Hi Mike,

Sorry to hear about your impending knee surgery. Thought you'd taken 
care of that last year? Is this on the other knee?

Thanks for your report on the no-name river. Always a pleasure to 
read your posts. Looking forward to seeing more of them soon.

Kent Lufkin

>I am off to the hospital in the morning for a major knee surgery that will
>put me out of fishing for at least 3-4 months so this will be my final report
>for awhile. 
>
>On Sat. I went Steelhead fishing for the first time with a friend.  He uses
>shrimp under a bobber so I played along figuring it was better to fish the
>experts way and maybe get a steelhead my first time out vs. not having a clue
>and watching him catch fish. 
>
>We fished the Snake/Clearwater confluence out of the Clarkston area and found
>it pretty slow going.  Lots of fish were breaching but we only saw two fish
>caught.  We had 7 strikes. 4 of which were good ones but for some reason we
>didn't hook up.  However, it was more then enough to give me Steelhead fever
>and I had to find a way to get back out and take a crack them with a fly rod
>which leads me to todays report.
>
>My friend is well connected with a DFW Biologist and he had told him about a
>little river in S.E. WA that has a tremendous Steelhead run.  I also recalled
>a cousin talking about it so I rolled the dice that I would get lucky and
>headed down there early this morning.  It was basically a blind shot in the
>dark since this stream is so small there are no fishing reports on it.  It
>sat downstream of the Clearwater so I was hoping that I would find fish.
>
>To make a long story short, I was too early for the run.   I talked to one of
>the guys at the fish hatchery and he said that only one fish had made it so
>far and that was back in July so obviously a misguided fish.  Thinking my day
>was ruined, I headed back downstream to a likely looking hole to see what
>kind of  non-migratory trout I could find.  Boy was I pleasently surprised.
>
>I pulled off by a bridge in a little no name town and waded down to the first
>deep hole.  Second cast, nice little rainbow of about 12 inches.  A few casts
>later  I pick up a 16 incher hatchery fish (adipose fin clipped) on a nymph
>down deep.  In about a half mile of river I picked up around 20 fish between
>6-16 inches.  About half were wild and the other half were hatchery fish.  I
>did see one fish about 17 inches that I couldn't bring up and had a follow
>early on with what could have been a small Steelhead.  Its tail was scarred
>up like it had been digging in the gravel.  Anway, the fish were lots of fun
>and they saved the day.
>
>A couple of quick questions for you Steelhead experts.  The fin clipped fish
>I talked about seemed too large to be small steelhead.  Do some hatchery
>steelhead never make the run out to see and stay in the river year around?  I
>would assume that just as every rainbow is not a steelhead, not every
>fingerling in the hatchery makes the trip downstream.  I will have to profess
>my total ignorance on the topic.
>
>Keep up the great reports. I will be living out my fly fishing dreams through
>your reports.  Now I wonder if I can mount my rod to my crutches:0)
>
>Mike W.
>Spangle, WA

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