Dont forget the March Browns out that way.. Should be ready to go by the
time you get there.

Now Im jonesin' again..



-----Original Message-----
From: Gary Meyers [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, April 05, 2002 9:03 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: One of lifes big pleasures


Thanks Brenden. Great info. Sounds like an awesome trip. I know the Missoula
shops and will call there.

Gary Meyers
Kirkland

> From: Brenden Portolese <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Date: Fri, 5 Apr 2002 08:50:54 -0800
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: RE: One of lifes big pleasures
> 
> Ok some more detail:
> 
> We floated some pretty main stretches North and South of Stevensville (~20
> miles south of Missoula?) My understanding of the "Skwala Hatch" is that
its
> less of a "popping" hatch where the bugs cloud the air.  The Skwalas crawl
> to the rocks and occasionally get blown into the river similiar to hopper
> action.  Likewise the "hatch" doesnt seem to progress up a river as a
> standard bug hatch, but there ARE hot spots.. You just never know where
> exactly.. Call a local shop I can give you names offline.
> 
> Weather - Look for overcast.. Skwalas take refuge in the sun, so less of
> them on the water. On our first day it snowed on the way to the put-in,
> later that day the high hit a balmy 40.  But we were still hooking big
fish.
> I started with dries, my buddy was on droppers, and we were hitting the
same
> numbers, so he switched early on.  The numbers of fish werent staggering,
we
> had maybe 20 in the net over 2 days, but we... I missed probably 2 or 3
for
> everyone I got in the boat.(Big fish are big for a reason, At least thats
my
> excuse..)
> 
> The big indicator for hot spots were the robins gorging themselves on the
> banks.. Typically just downstream of bird activity you would draw
strikes..
> We fished tight to the bank, and 2-3ft off and were productive in both..
> Basically if it looked fishy, it was...
> 
> Talking with guys in the shop, they were waiting for the Clark to clear
up,
> apparently the skwalas draw some hogs out on that river as well.
Blackfoot
> was the typical Blackfoot.  Fast and furious. (Heading back in the Fall to
> fish it)
> 
> HTH
> Good luck! 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Gary Meyers [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, April 05, 2002 8:36 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: One of lifes big pleasures
> 
> 
> Brenden
> 
> I'm heading to Montana next Friday for a week of fishing with my son.
We're
> taking a boat with us and were thinking of going all the way to the
Madison
> and perhaps the Yellowstone but thought we might hit the Bitteroot on the
> way there. Did you float?  Roughly, what part of the river were you on?
Any
> reports from other Montana rivers while you were there?
> 
> Thank you,
> 
> Gary Meyers
> Kirkland
> 
>> From: Brenden Portolese <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Date: Fri, 5 Apr 2002 07:57:23 -0800
>> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> Subject: One of lifes big pleasures
>> 
>> 
>> Taking 19" Rainbows on big dries, before the season even starts ...
>> 
>> Skwalas on the Bitteroot.
>> Landed many, lost many more.
>> For as long as live, I will never miss this hatch.
>> (Smallest fish landed was 15" rainbow, the average was 17")
>> The highlight was my fishing partner taking a 19.5" Brown off the
surface.
>> 
>> Not much more to say...
>> 
>> 
> 

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