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Red's Power Hour Fishing Report
The Power Hour Fishing Report is brought to you exclusively by Red's. The content of this report is not the generic "fishing has been good in the morning, and afternoons, and later in the evenings, too." Rather, when we go fishing, we will analyze one session and report the day, time, location, fly, number of fish caught, species, and size (if we caught any). We'll also write up the method we used. Keep in mind that the fishing report is based on a prior day's fishing and weather conditions.

 

12/20/2008

Anglers: Frosty the snowman?

Location: --

Flies: --

Time: --

Results: --

Needless to say with temperatures dipping below Zero into the negative realm of bitter coldness we are not doing any fishing right now, nor for a while it looks like. The Yakima is in a state of SEVERE ice up with lots of freezing coming from the bottom up and near solid ice flow coming downstream. It is a great time to stay indoors, enjoy the holiday spirits, and dream about the spring time. We'll post a report if the ice flow subsides and the bite turns on. Happy Holidays, Red's.  For a last minute Gift idea consider sending an angling pal of yours a Gift Certificate via Email, it is super fast and a great gesture.

12/06/2008

Anglers: Carig, Mike, and Mike

Location: MM 19 to Red's

Flies: sz. 8-12 Stone nymphs, sz. 16-20 Lightening Bugs, sz. 16, 18 Copper John's, and sz. 18, 20 Brassies

Time: 10:30 am until 4:00 pm

Results: Lots of trout landed (one NICE 19"er), and some Whitefish!

With some incredibly mild December weather, the nymph fishing on the Yakima has been very good over the past week. The fish are concentrated along the ledges and have been on the feed! When you catch one keep working the same zone, because there are likely to be more to come. We have also fished some streamers on sink tips with pretty good results. We expect this technique to produce some big fish over the next month. Even though the subsurface game has been the "go to", don't leave your 3 weight at home as some Midge are starting to show in the canyon. One last minute gift idea - the DVD THE DRIFT. We've got them in stock, and will ship it out immediately!

12/05/2008

Anglers: --

Location: The Office

Flies:

Time: --

Results: --

Alright, so we haven't been fishing enough lately.... we know.  We're finally catching up with all that work that was piling up while we were out having fun fishing all summer and fall!

12/01/2008

Anglers: --

Location: The Office

Flies:

Time: --

Results: --

This is good video if you want to laugh.  Our Guide staff manager teaching us how NOT to net a Steelhead. 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UKOl1kV3S3U

11/26/2008 late pm

Anglers: --

Location: The Office

Flies:

Time: --

Results: We are very proud to announce the grand opening of our new Online Fly Shop @ www.redsflyfishing.com This has been a big project and we hope that you take the opportunity to make a few orders from us online this holiday season.  We are proud to have customers like you we hope that you enjoy being able to purchase online from the same guys that you see on the river! The Lower Canyon is a long way from everywhere this time of year, so sit back in the comfort of your own home and do some shopping with Red's online! There are many great products available, or you can order a Gift Certificate to give away at Christmas time!

11/21/2008

Anglers: Mike and Giles

Location: Irene to Ringer

Flies: sz. 6-10 Stonefly Nymphs, sz. 14-18 Lightening Bug, sz. 18 Wd-40 (chocolate, black, olive), sz. 16, 18 Brassie, sz. 16 RCJ, sz. 6 Sheila's Sculpin, sz. 6 Sculpzilla

Time: 10:00 am -2:00 pm

Results: 8-10 trout and 2 Whitefish to the net

While the river being back in shape and fishing well is good news, the best news is that the log jam that has restricted this section since Spring was pushed aside by the high flows we experienced last week. There are a couple of new spots that require an experienced rower on the oars, but you don't have to portage the boat anywhere on this section at the current flow levels. The fishing today was good. Most of the fish came to the smaller nymphs, but the bigger trout ate streamers and stonefly nymphs. We did see some BWO's flying, but only a couple of sporadic feeders showing interest in them. For you die hard dry fly enthusiasts out there - try MP 17 (Frustration Flats) in the early morning or late evening!

11/18/2008

Anglers: --

Location: Red's

Flies: --

Time: --

Results: --

It looks like we are back on, that was a pretty quick 'freshet' of water. Like many rivers in the Northwest this past week the Yakima showed us her ugly side in a hurry with flows nearing 8000 cfs. The flow is leveling off now at around 2000 cfs and has great color. I will bet these fish are going to be hungry. Chuckin' and duckin' from the boat with a JJ Bugger or a Sculpzilla being towed by a Type 3 Sink Tip could be silly right now. The big trout will have some ground to make up before winter.  After the blowout they are going to be fairly aggressive as they try to reestablish good holding lies. Utilize the SJ worm under an indicator and life will be good. While the Yakima and the Klickitat were throwing tantrums the Methow (amazing watershed!) stayed in great shape and we ran up there for the weekend and hooked a few steelhead. Overall it was fairly slow but 1 steelhead per angler is worth the trip. Everything is back on track now so go get 'em, fuel is cheap so there is nothing holding you back!

11/12/2008

Anglers: --

Location: Red's

Flies: --

Time: --

Results: --

Is there a better time to fish? This month has been awesome on all of the watersheds that we guide. The Methow is out of it's slump, the Klickitat is kicking out some "big" Steelhead. Many of which are unlandable and act like a raging bull when you hook into them.  They usually leave your set up in a tangled heap, reel backlashed, knuckles bleeding, heart broken, and no fly left on the end of your line.  If you can get through the first 30 seconds you might have a chance. The average size fish has been very impressive this year and we have been getting into some fairly bright Silver Salmon as well. The Yakima, our local water, has been spoiling us with good fishing and abnormally warm, wet weather. It feels more like Western Washington here today with lots of drizzle and a temperate feel to the air. Use streamers on a 15' Rio Density Compensated Sinking Tip line, you can use a Type 3 with a heavily weighted fly or a Type 6 if you want to run unweighted flies. Use a traditional wet fly swing with snap jigs mixed in throughout the swing and let every swing finish because they will often follow all the way to the hang down before taking. The water is rising due to all of this rain so if you have trips planned for the next couple of days think about postponing them because we are in for some water.  Give the shop a call and they will let you know what the river looks like real time. Regarding the Methow and Klickitat, as soon as these rivers recover from the current swell up it will be GOOOOD fishing. There is still some time left to get trips planned, up until about the first week of December is typically pretty good fishing. Especially if you can get a Steelhead date shortly after the rivers rebound from the current influx of rain water. Good luck out there, Red's.

11/5/2008

Anglers: Chris, Doug, and Mike

Location: Red's to Slab

Flies: sz. 8, 10 Stonefly Nymphs, sz. 16-20 PT's, sz. 18, 20 WD 40 (Black, Olive, Chocolate), sz. 18 RCJ, sz. 16, 18 SW BWO, sz. 18 CDC BWO Emerger, sz. 18 Rusty Sparkle Dun.

Time: noon until 4:00 pm

Results: 13 trout landed (8"-17") and a few Whitefish.

More good weather and fishing on the Yakima. We did have a night of hard rain on Sunday, but the river remains in great shape and the storm has moved through. We have caught most of our fish on a shallow nymph rig along the color change, but the dry fly rise is consistent in certain pieces of water. If you can sneak out for a 3-4 hour period from about noon until 3:00, you will catch the best window of the day. The Klick flows bumped up a bit, but even by yesterday afternoon the clarity was back and flows were on the drop. We are still running trips on both the Klick and the Methow and have guides available next week. Give us a call for information or to schedule a trip!

11/8/2008

Anglers: Steve

Location: Red's

Flies: --

Time: 11:00 am until 4:00 pm

Results: River Update.

Despite a huge increase in volume yesterday and last night due to heavy rains and some low snow melt off, the river did not go completely out of shape and is already on the drop. If things continue at the pace we are seeing now, we could be seeing favorable conditions by tomorrow. The fishing has been productive throughout the day, and the weather has been much nicer than what we're accustomed to for this time of year! Don't be afraid to fish some streamers on sink tips - both from the boat on the go and wading inside corners. We have some new streamer lines in stock and we are now into the season when some of the larger trout in the river are caught using streamers! The Klickitat also saw a spike in flows and decrease in clarity yesterday. We expect it to come back into shape fairly quickly with the weather forecast, and think we may see some great fishing down there as the flows drop and conditions clear. The methow never did go out, and that's where we are fishing guests today. Flows picked up on the Methow last week, which helped the fishing and floating. How about those gas prices? My fillup this morning was 30.00 cheaper than a month ago - that's enough to buy a Windstopper Simms hat! The above photos pretty much sum things up - birds, trout, and Steelhead are all feasible options right now! Pick your game and give us a call!

11/5/2008

Anglers: Chris, Doug, and Mike

Location: Red's to Slab

Flies: sz. 8, 10 Stonefly Nymphs, sz. 16-20 PT's, sz. 18, 20 WD 40 (Black, Olive, Chocolate), sz. 18 RCJ, sz. 16, 18 SW BWO, sz. 18 CDC BWO Emerger, sz. 18 Rusty Sparkle Dun.

Time: noon until 4:00 pm

Results: 13 trout landed (8"-17") and a few Whitefish.

More good weather and fishing on the Yakima. We did have a night of hard rain on Sunday, but the river remains in great shape and the storm has moved through. We have caught most of our fish on a shallow nymph rig along the color change, but the dry fly rise is consistent in certain pieces of water. If you can sneak out for a 3-4 hour period from about noon until 3:00, you will catch the best window of the day. The Klick flows bumped up a bit, but even by yesterday afternoon the clarity was back and flows were on the drop. We are still running trips on both the Klick and the Methow and have guides available next week. Give us a call for information or to schedule a trip!

10/29/2008

Anglers: Curtis, Scott, and Mike

Location: Red's to Slab

Flies: sz. 8, 10 Stonefly Nymphs, sz. 16-20 PT's, sz. 18, 20 WD 40 (Black, Olive, Chocolate), sz. 18 RCJ, sz. 16, 18 SW BWO, sz. 18 CDC BWO Emerger, sz. 18 Rusty Sparkle Dun.

Time: 11:30 until 4:30 pm

Results: Good fishing - both trout and Whitefish were active!

This afternoon trip was the Cast portion of the Cast-N-Blast. After the morning hike, we jumped into the driftboat for an afternoon float and had good fishing the entire trip. The Fall season continues on the East side of the Cascades... While we've had cool night time temps in the 20's, the middle part of the day has been beautiful with sunny skies and highs near 60 degrees. The leaves are still on the trees and we're using sun block on a daily basis! The fishing has been consistent in the canyon. Our gameplan has been to run nymphs in the morning until we find some fish eating BWO's, Cahills, or Mahogany Duns. Some days have been better than others, and we're still waiting for some cloudy weather... The Klickitat and Methow have been our focus for Steelhead fishing and we're catching fish on both systems. Give us a call if catching a Steelhead on a fly perks your interest!

10/21/2008

Anglers: --

Location: Yak upper and lower, Methow, Klickitat.

Flies: For the Yak: Streamers!, and suggested patterns are Prince Harry #16, Black, Olive, and Chocolate WD-40 #16-#20, Pat's Stones #8/10, October Caddis Pupae #8, BH CDC Soft Hackle PT#16, BWO & Rusty Sparkle Dun #16, 18, CDC BWO Emerger #18, and in the evening throw big Orange October Caddis Patterns with a twitch and shake.

Time: --

Results: --

The Yakima is fishing good in the afternoons with nymphs, but the cloudy weather is on the way in and may enhance the BWO hatch a notch or two. It has been pretty good but we are going to see better rises before this fall is done. Try streamer fishing in the morning to wake 'em up and finish with nymphs and dries once the bite begins. Think smaller if you are fishing good water with no grabs, downsize tippet and flies until you get some action. #16-20's are the answer if you are fishing pressured water, like the Rock Garden for example. A #20 with no bead is almost essential.

STEELHEAD REPORT: We've had about 6 anglers land their very first steelhead on a fly with our company this past week and it feels good.  If you haven't landed a steelhead before, don't be afraid to give it a shot.  The Methow has been average fishing, with some days yielding 6 confirmed hookups a day but there have been a few days that we haven't touched a fish reminding us that steelheading is just that.... steelheading. If a hookup or two with a big metalhead doesn't satisfy your appetite then stick to trout. The Klickitat has been fishing AWESOME. Some of the best days that we have ever had Steelheading have been over the past week on the Klick, but it is the kind of river that can love you one day and leave you the next. No guarantees that it can produce for extended periods what it showed us over the past few days. The Wenatchee is still hopeful and we have been hearing a few rumors about an opening within the next 10 days or so. Keep your fingers and toes crossed and let's go Steelheading. We still have some room in our Klickitat Camp (which is the BEST), and plenty of guides looking for some work on the Methow.

10/14/2008

Anglers: Chuck, Sam, and Steve

Location: Red's to Mahre's.

Flies: Prince Harry #16, Black, Olive, and Chocolate WD-40 #16-#20, Pat's Stones #8/10, October Caddis Pupae #8, BH CDC Soft Hackle PT#16, BWO & Rusty Sparkle Dun #16, 18, CDC BWO Emerger #18

Time: 9:30 am - 6 pm

Results: 12+ trout landed (8"-16") and 5 or 6 Whitefish

Another slow start in the morning, but things picked up midday and we had our best fishing in the shade between 3:00 and 5:00 pm. Despite the bright sunshine we had - which we will never complain about - we did have a BWO hatch window at 1:00 and caught a number of trout on dry flies in several different zones. Between risers we ran a shallow nymph rig and had fairly steady action after about 11:00. We did manage to hook into a number of larger trout in the 16"+ range, which have been scarce on the surface of late. Don't discount running a big October Caddis dry in the morning, as we had 2 nice fish come up and eat our Orange strike indicators in the first 20 minutes of our drift!

10/14/2008

Anglers: Joe

Location: Methow River.

Flies: Stoneflies and egg patterns (nymphing) and Muddler type skaters on the swing

Time: 9:00 am until 5:00 pm

Results: Fish counts are still going up!

The Methow is open for Steelhead. Retain all hatchery fish, and keep all wild fish in the water while releasing them! Get a guide or go alone its up to you. Here is all the info: Methow Regulations:

10/09/2008

Anglers: Pierce, Larry, and Johnny

Location: Irene to Bighorn (logjam requires effort from 2 able bodied guys to get over).

Flies: Prince Harry #16, Black, Olive, and Chocolate WD-40 #16-#20, Pat's Stones #8/10, October Caddis Pupae w/ Black Conehead, 10/12 20"er Stone (no cone, used with split shot), BH CDC Soft Hackle PT #16, RCJ #16, Mayfly Soft Hackle #18, BWO Sparkle Dun #16, 18, CDC BWO Emerger #18, October Caddis Adult #8

Time: 9:30 am - 6 pm

Results: Good numbers of 8"-14" fish with a couple over 16", including a NICE 17" Cutthroat

A slow morning right out of the gate, but things picked up around noon. We did see the first decent BWO activity of the Fall season with a few nice fish eating BWO's and Cahills in the early afternoon. The first nice cloudy day we see ahead of us should bring a good hatch to the canyon. Fishing the same shallow nymph rig we've been running all Fall was our "bread and butter" yesterday. With these Mayfly hatches starting up, don't be afraid to nymph some of that slow, smooth water in the tailouts of runs. Our favorite time of the year has finally arrived. We're fishing trout on the Yak, steelhead on the Methow and Klickitat, and running dogs on birds. Pick your game and give us a call!

10/07/2008

Anglers: Ted, Scott, and Troy

Location: Methow River.

Flies: Stoneflies and egg patterns (nymphing) and Muddler type skaters on the swing

Time: 9:00 am until 5:00 pm

Results: Fish counts are STRONG!

The Methow is open for Steelhead. Retain all hatchery fish, and keep all wild fish in the water while releasing them! Get a guide or go alone its up to you. Here is all the info: Methow Regulations:

10/06/2008

Anglers: Chad, Emmet, and Steve

Location: Irene to Bighorn (logjam is passable but requires a big push from a few guys).

Flies: Prince Harry #16, Beadhead Black WD-40 #20, Olive WD-40 - various sizes both beaded and nonbeaded, Pat's Stones #8/10, October Caddis Pupae w/ Black Conhead, 10/12 20"er Stone (no cone, used with split shot), BH CDC Soft Hackle PT #16, RCJ #16, Mayfly Soft Hackle #18, October Caddis Adult #8

Time: 9 am - 6 pm

Results: 12+ trout landed, 8-17"

Good fishing in the Farmlands and top end of the Lower Canyon yesterday. There wasn't much of a hatch to speak of but it didn't seem to matter because the trout are in their annual feeding frenzy before fall really begins to set in and condenses their activity to merely a few hours per day in the afternoon. Right now however, the fish are feeding well pretty much all day and even in the absence of a hatch the catching is still productive. In a few weeks the fishing will be most productive from 11 am - 4 pm. If you find yourself out on a 'slow' morning though, make sure to fish some streamers on a swinging presentation with an Intermediate sinking line. Something in the 3-4 ips rate will work great with a lightly weighted streamer or bugger pattern. The fish will begin chasing streamers aggressively as the first few frosts of the year approach. Also note that the Methow River opened for Steelhead this past weekend and reports were great! See last night's report for a link to see all the regulations.

10/05/2008

Anglers: ?

Location: Methow River.

Flies: Bombers, Skunks, Freight Train, Goblin, Stone nymph even?

Time: --

Results: Hoooray!

The Methow is open for Steelhead, get a guide or go alone its up to you. Here is all the info: Methow Regulations:

09/30/2008

Anglers: Gary, Jeremy, and Joe.

Location: Ringer to Umtanum.

Flies: Gary's PT 20/18/16, Olive/Silver Lightning Bug #20, Puyon PT (curved shank hook, bead in body, read head) AWESOME fly!, Pat's Stones #8 Brown, Black WD-40 (non bead) #20, Buoyant Skwala #10 (looks just like a male summer stonefly), Quigley BWO Cripple #18, Mogogany Dun Cripple #16

Time: 9 am - 5 pm

Results: 10+ trout to hand.

The day started off with nice cloud cover and we picked up 3 fish on dries in the first hour, but it slowed down pretty fast as the 85 degree heat drove out the clouds and turned a September day in Ellensburg into an Arizona like afternoon. The dry fly fishing slowed down but the nymphing was AUTOMATIC from about 11 am - 1 pm.  As the evening shadows emerged we decided to mix it up a bit and start picking on a few risers with BWO Cripples and MD Cripples. Every time we got it close they ate it, the Cripple is a trump card this time of year but play it wisely. A few bad drifts will put them down even if you have the perfect fly. We fished a Summer Stone pattern on the go and found a Skwala pattern that has an almost perfect likeness to the male Summer Stonefly. The trout are becoming more selective and finding just the right attractor is the key. There were also plenty of October Caddis ovapositing so if you are out for an evening run make sure to twitch something big and orange. Preferably an Orange Stimulator type fly, just make sure it has stiff enough hackle to stand up and skate. A true October Caddis pattern should skate VERY well and not take any nose dives when skittered across the top. Also, in case you didn't notice the gluttony of steelhead photos it is time to get your Klickitat Steelhead camp trip nailed down. We still have a few weekend dates open so get signed up, it will be one of the best trips you have ever been on. And if it isn't that just means that you have been on some insanely great fishing trips. Outside of AK, BC, and the USSR it is a pretty awesome place to hook and fight some cold metal.  Red's.

09/26/2008

Anglers: The whole staff.

Location: The whole river.

Flies: WD-40 Olive BH 18, (try a non beaded WD-40 on the bright days), BCJ #16/18, Brassie #20, Prince Harry #16, Gary's PT 18/16, October Caddis Pupae #8, Parachute BWO #20, CDC BWO Emerger #20, Para Adams #12 (? don't know why but it works), Orange Sofa Pillow #8, Orange Phat Fly #8, Parachute Yellow Orange Stimulator #8/6, Sculpzilla #8

Time: 9 am - 5 pm

Results: Good trout fishing.

Well if this is your favorite time of year on the Yakima we don't blame you. The fishing and conditions are as close to perfect as you can get right now and the bite has been steady throughout the entire river system. Our guide staff has spanned out and been fishing a large variety of sections over the past few days with great results. The afternoon and evenings have yielded some good dry fly fishing on October Caddis patterns (big orange Stimulator type) and don't be afraid to twitch and skate the fly. October Caddis are shakers and movers out there. The BWO hatch has started to give us some hints, but it is still just around the corner. It is good to keep this hatch in limbo with warmer weather so that we still have some big hatches come mid-late October. Some years we will even have our best BWO dry fly fishing in early November if the hatch is late. There are still a lot of Summer Stoneflies and the devout dry fly angler can get some nice fish in the afternoon - evening hours on a big dry fly. Plan to nymph or dry dropper in the morning, eat lunch, wait for a Mayfly hatch, catch a few risers, then throw October Caddis on the go for the remainder of the day. Sound like a plan? Ready.... break!

09/22/2008

Anglers: Eric, Mark, and Joe.

Location: Ringer to Umtanum Day 1, Red's to Mahres Day 2

Flies: Red Humpy #12, Adams #10, Tan Parahopper #10 (with legs removed), Para Adams #10, Fly Formerly Known as Prince, WD-40 Olive BH 18, Prince Harry #16, Gary's PT 18, Black CJ #16

Time: 9 am - 5 pm

Results: About 10 trout landed each day.

Well the cool weather arrived on Saturday and so did the great dry fly fishing. It was nice to have some cloud cover and even a few sprinkles after a number of consecutive days that topped the 90 degree mark. The game has moved towards mid-river with so many sexy riffles becoming slightly exposed you will want to focus your efforts away from the banks and more towards the midriver ledges and rockpiles. You can still work some of the bank water if there is good flow tight to the salad, but if the water is stale think about pulling out and dry fly fishing over the 'nymph' water. Also, a thought on fishing dry flies in the wind... A guest fished dry flies all weekend, all day, with an 8'6" 2 weight RPL + (today's equivalent would be a Z Axis). This little rod fought the wind like few other rods do, it was amazing. The small cross section of the fly line being that it is a 2 weight sliced through the wind beautifully and the small diameter combined with the extreme fast action of the rod allowed the caster to power through the wind.  The HUGE upside was that the line never "splatted" down spooking fish like a 5 or 6 weight does. A 2 weight line lands so soft even when you hammer it that the fish weren't spooked by an aggressive lay down. Most 2-3 weight rods that we fish are shorter which makes them tough to fish on big water, and they are slower actions which renders them useless in a head wind. The 390 Z Axis might be a go to rod when fishing small dry flies in the wind. The ol' 2 weight RPL sliced through the wind and it was really amazing no joke. Most of us usually put those rods away when the wind comes up, next time you have the chance give it a shot with a lighter line and see if you find it to be an advantage like we did this past weekend.  The bug report is a mixture of light hatches, BWO's, Cahills, micro Caddis, October Caddis (in the evening), Summer Stones (lots!), and a few hoppers but they are getting pretty lean.  By the end of this week we should see our first GOOD BWO hatch with the drop in temperature.  Even though it was cool this weekend our water temperatures are still a bit warm for springing loose the typical torrent of fall hatches. 

Also, the Klickitat was on fire yesterday.  Anybody want to go catch a steelhead?

09/18/2008

Anglers: Tom, Terry, and Joe.

Location: Farmlands

Flies: Yellow Black Humpy #12 (Bee), WD-40 Olive BH 18, Prince Harry #16, Kingfisher #8, Dave's Hopper #12, Gladiator Tan #10, Gary's PT 18, Prince #12/10, Black CJ #16

Time: 10 am - 4 pm

Results: About 10 trout landed and a few Whitefish

The Dry Fly fishing has definitely slowed down over the past few days with the abnormally high air and water temperatures. Nymphing in the fast riffles has been productive, but the average size fish in this water seems to be a bit on the small side. We caught one big boy yesterday with a few middleweights mixed in but most of the fish were in the 8-11" range. The lunkers are patiently waiting it out and will go on the attack when the water and weather come back into check. There is a forecast for cloudy weather over the weekend and that could spice things up a bit. The fishing has been good, but this time of year we are always looking for it to be "great!". Please take really good care of the fish out there. At this point in the year these fish have been exposed to several months of 60+ degree water and can get a little "squishy". As the temperature drops they will firm up again but this is probably their most vulnerable time of year. Good luck out there and fish the color changes.  Also, NOTE:  The Methow River has been closed due to the 'incidental take' on wild steelhead being reached by trout anglers and today is the last day of the trout season up there.  Cross your fingers for a steelhead opener in October!

09/15/2008

Anglers: Kathy, Vickie, Ben, Mark, and Joe.

Location: Cle Elum to Thorp

Flies: Orange Phat Fly (October Caddis) #8, Yellow Black Humpy #12 (Bee), Royal Wulf #12, WD-40 Olive BH 18, Prince Harry #16, Orange Stimulator (Sofa Pillow style) #8, Leopard Hopper #10

Time: 10 am - 7:30 pm

Results: About 6 trout landed per boat, the biggest was 16"

Yesterday seemed to be a bit slower on the Yakima. We are not sure if it is related to the heat, weekend pressure, or maybe it is just our incredibly relaxed demeanor as a result of some gorgeous fall weather. It is a special time out here with cool nights, warm days, and plenty of options to dry fly fish, nymph, streamer, or even wade fish.  As the weather begins to cool this next week it will start to trigger our fall hatches. They are dependant upon the water temperature decreasing to a particular number and it is different for each hatch. This is the opposite of what triggers our spring hatches which is a subtle increase in water temperatures. There are a surplus of BWO's, Mohogany Duns, October Caddis, Cahills, Midge, and various small Caddis that are all waiting for that magic number. In the evening last night, we saw very few October Caddis but there was a good emergence of small grey Caddis in the size 18 range and this pattern yielded our best fishing. I forgot to mention it on the fly list above, but make sure to have a few CDC Caddis Emergers in grey or tan #18. The fishing is still steady just not quite the show we had a week ago. Although the rumor yesterday was that the nymph fishing in the LC was awesome. We were in the Upper River so we tried not to believe it, but it came from Steve Joyce whom we all know to be a pretty reliable source. If anything he probably downplayed it. The river appears to have stabilized and look out for a cool cloudy day to spring the BWO hatch loose in the Lower Canyon. Good luck and please don't be afraid to call for advice on wading or floating the river. Thank you, Red's.

09/06/2008

Anglers: Gary, Mike, and Joe.

Location: KOA to Ringer (now almost impassible)

Flies: Dave's Hopper #12, Yellow Para Hopper #8/10, Orange Phat Fly (October Caddis) #8, JR's Peach Stone #10, Yellow Black Humpy #12 (Bee)

Time: 9 am - 5 pm

Results: 10+ trout landed. Lots of smaller fish, 1 @ 16"

Another great fall on the Yakima River. Any time of year can offer productive fishing but without question "flip-flop" time out here is the most consistent. Day in and day out the dry fly fishing from now through early October is fairly predictable and the fish appreciate the ample supply of food, cool nights, and comfortable water temperatures. The banks and surface of the river will be littered with Stoneflies, Hoppers, October Caddis, small Terrestrials, small Caddis, Cahills, BWO's, varieties of Caddis, and a few other less abundant Mayflies. Water volumes welcome the wade fisherman with shallow gravel bars and ample structure approachable on foot.  The Lower Canyon in the fall lends itself to safe wading. Drifting anglers should consider shorter floats and focused efforts in the 'fishy zones'.  Perhaps even utilizing smaller more natural patterns if the big leggy C-ant/Dave's Hopper program is slow. By this point in the year, these trout have seen a lot of different fly patterns and far too much 3X tippet. 4,5, and even 6X tippet will help your presentation and once Wilson Creek begins to drop (soon hopefully) the water clarity in the Lower Canyon will become quite clear and the trout's discrimination on tippet size will definitely be a factor. Enjoy the great fishing, nice weather, and comfortable wading.  This is one of the few times that any section, almost any fly, on almost any day can yield good results.  

NOTE:  The Farmlands blockage is almost (is) impassible and until the water gets a bit lower it is not safe for even attempting to push a boat over the log piles.  Two of our most experienced guides both had close calls going through yesterday.  They rowed through by themselves (without guests) with each one helping the other through by standing on the log jam and pushing the boat through by hand before it got sideways.  Not exactly an easy nor safe passage.  The blockage is located between Irene and Ringer.

08/30/2008

Anglers: Bill, Doug, and Joe.

Location: Ringer to MM10

Flies: Dave's Hopper (yarn body) #8, Parachute Hopper w/ rubber legs and hair body, Yellow Parachute Hopper (Schroeder's Style) #10, Zug Bug #12, Fly Formerly Known as Prince #16

Time: 6:30 am - 4 pm

Results: 10+ trout landed, 8"-17"

Great fishing on the Yakima right now, everybody seems to be catching fish and using a variety of tactics. Our guide staff seems to be reporting that any strategy, i.e. big dry fly, small dry fly, dry dropper, or even full blown indicator nymphing is all productive as long as you present it well. Most of us will stick to straight dry flies, but if the dry action slows down don't assume that the fishing is off. We tied droppers on and did quite well fishing a "Hopper Dropper" rig yesterday. Flows are dropping and the best fishing (most consistent) of the year will happen over the next 2 months. Combine that with an opportunity to wade fish the Yakima and that is a good combo. River flows will be down to 2000 cfs soon and many would agree that is the benchmark that defines "wadability" in the Lower Yakima Canyon. Also, we are finally into the time of year the banker's hours are paying off and you can predictably have good fishing during civilized hours. The 8-5 program is working just fine. We hope to see you at the fly shop, and also pick up the new copy of Northwest Fly Fishing because there is a great article on the Wenatcheee River this month. Thanks, Red's.

08/27/2008

Anglers: Shan, Roc, and Joe.

Location: Klickitat River

Flies: Articulated Goblin, Stone Nymphs, Glo Bugs.

Time: 7 am - 2 pm

Results: 5 Confirmed hook ups, 2 on the Swing!

We took a scouting trip to the Klickitat yesterday and had great fishing, hooking fish on a Spey Rod is a special thing. Especially when they are DIME bright! The Klickitat is in great shape and should hold its clarity unless we get some really hot weather, or get rain in the mountains. Our guide staff is ready and anxious to run some one or two day trips down there, all of the information you need to plan a guided trip to the Klickitat is available here, including lodging. Just give the shop a buzz and make an appointment with your first Steelhead of 2008!  The Yakima continues to fish great, but it looks like we are in for some wind today.  Other than that conditions couldn't be more perfect and are becoming more beginner friendly every day as the water drops.

08/24/2008

Anglers: Karen and Joe.

Location: KOA to Ringer

Flies: Yellow Paranobyl #10, Dave's #8, Plan B Brown #8, Gypsy King #8/6

Time: 7 am - 2 pm

Results: About 10 trout landed. Flip Flop has begun!

We have waited all year for this time, the Yak is on the drop and should unveil some of the best dry fly fishing of the year over the next couple of weeks. The trout living tight to the fast water against the brushy banks are finally breathing a sigh of relief and are getting comfortable drifting out away from the bank to grab the occasional Hopper, Summer Stone, Ant, are anything that looks tasty and leggy! The workload of having to return to their holding lie after pursuing a dry has been practically cut in half by this initial drop of water. Although there is still plenty of depth against the bank for these trout to hold the "water pressure" in their holding lies has been greatly diminished which makes the tasty morsels formerly floating by just out of reach a bit more feasible for them. The 'strike zone' has grown tremendously. There will still be plenty of stubborn trout, especially the big ones, but we would strongly recommend letting your fly fish the seams and peel away from the bank if the water tends to push it there. In addition to the water drop our weather is going to begin favoring the mid day hours much more with cooler nights and what tends to be slightly overcast weather. The hay cutting season coupled with surrounding forest fires tend to give us just enough haze to build a light cloud cover most days, anything to take the edge off sure helps.  By the way, the Klickitat is fishing.  Summer Steelhead anyone?

08/21/2008

Anglers: Tony, Gary, Steve, and Joe. Riding Lina, Cinammon, Splash, and Paint in that order.

Location: A High Mountain Lake

Flies: Royal Parachute, Parachute Ant, Black Bugger #10, and Damsel Nymph

Time: 10 am - 6 pm (including riding on horseback, we fished about 3 hours)

Results: 4 trout landed, about 10 hookups.

We took a spectacular trip this past Monday and rode horseback into a high mountain lake to do some fly fishing for Cutthroat with our friends at Pacific Crest Outfitters. The experience was second to none, with great horses and awesome wranglers to help make the riding and mountian experience smooth, safe, and fun. It was a great ride covering nearly 15 miles and taking us by many lakes and we fished one of them for 3 hours. The unexpeceted rain put a damper on the rise but we did manage a few fish and got some good sight casting action to risers with a small dry fly. The beauty and overall experience is hard to even explain, this is a trip that we will be offering various packages for. A great trip for the whole family or maybe just some old pals. There will be multi-day overnight trips, day trips, and perhaps even a ride in trip to fish a high mountain stream for Cutthroat!

On the Yakima River, fishing continues to be good. Yesterday we had pretty good dry fly fishing in the Lower Canyon with about 6 trout landed in the 10-16" range all on dry flies. Certainly the nymphs will likely yield better numbers but it is hard to put down the dry fly rod while there are so many hoppers and stoneflies lining the banks!

08/17/2008

Anglers: Steve, Jerry, and Joe

Location: Irene to Red's (the logjam is tight but passable - experts only!)

Flies: Dave's Hopper #8, Plan B #8, Tan Paranobyl w/ white legs #8/6, Yellow Paranobyl #10, LB #16, Conehead 20" er, the NEW K Stone Black and Gold #8

Time: 8 am - 5 pm

Results: 10 + trout landed.

Fishing has been great this past week, the dries are good enough to be in the game all day long. Nymph if you like but I would say that it is optional... Flows are pretty steady and all sections are fishing great with each guide working multiple sections of river and spreading out. Be very careful out there with the high flows because more than one boat has been tipped over this year, the log jam below East Cle Elum is tight but passable, same with the jam below Irene Rhinehart). Good luck out there, not much for advice other than get out there and get wet!

08/12/2008

Anglers: Steve, Steve, and Joe

Location: Red's to Slab

Flies: Gypsy King #8/10, Para Hopper Yellow #8, Yellow Paranobyl #8/10, Dave's Hopper #8, Pat's Stones, Conehead 20"er Stone, Double Beaded Peacock Stone #10, Pearl LB #14, FB CDC PT BH #14

Time: 8 am - 12 pm

Results: 6 + trout landed.

We took one of the local News stations out, KIMA TV out of Yakima on Sunday and filmed a nice special about the lodge, the river, and what its like to do one of the best jobs on earth all while helping out the local tourism economy of Ellensburg and Yakima. It was a fun day and we hooked enough fish, we're always amazed how a News team can take hours of great video and condense it several minutes! I think we should get a half hour segment next time. Overall it was a fun time, but it seems like every time the camera is on us the fish get a little camera shy themselves and we didn't put any "big" trout in the boat. Plenty of smaller fish, but the true 18"er eluded us. All in all the fishing is still pretty good and it seems like most boats coming through the store are turning enough fish on dries to justify fishing them all day long, the guides are doing well and it really helps to have a great rower when the river is high. Early mornings and late evenings have slowed a bit and thankfully the trout have been biting pretty well mid-day. There are plenty of hoppers so stick with the basics and make sure to get that fly as tight to the bank as possible.  Click here to see the Video!

08/06/2008

Anglers: Kevin Josh, and Joe

Location: Upper Canyon - Cle Elum to Thorp

Flies: Dave's Hopper #10/12, Orange Parachute Stimultor #8, Orange PMX #8, Silver Winged Thing #10, Red Winged Thing #10

Time: 6 am - 3 pm

Results: 10+ trout landed.

Fishing is rockin' right now, "no guarantees about tomorrow", but I'll bet 5 out of next 7 days will be GREAT dry fly fishing. The Lower Canyon was absurd yesterday on dry flies, and since we had the same anglers 2 days in a row on a guided trip we hit the Upper Canyon today and it was superb too.  We landed a fish that taped 13.5" AROUND yesterday.  A milestone for the angler, fattest fish ever landed by a seasoned vet. There were not as many big fish in the Upper River, but the quantity of Cutts was outstanding and it was all on dry flies. Also, we would like to add that a boat got tipped over in the big log jam just below the East Cle Elum access. It sounded like everybody got out ok, we picked up some of the loose items floating downstream but were told the boat was a complete loss by some other floaters that tried to tie up and corral it. We sincerely hope everybody is all right and there were no injuries. We'll consider the East Cle Elum downstream section all but closed to anyone but very advanced rowers, it's pretty tight and fast.

08/03/2008

Anglers: Phillip, Matt, and Joe

Location: Umtanum to Roza

Flies: Winged Thing Silver #8, Kingfisher - Any size!, Dave's Hopper #10, Orange Parachute Stimultor #8, Tan Chernobyl Ant #6, Parachute Summer Stone #8

Time: 7 am - 1 pm

Results: 10+ trout landed, up to 15".

Great Dry Fly Fishing! Finally the fishing has turned the corner in the Lower Canyon and the Hopper fishing is fairly consistent. Try to get out while there is some shade on the water, this might mean staying out late or even getting up early and hitting the water while a shadow is being cast by one of the big hillsides of the Lower Canyon. We hosted one of our RFS 2 Day Schools this weekend and had a couple of father/son combos join our group and it was a great weekend. We spent most of the day Saturday learning all of the basic fly casting skills like tight loops, shooting line, double haul, steeple casts, and more. We had an entomology lesson (on the river!), knot tying class, fly selection class, and more. In the afternoon we wade fished many of the side channels of the Ellensburg Farmlands and learned dry fly fishing skills including reading water, upstream dry fly presentations, downstream approaches, mending (of course), and some advanced roll casting techniques for keeping your fly out of the brush. On Sunday we got the boys on the water by 7 am (sometimes a feat with teenagers!) and had a wonderful morning of dry fly fishing in the Lower Canyon. Overall it was a good weekend and fun to take a step back from guiding and actually slow down to teach some of the skills that will help make anglers independent without a guide. Great weekend and fun to see some kids taking off with the sport.

07/27/2008

Anglers: Jim, JJ, and Joe

Location: South Cle Elum to Thorp Bridge

Flies: Orange Parachute Stimulator, Plan B (Brown #8), Yellow Paranobyl #10, Pat's Stones, Hare's Ear Stone #8 (Double Beaded w/ black legs), Dave's Hopper #8, Lime Green PMX #10, Scupzilla 8,4

Time: 11 am - 8 pm

Results: 10+ trout landed, up to 14".

Overall the fishing is pretty good, naturally some days are better than others but if you like throwing dry flies against the bank this is the time to fish. Yesterday we couldn't seem to find the big fish but we sure had a good time turning good numbers of smaller fish on Hoppers and other various dry flies. We threw nymphs and streamers too in an attempt to locate some of the big fish that live in the Upper Yakima but it was to no avail. The big fish we did see ate a dry fly but unfortunately we were unable to connect, typical fish story... the big one got away! Imagine that. Nothing real new to report other than the Klickitat River is fishing decent for early summer steelhead and the Naches River is in good wade fishing shape finally. Good luck and maybe we'll see you at the shop.

07/24/2008

Anglers: Jim, John, and Joe

Location: Bighorn to Roza

Flies: Dave's Hopper #8/10/6, Tan Parachute Hopper #8/10, Lime Green PMX #10, Yellow Paranobyl #10, Plan B #8, Grey Triple Decker #8

Time: 5 am - 2 pm

Results: About 6 trout landed, with a nice Cutt at 14".

Joke of the week.... what is the difference between a Pizza and a Fly Fishing Guide?...........................a Pizza can feed a family of 4!........One of our guests told us that the other day.  Pretty funny.

We went D.F.O. all day yesterday, that translates to Dry Fly Only in guide grammar. It was pretty decent fishing and to land 6 means we rose +/- 30 trout to our fly which isn't a bad day of fishing. It certainly gets better than this at times, in fact it was one of the slower days we have had but that is still good fishing. Out of the all of the trout we rose, 80% were within 6 inches of the bank. Make sure to bring extra flies and punch them in tight to the salad. With flows at 4000 cfs there is not a lot of wiggle room for the trout to come out away from the bank for a fly. Good casting technique will set you apart from the crowd right now, it is all about slipping that fly in very tight to the bank and also doing it in a manner that promotes a 'drag free drift' even if it is only for a few feet. Learning how to reach cast on both sides of the river, while delivering the fly at high speed with controlled slack is the ultimate cast.  Ask your guide to show you a few tricks.  Other ideas are fresh tapered leaders, they seem to turn over better and float more naturally along the bank.  Leaders peaced together with Maxima work great for very good casters but for intermediate anglers a clean 7.5' - 9' leader tends to drift really well in comparison to hand tied leaders.  They are softer and flex better.  Also, lighter tippets help the fly hold its position along the bank.  This is a double edged sword but 4X helps it hang in the soft water along the bank for a second or 2 longer than 2X.  You might lose a few more flies but it is worth consideration.  Good luck!

07/21/2008

Anglers: Arne, Pete, and Joe

Location: South Cle Elum to Thorp Bridge

Flies: Orange Parachute Stimulator, Plan B (Brown #8), Yellow Paranobyl #10, Pat's Stones, Hare's Ear Stone #8 (Double Beaded w/ black legs), Dave's Hopper #8, Lime Green PMX #10, Scupzilla 8,4

Time: 8 am - 4 pm

Results: 10+ trout landed, up to 14".

We had a pretty good day upriver on Saturday, lots of small fish up to the dry fly but the larger fish seemed to hibernating during the daytime. Overall, everything is fishing pretty good and conditions are perfect. We did have a very tough day in the LC on Friday, but other than that one day the Lower Canyon has been pretty good and kicking out some BIG fish as you can see by the picture of Jim up above! The Naches is in perfect shape for wading right now and fishing good. It is finally low enough to step out and get your legs wet in the 90 degree heat and catch some Cutthroat. Focus on Terrestrial patterns on the Naches, think Stoneflies on the Yakima. Good luck!

07/17/2008

Anglers: Buck, Ernie, and Joe

Location: Ringer to Roza

Flies: Almost everything, Black Plan B #6/8, Tan Paranobyl #8, Red Turk's #8, Yellow Turks #8/10, Dave's Hopper #8, Orange PMX #8, Caddis CDC Emerger #16/18, 20"er Stone Nymph #6, Pat's Stones #8/10, Sculpzilla Olive #6/10, JJ Bugger #6, Fly Formerly Known as Prince #16, CDC Prince #16, CDC PT #16

Time: 5 am - 5 pm

Results: 10 + Trout Landed!

Good fishing yesterday, it started out very slow in the early morning but we were pleasantly surprised to have good fishing most all day once the sun hit the water. It made us wonder what in the heck we were doing up at 4 am to get on the water! Banker's hours would have worked just fine yesterday. As you probably read, we threw everything at the trout yesterday and had success on each strategy. Early in the morning the dry fly fishing was slow and the few fish that we could bring up were quite small so we shifted gears and threw streamers on floating lines against the cut banks and underneath the trees and managed to hang a few nice ones doing that. After we got tired of streamer fishing and a few close calls involving the guide's ears and a new piercing, we switched up to indicators and nymphs and did pretty well nymphing. The flow is perfect right now for summertime fishing and you don't need to run too much weight until the flow gets up near 4000 cfs. Most Stone Nymphs will have enough weight to pull down a dropper just fine. When the flow bumps up though start thinking about a #4 Dinzmore above your nymphs. Well after we got tired of nymphing and losing a few flies on the bottom we decided to give the dry fly fishing a shot again even though it was mid day. We tied them on and didn't go 200 yards before we found fish feeding on Caddis, it took quite a few casts and one fly change to find the right pattern and we stuck a nice 15"er that was feeding against a shady cut-bank. After that it was a Big Dry Fly in the front of the boat and a nymph rig out of the back and we had a pretty decent day. We also may have hooked the first Chinook reported of the season as well, we were nymphing the shallow side of a fast deep ledge and hooked up on a #6 20" er Stone that was being fished solo. The fish took, we both thought it was bottom for a few seconds and then it started to take off hard toward the shallows peeling line, I dropped anchor because it was going upstream and then it made a direction change but kept peeling line into the middle of the river in big flow with the reel screaming (3300 cfs!). By the time it got close to the backing it was time to try and slow him down, even a 6 weight Z-Axis couldn't get his head turned and finally it broke off on 2X Flouroflex! Unbelievable fish, we hook a few like that a year and we'll never know what it was. Kind of makes me think of a King, but Summer Steelhead and jumbo Trout will do that too. It is pretty cool to see fish that give you goosebumps once in a while. The Yakima is a big river and you never know what you are going to hook into out there. On other river reports, the Naches and Methow are both in PRIME shape finally after a long runoff and the Methow has been kicking out some really nice Cutt Bows. The Naches has been great on numbers of trout, with a few bigger fish being caught but plenty of scrappy little Cutts and Bows that will come up to a dry fly. Great for 3 or 4 weight you have been wanting to use!

07/12/2008

Anglers: --

Location: --

Flies: Suggestions... Plan B # 8/6, Red Turk's # 8, Dave's Hopper # 10, Triple Decker # 10/8, Marathon Bug # 8/6, 20"er Stone Nymph # 8/6, Prince Harry # 16, CDC Caddis Emerger, X Caddis Olive # 16

Time: --

Results: Overall... good fishing on dry flies and nymphs.

With so many anglers and guides out fishing over the past 2 days, it was hard to audit a single report and accurately demonstrate the conditions. Some advanced anglers have put up grotesque body count on fish, while a few others have had to work pretty hard for even just a few. It depends a lot on the time of day and if you are "dialed in" and making the "kill shots" on the feeders in the evening time or the bank dwellers looking to suck in a few Grasshopper during the mid day hours. Overall, conditions are near perfect regarding water flows.  The Yakima is in beautiful color condition and relatively stable at around 3200 cfs. While it is a bit high for wading, the float program with a cooler full of cold drinks is a pretty sweet way to go. If you are a wade fisherman, think about the Naches or Little Naches as a pedestrian opportunity. Our most consistent dry fly fishing will happen over the next 3 months on all rivers, i.e. the Yak (Upper and Lower), the Naches, and the Methow River. GET your trips on the calendar now because you will regret it when we post some more pics of 18"ers choking on Hopper patterns. It looks like a good Hopper year already and if we could pick one fly to fish all summer long on the Yakima, it would float high, have a yellow belly, and have some big ol' drumsticks hanging off the sides! Trout love 'em. They are meaty and good, even some people eat grasshoppers, try one.  Anybody ever watch Man vs. Wild? You know what I'm talking about. Good luck out there, keep fighting the good fight. 

07/10/2008

Anglers: Joe and Steve

Location: Big Horn To Lmuma

Flies: sz. 6-12 Winged Thing, Plan B, Hoppers, and Stimis; sz. 14, 16 Bloom's Caddis, EH Caddis, and CDC Emergers

Time: 7:00 AM until 3:00 PM

Results: Good dry fly fishing

We started the day throwing big dries tight to the banks, but only found a few volunteers, so we changed gears to Caddis. Once we did that, we started picking fish up consistently on both the adult and emerger patterns. You do see a lot of dinks come up on small dries, but don't give up too easy. We also hit a couple of very nice trout in zones where only dinks were coming up. The flows are well below the seasonal average, so the big dry fly water (deep slots tight to the bank with a good straight current) is not as abundant as it could be. We expect the big dry fly fishing to improve as flows come up. The Caddis hatch yesterday was heavy, and there were a fair number of fish feeding up and down the foam lines. The nymphing has been the most productive in the faster moving, more oxygenated zones. For the time being, come out and take advantage of some great summertime water conditions and beautiful weather!

07/05/2008

Anglers: --

Location: --

Flies: --

Time: --

Results: Awesome Conditions

The Yakima is finally in near perfect summertime condition with flows that are stable and green the fun of summer can finally begin. Think about using primarily dry flies in the low-light hours and nymphs during the heat of the day. There are a few Hoppers roaming the shore and in the next couple of weeks we will see the trout begin responding to them during the mid-day hours. Right now however, we are at the onset of the annual Summer Stonefly Hatch on the Yakima River and it can be some of the best dry fly fishing of the year. Big Stimulators, Parachute MX's, Chernobyl Ants, Turk's Tarntulas, or a fly called a Plan B are all good ideas. Just fish them really tight to the trees and grass where the Stoneflies are likely to crawl in or out of the water.  The volume is a bit high for wade fishing, but the floating is great.  Longer floats and fishing 'on the go' is the best strategy. The Naches is in good condition color wise but still a bit high for ideal floating, but over the next few weeks it should be absolutely perfect for a float trip combined with wet wading during the day. We hope you had a great 4th of July and we hope to see you soon on the Yakima!

07/03/2008

Anglers: Pat, Shawn, and Steve

Location: Ringer to Lmuma

Flies: Size 6-10 Stonefly Nymphs, Size 12-18 LB's, Size 14,16 PT's, Size 6-10 Big Dries

Time: 10 am - 7 pm

Results: 12 Rainbows (8"-16") 1 Whitefish landed

With flows at 4500 cfs, the Yakima continues to stabilize and drop. Clarity is favorable and the nymph fishing yesterday was good all day long. We saw the first Summer Stonefly adults of the season on one of the rock walls.The Hoppers are about a size 12 and growing daily. The big dry fly fishing that we've waited for is just around the corner. The Caddis rise in the evening, especially between the shop and Roza, has been good if you can stay out until dark. HAPPY 4th of July from all of us at Reds!

07/02/2008

Anglers: --

Location: --

Flies: --

Time: 1 pm - 10 pm

Results: Back in Action

The Yakima is dropping and clearing and we are back in action starting today. There is a bout 12-18" of vis in the Lower Canyon, slightly better in the Farmlands Section but make sure to steer clear of the Irene to Ringer section as there is a was a bad log jam in there before the push of water and we haven't been in there yet to evaluate it. The Summer Stonefly hatch is beginning to get rolling and the Caddis at dark should be exceptional on the "HOT" days. We should be done with any major water fluctuations for the year and in good shape for summertime. We'll update the report again in the next couple of days but the river should be fishing again starting today. Thanks and good luck!

06/29/2008

Anglers: Arne, Peter, and Joe

Location: Ringer to Slab

Flies: Black K Stones #6, Prince Harry #16, Fly Formerly Known as Prince #16, CDC PT FB BH #16, CDC Caddis Emerger #16 (grey), X Caddis Olive #16, Tan Paranobyl #8, Gypsy King #8, Red Turk's Tarantula #8

Time: 1 pm - 10 pm

Results: About 10 trout landed, good average size.

The fishing yesterday and last night was actually pretty good despite river levels shooting upward, the caddis hatch during the last hour of daylight was spectacular with quite a few rising fish. You definately had to stay out late though to experience it. We couldn't even see our flies or a splash on a couple of the fish we hooked at the end of the day. It was fishing by brail! Fishing today however is pretty poor so far as we have had a few reports already of bad fishing, one of our guides put a nice trout in the boat this morning but overall the river is pretty much out of shape with unstable water and a lot of turbidity. It should settle down over the next few days, clear up, and stabilize at around 4000-4500 cfs hopefully. There are still a few hearty anglers out there giving it a go, best of luck to them and hopefully a few trout get caught today and tommorow. Hit it later this week or over the weekend of the 4th. Good luck!

06/26/2008

Anglers: Mark, Clay, and Steve

Location: Lower Yak (Tri Cities)

Flies: sz. 6-10 Stone Nymphs, sz. 12-16 Prince Harry, sz. 12-16 Lightening Bugs, sz. 14, 16 FBPT, sz. 8 Bugmeister, sz. 6 Electric Blue Stimi, sz. 16 CDC Caddis Emerger

Time: 9:00 am until 5:30 pm

Results: 10-12 Rainbows landed(10"-19"), a NPM, and a Whitefish

With unseasonably low river levels and great clarity, the fishing has been pretty good in the canyon. We did throw some big dries the past 2 evenings and had lots of action. We landed a couple of nice fish on big dries in the shadows, but most of our interest to them came from smaller trout. The nymphing has been very good during the day, with much of the action coming in the zones of faster, more oxygenated water. We expect the flows to be bumping up soon with 90 plus degree weather in the forecast; however, for the time being, we're happy to make the most of the great conditions and weather!

06/24/2008

Anglers: Stacy and Steve

Location: Lower Yak (Tri Cities)

Flies: sz. 4 Black and Yellow Bass Buster

Time: 10:30 am until 6:30 pm

Results: 5 or 6 Smallmouth Bass to hand (one pushing 5 pounds!)

We spent a beautiful day on the Lower Yakima near Tri Cities swinging for Bass on a sink tip. We had caught some smaller fish recently down there, and figured the bigger bass may have headed back out to the Columbia, but all of the fish Stacy landed except for one were in the 2+ pound range, including one behemoth! We began the day fishing the mid river riffles with little success. We switched to the tight to the bank program in the afternoon and started hitting fish immediately. The largest fish of the day came after Stacy's fly bumped a grass pile and then released into the current. Once hooked, the Bass put up a great fight yesterday, with most of them going aerial. The trout section of the Yakima is currently in beautiful condition in terms of both flow level and clarity. Tonight might be the night we get back on track with some Caddis, and hopefully the big dries of Summertime!

06/23/2008

Anglers: Rob, Rick, and TJ

Location: Red's to Mahre's

Flies: sz. 6,8 Stone Nymphs, sz. 14 PMD nymph, sz. 16 FBPT, sz. 14,16 Prince, sz. 14 Caddis Pupae, a few Caddis dries in the evening.

Time: 9:30 am until 7:00 pm

Results: 3 nice Rainbows, quite a few dinks, a couple Whities, and a NPM!

The summertime irrigation flows have begun to ramp up in the Yakima system. With releases from Lake Cle Elum, flows bumped up over 1000 cfs this weekend and should begin to taper out this week. The fishing definitely slowed down, especially the dry fly fishing; however, with lots of focus and a rally late in the day, we manageed to land some nice trout and have a great time. We only saw 3 or 4 fish feeding on the surface all day, which we hope gets back on track as flows stabilize this week. We are now entering the Hopper and Summer stone season which will make the twilight hours of early morning and late evening prime times to be on the water. Overall, clarity is not bad right now, as the water that is released from the reservoirs is settled and generally clean. We've also been spending time on the Lower Yak in pursuit of Bass and the Naches chasing wild Cutthroat through the whitewater. The weather forecast for this week looks great, and we're hoping to find some gamers lined up in the Hopper lanes SOON!

06/18/2008

Anglers: --

Location: -- --

Flies: PMD's during mid-day, Caddis and Stoneflies at dusk.

Time: 7 am

Results: The Yakima River is in perfect condition!

All the high water and nasty weather of spring time is long gone and we are cashing in on Mother Nature's generosity right now with PERFECT flows and conditions on the Yakima River. The river is low and clear with great PMD hatches mid day and the nymphing has been excellent both before and after the PMD hatch. If you are out until dusk the Caddis hatch during the last hour of the day can be spectacular, especially on the really hot days. If it is cooler during the day then typically the Caddis will be light. Try to take advantage of the current conditions if possible, it looks like we have another week or so before the summer water will have much of an effect on fishing. Even if they started to release it now there would be several days before the bite turned sour. There are a few Golden Stones around mid day still and it looks like there are a few Summer Stoneflies out and about as well, water temps hit 61 degrees yesterday so the shorts/sandals program is fine for wading. You can all but leave the waders at home, especially if they are neoprene.   If you want to get the right shoe for summertime wading, pick up a set of Simms River Sandals. They have a closed toe and a felt bottom with similar construction to Keen Sandals which you probably already have 2 pairs of.  If you prefer a boot for wet wading, try a set of Simms Guard Socks underneath.  It is nice to shed the waders this time of year if you can. Regarding other reports, the Naches River is fishing pretty good and we are in the middle of prime float season down there. As you can see by today's pics, it is a fast and fun ride.

06/16/2008

Anglers: Bruce, Diane, and Troy

Location: Ringer - Red's --

Flies: Pearl LB 16, Green Sparkle Pupae, CDC FB PT, EHC 16, Olive X Caddis 16, Parachute X Caddis, P Stone, RCJ 16, Double Beaded Peacock Stone #8, Black Double Beaded Stone #8/10

Time: 10 am - 9 pm

Results: 2 bigger trout, many smaller fish, and some Whitefish.

Great day on the river, finally it feels like summertime in the canyon. It has been a long spring and it is finally starting to turn. The water is low and clear and the fishing is pretty good on PMD's mid day and Caddis at Dusk. Try to take advantage of the low water this next week because the flows will ramp up here soon and there will be a few days where the fishing is going to be really tough once the water climbs too much. Although at times, the initial rise upon summer release can make for some incredible nymph fishing as a lot of bugs are knocked free into a mid column drift. The release water coming out of the Cle Elum River will be quite clear throughout most of the release and the first few days can be awesome. Once it gets to 4000 cfs though, it will take a few more days for the fish to completely adjust to their new setting. Regarding other reports, the Naches River is running very high and is tough to wade but the floating is a good time right now and the fishing is quite good. It is very technical whitewater trip and provides some supplemental adrenaline with your guided fly fishing trip!

06/13/2008

Anglers: --

Location: --

Flies: --

Time: --

Results: RIVER BLOCKAGE

There is a complete river blockage between Irene Rhinehart Park and Ringer Road. It is kind of like the old days in there when it was blocked for a couple of years and you had to push the boat over a log and go through the side channel. Our guides made it through because there were 6 total between the 2 boats that were working together and helped a couple of other boats too, but it could have been a bad situation for a boat by themselves. There isn't any AAA out there so make sure and stay out of the Farmlands until you here otherwise. On another note, GOOD fishing throughout the entire river.

06/12/2008

Anglers: Troy, Shan, and Roc

Location: Umptanum to The Slab

Flies: CDC PT - Flashback #18/16, Lime Green Caddis Pupae #16, Peacock Elk Hair Caddis #18, CDC Caddis Emerger #18/16, PT Soft Hackle #14/16, Brown Caddis Pupae #16

Time: 2:30 - 8:30 pm

Results: Good nymphing, 7 Trout landed, and 1 Whitefish.

The fishing has improved! Even though we got a late start in our day of fishing we had a very productive afternoon. We found that nymphing was the most effective technique, a peasant tail followed by a caddis pupae seemed to work the best. We had the dry rods set up and ready to roll but the only fish we saw rising were 6-10 inches, nothing of substantial size. The little guys are still fun to catch on a three weight, but we were looking for the bigger trout, and they seemed to be mostly sub-surface. We caught a couple throughout the miracle mile right above The Slab. Although nymphing was good yesterday, the PMD and Caddis hatches will continue to get better once this cooler weather passes. Be sure to have some Golden and Summer Stones tied up in your fly box ready for some late afternoon big dry fly action! Hope to see you on the water soon, Red's   

06/08/2008

Anglers: Arne, Blair, and Joe

Location: Bighorn to Red's

Flies: CDC PT - Flashback #18/16, Hare's Ear Prince #16, Fly Formerly Known as Prince #18, Doube Beaded Peacock stone #10, Lime Green Caddis Pupae #16, Gold Ribbed Hare's Ear #16, Sculpizilla - Olive and Black #4, Sheila's Sculpin #6, JJ Special #6, Black Zuddler #4

Time: 9 - 5 pm

Results: 6 trout landed (none over 12") and a ton of whitefish, no fish on dry flies.

The 50 mph wind was too much yesterday. Between the rough wind and the big pressure change the trout fishing was quite a challenge. We battled hard but the whitefish were on the attack and that is all it seemed like we could catch all day. To mitigate the wind and whitefish We threw streamers for a couple of miles with only a single grab. Even when we would anchor up in the good trout buckets and riffles the whitefish would beat the Rainbows to the fly. We felt good though after taking on conditions like that and still managing to land some fish. It was a tough day to be fishing despite perfect river conditions. Good job to all those guys out there rowing boats, it was a tough day to even land a single fish whether it was a whitey or a trout. The forecast looks like it is going to calm down today a bit and Monday will be a little better too. We really want that dark cloudy weather back. It gave us such good dry fly fishing a few days ago. The PMD hatch was spectacular again yesterday with bugs everywhere for at least 2-3 hours, but unfortunately the big pressure change and suddenly sunny skies kept them down on the bottom and not feeding much. Look for the next dark cloudy day to bring the dry fly fishing back, especially if it rains. Until then, plan on nymphing with some extra split shot to neutralize the wind-caused drag on the indicator. Nymphing in the wind is tough because the mends get knocked down and it causes a ton of drag. The extra weight combined with steep downstream casting angles (when in a drifter) will really help the floats. Lateral casting is fine in calm conditions when combined with a high stick, but in the wind highsticking turns into a kite flying episode. Downstream approaches keep more fly line on the waterand the wind can blow the indicator over the top of the fly allowing for a few seconds of perfect drift. - Just a couple of ideas to better your success in a tornado. Red's

06/06/2008

Anglers: TJ

Location: Red's to Mahre's

Flies: Parachute PMD's, PMD Comparadun #16, CDC PT #16, Homemade PMD Nymphs #14/16

Time: 10 am - 5 pm

Results: 10 + trout landed, lots on dry flies.

It's ON. No need for any more foreplay just go fishing. Conditions don't get any better than this, the PMD hatches in the lower canyon have been spectacular and the nymphing is semi-automatic and could go full-auto at any time.

06/03/2008

Anglers: Jim, Ken, and Steve.

Location: Lower Yakima River

Flies: Yellow and Black BASS BUSTERS Size 4.

Time: 10 am - 5 pm

Results: 8 Smallmouth to hand (2-4 pounds).

We got some Bass fishing in yesterday and landed some nice ones throwing Bass Busters on heavy sink tips. The water was fairly muddy but the Bass were aggressive and fought absolutely awesome, especially since they are working with a lot of current right now. Smallmouth are amazing fighters. No matter how many you see hooked the way they fight is always impressive. The best smallmouth fishing of the year should be in the next 3 weeks as the lower Yakima clears up and drops a little bit more. If you haven't ever tried it just give us a call and we'll get you out on the river with one of our guides. If you want to try it in your own boat, stop by the shop or email and we'll give you the info on flies and where to launch. It is awesome.

06/01/2008

Anglers: Arne, Garth, and Joe.

Location: Irene to Ringer

Flies: About the same as the day before... CDC Flashback PT 16, Golden Stone (Dry - Clark Style) #8, Golden Stone Nymph #6/8, Green Sparkle Pupae #16, Pearl LB #16, Fly FKA Prince #16, CDC PT #16, Trout MRE #16, Elk Hair Caddis #14, CDC Caddis Emerger #16.

Time: 9:30 pm - 7:30 pm

Results: About 10 trout landed 10-17" and many more Whitefish

The momentum finally shifted in favor of the angler yesterday with great nymph fishing. Still not much in the way of feeding fish on the surface although there were a few. We hooked one nice fish on an adult Golden, LOTS of Golden Stones in the Lower Canyon right now. We probably saw 20 adults which is a great showing for this hatch. Overall the fishing is pretty good in the Lower Canyon. Stay out till dark for the best shot at feeding fish.

5/31/2008 pm

Anglers: Mark, Dan, and Joe.

Location: Irene to Ringer

Flies: Green Sparkle Pupae #16, Pearl LB #16, Fly FKA Prince #16, CDC PT #16, Trout MRE #16, Elk Hair Caddis #14, CDC Caddis Emerger #16.

Time: 9:30 pm - 7:30 pm

Results: About 6 trout landed 10-16"

The trout continue to impress us with their discipline of appetite. If only the human kind had that much willpower we could put down the bacon cheeseburgers, cigarettes, and beer so that we could be wade fishing into our 90's! The catching is still a bit slow and conditions are no longer an excuse with good clarity throughout the system and stable flows. Today we are expecting 79 degrees and cloudy, that feels like PMD weather so today could be our gamebreaker. When the fishing gets slow like it has been over the past week make sure to patiently and methodically work over the water that you know there to be trout holding. Typically they will grab the first drift past them but right now it seems like it has to be just perfect. In addition, the glacial tinge to the water is allowing the fish to feel secure and they are not very spooky. Short floats and detail wading is a good idea. Last night there was a good evening Caddis hatch and we did raise some fish on dries and hooked one very nice trout on a CDC emerger behind an EHC. If you can stick it out till dark you'll see some good feeding action on the surface but the 3 pm - 7 pm window was pretty much dead. It is starting to feel like summer! Stones are about 2 weeks out, once that happens the evening fishing can be truly spectacular.

5/28/2008 pm

Anglers: TJ, Troy, and Joe.

Location: Irene to Ringer

Flies: Green Sparkle Pupae #16, San Juan Worms, Pearl LB #16, LaFontaine Pupae #16, Pat's Stones, Black K Stone #8, Golden Stone #8, Sculpzilla Black #4, PMD Parachute #16, Elk Hair Caddis.

Time: 12:30 pm - 5:30 pm

Results: 6 Whitefish landed 10-16", and about 8-10 other fish hooked (trout/whitefish).

We found some Whitefish today, not many trout were on the take. The clarity is still fairly low but it seemed to improve throughout the afternoon. It is about 2' in the Farmlands and about 12-18" down in the Lower Canyon section. We hooked a couple of very nice trout today, but unfortunately they didn't make the net or the official tally. The bite is very slow right now, it seems as though the fish are still trying to get adjusted to the new water volume. It isn't likely to drop much from here on through the summer, it is pretty likely that we will stay above 3000 cfs all the way through. By the time the runoff ends the irrigation demand will be high and offset the dropping tributary streams. The clarity doesn't seem to be a real problem as the catch today was all on #16 nymphs.  Our biggest tip is that every single fish hooked was on a small flashy nymph. We can't seem to buy a fish on a Stone Nymph right now - ? Kind of weird. You would think with the big flow that the S. Nymph would be rockin'.  Especially since there are both Salmon Flies and Golden Stones on the move. The Caddis were thick as usual today and we did see a few nice trout rise, but were unable to convert as they were in some pretty tough spots and were unable to get position on them. The Canyon is a little more amenable to anchoring down on feeders right now. There was a light PMD hatch that brought up a few sporadic rises, but they didn't respond to our dry flies. Finicky. Overall, fishing was pretty slow for 3 guides taking a day off but we got a few yanks and opportunities, plus you KNOW we got in some good laughs. Hopping in the drift boat with a couple of buddies is always fun even if the fishing is slow. Good times. Oh yea, has anybody here ever thrown a golf club after a bad shot? Try not to do it with a fly rod because they aren't nearly as durable.   :-) You guys rock, thanks for reading. Red's.

5/28/2008 am

Anglers: Not many.

Location: Lower Canyon

Flies: Some suggestions.... Fly Formerly Known as Prince #16, CDC Prince #16, Green Sparkle Pupae #16, Black Stones, San Juan Worms, Parachute X Caddis, Elk Hair Caddis, Parachute PMD, CDC PT.

Time: --

Results: Still pretty dirty.

The river is still pretty dirty throughout the system with about 12-18" of vis in the Farmlands and about 12" in the Lower Canyon. Most anglers are able to hook a few fish but overall the catching is pretty slow despite blizzard Caddis hatches and a daily emergence of PMD's. The Upper Yakima has finally stabilized and so has the Teanaway River indicating that most of our tributary streams are coming back into check. We have had some rain over the past couple of days that has inhibited the river's ability to clear up, but that just comes with the territory in the springtime. There have been some anglers out here giving it a shot and willing to 'roll-the-dice' and fish despite low visibility. We admire the spirit, you guys define passionate and keep up the good work. Expect the river to clear up a little over the next few days but don't hold your breath. 2' of vis is what we are hoping for and that shouldn't take long.

5/25/2008

Anglers: Bob, Maria, and Joe

Location: Ringer to Red's

Flies: Elk Hair Caddis #16, Parachute Olive X Caddis #16, Black K Stone #8, Fly FKA Prince #16, Prince #16, Bright Green Caddis Pupae #16

Time: 9 am - 5 pm

Results: 4 landed, about 8-10 trout hooked.

The time-bomb is ticking in the lower canyon, the dry fly fishing will blow up any day now. The Caddis hatches are amazing and near blizzard like most of the day, it will almost without a doubt be one of the best hatches you have ever seen if you come out to fish in the next few days. The water clarity is still pretty poor, about 12 inches in the LC and about 18" - 2 ' in the Farmlands on up. The clarity does not really seem to be much of a factor when it comes to the bite. Almost every fish that we saw rise ate the first drift that went over them and all of our fish were hooked on #16's. We did not hook a single fish on a Stone Nymph, only a #16 Prince or a dry fly. Overall, the fishing is pretty slow but we did get a few on dry flies and any day now the fish will decide it is go time and start feeding heavily. They are still getting adjusted after the big water and trying to find a good place to live. Maybe the next few days the bite will improve, but it was a lot of fun getting to sight cast to some rising trout! More of that is on the way soon.

5/22/2008

Anglers: --

Location: The Yakima

Flies: Nymphs

Time: --

Results: Probably by Saturday, you have been very patient.

The Yakima is dropping hard and it looks like we'll be fishing (and hopefully catching) on Saturday but maybe even by Friday afternoon. The clarity is till very poor but since the water is dirty pretty much right out of Lake Easton these fish are not going to wait for clear water. As it begins to drop back down to comfortable levels you can bet these fish will be anxious to feed and downright hungry! We'll try to get a boat in the water tomorrow afternoon but these lakes have kept us pretty distracted. One of our clients landed a beautiful 21" Brown Trout yesterday, congrats! Stay tuned and we'll be in the shop by 8 am Saturday morning if you need a "real time" river report. Also, take notice of 2 new programs that we have started at the shop. Check out the "Rent to Own" page and also see our "Spey Lesson" page too. Thanks guys. Also, for the boat renters out there.  If you rent a boat and decide to order through us, we will credit your $169 rental fee towards the purchase price of the new boat!  Also, we are offering a Drift Boat Consignment program as well.  If you are looking to sell a used drift boat just give us a call and we'll help you move it.

5/20/2008

Anglers: TJ and Mike

Location: Dry Falls Lake and Lake Lenore

Flies: Varieties of Chrironomids, Danzels, Dragons, Leeches, and the Zandoli Zapper

Time: --

Results: Gross Tonage

Sometimes we have to reminded of Central Washington's other great fisheries. The river has been out for a week or so and the boys decided to take off and do some lake fishing. Well, as you can by the pictures see they broke it open yesterday with some BIG FISH! One of those is a legit 25"-26" Lahontan Cutthroat. We have been running a few guided trips on the lakes out there and have a feeling we will be doing some more with the river conditions subject to change. If you are curious on how to fish these lakes, or you just want to go have a good time and try to bag some big fish give us a buzz anytime. As for the river, we hope the Lower Canyon will be back in on Saturday but we're not holding our breath. The Upper is still quite muddy which is somewhat surprising because it is not all that high. For now it is still a waiting game and it is time to go lake fishing. Grab your pontoon boat, get a guide, or you can buy or rent a pontoon boat down at the shop. If you rent a pontoon boat from us you can apply the full rental cost towards the purchase of a new boat, just make sure to ask for a "rental credit" when you get rung up. We have lots of great lake flies and Gary Thompson is usually behind the counter and can give you expert advice on any of the lakes out in Eastern Washington. We also have a couple of good books that are complete with maps and hatch charts. Good luck!

5/16/2008

Anglers: Joe, Tony, and Steve

Location: Snively to Hyde (Lower Yak - Tri Cities)

Flies: sz. 4,6 Bass Buster (Black, yellow), sz. 4 Yak Attack Brown

Time: 10:30 am until 5:30 pm

Results: 6 Smallmouth landed (2 pounds to 4 pounds).

We took one last opportunity yesterday to outrun the deluge of Spring runoff water coming down the Yakima and Naches Rivers, and hit the Lower Yakima for Smallmouth. It doesn't get much better than catching fish on swung flies while wearing shorts and sandals in 90 plus degree weather! The visibility was about 12", which is fine for Spring Smallies, and we found enough fish with that snappy demeanor to keep us focused the entire float - inlcuding 2 huge Carp that came unbuttoned before we got them to the boat. That was OK with us, because there was just no way they would have fit in the net! It's difficult to imagine how hard these Smallmouth pull until you experience it. Even a 2 pounder will bend your 8 weight into the butt section! The Yakima River is currently out throughout the entire system, and it looks like we're going to get the majority of our runoff out of the way in one big shot here. It's probably a good weekend to go see an M's game!

5/14/2008

Anglers: Joe and Steve

Location: Irene to Big Horn

Flies: sz. 6-10 Pat's Stone, sz. 6,8 20"er Stone, sz. 8 HE Dbl Beaded Stone, sz. 8 Peacock Dbl Beaded Stone, sz. 14 Trout MRE, sz. 14-18 Lightening Bugs, sz. 12 - 16 PT's, sz. 14, 16 Caddis Pupaes (Green and Tan), sz. 14 GRHE, sz. 14 EHC, sz. 16 CDC Caddis Emerger, Para March Brown

Time: 9:30 am until 5:30 pm

Results: 10+ trout landed (10"-14").

More nice weather yesterday and good nymph fishing. Flows have continued to come down, and the river is in beautiful shape. We caught more fish on softer seam lines in the morning, and then the quicker moving riffles towards the middle of the day. Not much of a hatch yesterday - Caddis or March Browns, but we did hook some fish around 3:00 drifting a March Brown down a likely looking foam line. Things are supposed to start warming up this afternoon and into tomorrow. We're hoping the river hangs on, but the only thing predictable about the weather and fishing this Spring has been that it's unpredicatable!

5/13/2008

Anglers: Kevin, David, and Steve

Location: Irene to Big Horn

Flies: sz. 6-10 Pat's Stone, sz. 6,8 20"er Stone, sz. 8 HE Dbl Beaded Stone, sz. 8 Peacock Dbl Beaded Stone, sz. 14 Trout MRE, sz. 14-18 Lightening Bugs, sz. 12 - 16 PT's, sz. 14, 16 Caddis Pupaes (Green and Tan), sz. 14 GRHE, sz. 14 EHC, sz. 16 CDC Caddis Emerger

Time: 9:30 am until 6:30 pm

Results: 8+ trout landed (10"-16"), 2 Whitefish, and a BIG, beautiful Yakima River fluvial Sucker.

Talk about a beautiful day on the water... calm, sunny skies, and better fishing than what we experienced over the weekend. It seems like the Upper reaches are fishing better right now. We had lots of Caddis and March Browns flying during the day, but no fish up on them. The nymphing was a mixed bag, with each fly getting a little action, but nothing being a "go to" bug. The river remains in great shape throughout the system. It looks like we're going to see some HOT weather by the weekend - watch the flow graph. We had some excitement yesterday when David's indicator took a dive and he picked up on a heavy fish that took off upriver. We managed to get the boat back up in pursuit, but by the time we got there, the fish quit taking line and was holding - in the middle of a big snag! We jumped out and managed to unwind the line and keep the fish on, which took another big run only to come right back into the same snag again. At this point, we had seen the flash of a BIG fish. We finally got it up and into the net, and found ourselves looking at the prettiest Yakima Sucker David had ever laid eyes on! That's what we call getting taken to the woodshed! That fish was a gamer!

5/11/2008

Anglers: Chuck, Bruce, and Steve

Location: Red's to Roza

Flies: sz. 6-10 Pat's Stone, sz. 6,8 20"er Stone, sz. 8 HE Dbl Beaded Stone, sz. 8 Peacock Dbl Beaded Stone, sz. 14-18 Lightening Bugs, sz. 12 - 16 PT's, sz. 14, 16 Caddis Pupaes (Green and Tan), sz. 14 GRHE

Time: 9:30 am until 6:30 pm

Results: 3 trout landed, a Whitefish, and a few smolt.

Happy Mother's Day! Things looked promising for a Caddis hatch yesterday - bugs flying at 9:00 am, water temps up a full 6 degrees, and blue skies on the horizon; however, clouds, cool weather, and some wind rolled in, and it never materialized. We did see some PMD's mid day, but no fish eating. Water levels have dropped slowly, and visibility is decent at 2'+. I floated Irene to Big Horn on Friday, and we had our best fishing, including the 3 nicest trout of the day, below Wilson Creek. Any day now is going to be the first day that the fish key in on Caddis! Conditions will be changing frequently depending on weather - mostly snow melt and rain, so keep an eye on flows and the forecast! Rod's guest, Steve, landed that nice fish 100 feet below the Red's launch yesterday. At that point, they calculated how many miles they had ahead and how many fish they could land if the formula held. We fishermen - always the eternal optimists! We often tell guests at the end of a tough day - "days like this are what make you appreciate the good days you'll have ahead." It seems like we've said that a lot this Spring... Bring on the Caddis! Steve

5/8/2008

Anglers: --

Location: Teanaway upstream

Flies: --

Time: 8 am

Results: Update.

The cold nights are bringing the Lower Canyon back into shape much faster than expected and we have about 12-18" of visibility right now at the shop, by the end of today we will have at least 2 feet and expect to see some fish feeding on Caddis against the banks. It will definitely be fishing this weekend, PERFECT timing for the the Mother's Day Caddis Hatch! There have been some good hatches and hopefully we will see some great dry fly fishing, as you know it can be one of the best weeks of the year on the Yakima River. The Mother's Day Caddis Hatch is our favorite, nymph fish with Green Sparkle Pupae prior to the hatch and use a Parachute X Caddis, or a standard X Caddis as the hatch begins. After the hatch is complete, think about using a traditional EHC (Elk Hair Caddis) or a Hot Butt Caddis under the trees and stick piles. Good luck!

5/7/2008

Anglers: --

Location: Teanaway upstream

Flies: --

Time: 8 pm

Results: Slow fishing and a fair amount of pressure.

Pretty tough fishing right now on the Upper Yak, the water is relatively stable but overall the bite is slow.  Don't let this prevent you from taking on the river though, an Old Timer once said that, "the difference between a great, good, and poor fishing day is separated by a mere six casts".  Some other guy once said that tough fishing is like a good soccer game because there is not much actual scoring but the entire game is tense, fast paced, and exciting.  That is good advice but really the biggest similarity between soccer and fly fishing is that they both suck to watch on TV versus actually getting out and doing it for yourself.  Unless it is the World Cup and there is a good head butt involved.

The Lower Yakima should come into shape relatively soon with cooler weather helping things, although the Teanaway hasn't dropped much it has cleared a little bit and should continue to do so even if it does not come down a whole lot. Once there is about 18" of vis in the Canyon we should be rockin' on Caddis. There have been some episodes of 'blizzard' like hatches so get ready to hit it when things clear up. It should be very good, the fish will be post spawn and looking to build their weight back up again.  Predictions are that it should clear up enough by this weekend to get some dry fly fishing in.  No promises but after looking at the hydrograph and the extended weather forecast it appears that by about 2:45 - 3 pm on Saturday the LC should have enough vis to fish an Elk Hair Caddis and catch a trout or two.  Again, NO PROMISES but it looks like it will happen for us by Saturday afternoon in the LC on dry flies.

5/6/2008

Anglers: --

Location: Teanaway downstream

Flies: --

Time: 7 am

Results: Big water

The Teanaway downstream is running big and muddy so it will be a couple of days at least before the Lower becomes fishable again. Hopefully this will be just in time for the the MDC hatch to get rolling. The Upper Yak remains in great shape and is fishing, but is pretty slow overall with a lot of pressure working that area due to the Teanaway swelling up. Even if it doesn't drop a lot we should see it start to clear up due to prolonged high flow. Last year it ran at 1000 cfs and relatively clear for extended periods so hopefully the clarity will improve even if the volume stays high. Stay tuned, cooler weather on the way.

5/5/2008

Anglers: John, Jamie, and Joe

Location: MM19 to Red's

Flies: Green Sparkle Pupae #16, Green Rockworm, CDC Phesant Tail #14, Pearl LB #16, Brown Kaufman's Stone #8, 20" er Stone #6, Pat's Stone Olive #8

Time: 9:30 am - 3 :30 pm

Results: 5-6 Trout landed, and 1 Whitefish

Not a bad day yesterday in the Lower Canyon, although the fisher weren't on top hunting Caddis they were definitely onto the Pupae and willing to eat. Some advice from yesterday's experience... work the spots in detail that you know there to be fish. We didn't hook a single fish that wasn't in the 'primo buffet' water. We fished all the pocket water and ledges quite hard, but the edges of the big runs seemed to be the hot spots. Also, most of the larger fish we landed were pretty skinny and looked to be fresh off the spawn so get those big boys back in the water quick. Regarding river conditions, the Tway is rising hard and so is the Upper Yakima and the fishing should be fine today, and maybe tomorrow in the LC, but if you are planning a trip later in the week start thinking about fishing the Upper River or contingency plans at Rocky Ford, Lake Lenore, Lenice, etc. If you need any help with advice or gear let us know and we'll send you in the right direction to try some new water. Red's.

5/2/2008

Anglers: --

Location: Yakima River and the Ellensburg Fairgrounds

Flies: --

Time: --

Results: Great Conditions!

The conditions are near perfect out here on the Yakima, the river is low again and quite clear. That doesn't necessarily mean great fishing but the elements are certainly in our favor right now. We also wanted to remind everybody that tomorrow there is a Fly Fishing Enclave put on by the Washington State FFF at the Ellensburg Fairgrounds. It should be the best fly fishing event of the year, lots of casting, tying, and plenty to see and learn. Combine this with some fishing on the Yakima and that is a fun weekend. Hopefully we will see you there, also we are also excited to report that the Smallmouth fishing on the lower Yak is about to get rockin' and it is a fun trip. We have guides waiting to take you down there and show you the Bass fishing program, or simply call the shop and we'll help set you up with equipment, flies, and access information. See you at fly fishing show! Red's.

4/29/08 LATE p.m.

Anglers: Dave, Frank, and Joe

Location: Ringer to Red's

Flies: Conehead 20"er #6, Double Beaded Peacock Stone #8/10, Hare's Ear Double Beaded Stone #8 (NEW FLY located over by the small nymphs, next the CDC PT's), Pink/Red San Juan Worm #10, Bright Green Caddis Pupae with Krystal Flash #16, Pearl LB #16, Bright Green Rockworm with Black Bead #16

Time: 9 am until 6:00 pm

Results: 10 fish landed, 8 trout (11-16") and 2 whitefish.

We earned each and everyone of those fish today, it feels good to fish a rising river in some big wind and come out of there victorious. Tough games are sometimes the best kind, of course we wouldn't be saying that if it were a 30 fish day on dry flies!  It really does feel good though, we fished our tails off today. The river is coming back down and we even noticed that it was dropping a little bit in the afternoon, tomorrow it should be looking pretty good as the Teanaway begins to plummet. The LC has about 2' of vis and it looks like it will be the place to be in preparation and anticipation of the Caddis Blizzard.  If you are going to get here sometime soon it looks like the first week of May should provide some pretty decent river conditions and be alright into the front half of Mother's Day Weekend. The 15 day forecast looks like we should be solid till about May 9th, just a guess though. This upcoming week looks absolutely awesome for water conditions, no promise of a big hatch but the water should be clear and a shot at some big fish certainly exists, its been a good spring thus far. Today's fishing was tougher than our numbers let on, we got blown around a little bit but the next few days look better for water volume, clarity, and atmospheric stability. We had a high pressure system move in this afternoon that was sunny, but kind of gusty. We got enough action though and broke off an enormous fish on a SJ worm wading an inside corner. It seems like when the water bumps around some of the giants wind up sitting in places they shouldn't, not sure exactly how big it was but it would have probably made the Super Top Secret Red's Fly Shop Unofficial Boone & Crockett Rainbow Trout Record Book.  Please note: To make it in this elite book the fish needs to be photographed in an actual Measure Net and verified by 2 witness (that are not guides!).  Also note, that we don't actually have any entries yet but with the way a few of us measure fish we should start. Enthusiasm is never a bad thing, spread it around a bit while you are on the river! 

4/28/08

Anglers: General Report

Location: The Whole Yakima River

Flies: Get the San Jaun Worms ready, and the bright Green Caddis Pupae, CDC Prince Nymphs, and Lafontaine Sparkle Pupae

Time: 6 am

Results: The river is starting to swell up, but it won't go too far.

We are starting to see some initial runoff from the high country, we have been fortunate thus far to have gotten rid of all the low lying snow without any major speed bumps in our fishing and also without any rain. Last year at this time we were subject to several different weather patterns that brought heavy rains over the top of a deep snow pack, that is when you get some serious blowouts. Last spring we were fishing (with good success) at flows exceeding 4000 cfs at this time, to have had the river below 2000 for so long was really quite surprising. A bump in flows will be good for the fish, it helps them safely regenerate their body mass after the spawn by giving them some protection for the Ospreys, Herons, and Pelicans. Just the other day, an Osprey swooped down no more than 50 feet from us and latched into a nice fat 16" plus Rainbow, it couldn't even take off. It had to do the 'bunny hop' all the way over to dry land before it could get airborne. It was in about 12" of water, that fish was most certainly on the spawn. Increased volume will help the big fish remain safe and send those Ospreys out to the local lakes where they can find some hatchery trout and sunfish leaving our big spawners alone.  The river will swell up a bit, due in part to a very small release from the reservoirs, but it is primarily coming from the Teanaway River. The forecast looks as though it will keep the Tway in check over the next couple days, this might be a bold prediction but I don't think any section of river will become unfishable. The LC cleaned up a lot over the past few days and yesterday morning it was about the same clarity as the Farmlands.  During a water spike like this, the trout in the LC seem to handle the volume/clarity change the best. As a general rule, focus on the Lower Canyon and the Upper Yak above the Tway. Cle Elum to Thorp can be pretty tough if the water is unstable as can the Farmlands, not a rule, just some general advice we have collected by getting our butts kicked on a rising river many many times.

Also, get those Caddis Pupae ready now. The bright greens are good, we have a new rockworm in the shop that officially 'rocks' no pun intended. The CDC Prince is killer during the Caddis hatch, as is the Trout M.R.E. (which is very similar to the G Lafontaine pupae), with some minor upgrades. The Caddis hatch should be big, lots of water 3 years running brings plenty of organic biomass into the stream and as we all know, the Caddis is an herbivore and feasts on this tiny plankton like matter. ALSO, there have been a few adult Salmon Flies spotted so let's start thinking about the following patterns. #6/#4 Brown/Black K Stones, #6 Double Beaded Black Stone, #4 Pat's Stone, #6/4 Orange Paranobyl (which will carry a dropper nicely), Banks Parachute Biot Legged Salmon Fly #6. The Salmon Fly nymph generally works better than the adult for us, especially during times of instability. Big meal, little effort for the trout. Good luck, we'll see you on the flipside. Red's.

4/26/08

Anglers: Troy, Dean, Linda

Location: KOA - Ringer

Flies: Double Beaded Black Stone # 10/8, Lime green Copper John # 14/16, CDC Prince Nymph # 14/16, CDC PT # 14/16, Para March Brown # 14/16 and San Jaun Worms

Time: 9 am - 5 pm

Results: Yesterday was a busy day down here in the canyon, lots of people anxious to get out and wet there lines in one of the nicer days we have seen down here in a while. We had multiple group/company trips yesterday and had guide boats fishing from Cle Elum to Roza. Reports seemed pretty consistant throughout (3 or 4 fish landed per boat, with a lot of hook ups). Although the weather was sunny and starting to get warm, I noticed that the fish were not feeding on top as much as I hoped, but we did see some. This will hopfully change as the weather becomes a little more consistant. The water clairty above Wilson Creek is in great shape with a green hue to it flowing roughly around 2000 CFS. Make sure and Get those dry fly rods ready because the Mother's Day Caddis Hatch is going to happen in the next couple weeks. The Upper River still continues to be consistent with quite the boat traffic as well. I have been noticing that the drift boat traffic down in the canyon has been minimul, with this nice weather rolling in it would be a great time to take the kids or wife down the river in 70 degree sunny weather before the river dirties up a bit due to the massive amounts of snow still left in the mountains. The most consistant bugs for me this past week have been size 14 and 16 CDC pheasant tail, size 10 rubber leg Pat's Stone, 16 green Sparkle Pupa, 14 lime green copper john, 14-16 CDC Prince Nymph, and 14 parashoot March Brown. Just this week the shop recieved about a dozen new fly patterns that we are all anxious to try, and we well let you now how they fish as the reports continue. Our group had a great time on the water yesterday and I will never forget Dean in the front of my boat fighting a nice 16 inch rainbow that seemed like it would never give up. It was a hard earned fish and there was nothing but a big grin on his face for the rest of the day, it was great. I hope to see you all out here this weekend to soak up some rays and catch some fish.

4/22/08

Anglers: --

Location: The Yakima

Flies: Nymphs are the staple, very few rising trout right now.

Time: --

Results: Catch numbers were good, but not important.

What a great couple of weeks on the Yakima, if you are a regular to the site you will notice that there have been more than a few pictures of some exceptional trout from the Yakima. We have been pretty fortunate, but luck truly comes to the anglers that put there time in and keep fishing despite adverse weather, water, and expected productivity. The last 2 weeks have really taught us that even the most perfect conditions can yield some of the slowest fishing, and inversely a few of the days that we found it a little difficult to get out of the warm truck during snow, hail, and 40 mph winds turned out to be some of the better days. You just never know what is going to happen out there. I suppose the most rewarding part of a slow fishing day, especially in rough weather is that you can go out and tackle the river head on, fish hard, and conquer the fear of getting skunked and hopefully convert it into a good day. You never know, it could be you holding a 20" plus'er on the Red's page. Or maybe you will be one of the anglers that put in a hard day's fishing and only turn over a few fish when some other anglers may have decided to stay home, at least you rolled the dice. You just never know... As a guide, I was truly impressed and in a way touched by a few of the guide trips that we ran this last week. One in particular... I had "the kid" in my boat on one of the windiest, nastiest days you can imagine and he was fishing his brains out. We hooked a total of 2 fish up until about 3 pm and in the midst of a 40 mph gust he yelled back at his dad if they could come back tommorow. THAT is the definition of a fisherman right there, Karma smiled back at us and we had good late afternoon and evening fishing. It was not the best we have ever seen together, but these guys came off the river more proud and happier than any one of the other 20 float trips they had ever been on. They played a tough game as hard as they could and won in the bottom of the 9th. It wasn't about numbers of fish or size of fish, it was about their angling performance and the laughs along the way. That type of attitude keeps this job worth doing. Don't get me wrong, we love putting up big numbers of trout to the boat, but that is not what it is all about for us. There is so much more that goes into it, being able to fish hard and hook a fish or two, all the while having a good time with good people is a great day on the water. Everyone hopes for 75 degrees, sun, no wind, and lots of trout on dry flies but these days can be rare. Our hats go off to all of the wade fisherman and other anglers out there drifting and fishing hard over the past couple weeks. There have been some tough days so don't feel bad if you haven't hooked a fish or been able to match some of the numbers you have heard about or the photos you have seen. Fly fishing the Yakima in a cold spring is one of the most difficult challenges an angler can face, but it is also the most rewarding as well. Stay the course and enjoy your time on the water, fish the way like to, and good things will happen. We'll make sure to keep giving out the right advice and helping you as best we can, just keep up the good work. Water Conditions are pretty good right now, the weather is cold but there are a few fish waiting for you. The LC is a little off color (about 2' of vis), the Farmlands on up are clear as can be. The fishing is what we will describe as average/slow throughout the system. There were reports of a good March Brown hatch yesterday but very few risers. It will happen sometime though, look for warmer days and cool nights to be the best but as we mentioned earlier... you just never know. Fly suggestions: K Stones 6-12 black/brown/olive, Double Beaded Peacock Stone 10, Double Beaded Black Stone 8, Skwala Cone Stone #8 (makes a great Golden!), San Juan Worms (especially in the LC as Wilson Creek is a chum line right now), SOFT HACKLE PT #12 (capitalized for importance), RCJ #16/18 (great when the water gets brown), CDC PT #14 (makes great March Brown emerger, nymph it during the hatch if there are no risers), Split Wing Adams 12 - for the March Browns, Split Wing BWO 16, Green Caddis Larvae (Mother's Day is only 19 Days out!)

4/20/08

Anglers: Steve, Joe, Joe, Mike, Al, and Ty

Location: Upper River

Flies: Pearl LB #16, PT #18/16, SJ Worm #12, RCJ #16/18, BWO Soft Hackle #16, Double Beaded Black Stone #10/8, Double Beaded Skwala Nymph #10, Olive K Stone #10, Green CJ #14/16, Princes #14

Time: 9 am until 6:00 pm

Results: About 8 trout landed to each boat (12-18")

The whole river is back in nice shape and fishing pretty good, nothing off the charts but good solid average run-of-the-mill regular fly fishing for wild trout. The cool weather has tamed the Teanaway and even the lower canyon is flowing a nice green color, Wilson Creek is still a bit dirty due to the irrigation canals being charged recently. It is clearing slowly and doesn't seem to be affecting the fishing as we had positive reports from the LC yesterday. It looks like the fish are starting get hungry again, gotta love it. Focus on the nymphing and maybe pitch some streamers against the bank as well. If the clouds blow in look for the BWO's and March Browns, but don't get your hopes up as the weather pattern is fairly cold. Look for a warm cloudy day and the lid might just blow off. The water temps are pretty cold but that keeps the clarity in good shape and the fish biting during banker's hours, the afternoon seems to be the most productive. The Lower Canyon has been producing a short hatch of Bwo's and March Browns so be ready to throw a dry and take advantage of the hatch as soon as you start seeing the Swallows spash the surface of the water. If they are up high, keep on nymphing.

4/19/08

Anglers: Joe, Steve, Joe, Ty, Mike, and Al

Location: Upper River

Flies: Pearl LB #16, PT #18/16, SJ Worm #12, RCJ #16/18, BWO Soft Hackle #16, Double Beaded Blace Stone #10/8, Double Beaded Skwala Nymph #10, Olive K Stone #10, Green CJ #14/16, Princes #14

Time: 9 am until 6:00 pm

Results: About 8 trout landed to each boat (12-18")

The whole river is back in nice shape and fishing pretty good, nothing off the charts but good solid average run-of-the-mill regular fly fishing for wild trout. The cool weather has tamed the Teanaway and even the lower canyon is flowing a nice green color, Wilson Creek is still a bit dirty due to the irrigation canals being charged recently. It is clearing slowly and doesn't seem to be affecting the fishing as we had positive reports from the LC yesterday. It looks like the fish are starting get hungry again, gotta love it. Focus on the nymphing and maybe pitch some streamers against the bank as well. If the clouds blow in look for the BWO's and March Browns, but don't get your hopes up as the weather pattern is fairly cold. Look for a warm cloudy day and the lid might just blow off.

4/17/08

Anglers: Sam, Mathew, and Joe

Location: Upper River

Flies: Pheseant Tails #12-18, Dirt Snakes, Brown K Stone #10, Olive K Stone #8/10, P Stone #10, Sculpzilla, Lightning Bugs #16, RCJ #16, Black CJ #18/16, Prince Nymphs #16, Bitteroot Skwala #10, Nightmare Skwala #10

Time: 9 am until 7:00 pm

Results: 6 Cutts and Rainbows landed and a few Whities (not a misprint, same results as last report)

The Lower Canyon is coming back into decent shape today and will continue to clear over the next few days, there is about 2' of vis and things are looking pretty good. Don't expect much in the way of dry fly activity or hatches, the cool weather and water will likely keep that to minimum. Do expect to hook a few fish as they will be hungry for the worms and nymphs after a small blowout like we had over the past few days. We will be fishing the entire river depending on the day, Wilson Creek is dumping a little mud so if water color aesthetics are important to you then the upper river might be a good idea but the LC is in decent fishing shape and the fish are probably going to need some food. We'll be by the phone if you need an up-to-the-minute clarity check. There will be some foul weather over the weekend but it should keep conditions looking good clarity wise. Thanks for listening, AND by the way. We'll be doing a short clinic on fishing the Eastern Washington Lakes on Saturday at 9 am down here at the shop. It is 100% free and you will get some awesome inside information on fishing the great stillwaters, Lenice, Dry Falls, Nunally, Dusty, Lenore... just to name a few. It should be a good class and you will learn some good info. If that isn't enough I'll make sure to have some Free Donuts. See you there.

4/16/08

Anglers: Steve and TJ

Location: Upper River

Flies: sz. 6-10 Stonefly nymphs, sz. 14-18 Lightening Bugs, sz. 18 Midge Pupae, sz. 8 Dirt Snakes, sz. 18 WD-40, sz. 6 Black Zandoli's Zonker, sz. 6 Sculpzilla

Time: 12:00 pm until 5:00 pm

Results: 6 Cutts and Rainbows landed and a few Whities

With the bulk of the system out of shape, we had a couple of boats on the Upper River yesterday between Ensign and East Cle Elum. Once in a while, the big fish are on the feed. Some think it's the barometer, some say the moon phase... Whatever it is, we had one of those days yesterday. Catching a trout like that is rare, and the more time you spend on the water, the more you appreciate it when it happens! There were some March Browns and BWO's that came off in the afternoon during the calm periods between wind gusts, snow flurries and sleet; but we never saw any fish feeding on the surface. We fished nymphs and streamers from the boat on the go and caught fish with both techniques. By the time we took off and headed back towards Ellensburg, the river below the Teanaway had cleaned up immensely, and even the canyon looks good this morning. It's amazing how fast this river came back into shape. The forecast ahead looks good. Cold nights will keep things clean, and cloudy skies should get these BWO's and March Browns on the move.

4/14/08

Anglers: --

Location: Red's

Flies: --

Time: 2:00 pm

Results: River update!

Flows continued to climb throughout the night, and are now showing signs of cresting around 3000 cfs. The river is pretty much unfishable from the Teanaway downstream this morning with only about 6" of visibility. The river above the Teanaway remains clear and low. We will be spending some time on the Upper rreaches over the next few days, and are hoping with the cool weather returning to the immediate forecast, we see things come back around by as soon as Thursday. If the forecast holds true, we could see some great BWO activity later this week with mostly cloudy skies and calm conditions.

4/13/08

Anglers: Mike, DB, and Joe

Location: The Farmlands

Flies: #6 Black K Stones, #6/8/10 Pat's Stones, #16 Bloody Mary, #14/16 Phesant Tails and Prince Nymphs, #16 RCJ, #10 Skwalameister, #10 Bitteroot Skwala, #10 San Juan Worms in various hues, #6 JJ Buggers, #6 Conehead Zuddlers

Time: 9 am - 6:30 pm

Results: 4 Trout landed and one Whitefish.

What a strange week, the fishing has been all over the board. Early in the week we had some good fishing, but starting on Wednesday the fish decided to go on a Hunger Strike and starve themselves. As if that wasn't enough, they decided to start moving out of the way of our flies and swim to other side of the river. As if that wasn't enough, they formed a Union and decided to go on strike until they are done spawning and the river comes up a little bit and brings them some fresh food. Our chief negotiators did mangage to bring a few across the picket lines in trade for a March Brown and a Skwala. A few others were bribed by Stone Nymphs followed by a #12 Soft Hackle PT (great March Brown Nymph). Friday's fishing was truly tough, but as the river began to rise (thanks to the Teanaway) yesterday's fishing picked up a bit. Our boat only landed 4 trout, but one of our other guides working with some sharp anglers yanked maybe 10 trout out of the water, several of which were exceptional. Even a great Cutthroat came to hand, it must not have gotten out of the way fast enough :) ! The good news is, the snowmelt is actually bringing the water temps up from earlier this week and we are starting today at over 45 degrees, so despite the loss in clarity which is currently at 2' in the LC at 10 am, we have better temps to work with. The hatches are pretty good, the lid could blow off this fishing any day so stay with us. A bit more river to work with will hopefully spread the fish around and put some big trout in the shallows for us to pick on. The LC should stay fishable through today and probably through the early portion of the week. It is supposed to cool off and the freezing level will be at 1800' on Monday. The Upper Yak hasn't even budged so you can always fish the upper reaches above the Teanaway. We are looking forward to guiding on the Upper River a bit more anyway. The river will likely go out of shape bad some time in the next week or two but it is ok to have a blow up once in a while because "make up" fishing can be the best kind. You married guys know what I'm talking about.

4/11/08

Anglers: Scott, Chris, Johnny

Location: Irene to Ringer

Flies: sz. 8, 10 Stonefly Nymphs, sz. 14, 16 FBPT, sz. 16 Red Copper John, sz. 16 Lightening Bugs, sz. 8 Winged Thing Skwala, sz. 10, 12 Gypsy K Skwala, sz. 16 BWO Sparkle Duns

Time: 10 am - 6:00 pm

Results: 4 Small Trout landed and a couple of Whitefish.

After a decent day of fishing on Wednesday in the canyon, we had another tough day yesterday! The bump in flows comes mainly from a water release intended to charge the irrigation canals for the season. This also put a bit of the familiar green color into the water. Things are stable this morning, and we're optimistic about the day. Visibility is good, and we are glad to see the freshet of water hit the system. We expect water conditions to hold at least through Saturday, as evening temps are forecast to dip near freezing in the mountains, despite daytime highs of 70 degrees plus! We're now entering the Spring period when runoff could get to be a factor, so keep an eye on the flows and give us a call if there's any question regarding fishability. Afternoon Blue Wing hatches have been great on cloudy days, and we are still seeing a lot of Skwalas on the water. With a bump in flows and drop in visibility, the dirt snake (aka San Juan Worm) will become a standard part of the nymph rig.

4/07/08

Anglers: Arne, Pete, and Joe

Location: Red's to MM10

Flies: Black K Stone #8, P Stone 8/10/12 brown/black and Olive, Gary's PT 18, Black CJ 18, Red CJ 16/18, Caddis Sparkle Pupae (bright green) #16, Bitteroot Skwala, Flashback PT 14

Time: 9 am - 1:30 pm

Results: 1 or 2 trout landed, and a few whitefish.

Slow fishing in the LC yesterday morning, really slow. The morning started out with sunny skies and was shaping up to be a nice morning, then the storm blew in and dumped rain on us for a couple hours. Strange however, it didn't rain in the upper half of the Canyon. While were strapped down in Goretex in the bottom end, some anglers were sporting T Shirts in the top half. Funny how that works. I think we wrapped up our float too early yesterday, most of the mornings have been pretty slow but without a significant hatch (which is due any day?!) the low clear water is making things relatively slow. The fishing is not bad, the same 2 anglers had a great day on Saturday and put some pretty large fish in the boat. Just make sure to concentrate on the p.m. hours as there is still frost on the ground every morning it seems like. The hatches are going to start popping up any time and the next bump in volume will really help the fishing. A little rise in flow will push the nymphs up into the water column and get the fish feeding aggressively again. As the river is right now, most of the nymphs are able to maintain control and successfully hang on without being pushed downstream or up in the water column. They are a little more secure and hence the fish aren't looking for nymphs anywhere but on the bottom. A good strategy in low, clear, and dropping conditions is to work the edges of deeper pools with light line, small flies, and even some spit shot to grind them out. They are much more apt to take a fly on or near the bottom when the flow is stable. However, when the flow bumps up those nymphs will break loose and free drift allowing us to hook fish on nymphs that are fished up off of the bottom (this can make the fishing soooo good). It would also be nice to have a little color in the water to mellow the fish out, they are awfully spooky. Light lines and long casts are a good idea. There were some fish rising on Midge Clusters and Blue Wing Olives the last 2 days, so think about grabbing a couple of Griffith's Gnats and some Quigley Cripples. We never thought we would be asking for more water in a year that is still giving us snow into April, but I think we are ready for a little push of water. The San Juan worm is ready and waiting, we ordered 3 pallet loads of them and haven't used a single one yet. The March Brown hatch seems to be in a holding pattern, any day it should start going consistently. I'm not sure what they are waiting for because the water temps are looking good and the length of day (also important to Mayflies) is appropriate. Maybe this week sometime it will happen, that is the upside to low/clear conditions. If you do have the hatch, the sight casting to feeders is truly spectacular.

4/05/08

Anglers: Luke, Cory, and Joe

Location: Irene to Bighorn

Flies: Black K Stone #8, P Stone 8/10, Soft Hackle PT #12, Clack CJ #14, San Juan Worm, Gary's PT 18, Bitteroot Skwala #10

Time: 10 am - 6 pm

Results: 10 trout landed, and a few whitefish

Where did the hatch go? The Farmlands and upper end of the LC was devoid of any hatch yesterday other than a few Skwalas. The weather and temperatures seemed very conducive to a March Brown hatch with rain and very dark sky, the BWO's did not make an appearance either. We did however see a couple of Skwalas and raise a few fish in the late afternoon on a Bitteroot pattern. Overall, the fishing was pretty good. Not 'smokin' but pretty good. And we did land the best fish that I have personally seen so far this spring, it was officially taped at 19.5". We field judged it larger but the taped doesn't exaggerate. The hatches were better in the LC to be certain, we literally saw 1 fish rise in the entire Irene to Ringer stretch yesterday. The nymphing was decent though, it is worth an effort if you like the Farmlands. We'll have some more info tomorrow, Red's.

4/04/08

Anglers: Mike and Dick

Location: Umtanum to Mahres

Flies: Skwala Dries, BWO's, and March Browns (primarily dry flies, some nymphing early on)

Time: 11 am - 6 pm

Results: 8+ trout landed, and a few whitefish

That hatches are starting to begin on the Yakima, the LC seems to be the most active for the Mayfly hatches but there are some Skwalas roaming around upriver still. The mainstay is becoming either a Blue Wing Olive pattern (nymph, emerger, or dry) or a MB. Some suggestions are size 18 Pearl Lightning Bugs or FB PT's for the BWO or even an Olive Soft Hackle in the 16-18 range. For the MB, use a #12 Soft Hackle Hare's Ear or a Soft Hackle PT for the emerging nymph. The river is handling the bump in water volume just fine and overall, it is a good thing and should spread some fish around for us. Several of us fished Isaak's Lake on Tuesday. We landed some nice fish in the Upper Lake, but didn't get any action in the Lower. Overall, we felt we were a tad early to experience the quality fishing Isaak's is known for, so we have pushed our April 6th date back a week to April 13th. We do have space open, and allowing another week for temps to warm up should get us into the window when we start to see some surface activity on the lake. Also, the Canyon marathon will be run TOMORROW. Recreational traffic is permitted - passes are available at the Flying J and all of the local fly shops. If you get stopped at the road block and experience problems getting through, please give the shop a call. The speed limit is 25 mph, and you can expect to see runners in both lanes, so please drive carefully coming down!

4/02/08 LATE PM

Anglers: Bruce, Blair, and Joe

Location: --

Flies: --

Time: --

Results: --

Its a good time to fish, I won't mess it up with an attempt to verbally amuse you tonight. True spring fishing is getting underway, March Browns, Blue Wings, Skwalas, Midge, and a few Cuban Cigars... you want some of that hot action? Call us.

4/02/08

Anglers: Jim, Griffin, and Joe

Location: LC

Flies: P Stones of every make and model, Olive K Stone #10, Gary's PT #18, Flashback PT #20/18, Pearl Lightning Bug #18, Bitteroot Skwala #10, March Brown #10, BWO Parachute #18

Time: 11:30 am - 4 pm

Results: 3-4 Nice Trout (14"-17") and a bunch of Whitefish

Yesterday was a good turnaround in the fishing, we broke a 2 game losing streak and should be climbing back to the top of our division by the end of the weekend. Our home stand against the Skwala Stoneflies is just about over, but the Blue Wings and March Browns will be in town and I think our pitching staff is well rested enough that we can shut them down. Lots of singles and the occasional double is the expected outcome. Just keep your eye on the fly. The hatch yesterday was pretty good, the best I have personally seen so far this spring and for about an hour and a half there was more than ample sight casting opportunity. They were a bit resistant to the Skwala, wonder why? I guess they have been hooked on that one a few too many times. They are anxious to eat a MB - one of the preferred patterns that we use is a Split Wing Adams (it is a parachute with 2 posts and some flash on the underbody), it floats awesome and you can search with it on the go. The river is still super low and clear, yesterday we could actually see fish levitating mid column waiting for MB's to come down the lane. It was awesome, you don't get to see that very often. A couple of tips, think big feeding lanes and bring 'em off the bank a ways. The water is so clear and low that a lot of fish have pulled out to midstream. Especially if you are working MB and BWO hatches as these bugs don't fall out of the trees into the water, at least not very often.  I don't mean to blow your mind Dude, but they actually come from underwater and fly away once they hit the surface.  I know... that is crazy but it is true and I have seen it happen.

4/01/08

Anglers: --

Location: LC

Flies: --

Time: --

Results: --

"If you don't like the weather now, just wait 30 minutes..." this old saying could not have been more true this week. We have had snow, sun, wind, hail, sleet, and then usually some more sun afterwards. All in all, the fishing has been so sporadic that it hardly seemed fair to post actual catch numbers, but we will give you a generalization of the current conditions. The water is COLD - it dipped down to 35 degrees yesterday, but the good news is that it has only one direction to go and that is up. When this water temp climbs the fish are going to be hungry and need some food because they have been relatively inactive over the last week with all the mixed weather patterns. A couple of days fished quite good, but overall we'll have to admit it has been slow. Especially the dry fly fishing. The water temps are up a degree or so from yesterday as of 7 am which is a good start and the forecast is for fishing to start rockin' by Friday with nighttime temps around 35 versus 21 which is how cold it was last night. Daytime temps near 60 is a good thing, the river will stay in perfect shape and the trout will start to feed heavily. Think about getting some trips planned before temps start getting into the 70's if you like fishing dry flies in clear water. That was a rhetorical statement, we all like fishing dry flies in clear water but you get the point. Especially Blue Wings, March Browns, and Skwala Stoneflies. By the way, all of which are now hatching on the river. The Skwala hatch has been amazing, even in the LC it is still going. The BWO's are a mid day staple now (nothing super yet, but its coming up soon), and the March Brown is beginning to show in the upper portion of the LC. The March Brown is one of the Big Mac's of the Mayfly menu. If you have never hit this hatch right on you are not alone as it can be kind of sporadic and the hatch is commonly very fast and furious, inversely there are days where it continues for hours and these are the days you will remember forever. It is a size 12 and can be considered a Monster Mayfly, very vulnerable to the fish while it is drying its wings and some of the river's biggest fish key into this hatch. Make sure to have a Hatch Rod ready to go, the emergence will come on strong and be over before you know it some days.  Especially on the colder, windy days.  On the warm cloudy days it will be more evenly distributed as the water temps are undergoing only gradual changes rather than an aggressive rise and drop. If your guide parks on a riffle and says it is a good time to 'post up' and wait for the hatch, trust him and be patient. The MB is worth it. Any questions?  Call the shop, we'll be waiting to field them for you.

3/29/08

Anglers: Most of the Yakima River Guides and Stewards

Location: Ellensburg Fairgrounds

Flies: --

Time: 6:00 pm

Results: A free education.

The meeting of the minds last night regarding watershed management in the Yakima River Basin was excellent and I would describe it as an inspiration. Biologists from the WDFW and the Yakima Nation presented (along with others), their current research, findings, and vision for our mother stream. The meeting started out a bit depressing after seeing what has been done to mame this river, it really is a living, breathing, and growing creature that seems to have a heartbeat of its own. The destruction of the flood plain and much of the hydrodynamics of this river and its tributaries have been altered for the worse and it was very enlightening to learn more about it and listen to speakers that have dedicate TWO DECADES of their lives to learning more about this. I learned more in 2 hours last night regarding river morphology as it applies to fisheries habitat than in all 4 years of a Geography/Environmental Studies degree. The meeting brought many of the problems to light, and the positive conclusion was that we have identified the limiting factors to the carrying capacity of our trout stream and executing them is reasonably feasible. Loss of side channel and braided habitat seemed to be the number one problem addressed, the dikes have created a channelization that ultimately results in loss of critical habitat by failing to allow side channelization and woody debris formation. In addition, the natural flood cycle and runoff pattern is very different than it used to (not just reffering to high summer flows, the entire watershed from logging, cattle grazing, suburban sprawl on down the line.) Even the water table's contribution to the river during summer months is altered, this is critical. Natural streams are typically still receiving returns of spring flood water that is still cold through the ground during the hot days of summer. Additionally, the bank habitat (THE MOST IMPORTANT HABITAT FOR RAINBOW TROUT) has diminished over time and needs to be supplemented in order to achieve maximum productivity. Some other factors were ditches, diversions, and pumps need to be screened which will keep juvenille fish from entering intermittent and seasonal waterways. When these dry up, they ultimately die and are lost forever. The beauty of all this, we know what needs to be done and much of it is feasible. Projects as simple as creating small habitat dikes, rockpiles, and anchoring woody debris into areas void of it will greatly increase productivity and habitat. We plan on adopting a habitat restoration project somewhere in the Lower Canyon sometime in 2008, this might be as simple as planting trees or adding boulders to areas that lack them. The biologists explain that any structure that contributes to "fattening up" the banks and increasing bankward habitat will help the fishery. These fish are not limited in size, growth, genetics, or population by the available food source. They are limited by the potential living space and habitat. What is even more interesting, all of the biologists seemed to unanimously agree that there is a massive amount of remaining potential in this river and it can only get better as education and angler participation increase. We will be selling Trout Unlimited Memberships right on the counter of our fly shop for those interested in helping the cause. We have a great local chapter in Ellensburg whose primary focus is helping the Yakima River reach full potential. Please join the fight, join TU. Red's. Oh yea, current conditions.... low, clear, cold, and beeeeautiful out here right now. A great day to be out, enjoy nature, and listen close for the heartbeat of the river. Sometimes it is faint, but it is definately there.

3/28/08

Anglers: Bruce, Lee, and Doug

Location: Big Horn to Red's

Flies: #8 P Stone, #18 droppers of various sorts but the #18 Flashback PT was the BEST! #18 Mogandy Para Dun was used to sleuce 'em during hatch time.

Time: 10:00 am - 6:00 pm

Results: 10 + Rainbows and some nice Whitefish too.

What great winter fishing we are having over here, the casting pond is frozen in the morning and there is tremendous snow on the pass. WHEN WILL IT END?!!! The upside though is that the river is in pristine shape, we all prayed for a long cool spring and we are getting just that. Even runoff and cold nights and days will do that, we could do without the snow showers but it seems like within minutes of the snow ending the sun is back out. Amazing weather patterns, fairly stable though and the fishing has been good. The nymphing was steady though and the BWO hatch was good enough to put 5 rainbows in the net in 10 minutes!? That sounds like a good time, not to mention the Skwala is still out and about as well. Anyway, we'll see you this weekend. Mention the road kill pheasant on Saturday and get one free fly for being a loyal listener. I want to see if we have more than just one.

3/27/08

Anglers: John, Patty, and Joe

Location: Umtanum to MM10

Flies: Size 10 Brown Wing Bitteroot, Gypsy King 10, Flat Wing Skwala 10, P Stone 10 Olive w/ green legs, Olive K Stone, Gary's PT 16, CDC PT 16

Time: 11:00 am - 5:00 pm

Results: About 5 Rainbows (11"-16"), 1 Cutthroat 12", and some Whitefish.

We saw it all yesterday, from closures on 2 passes, snow in Ellensburg, 30 mph winds, sun, and even some fog filling up the high ravines. That is what March can be like when you live between the mountains and the desert. The fishing was pretty decent overall, not extraordinary but it was alright. We threw dries most of the day but did nymph a little when we were feeling down. The Skwala hatch is strong right now, amazing really. There have been Skwala Stoneflies hatching since around March 1st and I would have to say this is the longest and steadiest I have personally ever seen this hatch. The cold weather is keeping water temps and flows very even and if we could make a suggestion, plan your trips now before the weather warms up. If you like to fish clear water, NOW is the time. The river is small and clear, very fishable on foot or in a pontoon boat. In addition the BWO hatch starting Monday has gotten fairly predictable around 2 pm, it will get better as water temps climb but if you are patient and willing to work the risers with light tippets and soft casts it can be a great time right now. For the rest you Neandrathals that don't like 3 weights, 6x, and educated trout the nymphing is pretty good right now. We nymphed for just short intervals yesterday and the fish were pretty snappy. We also want to note a couple of new games that we're playing at the fly shop. The first is guess what is in the back of the guides pickup truck. You are the winner if you guessed... 1 roadkill pheasant, 3 beer bottles, an empty Red Bull can, a hatchet, and an empty bottle of Pepto Bismol. If you are the winner send us an email, we can split the feathers out of the phesant as a prize. The second game.... still working out the details and this one is for real. We have a competition casting pond at the shop now, and as the customer you can challenge the guide, or shop staff running the register to a casting competition and earn free Red's Fly Shop Gear. We'll get the details ironed out soon. All in good fun, plus you can talk smack if you can beat us on the pond. Good luck, stop in and buy a Coke next time you are out fishing.

3/24/08

Anglers: Steve, Jeff, and Steve

Location: Umtanum to Roza

Flies: sz. 8-12 Stonefly nymphs, sz. 14-18 PT, sz. 16 Copper John, sz. 14-18 Lightening Bugs

Time: 10:00 am - 6:00 pm

Results: 10+ Rainbows (12"-18") and some Whitefish.

We hope you and your families enjoyed the Easter weekend! We've started each day out recently with blue skies and sunshine, which has given way to periods of clouds, cold, and even some wind in the afternoon. Today is clear and sunny again, and we're optimistic that it will stick around. As for the fishing, BWO's have become more consistent, and we have seen fish eating them in some of the softer currents. We are still fishing Skwala dries in the afternoon. The big dry fly fishing has not been a quantity game, but the fish looking for them have been a notch bigger on the quality end! With sub surface fishing, we have seen the preference switch from Stonefly nymphs to smaller bugs - likely due to the elevated BWO activity. The trout are in great shape and seem to have wintered very well. With another good snow pack season and healthy summer flows ahead of us, there will be some very large trout caught this year.

3/21/08

Anglers: Johnny and Bruce

Location: Ringer to Red's

Flies: Stone nymphs sz. 8-12, sz. 10 Power Worm, sz. 14-18 Copper John, sz. 16 PT, sz. 8 Gypsy King Skwala, sz. 10 Bugmeister

Time: 9:30 am - 5:00 pm

Results: 6-8 nice Rainbows landed on dries and lots of Whitefish on nymphs.

The dry fly fishing was pretty good on this particular day, and it was the nymphing that was tougher. Again, long dry spells followed by a flurry of activity on the dries has been the norm. We have seen several pods of trout eating BWO's in the afternoon, which is great news! This should become a major part of the program, especially on cloudy days. We have seen signs of some spawning acitivity with the Yakima Rainbows. Please be aware of this (fish stacked in shallow gravel with rub marks on tails and fins) and try not to target or distrub the redds. These fish will do their thing and start feeding voraciously when they finish! The highlight of the day with Bruce was not a fish that came to hand - but the infamous "one that got away". The indicator went down and Bruce set the hook on what felt like a solid fish. After staying deep and bulldogging for a long time, Bruce was able to bring the fish up near the boat. What they saw was the bright red stripe on the side of a fish in the 7-8 pound range. Bruce kept the pressure on it, but the line suddenly went slack. They were surprised to find the eye of the hook of the sz. 16 PT still attached to the 5X tippet - with no body on the fly. Johnny has seen enough Steelhead to be confident that's what they were looking at - there are 200-300 that make it over Roza on an annual basis. Lastly, we will be open on Easter Sunday until noon, so if you're planning to spend the day on the river, we'll be able to run a shuttle for you.

3/19/08

Anglers: Carl, Ron, and Mike

Location: Ringer to Red's

Flies: Kaufmann's Stone sz. 8-12, Pat's Stones sz. 8-12, sz. 10 Power Worm, sz. 14-18 Lightning Bug, sz. 14-18 Copper John, sz. 18 WD-40

Time: 10:00 am - 7:00 pm

Results: 8-10 Rainbows landed (12"-19") and lots of Whitefish.

Cool nights have kept the river flows down and clarity up over the past 4 days. The fishing has been a mixed bag, with decent afternoon dry fly fishing one day, and not much of anything on the surface the next. We have started seeing some BWO's coming off for the past 2 days, but no fish actively eating them yet, either. Our basic strategy has been to get on the water around 10:00 am and fish nymphs until after lunch. We've been hooking lots of fish nymphing, with the overall ratio favoring Whitefish; although yesterday we did land a fair number of trout, including several nice ones, on nymphs under an indicator. After lunch, we have been switching to dries and casting at likely spots along the bank. The thing about fishing Skwalas is you may go a long ways without seeing a rise, and then hit 2 or 3 fish all at once. The bugs are out, and the trout know it - it's just a matter of being persistent enough to find that fish with the "snappy demeanor". If you're having slow fishing in the tight to the bank zone, don't be afraid to try running 10 feet out. A lot of that water gets overlooked.

3/17/08

Anglers: Gayle, Arne, and Joe

Location: Farmlands

Flies: Olive K Stone #10/12, Pat Stones Olive, Brown, Tan, #12-8, San Juan Worms, RCJ #16, BCJ #16, PT's #14/16, Sculpzilla #6/4, JJ Buggers #4, Bitteroot Skwala #10/8, Clark's Skwala #8/10, Gypsy King #10

Time: 9 am - 5 pm

Results: 4 Very hard earned trout (13"-17"), only several other hooked.

Very tough fishing in the Farmlands over the weekend, we had a cold snap and a pressure change that kicked the winds up and despite good Skwala activity the fished stayed low and did their best to avoid both nymphs and dry flies. That is how it goes sometimes, we had a really good run with steady dry fly fishing on most days. The water temps took a dive and actually got down below 38, which is semi rare for this time of year. We prefer to have them stay over 40 to keep the fish interested in steady hatches of Skwala Stonefly and BWO's, the midge will continue to hatch at lower temps but they are a less significant food source than the aforementioned BWO. Now for the GOOD NEWS, water temps took a big jump yesterday afternoon and this morning and are up near 40 degrees at 9:30 am already this morning. We had good reports of dry fly fishing in the LC yesterday afternoon, so it looks like we are back on track after a slow Saturday. The extended weather forecast looks like it will keep the river in good shape for at least another week, if you are thinking about a guided trip or Cast n' Blast now is the time. Prerunoff is a great time to fish. Red's.

3/14/08

Anglers: Your name here

Location: Red's

Flies: --

Time: 9 am

Results: Better angling.

Just a reminder that we are having a FREE Spring Wade fishing clinic tomorrow at 9 am, just bring your rod, reel, and waders and we'll give you a couple of hours learning some of the tricks to wade fishing the Yak during the springtime. No reservation necessary, see you around 9 am and if you are a few minutes late no worries, we'll be down at the river.

3/13/08 late pm

Anglers: Hap, Slick, and Joe

Location: Umtanum to Marhes

Flies: sz. 10 Olive K Stone, #10/12 Olive/Brown P Stone (pat's stone), sz. 16 RCJ, sz. 16 PT, JJ Bugger's #4, Sculpin Zuddler #4, Morrish Sculpin #6, Bitteroot Skwala #10, Winged Thing Olive #10, Single Skwala w/ legs #10

Time: 9:30 am -6:45 pm

Results: ? Trout landed, a couple of fnpigs.

The fishing continues to be steady, flows are up a bit but the water clarity in the LC is really good right now. Just a hint of glacial green to keep things looking "mysterious" under the surface. We completed the trifecta yesterday, fish hooked on streamers, nymphs, and dry flies (yes!). The fishing was average to good for this time of year, our catch numbers would be a bit misleading if posted. I think we were just holding our mouths right. The evening dry fly fishing was pretty good, and almost every fish that ate was 16" or so, very nice. We expect the river to hold through the weekend despite the lite showers we're having in Eburg. There shouldn't be much that changes, the nymphing and dry fly fishing are both productive but don't expect miracles because the water is still very cold and the fly has to be SPOT ON, with very exceptions. Presentation cannot be overated this time of year, fly pattern and strategy matters little in comparison to being able to throw perfect drifts with relatively long delicate casts. Good luck, and the big fish are biting!

3/11/08

Anglers: Jeff, Jeff, and Steve

Location: MM 19 to Lmuma

Flies: sz. 8-12 Stonefly Nymphs, sz. 14-18 RCJ, sz. 16, 18 PT, sz. 14, 16 Lightening Bugs, sz. 8, 10 Winged Thing, sz. 8, 10 Bitteroot Skwala, sz. 8 Para Skwala

Time: 10:30 am -6:30 pm

Results: 6 Trout landed 12"-17", and a bunch of Whities

The past few days have us scratching our heads a little bit, as some of the best fishing we've experienced has been with nymphs in the earlier part of the day. We continue to run a shallow nymph rig (stone with smaller dropper about 3'-4' under an indicator) with success, but the dry fly fishing has been a mixed bag. We've been switching to dries around noon and getting some action, but it's felt like we're still a day or two away from the fish really keying in on the adult Skwalas. The river has climbed about 50 cfs each day over the past 4 days, but visibility is great and we could actually use a bit more volume, as some of the weak side banks are still too shallow to hold fish right now. The best of the Spring is ahead of us - we're expecting to see some BWO's enter the equation soon as water temps continue to climb, as well. We have a free wade fishing clinic at the shop this Saturday at 9:00 am. No reservation necessary - just swing in with your gear and plan to spend a couple of hours in the river discussing wading strategies and techniques. You may as well plan to make a day of it and fish afterwards!

3/07/08

Anglers: Ethan, Steve, and Joe

Location: LC

Flies: K Stone Olive 12/10/8, P Stone Olive/Brown 8/10, CJ 16, Red CJ 16, Black CJ 16, Bitteroot SKWALA! #10, Parachute SKWALA! #10

Time: 8-5 pm

Results: 10+ Trout landed 13"-18"

Quite a day, the first few days of good dry fly fishing after a long cold winter are the best. The fish were on top looking for dry flies today and conditions could not have been better. Warm, cloudy, calm, and adult Skwalas on the river. It is still a bit early and the fishing will get better but today would have been hard to beat any time. The afternoon is prime, the morning will be a slow starter especially if there is frost on the ground. The dry fly fishing can be spotty if you don't fish the fly with  confidence and hit all the micro seems with a perfect float. Every year Skwala fishing surprises me by the subtle seems that the fish will watch while waiting for a big stonefly, it just doesn't seem right.  You would think they would be watching the main arterials looking for big bugs but they typically don't. Focus on the little water and fish your dry flies with all the grace and finesse that you would a BWO on 5X in the fall, there is a lot of touch involved with presenting big dry flies in thin, clear water.  It can be tough to make a #8 Bitteroot look real in 2' of slick walking speed current.  It requires some soft touch, more of a Winston style presentation. This Skwala thang AIN'T hopper fishin so cast with class and save the Billy Bob deliveries for summertime. See you at the shop tomorrow, Red's.

3/02/08

Anglers: --

Location: --

Flies: --

Time: 7 pm

Results: Dropping, clearing, and looking good!

The river did bounce up a bit over the weekend just as we thought it might, but it did remain fishable through the weekend and the current trend shows that it is dropping and clearing and looking very fishy. This is a tough time of year to predict catch numbers, we not only contend with fluctuations in volume but at the same time it can be quite cold or warm, which may upset the trout's routine. The UPSIDE of this time of year however, is that when it is good its GREEAAAT! The average size of fish seems to be quite large. The most mature Rainbows are packing on weight in preparation for the spawn. One prediction that we GUARANTEE will come true this week..... somebody, somewhere will be catching fish on Skwala dry flies and if it isn't you... you will WISH it was. True statement, made in true Red's style.

2/29/08 Late PM

Anglers: Joe, Sam, and David

Location: MM20 to Red's

Flies: Bitteroot Skwala #10, P Stone (olive/brown) #12/10, Flashback PT 14, K Stone Olive #10

Time: 10 till 6 pm

Results: About 8-10 Trout Landed

We fished dry droppers till about 2 pm, then ran straight dry flies for the remainder of the afternoon. We did not turn a lot of fish, but they did eat a dry fly and the average size was really nice. Water clarity was good in the afternoon as the river stabilized, but we might be in for the first big jump in flows by Saturday afternoon. The Upper Yak and Teanaway are both on a big climb, the good news is that at 1600 in the canyon and Wilson Creek running CLEAR we can handle some water and still be OK. It may thwart the dry fly fishing but the water is staying above 40 degrees all day now, so the fish are pretty hungry and willing. Its tough to predict the future, but it should fish pretty good through the weekend. Red's.

2/28/08

Anglers: Joe and Bryan

Location: MM20 to Red's

Flies: Bitteroot Skwala #10, Flashback PT 14, K Stone Olive #10

Time: Noon till 5 pm

Results: 8-10 Trout Landed (all VERY nice trout), one Whitefish.

NOW is the time, fish are eating nymphs aggressively and there are some takers on dries. No reason to mess up a good report with a bunch of small talk, over and out. Red's.

2/25/08

Anglers: Gary, TJ, and Troy

Location: MM19 to Red's

Flies: Olive K Stone #10, Pat's Stone, Braided Cone Stone #8/10, Black CJ 16/18, PT with Black Bead 16, PT Soft Hackle 16 (no beadhead), Black WD40 18, Biot Sparkle Stone 16, Sheila's Sculpin #6, Caddis Lavae #16 (bright green rockworm)

Time: Noon till Dark

Results: 10-12 Trout Landed ( 2 in the 17" range, 1 16" fish), several Whitefish, and a couple of LDR's

Good fishing on the Yakima right now, each day is slightly different but the trout are on the take, the river is holding is size and color very well despite the warm temperatures, the forecast for the week looks great. Thursday it is predicted to hit 54 degrees, still a bit early for dry fly fishing but it won't be long now. Keep the nymph stick in your hands and you if that doesn't keep you satisfied then try tossing streamers on a sink tip if wading, or on a floating line if you are fishing out of a drifter. The big trout are pre spawn and looking to bulk up. TJ, Troy, and Gary found that the fish took a variety of small nymphs as long as you had them on or near the bottom. Parking or working through known holes in detail and running your indicator at a depth near the bottom is the ticket, this water is still pretty cold. Yesterday's high temp was 39.1 F so be patient and don't expect the fish to move very far. They will take willingly as long as you make it easy for them. Good luck, stop in the store to say hi or waive while on the river. Thanks, Red's.

2/23/08

Anglers: NONE

Location: Wenatchee, Methow, UC, OK, and Similkameen Rivers.

Flies: None

Time: --

Results: Closure

Bad news yesterday, the Met and Wenatchee are closing after tomorrow which is very disappointing and surprising at the same time. We're going to shift some of our Steelhead offerings to the Grande Ronde, but it looks like we'll have to settle for wild trout. Not a bad back up plan. Just wanted to let everyone know, you have tomorrow and that's it. Bummed out in Eburg, Red's.

2/22/08 - OT

Anglers: Joe and his Dad

Location: Most of the Eastern Cascades

Flies: Many

Time: --

Results: Multiple Hook Up Days on Steelhead

Two Cell Phone photos on big trout?  We don't typically host amateur grade Fish Porn on this site but these trout are too big not to post.  That fish of Gary's is spectacular, Gary is big, the kids even call him "Scary Gary" and anyone who can read a trout knows what he is holding.  That is a bonified Yakima "HAWG"!  Congrats to the big man.  The good camera is always in the truck when the big one finally gets caught! Fishing every where is getting good, Steelheading on the Wenatchee and Methow is rolling along, multiple hook ups per day are not uncommon and in fact, they are about the norm for experienced anglers. Conditions on the Methow are still very cold with about 3 feet of snow through most of the valley, but I personally don't know any fisherman who could be deterred by that.  Bring your snowshoes or your self bailing raft if you have one. The Wenatchee is a little warmer, and a little closer. If you are thinking about steelhead fishing it is an easy day trip from Seattle. Assuming roads are dry, you can be on the river in 2.5 hours. If you aren't into the steelhead thing, do not miss out on pre-runoff trout fishing on the Yakima starting now.  Some of the best is right around the corner.  Spring fishing is starting rock 'n roll, let's do it.

2/22/08

Anglers: Gary and TJ

Location: Big Horn to Umtanum

Flies: sz. 6-10 Stonefly nymphs, sz. 6-10 Dirt Snakes (aka worms), sz. 14-18 Lightening Bugs, sz. 14-18 Prince Nymphs

Time: 10:30 am until 4:30 pm

Results: 8-10 trout landed including a trophy, several Whitefish

Water temps have warmed several degrees over the past 4-5 days, and the fish have responded favorably. The trout have become more active, and are starting to see a large number of Stonefly nymphs moving towards the banks. Turn over any larger rock along the edge and you'll likely find a number of Skwala nymphs. These Stoenfly nymphs will be the trout's focus over the next 2-3 weeks, and if this weather pattern holds, we should see some dry fly fishing during that timeframe. We're targeting the standard ledges and drop offs, and concentrating more on the middles and tails of runs than the heads. There are large numbers of Midge showing in the middle part of the day, and if you find yourself in the right place, you may have an opportunity there, as well. All in all, it's a great time to be on the river, and it should only get better! Gary and TJ took the day to make a float yesterday which was monumental for Gary, as he landed the largest trout (possibly a Steelhead) that he's caught on the Yakima. TJ attributes it to great rowing effort, although gary claims they were anchored at the time. Their story is about as clear as the photo!

2/18/08

Anglers: --

Location: Lower Canyon

Flies: --

Time: --

Results: --

Quite a day in Ellensburg today, not a cloud in sight and believe it or not.... NO wind. Not even a breeze in the air. There was a pretty good turnout of anglers in the LC today in response to the perfect weather and water conditions. We even made a few jokes around the shop, asking where guys were 2-3 weeks ago when the weather was cold. Everyone has a little "fair weather" angler in them even if they won't admit it! Overall, the catching seemed to be pretty slow but the fish landed were exceptional. That is the typically the M.O. for the later half of February, not big numbers but there are some big fish. The wise old fish like to put on plenty of weight prior to the spawn and runoff. Conditions look good for fishing over the next week or so, hope to see you out here. PS - most of the access below Red's is still iced in so think about floating somewhere between KOA to Red's if you are bringing a drifter.

2/14/08

Anglers: Bill, Steve, and Joe

Location: Irene to Ringer

Flies: Pat's Stone #10-4 in various colors, Pearl LB 16 and 20, PT 16, JJ Bugger Conehead Style, Sculpzilla (big and baby sized), K Stone black #8/10, Skwala Cone Stone #10, San Juan Worms - pink/red brown/red.

Time: 10 - 4:30 pm

Results: 4 Nice trout landed, 3 whitefish.

The river is back in good shape throughout the system, the canyon is a little off color but not too bad to fish. The Farmlands on up are in perfect shape and fishing should be quite good after the brunt of a new pressure system slammed us in Ellensburg yesterday. Cle Elum saw about 10" of new snow and the winds in Ellensburg yesterday were nearly 20 mph with sunny skies, that makes for very tough fishing conditions. We are happy to have put up the numbers that we did - a big "Cyber High Five" and chest bump goes out to our guests from yesterday for manning up and pulling out a few fish when it would have been easy to just bag it. Today the conditions are a whole different story altogether, warm, cloudy, and very fishy. More like the February weather we hope for, fishing should be darn good right now and temps are supposed to hit 50 on Sunday.  With nighttime lows in the upper 20's and a stable weather pattern these trout will find some routine over the weekend and feed heavily in the afternoon hours.

2/12/08

Anglers: Joe and Troy

Location: Upper River

Flies: --

Time: 10 - 4 pm

Results: 3 Nice trout landed, 2 whitefish.

The Yak is in great shape from Ellensburg on up, but the lower Farmlands and Canyon are in pretty bad shape due to the initial runoff stirring up the ditches in the Kittitas Valley. That should subside over the next few days and clear up nicely. It is primarily a wade fishing game right now with a lot of boat launches still snowed in, but the hard core anglers that don't mind dragging a raft or pontoon will find the river ALL to themselves. We'll be sliding in and sliding out tomorrow, hopefully with some more big fish pics to follow. It's not a bad idea to get your first trip of the spring planned now!  PS - Ice is off of the Wenatchee, steelhead fishing is back on.

2/11/08

Anglers: --

Location: --

Flies: --

Time: --

Results: --

The Yakima River from Ellensburg down is marginal at the moment, about 12-18" of vis and doesn't look good. This is the first bit of initial runoff and the low lying snow is fading fast, unbelievably fast. The temperatures are great and spring is in the air. The upper Yakima looks to be in good shape still but you'll find most boat launches snowed in so plan on wade fishing. The river should come back in check, over the next couple of days and be fishing awesome, the trout are going to be very hungry after a brutal cold snap followed by a warm (and temporary) blowout.

2/9/08

Anglers: Troy and Eric

Location: Ringer to Big Horn

Flies: sz. 6-10 Stonefly Nymphs, sz. 16, 18 Lightening Bug, sz. 16, 18 RCJ, sz. 18 PT, sz. 6 Sculpin Streamers (Brown and Olive)

Time: noon - 3:30 pm

Results: 2 Rainbows landed (15", 16") and several more lost.

The river from Ringer to Red's is free of all ice and in excellent floating and fishing shape. Below Red's there is a high ice shelf (like 6' high!)along the banks that will impede drift boat trailer access. Johnny reported yesterday that there were also a couple of spots in the Irene section that are frozen across - give it a few more warm days before trying that one. We have actually had very nice weather in the canyon over the past week. The snow is melting daily, and we've seen lots of sunshine. If you can find a window when they'll let you over the pass, it's a good time to be on the water. Target the shallower water areas when you're fishing - and don't be afarid to spend some time in the areas that look "fishy". All it takes is the right drift! We are now in the zone when the Skwala stonefly nymphs will begin migrating towards the banks. if you catch the river on a day when the water temperatures are taking a bump, you're likely to find lots of players.

2/5/08

Anglers: --

Location: Yakima River

Flies: --

Time: 8 am

Results: The Yakima is in perfect shape again.

The ice flow is completely gone other than a bit of shelf ice here and there, and the fishing should be very good over the next few days as the temperatures start to reflect early spring in Ellensburg. We may even hit the 50 degree mark in the next week or so. Grab that nymphing stick and give it a shot because it won't be long and the Skwala Stone Nymphs will be on the move towards the river bank. We did manage to make it the Bellevue Fly Fishing Show this last weekend, despite adverse pass conditions. It was great to see so many familiar faces and thanks for the support again this year. It is without doubt our favorite show because we get to see so many folks we know. We still have plenty of Spring Steelhead Dates left so if landing a steelhead on the fly is on your 'to do' list for 2008, we're happy to help. Sincerely, Red's.

1/28/08

Angler: Joe

Location: Puyallup Fairgrounds - Indoor Steelhead River!

Flies: Sz. 6 Dbl Beaded Stone, sz. 8 Glo Bug (hooks cut partially off)

Time: 6:00 pm

Results: One Steelhead hooked Friday! and one hooked Saturday!

You know its cold when the owner of the fly shop heads to the Bahamas for the weekend and the Number 2 man has to resort to fishing steelhead indoors!  - Is indoor fishing the wave of the future? I hope not. Pro baseball and football started to go downhill fast as soon as the first "domes" were built. Although steelhead fishing in January wearing jeans and dress shoes isn't bad either. For the record, I did fair hook one steelhead each day in the river, both on a #6 glo-bug with the tip of the hook cut off. The fish on Saturday jumped about 3 times and splashed me and the audience, right before it wrapped me around a boulder and broke the line. Typical. Anywho, the Puyallup show was a lot of fun and thank you to everybody who made it down and for those that didn't we'll see you this upcoming weekend in Bellevue. Red's will have an entire separate booth strictly dedicated to Simms products, so if you are in the market make sure to find us.

1/25/08

Angler: Joe

Location: Puyallup Fairgrounds - the Steelhead River!

Flies: Sz. 6 Dbl Beaded Stone, sz. 8 Glo Bug (hooks cut off)

Time: 6:00 pm

Results: No fish to hand!

Major ice flows and near zero temperatures on the Yakima have us all in a pretty ornery mood! We're ready for this arctic front to push through! We do have some guests at Rocky Ford today, and our booth is set up at the Puyallup Sportsman's show. Swing by and say hello if you get a chance, it'd probably make our day! We are doing a daily presentation in the "Steelhead River", which is an indoor casting pond complete with flowing water and big boulders. We are giving a "Nymphing for Steelhead" presentation twice daily. Joe thought he had a bump yesterday, but we're skeptical! (Note to readers: there aren't any fish in the pond!). We will let you know when conditions improve on the Yak. I (Steve) must confess, I am feeling a hint of guilt, as I think of TJ braving the sub 20 degree weather at Rocky Ford, while I sit here packing my Bonefishing gear for a quick trip to the Bahamas. I think it'll pass - along with the snowcrested peaks of the Cascades as we head South!

1/17/08

Anglers: --

Location: --

Flies: --

Time: Noon

Results: --

Ice flow - you may want to give us a call before you come out, the forecast suggests a chance of getting the river clear on Saturday. Give us a call, but it looks like even if the ice flow clears that water temps will hover around 32-33 anyway which can be pretty tough fishing.

1/13/08

Anglers: Jack, Sam, and Joe

Location: Umtanum to Red's

Flies: K-Stone black size 8, Olive K-Stone size 10, PT's 16-18, Sculpzilla #6.

Time: 11 am - 2:30 pm

Results: 1 Whitefish to hand, and about 6 hook ups total.

The body count was little low today, but the bite actually wasn't that bad. We were out for a few hours with one youngster that braved the cold and managed to fight a couple of fish only to lose them in heartbreaking fashioned. It was one of the nicer days we have had in a couple of weeks and you can already feel the effect of longer days and a little more direct sun angle. The trip through the 'dark side of the moon' (that is Guide Grammar for floating through sunny sections and getting warmed up only to float around a shady bend and experience a hundred degree temperature drop) seemed to pass more quickly and was not demobilzing as it can be on some winter days. We saw several groups of bald eagles and actually missed a few hookups while gazing up at our National bird. We got a few tugs on a streamer but none seemed to stick, light grabs so make sure to have an "itchy trigger finger" on that streamer. The midge hatch was pretty good and we saw a few fish rise. We weren't in a position to throw dries, but I think the 3 wt. is going to become a sidearm later this week. Watch the forecast, the days above freezing should fish fine. Thanks, Red's. PS - on another note, the fishing looked like it was better for one of our other guides. Troy was netting a nice fish for a client as we were driving up the canyon. Nice work Troy. Also, check out the posting above for our Spring Steelhead Trips. It might be your last shot at steelhead until fall and you may want to secure your dates early. Red's.

1/07/08

Anglers: Mike

Location: Umtanum, wade fishing.

Flies: Suggested Patterns - K-Stone black, olive, or brown in the 8-12 range. Preferably weighted with no bead, PS (Pat's Stone) in any of the wonderful color schemes in the 8-12 range, LB, PT's, and Midge Pupae. Focus on running non beaded flies on your small nymphs larger than size 18, run beads on the small stuff ESPECIALLY the midge pupa. Black in the size 20 range with a bead. Streamers - natural colors with an emphasis on olive. Bigger isn't necessarily better, on the swing think about a Teeny Leech.

Time: 10 am - 2 pm

Results: 9 trout and 5 pea mouths.

Good winter fishing yesterday, this has been one of the more mild winters (temperature wise) that we have had in the last few years. There has been no ice flow yet, and very little shelf ice to speak of. Lots of clear sunny days and the fishing has been very consistent. Every afternoon these fish turn it on and feed for a few hours. Essentially, they are doing an entire days worth of feeding during a fairly short time period. Not to say that they are not feeding during the wee hours of morning, evening, or even at night it is just that the vast majority of their nymphical and baitfish intake happens during the afternoon. Not to mention, that the river at just over 800 cfs it is only 1/5 or even 1/6 the typical volume that we fished it at during the spring/summer of the 2006 - 2007 seasons. The big flow has built up a great fish population and it is is kind of condensed right now into a fairly small space making the likelihood of your fly landing in front of a fish greater. The big holes especially are holding A LOT of fish right now. You'll find some of your best fishing on the fringes of the big holding water, winter fish definitely like to have an escape route when temperatures take an unfriendly dive. Yesterday, Mike fished a small PS (Pat's Stone) and an LB (Lightning Bug). He didn't even mention sizes, it sounds like the fish are presentation picky and more worried about how the fly gets to them than exactly what it is. Keep your eyes peeled for midging fish though, we have been seeing a lot of feeders in the flats and if they are riding a foam line that makes them especially vulnerable. Avoid the fish in the open slicks if possible and focus your efforts on the seems. Go get 'em.




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