Hi,
I was up in this part of the world a couple of weeks
ago and fished the Elk and the St Mary's. Beautiful
country. Fished mostly caddis. Working structure and
seams, I found fish pretty much everywhere you would
expect them to be.
I have a question, though. This was the first time I
had ever fished for west slope cutts. Almost to a
fish, they put up no fight. After the first charge,
it was all over. I caught some fat 16-18" fish that I
pretty much stripped in. A little 12" upper
Snoqualmie cutt battles harder.
Maybe it was the heat (30-32 C), or the water level
(didn't seem like there was much in the tributaries,
but the fly shop in Kimberly said it wasn't unusual.)
Has anyone else noticed this about this species, or
was I just there at a bad time?
--ken
--- Gary Meyers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I was on the Elk three summers ago in mid-August. We
> fished lots of
> hopper/stimulator patterns which the cutts were on.
> Fished various beadheads
> (prince, pheasant tails) for cutts and big nymphs on
> the bottom for the
> bulls, which were a lot more elusive. My son and I
> floated with a guide the
> first day to get the lay of the land, and I rented a
> kick boat the next day
> and fished it alone. There's a nice fly
> shop/outfitter in town. Long drive
> from Seattle, though, for a long weekend. Spokane
> would certainly be a
> better launch point.
>
>
> Just had a customer in the shop a day ago who just
> came back from
> there--fishing is good and as stated, uncowded.
> Seems he mentioned
> grasshoppers and caddis imitations, both nymphs and
> drys.
> Chuck S (Silver Bow Fly Shop, Spokane)
>
>
> Fishing East Central Florida - Flyfishing
>
>
>
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