want the fishing in our region to be amazing. doing nothing about it is not an option. hoping things will get better is also not an option. this year, the Truckee river take limit was reduced from 5 fish to 3 fish. This is a step in the right direction. more can be taken, fisherman like you must get interactive. i know our first response is to become defensive over our favorite places to fish, but that wont solve what will come, change! Come join us at the Truckee river fisherman
Thursday, March 13, 2014
The Future of our Rivers, lakes, and Creeks; how we move forward
Over the last few years, i have really come to appreciate just how lucky I am to live here in Reno, as it relates to fishing. Not only am i located within a few hours of dozens of major rivers, hundreds of lakes, and thousands of creeks, but also a time of improving water conditions and river awareness.
However, there are some big challenges that us avid fisherman will face in the coming decades, very large, and sometimes scary ones. the questions becomes how do move forward, what kinds of action needs to be taken now, in order for things to be just as good or better than they are now! i recently had a conversation that opened my eyes, there are people who believe the best action for our local rivers is to purely do nothing, no restoration, no regulations, merely to "hide" our local rivers. They claimed unnecessary publicity was the sole cause of river degradation, and the way to fix it was merely to stop talking about our rivers. and that government can do no good at all in terms of setting river management policy, or actively restoring our local waters.
This idea of 'lets go back to the way things were' is not the way forward. lets take a look at a few of the major challenges that we will face here in the western united states, and some ways that we work to counter them. doing nothing is the worst possible angle to take. creating an active community of local fisherman that can take action, and force our local/state agencies to do the same is an invaluable tool, and i hope to use the Truckee River Fisherman in such a way. David Bobizen has been a friend to this page, I'm hoping to reach out to him, as well as some of our friends in NDOW, TU, and the nature conservancy, and create real change in our rivers here in Nevada, and in the west.
Here are some of the serious problems we may face:
- Education; this one is key to ensuring that we can meet the challenges that we may face. becoming educated about all the topics above, and about trout, will be a huge advantage, along with promoting knowledge and information about our resources.
Through my next few blogs, i will identify some of the challenges, and ways i believe we can fix them. i by no means and expert, and would love input. good ideas, information, perspective are always wonderful to receive. what i will not accept are people hoping we can just go back, put our heads in the sand. i want to see our region get better, and ignoring these problems will not achieve that goal! Feel free to contact us on the Facebook page, or reply here. i would love some input! thanks so much!
FACEBOOK
YOUTUBE
GOOGLE +
However, there are some big challenges that us avid fisherman will face in the coming decades, very large, and sometimes scary ones. the questions becomes how do move forward, what kinds of action needs to be taken now, in order for things to be just as good or better than they are now! i recently had a conversation that opened my eyes, there are people who believe the best action for our local rivers is to purely do nothing, no restoration, no regulations, merely to "hide" our local rivers. They claimed unnecessary publicity was the sole cause of river degradation, and the way to fix it was merely to stop talking about our rivers. and that government can do no good at all in terms of setting river management policy, or actively restoring our local waters.
This idea of 'lets go back to the way things were' is not the way forward. lets take a look at a few of the major challenges that we will face here in the western united states, and some ways that we work to counter them. doing nothing is the worst possible angle to take. creating an active community of local fisherman that can take action, and force our local/state agencies to do the same is an invaluable tool, and i hope to use the Truckee River Fisherman in such a way. David Bobizen has been a friend to this page, I'm hoping to reach out to him, as well as some of our friends in NDOW, TU, and the nature conservancy, and create real change in our rivers here in Nevada, and in the west.
Here are some of the serious problems we may face:
- - Population growth; Our region is growing. Reno has doubled in size since i was born, many of you have seen it triple, or more! its something we cant change. with social media, and an increase in fishing popularity, its unavoidable that our rivers, lakes, creeks will become more crowded, we cant stop it.
- - Pollution; although huge, huge strides have been in our region on increasing water clarity, and reducing pollution. Trout are sensitive fish, and with more people moving to our region, increased pollution could be a problem.
- - Drought/ climate change- putting the climate change debate aside, change always happens. we have droughts, and climate change will likely impact our region, from reduced rainfall, to warmer temps, huge changes may be in store, and they will be hard to predict, but some measures can be taken now, to minimize their impact in the future.
- - overfishing- Although many people who read this probably practice C&R, the majority of fisherman do not. In a healthy river, fish can be harvested, but there are many rivers and lakes in our region that could easily go from stable to unstable, from any one or all of the condition listed above. Policy/ Regulations will need to be crafted to ensure its helping, and not hurting our waterways.
- Education; this one is key to ensuring that we can meet the challenges that we may face. becoming educated about all the topics above, and about trout, will be a huge advantage, along with promoting knowledge and information about our resources.
Through my next few blogs, i will identify some of the challenges, and ways i believe we can fix them. i by no means and expert, and would love input. good ideas, information, perspective are always wonderful to receive. what i will not accept are people hoping we can just go back, put our heads in the sand. i want to see our region get better, and ignoring these problems will not achieve that goal! Feel free to contact us on the Facebook page, or reply here. i would love some input! thanks so much!
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Sunday, March 9, 2014
Sunday reflections
Here is a little Sunday evening reflection for everyone. i hope everyone had tight lines this weekend, and hooked up with some nice fish. There will be an article this week on catch and release, and what i have learned, and how i learned it the hard way.
Fishing has really become part of my life over the last several years. i was always a fisherman, since i was able to walk. my grandfather and my dad took me fishing all the time. My dad took me to the Truckee river, my Grandfather to pyramid lake. however i was never really dedicated, i liked fishing but not loved it.
In the fall of 2010, something clicked. Alot was going on in my life, and fishing was something to relive the stress of life. what really got things going though was the fact that i started really catching fish. before that fall, i would go fishing maybe 1 or 2 times a month for maybe 2 hours tops. i rarely caught many fish, and never any large ones. Then suddenly, in mid September 2010, i hooked up with a beautiful 3lbs brown ( at the time, i was so bad at gauging size, since then, Ive worked so hard at becoming accurate.) i proceeded to hook up with tons of trout in the 2-5lbs range that fall, and it kicked off my love of fishing.
since then, i have spent countless hours, tons of money, and put all my heart into the my passion, fishing. Ive learned so much, from catch and release, proper fish handling, to new techniques, and the biology of rivers. i now spend a solid 100 days a year fishing in some form or another.
As spring arrives, so does warmer weather and longer days. Ive found myself in a malaise recently. my fishing partner of the last several years is no longer able to fish with me so much. with low flows due to our drought, many of my favorite fishing locations are falling on hard times. however, warmer weather, plus California opens in just 1 moth. I'm hoping to pick things up, and start fishing more again. although Ive been going basically every weekend, Ive been finding myself only spend 3-4 hours fishing, instead of my usual 5-8 hours.
I'M also hoping to start hooking up with some monster trout in the coming weeks, as many fish start to come out of there winter hibernation. I'm also hoping this spring to increase my fly fishing abilities. its been a tough winter, and I've fallen back on my spin rod.
Fishing Report:
This weekend was a nice one weather wise. i spent several hours on Pyramid lake Saturday morning, with little success. i tried jigging a small black marabou, then went to spoons, and couldn't even get a follow up!
The river east of sparks was better on Sunday, with overcast condition. there was a large Bwo hatch, as well as alot of drakes. i was using a rainbow pattern Lil Cleo, with great success, hooking up with 3 browns in 17-20" range.
Make sure to check out all the Great stuff we have to offer!!
YOUTUBE
PINTEREST
FLY DREAMERS
Fishing has really become part of my life over the last several years. i was always a fisherman, since i was able to walk. my grandfather and my dad took me fishing all the time. My dad took me to the Truckee river, my Grandfather to pyramid lake. however i was never really dedicated, i liked fishing but not loved it.
In the fall of 2010, something clicked. Alot was going on in my life, and fishing was something to relive the stress of life. what really got things going though was the fact that i started really catching fish. before that fall, i would go fishing maybe 1 or 2 times a month for maybe 2 hours tops. i rarely caught many fish, and never any large ones. Then suddenly, in mid September 2010, i hooked up with a beautiful 3lbs brown ( at the time, i was so bad at gauging size, since then, Ive worked so hard at becoming accurate.) i proceeded to hook up with tons of trout in the 2-5lbs range that fall, and it kicked off my love of fishing.
since then, i have spent countless hours, tons of money, and put all my heart into the my passion, fishing. Ive learned so much, from catch and release, proper fish handling, to new techniques, and the biology of rivers. i now spend a solid 100 days a year fishing in some form or another.
As spring arrives, so does warmer weather and longer days. Ive found myself in a malaise recently. my fishing partner of the last several years is no longer able to fish with me so much. with low flows due to our drought, many of my favorite fishing locations are falling on hard times. however, warmer weather, plus California opens in just 1 moth. I'm hoping to pick things up, and start fishing more again. although Ive been going basically every weekend, Ive been finding myself only spend 3-4 hours fishing, instead of my usual 5-8 hours.
I'M also hoping to start hooking up with some monster trout in the coming weeks, as many fish start to come out of there winter hibernation. I'm also hoping this spring to increase my fly fishing abilities. its been a tough winter, and I've fallen back on my spin rod.
Fishing Report:
This weekend was a nice one weather wise. i spent several hours on Pyramid lake Saturday morning, with little success. i tried jigging a small black marabou, then went to spoons, and couldn't even get a follow up!
The river east of sparks was better on Sunday, with overcast condition. there was a large Bwo hatch, as well as alot of drakes. i was using a rainbow pattern Lil Cleo, with great success, hooking up with 3 browns in 17-20" range.
Make sure to check out all the Great stuff we have to offer!!
YOUTUBE
FLY DREAMERS
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Fishing the East Walker river, march 2 2014
So, this will be the first in a series of Blogs, that will cover everything from past fishing trip, fishing tips, advice, stories from my fishing adventures. id love to get into a weekly grove, really tell some of the stuff i have to say, and provide great content. so, here it goes!
this year we are really struggling with a drought here in the west. its awful, there is no snow in the mountains, and spring is just 2 weeks away. although I'm looking forward to the nice weather, and longer days, once summer arrives, flows are going to be really low! so this weekend i decided to take advantage of a river that could see rough times ahead if flows don't return to normal lever, The East Walker River.
Its one of my favorite rivers to fish in the region. its a 2 hour drive south of Reno, with nice road access. it provides about 20 miles of amazing fishing, loaded with mostly wild Brown trout. the river appeals to me for a lot of reasons. its tucked away, far from any major city or highway, ensuring that few people fish it. its remote location, high elevation, and incredible scenic beauty, means a very good time.
The river is a very manageable river. about 10 feet wide, with runs that are about 3-6 feet deep. every single hole has at least one brown trout 17 inches or larger, with many holes contain multiple large browns, and browns as big as 26inches. the means that a good day might mean hooking up with several Browns in the 2-4lbs range.
After a long 4mile hike at 8am, beautiful 45* temps, and slight overcast, we wadded into our first hole. with flows running at just 25cfs, i was worried for my favorite river. come summer, it wont be fish-able, not without risking the health of the beautiful browns. I started off running a size 14 golden stone, with a small blue midge, on x5 tippet. within 5 casts, i was snagged on the bottom. so, after losing my setup, i chose to run with a white steamer instead. i casted up into the riffles, and of course, my extra line was tangled on a stick at my feet. while i was fixing this situation, my streamer was dead drifting. as i pulled my slack tight, i came to find an 18inch Brown on my line. what a way to start your morning.
Several more runs, and several lost chasers later, i hooked up another nice Brown. my Brother, who stuck with nymphs, had little success. at about 11am, i ran into a terrible patch of nothing, forcing me to fall back onto my spin cast rod. that change was what i needed, after just a few casts of a 1/4oz gold daredevil, a 20inch brown followed it right to shore.
The rest of the afternoon was pleasant, mild spring weather, and alot of missed Browns. in all, i landed 4 nice, 17-20inch Brown trout. although my brother stuck it out with flies all day, he was skunked. after de-wadding, we hopped in the Jimmy, and raced back to Reno, making amazing time at 1;45min.
We always take great care to handle our fish. after several years of learning the do's and donts of C&R fishing, we take pride in not injuring our fish. pinch your barbs, use a rubber net, minimal fish fighting, only removing the fish from the water for a few seconds.
this year we are really struggling with a drought here in the west. its awful, there is no snow in the mountains, and spring is just 2 weeks away. although I'm looking forward to the nice weather, and longer days, once summer arrives, flows are going to be really low! so this weekend i decided to take advantage of a river that could see rough times ahead if flows don't return to normal lever, The East Walker River.
Its one of my favorite rivers to fish in the region. its a 2 hour drive south of Reno, with nice road access. it provides about 20 miles of amazing fishing, loaded with mostly wild Brown trout. the river appeals to me for a lot of reasons. its tucked away, far from any major city or highway, ensuring that few people fish it. its remote location, high elevation, and incredible scenic beauty, means a very good time.
The river is a very manageable river. about 10 feet wide, with runs that are about 3-6 feet deep. every single hole has at least one brown trout 17 inches or larger, with many holes contain multiple large browns, and browns as big as 26inches. the means that a good day might mean hooking up with several Browns in the 2-4lbs range.
After a long 4mile hike at 8am, beautiful 45* temps, and slight overcast, we wadded into our first hole. with flows running at just 25cfs, i was worried for my favorite river. come summer, it wont be fish-able, not without risking the health of the beautiful browns. I started off running a size 14 golden stone, with a small blue midge, on x5 tippet. within 5 casts, i was snagged on the bottom. so, after losing my setup, i chose to run with a white steamer instead. i casted up into the riffles, and of course, my extra line was tangled on a stick at my feet. while i was fixing this situation, my streamer was dead drifting. as i pulled my slack tight, i came to find an 18inch Brown on my line. what a way to start your morning.
Several more runs, and several lost chasers later, i hooked up another nice Brown. my Brother, who stuck with nymphs, had little success. at about 11am, i ran into a terrible patch of nothing, forcing me to fall back onto my spin cast rod. that change was what i needed, after just a few casts of a 1/4oz gold daredevil, a 20inch brown followed it right to shore.
The rest of the afternoon was pleasant, mild spring weather, and alot of missed Browns. in all, i landed 4 nice, 17-20inch Brown trout. although my brother stuck it out with flies all day, he was skunked. after de-wadding, we hopped in the Jimmy, and raced back to Reno, making amazing time at 1;45min.
We always take great care to handle our fish. after several years of learning the do's and donts of C&R fishing, we take pride in not injuring our fish. pinch your barbs, use a rubber net, minimal fish fighting, only removing the fish from the water for a few seconds.
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