Welcome to Fly Fishing
Visit Maine, USA! Lots To do!
Search
Fly Fishing


Fly Fishing Navigation
Home
Submit Your Fish Tale
Archived Fish Tales
Fly Fishing Forum
My Account/LOGIN
Contact Flies And Fins

Flies & Fins Social Web
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Google del.icio.us Yahoo! MyWeb StumbleUpon Furl Blinklist Spurl Magnolia Simpy Blogmarks Startaid Netvouz Facebook Shadows

Flies And Fins Feed
 Syndicate or Subscribe

Fish Tale Archives
Fish Tale Archives

Fly Fishing Videos & Tunes
Fly Fishing Videos

Fly Fishing Music

Flies And Fins Member Info
Welcome, Anonymous!
Nickname
Password
Security Code: Security Code
Type Security Code:
(Register)
Membership:
Overall: 3831

Flyfishermen Online:
Visitors: 50
Members: 0
Total: 50

Random Fish Tales
·Afternoon Delight: Stripers For Lunch!
·Striped Bass Solitude: May Lay On The Rhode Island Flats
·Savoring Every Striper - ME
·North Carolina: Smokey Mountain Streamers, Eggs And Good Friends
·Southwest Florida Tarpon: 100 Pound Fish In 3 Feet Of Water
·North Carolina: A Bizarre Fly Fishing Trip
·Naples Florida Wade Fly Fishing For Sea Trout
·King Fish For Breakfast: Keep Em Away From The Barracuda
·Islamorada Florida: Killer Instinct, Tons O' Fish And A Killer Time
·Square Tail Calamity
·North Carolina: Saltwater Blues, A Comedy Of Errors
·Winter Steelhead: I'll Be Chrome For Christmas
·Hush, Hush: It's A Small Fly Fishing World!
·Florida: Permit, Peacocks And Flip Flops
·Salmon And Brookies In An Afternoon: There's Enough For Two
·North Carolina Trout: Here Today Gone Tomorrow, Literally!

 
Fresh Water Steelhead Tips: Follow Hunches & Go Off The Beaten Path
Posted by jinxed247 on February 02, 2008

AddThis Social Bookmark Button  Save to del.icio.us 


Finally, after a few tormenting, fishless weeks I was bound and determined to get out and get my fly line in the water. Between, work, kids and wife my time has been seriously limited this winter. (I know, who cares!!) Anyways, after I finished my husbandly chores around the house I finally got to break free and go fly fishing. Since I only had a couple of hours I decided to not drive the distance to the Salmon River in Pulaski and instead I headed the five minutes down the road to a small creek. As I approached the creek I saw that five vehicles were already parked there. Disappointed I just happended to look to my right and I saw a road that looked like it ran down to the river. As I pulled onto the side road it turned into a back country rough road where the fields had actually flooded across the road making travel a very sphincter puckering affair. The road was a deadend and ended right at the river and I very gratefully exited my truck and geared up. The road had actually lead me to a little split off of the river which, from the bank, looked like it had a few promising looking runs. The wind was calm which made the 34 degree temp comfortable enough. I tied on an organish-pink egg pattern that I had butchered trying to tie, as well as a single split shot and headed to the first run that I spied. After a few snags off on the bottom I headed over to where

the main river and this stream branched and decided that since it was getting late that I would just fish back to the truck. I found a spot that had deeper, faster moving water that backwashed into a slight whirlpool before rejoining the stream. I thought that if I was a steelhead I would be hanging around that seam waiting for something to wash in to me. So I threw in my line and watched my floatline dance along the top of the water as it made it's way down towards my intended destination. As soon as it reached the whirlpool area my floatline just stopped. I thought that I was snagged again so I gave the line a little tap to get it moving again when I felt the tell tale tug of a fish on the other end. There's nothing like the feeling of a steelhead shaking it's head vigorously underwater, trying to throw your hook! The fish immediately took off up stream before jumping up into the cold air and headed back down towards me. It tried a few more runs before I was able to coax her onto a weed/rock bed on the bank. I snapped a couple of pictures and sent her on her way. What an afternoon. I fished all the way back to my truck but I think that I only half-assed it because I kept thinking about the beautiful chrome that I had released. Sometimes by playing a hunch and going off the beaten path great things can happen.



The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

No Comments Allowed for Anonymous, please Login/Create Account

Re: Steelhead Tips: Follow Hunches & Go Off The Beaten Path
by jeremy on February 03, 2008 http://www.ineedasimplesolution.com
beautiful looking fish. healthy looking and cool colors. looks more like a typical "rainbow" than a typical "steelhead" ... and that is what i love about steelhead fishing ... that fish, compared to let's say .. every other steelhead you have ever caught .. is unique in it's own ways .. the shades of red cheeck plat, the dot formations, the white tips on the fins, the lack of any flaws, the shades of green on back and top etc.... point being is that steelhead are spectacular in the sense that no matter how many i catch (and lately, it hasn't been many:)) each and every one is unique in and of itself .. so many folks seem to put all the emphasis on "big" ..... certainly that is one metric that i value .... but some of the most memorable steelhead i have ever caught were not "big" at all ... for me, the most memborable are those where i "followed my hunches and went off the beaten path" and i caught fish that were "spectacular" to me, within the many changing variables of which i "measure" and "spectacular fish" .... with that said, some of my most memorable and "best" steelhead ever, were not "big" at all .... nice work jinxed. spectacular fish! .. great tips ... going "off the beaten path and following hunches" is the funnest part of all ...



Re: Steelhead Tips: Follow Hunches & Go Off The Beaten Path
by joey on February 04, 2008 http://www.fliesandfinseast.com
Nice looking fish jinxed. I love the pig egg right in its grill.



Re: Steelhead Tips: Follow Hunches & Go Off The Beaten Path
by bfc06 on February 04, 2008
i like the fact that a random side road leading to a side channel produces a fish like that one. nice man



Re: Steelhead Tips: Follow Hunches & Go Off The Beaten Path
by donjuanfour20 on February 05, 2008
sweet steel! now you have a close to home "honey hole"! tight lines to you my friend!



Re: Steelhead Tips: Follow Hunches & Go Off The Beaten Path
by Austin on February 05, 2008
Nice work jinxed! i love finding those special honey holes......beautiful steelhead!



Re: Steelhead Tips: Follow Hunches & Go Off The Beaten Path
by jinxed247 on February 18, 2008 http://www.jumpcut.com/flyfishing247
Thanks guys...I thought that it also looked more like a rainbow than a typical steelhead. It certainly is one of the most picture perfect fish that I have caught.
The run should start by me later on in March. I can't wait!


 
Fly Fishing Pictures







Summary: Flies and Fins contains fly fishing pictures, videos, tips, tactics, forums and articles related to salt water and fresh water fly fishing. The stories are comprised of fly fishing trips and vacations to travel destinations worldwide with fly fishing tips and tactics related to trout, steelhead, salmon, tarpon, permit, bonefish, tuna, striped bass, shark, sailfish, and other freshwater and saltwater fish species. Flies and Fins is an online fly fishing community comprised of fly fishermen of all different levels and all walks of life. Flies and Fins is a state of mind, a way of life; an opportunity for fly fishermen to use video, pictures, and the written word to share their fly fishing experiences and live vicariously through the experiences of other fly fishermen. Please browse our stories site map, corresponding fly fishing story archives, and forum site map.