South Platte Winter Outing with Trepidations

I was watched the snow flurries falling for a couple of minutes, then returned to quickly to the task of gathering all my fishing gear and making sure I had all the layered clothing, gloves and extra pair of socks to be able to withstand the bite of winter on the river.  Bob would be picking me up any minute.

Robert  Province and I met in December at a Project Healing Waters Fly Fishing meeting I had set up through Facebook and a forum on ColoradoFishermen.com.  We both hit it off and are both retired.  At this past weeks Fly Tying class, teaching disabled veterans how to tie some basic flies at the Denver VA hospital, I told Bob I was planning to go down to the South Platte near Deckers, for a couple of hours, the next morning.  He said, “Why don’t I pick you up at 8:15 and we can be on the water by 10.”  I said “I’ll be waiting”.

The Deckers area of the South Platte is in recovery mode since whirling disease and the Hayman fire in 2002 and subsequent snow melt and severe rainstorms.  Most of the deep holes that once held two to five hundred trout per hole were filled in with ash and silt.  The whirling disease, a brain parasite that started in the Division of Wildlife hatcheries, spread through the rainbow trout and brook trout, killing most of those fish in many Colorado Rivers and streams, has been reversed by stocking a new, disease resistant, strain.

I had the garage door open and was laying out my extra clothes on the bed of you pickup when Bob’s F150 pulled in a few minutes early.  I threw my gear in his camper in the back jumped in and we were off.  A quick stop for some coffee and we were heading to the South Platte.  We continued getting to know each other on the drive to Deckers.  We talked about our tours in Vietnam, some of our favorite fishing streams and, of course, how we can help our soldiers through PHWFF.  As we drove through Sedalia, the snow has stopped and the sky is clearing ahead.  Colorado is amazing!  You almost never cancel a fishing trip based on the weather at your house.  Bob remarked “I hope we don’t meet too many people on Nighthawk Hill”, a 15% grade on the dirt road down to the river.

If you’ve never been down Nighthawk, the first time is an experience and only with repeated descents does your panic wane.  You’re driving down a twisty narrow dirt road and at one particular bend to the right, you see the sign that says “15 % Grade” with a huge rock on the right side of the bend.  As you drive around the rock the road almost drops out of site and soon your looking down, what appears to be, a ski slope… nope, it’s the road. The first hundred yards is the worst with a couple of slight bends then it gradually starts to level off over the next mile. It’s not so bad in the summer, but it can get your blood pumping with winter snow packed roads.  Nighthawk Hill, and the road leading to it, is actually maintained as a postal and school bus route.  I’m glad my grandkids don’t have to ride that bus.

We reached the bottom of Nighthawk and see the river.  No ice!  Not even a slush flow!  Bob remarks that they must be letting water out of Cheeseman Reservoir.  As we turn up stream along the river, I’m thinking “this is going be a great day”.  We drive several miles up river to Scraggy View and pulled of into a parking area.  The sky was blue with few wispy clouds and the sun was starting to take the chill out of the canyon.  No need for all the extra clothes I brought, just shirt sleeve, polar vest and a wool cap.  I had never stopped at this section of the river before, so after rigging up the fly rods and putting on waders and vests, Bob suggested we head down stream a couple hundred yards.  He pointed out a hole down below by a bend and suggested I start down there.  I made a couple of casts and my strike indicator hesitated and I lifted my rod and saw the fish roll under the surface.  Missed it!  I continued casting through the hole from side to side and top to bottom to no avail.  Moving down river, I fished through shallow riffles that definitely will hold trout as the springtime warms the water a little more, until I spotted another fisherman a couple hundred yards below.  I worked my way back up to the hole I started at and after a half dozen casts, hooked and landed an eleven inch rainbow on a size 18 buckskin nymph.  As it turned out, this was my only fish of the day.  Bob didn’t fare much better.

We decided to try a spot about 5 miles upstream.  This was my old stomping grounds.  Familiar water had to produce more fish, right?  As I prospected about a mile of once familiar waters that 15 years ago would produce 30 to 50 fish mornings, with deep sorrow, I realized that the river has not recovered much from the 2002 fire and flooding.  All of the, once deep holes, are either just shallow runs or much narrower holes, still filled in with ash and silt.  I met up with Bob at the truck and started preparing for the drive home.  I told Bob that, in my opinion, what the river needs is for the Denver Water Board to open the gates of Cheesman Dam and blow that river out.  A couple of years of that would wash the sediment silt out of the holes, giving them more width and depth again.

Don’t get me wrong.  I’m not saying there aren’t fish to be caught in that part of the South Platte.  To the contrary, guides tell me that there is a healthy population returning and some very nice fish over 15 inches.  Using the right flies and tactics, you can have great fishing.  But on that given day, I tried to fish it like I used to in the “Glory Days” and it didn’t work.  I thought I knew that river and what works.  Next time, I’ll adapt!

Bob and I drove home and discussed more trips.  Different waters, different fish, different outcome.  It was a clear warm day and great day to be on the water.

Tight Lines————-<*))))><
Larry Snyder
FlyFishingCrazy.com
Phone: 303-755-2105
email: larry@flyfishingcrazy.com

Premium Fly Rod Blanks made in the U.S.A.

If the price is just a little out of your reach for one of the finest fly rods in the World?  Build your own!
T. L. Johnson Rod Company is now making their fly rods available in blanks.  The cost is half the finished fly rod price.  That’s right… You can buy a T. L. Johnson Emerger 2 fly rod ($375 finished) blank for $187.50.  Even if you use high end components, you can build it for under $300.  The LX, L2X, LL, SL2 and SLP blanks are $342.50 also.  Again, finish it yourself for $450 – $500.
Most U.S. rod manufacturers build most of their blanks in the U.S., but their low end models have blanks that are built overseas and then assembled in the U.S.  Unlike other manufacturers, Terry Johnson doesn’t put his name on his import line.  His Fish Creek fly rods are built overseas to his exacting specifications and are great casting and affordable, but are sold under the Fish Creek brand.  If it has the T. L . Johnson name, you know the rods are made entirely in the U.S.A.  Terry has his own shop where he builds all the blanks for his T. L. Johnson brand.  His patented high-modulus graphite, using exclusive carbon helix uni-directional construction techniques, creates a blank with superior hoop strength as well as improved response.  His exclusive ferruling system reduces section to section flat spots, swing weight and has a smoother load transfer. T.L. Johnson’s commitment to the highest quality is apparent in his entire collection.

Purchasing a T.L. Johnson rod buys you a certain exclusivity not available with the more popular U.S. brands.
Treat yourself to possibly the BEST rods Made in the U.S.A.
The quality of his rods are putting the fly fishing industry on notice. “Build it right or stay home.”
This is T.L. Johnson country!

Contact me if you have any questions regarding availability.

Tight Lines————-<*))))><
Larry Snyder
FlyFishingCrazy.com
Phone: 303-755-2105
email: larry@flyfishingcrazy.com

Denver Metro – Project Healing Waters Fly Fishing

Denver ‘Project Healing Waters Fly Fishing‘ wants to expand what we can offer our Disabled Veterans this coming year.  I’m asking anyone, in the Denver area, who would like to volunteer their services, time, expertise (whatever you’ve got), to meet us at the Rock Bottom Brewery, County Line Rd and I-25, next Tues, December 29th at 6:30 After 3 meetings, we are considering holding a Pro-Am Fly Fishing Competition.  Details are to be worked out, but some things decided are to have a Fly Casting competition and auctions on Friday and Saturday evening in mid June and then the Fishing Competition featuring 10 rafts floating the Colorado River each with a Professional from local Fly Shops and an Amateur fisherman on Sunday.  Media rafts with representation from ESPN and local TV stations covering the event.  There will be auctions with products from Fly Fishing manufacturers all to raise money to send our soldiers on Fly Fishing trips as well as teaching them how to tie flies and fly casting.  This weekend event will culminate in either Vail or Silverthorne, CO.

Let’s brainstorm what we can offer our soldiers and how to best achieve some lofty goals for 2010.  One thing we want to try to implement is rod building.  We just received a donation of about 70 fly rod blanks from Terry Johnson of  T.L. Johnson Rod Co. to start our rod building classes.  We’ll throw some other ideas against the walls and see what sticks.  Let’s show all those guys who have given a part of themselves, so we can enjoy freedom in this great country, that we appreciate them and have their health and well-being in our hearts.

If you want to help out this year, contact me so we can get you involved.

Larry Snyder
FlyFishingCRAZY.com
Phone: 303-755-2105
email: larry@flyfishingcrazy.com

Fly Tying: The 720 VISE™…a complete TURN AROUND!

Vincent Su had a need.  He ties parachute flies down to size 30.  As someone who ties flies professionally and travels the country giving demonstrations, he needed a vise that would make tying some of his specialties easier; parachutes, extended-body and vertical midges to name a few.  The rotating vise has been around for awhile, but what if a vise could rotate on a vertical axis as well as horizontal?

Enter the 720 VISE™.  It is a ground breaking 720-degree true-rotary fly tying vise. Vincent invented and patented his vise and after almost a year of further development, the 720 Vise™ is more refined and more user friendly than ever.  The 720 Vise™ is packed with features that set new standards for the industry.  The vise makes tying parachute and extended-body fly patterns, that require rotation of the bobbin, much easier.  Vincent’s vise works on two axis, one axis along the center of the hook shank, the other axis perpendicular to the hook shank and the two axis cross each other.  It has a multi-part base assembly and a bearing mechanism which will provide a lateral rotation of the jaws.  The vise base can be locked in different positions laterally for using the vise as a regular rotary vise or working on a fly from different directions, such as right handed or left handed.

At $270.00, check out what people are saying about Vincent and his revolutionary vise at http://www.coloradofisherman.com/forum/index.php?topic=49622.msg566326

Oh, BTW… each 720 Vise™ comes with a DVD that shows you the features of the vise and fly tying demos from start to finish.
Come join the new fly tying era.

Tight Lines——–<*))))><
Larry Snyder
Fly Fishing CRAZY

If I should die before I wake… Let me Fly Fish in heaven!

I, like many of you, love FLY FISHING and some of my friends and family have called me CRAZY at times.  The feel of fighting a big fish on a FLY ROD and palming the rim of the FLY REEL to add additional, run stopping, pressure to an already smooth drag is exhilarating to say the least.

Think about those memorable fishing trips you’ve taken and then think of the destinations you dream of.  Imagine yourself on the fabled streams of Pennsylvania, New York and New England, then fishing famous Colorado streams like the South Platte River, Colorado and Arkansas Rivers, the Williams Fork, Frying Pan, Roaring Fork and numerous others.  Picture yourself in Wyoming’s Yellowstone National Park fishing the Yellowstone River, Slough Creek, Fire Hole, Gibbon, Lamar and Lewis.  Then have a blast FLY FISHING for Chinook (King) Salmon in late September and early October on the Pere Marquette River in Michigan.  I could go on and on talking about fishing in other states like northern California, Montana, Idaho, Oregon and Washington.  And let’s not forget Alaska. There is no place in the USA that can rival its beauty and fishing.

Pass your passion on to your children and grandchildren.  Teach them to know the joy of “Perpetrating the Fraud” with FLY ROD and REEL and to feel the pulsing, head shaking runs of trout, salmon, bass or even Bluegill on fly tackle.  Think of the joy you will receive when they tie their own handmade flies or build their own rods.

Those are the things that have sustained my passion over the years.  My hope is that you too can find the love for this sport, whether it’s taking up FLY FISHING for the first time yourself, feeding your current CRAZY passion, or even outfitting and teaching a child.  Let this be one of your greatest obsessions.

So, until Heaven calls, let me help you make your FLY FISHING memorable… and CRAZY!

Tight Lines————–<*))))><
Larry Snyder
Fly Fishing CRAZY

Some great Fly Fishing websites!

In the past, I wrote a blog about Tradd (Troutdawg) Duggans sites Fly Fish Addiction and Fly Fish Addiction Blogspot.  In addition to Tradd’s great sites, offering insight to Fly Fishing throughout Colorado and around the world, I have come across 2 other sites that offer Fly Fisherman a great deal to read and think about.

The first is Rocky Mountain Troutfitters. Wade Seymour started fly fishing Colorado waters at a very young age.  He worked as a guide at a local Denver area Fly Shop and realized that fame and fortune would only come with starting his own guiding business which he started this summer.  In addition to his fishing expertise he is EMT certified.  Although he specializes in fishing Rocky Mountain National Park, he is intimately familiar with the other “Troutspots” of the Colorado high country.  He recently created the Flying Pigs Club Blog named for his Dad’s quote “did you see that flying pig?” after landing a monster Rainbow .

Next is a new friend I met on-line today and had to call and talk to him in person.  Phil Light created flyfishreviews.com as a way to make available, to fly fishermen, a database of information on fly fishing gear of all types.  Phil lives near and fishes the storied streams of south central Pennsylvania.  Legendary waters like the Letort, Yellow Breeches and Falling Springs are his stomping grounds.  His website offers Product Reviews, Forums and Blogs.  It’s geared more towards the GEAR.  Visit flyfishreviews.com, create a login and get busy reading a writing reviews.

Tight Lines——-<*))))><
Larry Snyder
Owner and President of
Rocky Mountain Web Connection, LLC
and FlyFishingCrazy.com

Fly Fishing – from “Bust” to “Boon”

Last week, I got up at 5am to drive 135 miles to fly fish for Kokanee Salmon (a landlocked cousin to the Sockeye).  I left Denver around 6:45, stopped for coffee in Woodland Park and was fishing on the Dream Stream (a short stretch of “Catch and Release ” water on the South Platte River between Spinney Mt. Reservoir and Eleven Mile Reservoir) in South Park, Colorado by 8:30.

The air was cool and the wind was calm.  The Kokanee should have been plentiful and range from 16 to 20 inches.  They should have been easy to spot in the river as during the spawn, they turn dark red.  I wanted to be challenged by these hard fighting acrobatic fish, so I decided to use my 9’0″ 3 weight Elkhorn 4 piece Traveler fly rod and Elkhorn T-1 fly reel.  I tied a red San Juan Worm onto my 5X tippet and then tied another foot long piece of 5X tippet to the bend of the hook and added a pink salmon egg fly to the end of that.

I had parked at the second (of 3) parking areas and started fishing downstream.  It wasn’t long before I was concerned about having a successful day.  I saw no salmon in the water and only caught a couple of small 5 to 6 inch brown trout on the salmon egg.  The air was warming and the sun climbing.  The number of fishermen were increasing as the morning wore on.  I decided to work my way upstream from the parking area and came across a 20″ brown trout lying dead along the edge of the stream.  A gorgeous fish that had the misfortune of being caught by someone who doesn’t know the proper way to revive a big fish after exhausting it in battle.  It gave me pause as I pondered the 3 weight rod I had chosen.  It’s one thing to have fun exhausting a salmon that will be dieing soon after spawning but these big brown trout and rainbows that are there to feed on the eggs of the salmon need to be revived and released properly.  I had a T.L. Johnson SLX 9’0″ 5 weight fly rod and Stone Creek M60 fly reel in the car, but I was already a quarter mile upstream and decided to continue with my chosen gear.  I knew I had to do everything right if I was fortunate enough to hook up with one of these monsters.

As I worked my way up stream, I talked with a couple of fly fishers who said they had seen a group of about 8 or 10 salmon in a hole about a quarter of a mile farther up, so that’s were I headed.  The farther I went upstream, the more crowded the river, so I decided to stop at a deep hole by a bend in the river.  As the morning neared end, the wind started to pick up.  I could see some fish moving around in the deep water and thought they looked dark enough to be salmon. As one cast drifted below the fish I was seeing, I had a strike.  My first rainbow trout of the day.  A nice fat 12 incher on the egg again.

After trying to cast a double fly rig into the wind with a 3 weight fly rod, I decided to cross above the hole and fish it from the other side.  I also replaced the dropper egg pattern with a size 16 buckskin nymph.  A few casts later, I was into a big fish.  With the 3 weight fly rod doubled almost in half, I put as much pressure on him as I could.  He cleared the water with a mighty jump and I saw it was a big brown trout.  I layed the rod over to steer him to the slack water along the edge and was finally able to grab the tail of the 20″+ beautiful male with kyped jaw.  He was fat and heavy. As I tried to remove the barbless hook of the busckskin from his jaw, a might shake of his head broke the tippet. I slid my other hand under his belly and lifted him out of the water for a photo.

Remembering the dead trout, I had seen earlier downstream, I took all the time this great fish needed to revive, holding his head facing upstream to let the water wash through his gills.  Water moving through their gills is like air breathed into our lungs. After a minute or two, I felt the pulsing in his tail strengthen.  Finally with a powerful shake of his body, he pulled away from my light grasp and swam back into the hole with my fly still in his mouth.  I tied a pheasant tail nymph on as the dropper and resumed fishing.  A Second big fish took the fly.  Fighting equally hard and on a big jump, I saw it was about a 19 – 20″ rainbow, but before I could bring it in and release it, it performed it’s own “long distance” release.  My philosophy is… fly fishing is all about “perpetrating the fraud”.  If you can get a trout, especially big trout, to take an artificial fly, it’s a successful catch.  Several more casts and I was into my second 20″+ brown trout.  Another nice fight, another safe release and I turned a “bust” salmon fishing day into a “boon” trout day.

Tight Lines———-<*))))><
Larry Snyder
FlyFishingCRAZY.com

“Accelerator” Fly Casting Trainer

FFF Master Fly Casting Instructor and inventor of the “Accelerator” Fly Casting Teaching Device, Floyd Dean of Sausalito, CA  just stepped up to the plate for our disabled soldiers by donating an Accelerator to be used by Project Healing Waters Fly Fishing at the VA hospital in Denver, CO.  This will be huge in helping us teach our disabled vets how to cast a fly rod.  Thanks to Floyd and his lovely wife Janet, who by the way are retired, we’ll make a difference in the lives of our returning heroes.

The Accelerator is a fly casting instructional tool that Floyd developed to teach a novice fly caster (and us know-it-all veteran fly casters) the delay needed between forward and backward casts to properly allow the fly line to load the rod for the power transfer in the cast.  In casting a fly rod, if you do not allow the fly line to extend back far enough to start to bend the rod tip in that direction, you haven’t developed the loading of the rod which provides the power to make the forward cast.

The 2 o’clock  to 10 o’clock casting technique is the most common taught fly casting method.  But that’s only part of it.  When you reach the 2 o’clock, back cast, point, the fly line (and fly) is still in the process of moving backward, so you have to STOP at 2 o’clock and PAUSE until the line moves all the way back and starts to “tug” or pull the rod tip back.  This is called loading the rod.  This is needed for the rod to provide the casting power.  At that point you start your forward cast. The same thing applies on your forward cast.  When you reach the 10 o’clock forward cast point, the fly line is still in the process of moving forward, so you have to STOP at 10 o’clock and pause until the line moves all the way forward and starts to “tug” or pull the rod tip forward.  So here is the scenario.. back cast.. accelerate.. stop.. pause.. forward cast.. accelerate.. stop.. pause.. back cast.. accelerate.. stop.. pause.. forward cast.  Got it?

Here’s the RUB… HOW LONG DO YOU PAUSE?  Well, I always taught students to turn sideways and watch their back cast and watch the line tug or load the rod tip before starting the forward cast.  Then watch the forward cast until they see the line load the rod tip before starting the back cast.  Not the easiest thing for them to understand even when watching.

Enter the Accelerator!  Floyd’s invention is about three and a half feet long, has a grip at one end and a hollow tube with a stainless steel ball at the top end and is held just like your fly rod.  When you simulate casting the Accelerator, on the back cast, at the 2 o’clock stopping point, the stainless steel ball flies up to the top of the tube and you hear a click.  When pausing, to allow the fly line to straighten out and load the rod, the stainless steel ball falls back down the tube and at the point when the line would load the rod, you hear the ball click at the bottom of the tube signaling you to start your forward cast.  The theory is, never start your cast in the opposite direction until you hear the second click.

Here is the Accelerator scenario… back cast.. accelerate.. stop.. click.. pause.. click.. forward cast.. accelerate.. stop.. click.. pause.. click.. back cast.. accelerate.. stop.. click.. pause.. click.. forward cast.  You get a distinctive auditory two clicks on the forward and back casts.  The time between the two clicks is the time you should PAUSE before casting in the opposite direction. Got it?

The Accelerator can be used effectively to practice the double haul by utilizing the attached rubber strip to simulate the motion and it can also emulate spey casting.  The Accelerator is now available at Fly Fishing Crazy.

Anyone else want to “man up” and help our troops?  Big companies.. we need money to help our soldiers.  Do like Dean and donate to Project Healing Water Fly Fishing.  Thanks again to Floyd and Janet.  We need more people like them to ‘Step up to the Plate” and help our troops.  We all know our government is falling far short!

Tight Lines——-<*))))><
Larry Snyder
http://www.flyfishingcrazy.com

Support our Troops through FISHING

There are many organizations that are helping our troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.  Our government is falling far short of providing the support they need.  A few of these organizations, that I am aware of, are Project Healing Waters Fly Fishing, Inc., Army Bass Anglers, LLC and Warriors & Quiet Waters Foundation, Inc. Many of our soldiers have life changing handicaps and these groups help them cope with their injuries, depression and overall wellness.  These groups offer fishing as a means of solace to our soldiers, who have given more for the freedoms that we enjoy than most of our politicians, by giving them something else to focus on.

Project Healing Waters Fly Fishing is a nationwide group dedicated to the physical and emotional rehabilitation of disabled active duty military personnel and veterans through fly fishing and fly tying education and outings.  Locally (Denver, CO area), Project Healing Waters volunteers meet regularly with current war veterans and heroes and also Vets dating back to Vietnam, Korea and WWII.   Along with teaching them how to tie flies and cast a fly rod they have even enlisted the cooperation of the Colorado Division of Wildlife to fish private stocked ponds.  Other states have volunteers doing similar things.  Project Healing Waters uses private donations to take our heroes on Fishing Trips all around the world.  They don’t even think twice to ask airlines and hotels to comp. a flight or housing to help defray the cost of these trips.

Army Bass Anglers sponsors events like “Fishing for Freedom” tournaments that pair local fishermen with wounded Soldiers, for a day of tournament bass fishing on an awesome fishery, especially for them.  They depend on local businesses, volunteers, and caring local and regional anglers in the San Antonio Texas area and specifically with Fort Sam Houston’s Brooke Army Medical Center. They also work closely with ReturningHeroesHome.org a 12,000 square foot replacement building for the 1,200 square foot existing Warrior and Family Support Center formerly called the “SFAC” (Soldier and Family Assistance Center) located at Fort Sam Houston.

The Warriors & Quiet Waters Foundation, Inc., a Billings, Montana based non-profit corporation, provides high-quality therapeutic and rehabilitative recreation, primarily to young enlisted servicemen and women wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan still in rehab in the military hospital system.  They do this by taking traumatically wounded servicemen and women Fly Fishing for trout on Montana’s rivers and streams.  A quote from the W&QWF website reads “Fishing is a solace…the opposite of war…a gentle and healing occupation.” (Luis Marden)

If you can help in  any way, either by donating your money or your time, or if you are a Vet that is having trouble coping with life at home, contact these organizations.  Reach out to help yourself by helping others.

For more information on these great groups:
Email Project Healing Waters Fly Fishing at admin@projecthealingwaters.org
Email Army Bass Anglers at Armybassanglers@yahoo.com
Contact Warriors & Quiet Waters Foundation by going to http://www.warriorsandquietwaters.org/contact.html

For more information on Project Healing Water Fly Fishing in Colorado, contact me.  If I don’t have the answers, I’ll get them.

Tight Lines——–<*))))><
Larry Snyder
larry@flyfishingcrazy.com
http:www.flyfishingcrazy.com

Kokanee Salmon on the Dream Stream

There is about 1.5 miles of the South Platte River, in the South Park area of Colorado, between Spinney Mountain Reservoir and Eleven Mile Reservoir that is referred to as the Dream Stream. Year round, this tailwater fishery is very popular with Fly Fishermen. The rainbow trout are recovering very well since being devastated by whirling disease a few years back and now has a good population of nice rainbows and brown trout.

In another week or so, this stretch should experience a good run of Kokanee Salmon coming up from Eleven Mile to spawn and, like their Sockeye Salmon cousins, die. I’ve been told that the biggest factor in determining when they begin their run is when the water temperature is consistently below 55 degrees. Not having verified that, there have been some Salmon already moving into the river. Next week should start seeing some good numbers and the run should continue throughout October and into the beginning of November.

In the past years, the Kokanee have been measuring 16 to 20 inches. Their color changes from the silver color in the lakes to red. For the egg laden females, that is the only obvious change, but the males develop a huge kyped jaw. Their heads increases in size to almost 1/3 of their length. The head can be up to 7 inches long with the toothy mouth being about 5 1/2 inches. Although somewhat grotesque, they are a blast to catch on a 5 or 6 weight fly rod. When hooked, they like to jump and do cartwheels across the water, putting on a great show. I’m going to try my Elkhorn 9′ 3 weight rod just for some added thrill.

My favorite setup is a simple nymph rig with a strike indicator. Small egg patterns, red San Juan Worms, red Copper Johns or any other kind of red fly should catch lots of Kokanee Salmon and several bonus trout including some big brown trout that follow the Salmon up from Eleven Mile to feed on the eggs.

Tight Lines———<*))))><
Larry Snyder
Fly Fishing CRAZY