February 28, 2008

Driftless Area early season trout opener

It is finally here after a cold and snowy winter. Southwest Wisconsin's early catch and release season opens. The rivers are all full and flowing clear and cool. There has been a slow melt the past few days followed by a freeze at night, perfect conditions for the water to soak into the ground instead of putting any stain on the water. Weather is supposed to push into the mid 30s to 40 this weekend.

Look for fish to respond to large scuds (pink and orange) and caddis pupae as well as tiny black stone nymphs and baetis nymphs. For the days where the water temps get above 40, look for midge hatches.
Use caution walking through the snow, as there is a slight crust to it and drifts over the river are very unstable. Best of luck on the opener!

December 21, 2007

Northern California Winter Fishing

We've had a phenomenal fall season here in Northern California, and the winter is shaping up to be just as good or better.

The steelhead fishing has been great on the Trinity River.  Although the river was extremely crowded through October and November, the cold winter weather has started to dissipate the crowds while the steelhead are still present in huge numbers, with fresh wild winter fish just now starting to enter the system.

The Klamath has been fishing very well for half-pounder steelhead, with a smattering of good adults showing as well, and the fishing should continue to improve for adults through January and February.

The Lower Sacramento River in Redding has been fishing great for big rainbows, with an average size in December of around 18 inches and hardly another soul fishing the river.  There has been so much emphasis on the steelhead on the Trinity this winter that everyone seems to have forgotten about the big, healthy rainbows on the "Lower Sac". 

Many of the area's lakes have begun to fish well, too, especially Baum Lake and Iron Canyon Reservoir, both beautiful mountain lakes full of both wild and stocked trout that love to eat midges and streamers all winter long. 

December 12, 2007

Super Secret Fly Fishing Spots

Adx

Have you ever dreamed of fishing where no one has before? Perhaps where no one has for months or years? Got a some money burning a hole in your pocket? Call the boys at Angling Destinations as they are offering a program for the traveling fisherman called Destination X Angling Destinations claims they do not advertise these spots, will not let any magazine articles be published or TV shows filmed with them at these locations and GPS units are not allowed. You might not be sleeping at a swanky lodge, but I guarantee the fishing will be better than if you were. If you do agree to go on one of these trips you really never know what you're going to get... You might be sleeping in a tent one night a live aboard the next. They ask all participants via gentleman's agreement that there be no trip reports published good or bad, no "Angling Reports" be posted when they return and basically just keeping quiet with other people. Heck you can't even view their destinations without proper user logins and passwords. For more information visit the link to Angling Destinations above.

TR

November 20, 2007

Winter fishing in Wyidaho

It's been a fairly calm fall.  Everyone is hunting elk, deer and ducks.  But can't ignore the fall fishing around here.  Since a couple of years ago, fishing was closed Nov 1 to trout, so people were out fishing for whitefish.  Releasing trout if one got on.  But now fishing is open year round, some of the access landings are close.  After the big flood in September on the Snake, October was great.  Big fish on streamers, October Caddis and on the right day, Blue Wings.  The South Fork is good as well, people fishing streamers, white/black and JJs, of course the un-mentionables are red hot, chartreuse being the color.  The flows are as low as its going to get.  Try the shorter floats or walk/wading in your favorite holes.  I did a memorable day early Oct on the Green, floating through the Seven Mile.  On a cast and blast day, numerable 20 inch browns were caught.  Of course, the biggest fish I have seen on the Green (upper 20's) hooked and broken.

Curt Hamby

Bass on the Border

Lake Amistad, Texas
Target species: Largemouth bass
January avg. temps: 56 high, 39 low
Round-trip airfare to San Antonio: $280
accommodations: Camping at $8 per night

Amistad is the hottest bass lake in Texas right now, both for numbers and for size of bass. And because it’s hard on the Mexican border at Del Rio, it’s also one of the warmest in winter. Hire a cheap car at San Antonio (about $125 a week) and drive southwest to your campsite at the Lake Amistad National Recreation Area (nps.gov/amis). That frugality puts a powerboat rental from one of several local marinas (about $125 a day) within your means. Or start with a day’s guided fishing at the area’s going rate of $300 a day for two anglers. It just might be the best bassing you’ll have all year.

--John Merwin

November 19, 2007

The Redfish Remedy

Aransas Pass, Texas
Target species: Redfish, seatrout
January avg. temps: 60 high, 45 low
Round-trip airfare to houston: $250
Accommodations: Camping at $8 per night

Texas redfishing is hot from the Louisiana border all the way west and south through Padre Island National Seashore. The area around Aransas Pass just northeast of Corpus Christi harbors lots of protected shallows for both kayakers and redfish. (From most major cities, it’s cheaper to fly to Houston than to Corpus Christi, and because most rental cars have unlimited mileage, driving the 200 miles from Houston is a better deal.) For kayak rentals and guided fishing, check out the aptly named Slow Ride Guide Service in Aransas Pass (slowrideguide.com). You’ll find the cheapest possible lodging at nearby Mustang Island State Park, where—high-tide levels permitting—beach camping is allowed (tpwd.state.tx.us/spdest/findadest/parks/mustang_island).

Sunshine Largemouths

Ocala National Forest, north-central Florida
Target species: Largemouth bass
January avg. temps: 70 high, 50 low
Round-trip airfare to Orlando: $195
Accommodations: free camping

There are literally hundreds of small lakes and grassy ponds in this 389,000-acre national forest about 40 miles north of Orlando (fs.fed.us/r8/florida/recreation/index_oca.shtml). A few are busy places with improved boat ramps, but many offer only backcountry access by primitive sand roads. Rent a canoe or kayak at one of several forest-based concessions, and then use the SUV you hired at the Orlando airport to reach seldom-fished water. Camping at designated “primitive” sites is free. Get a copy of the Forest Service fishing booklet and a map when you check in.

--John Merwin

Snowbelly Camp

Southern California Reservoirs
Target species: Largemouth bass
January avg. temps: 64 high, 45 low
Round-trip airfare to Los Angeles: $295
Accommodations: Camping at about $20 per night

Dozens of small lakes and reservoirs in Southern California hold huge bass. Most are in the vicinity of Los Angeles and San Diego, where the weather is warm enough to allow fishing all winter. Many lakes are stocked with rainbow trout, which are like candy bars for the potbellied largemouths. Castaic Lake and Lake Casitas both offer plenty of water (2,500 surface acres each), are famous for lunkers, and have campsites available. For an excellent descriptive listing of these and other regional bass waters, including some fishing reports, see westernbass.com/scalifornia/featured.

--John Merwin

Buenos Beaches

East Cape Baja, Mexico
Target species: Dorado, tuna, roosterfish, marlin
January avg. temps: 75 high, 56 low
Round-trip airfare to San José del Cabo: $513
Accommodations: Lodge room, $701 for two people for four nights, including daily charter boat and meals

This is one of the best deals in all of fishing. The East Cape area near the southern tip of Mexico’s Baja Peninsula is relatively undeveloped except for a few beachfront resort hotels catering mostly to anglers. The Van Wormer family operates three of these (vanwormerresorts.com), with everything from kayak flyfishing to big-game offshore trolling available. My favorite option is fishing with a local captain from a 23-foot super panga (an outboard-powered center-console boat). You and a buddy get meals, four nights’ lodging, and three days’ charter fishing for about $350 each. (For more on this region, see “Baja by Bike,”)

--John Merwin

The Bonefish Bargain

Long Island, Bahamas
Target species: Bonefish
January avg. temps: 80 high, 69 low
Round-trip airfare to nassau: $360; plus approximately $150 to Long Island
Accommodations: Beachfront cabana at $150 per night for two people (best for couples; includes meals)

About 4 miles wide by 80 miles long, Long Island is a Bahamian out-island 160 miles southeast of Nassau. Pierre and Anne Laurence opened Chez Pierre (chezpierrebahamas.com) on an isolated beach here in 2002, with six cabanas on the water flanked by a superb restaurant where Pierre does very capable duty as chef. Bonefish prowl the flat in front, where I’ve watched them tailing before I even got out of bed in the morning. And there are enough drive-to flats around the island to make it a worthwhile destination for do-it-yourself (unguided) anglers. I’ve chased bonefish across the Bahamas for a lot of years, and this is the best—and nicest—deal I’ve found. Explorer Chartbooks (explorercharts.com) offers a series of maps that’s very helpful for navigating unmarked secondary roads and locating bonefish flats.

--John Merwin


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