Pimpin Ain’t Easy But It Sure Is Fun!
After the pic and release, Billy watched his indicator drop, he cracked back and this fish exploded out of the tail of the run…I saw chrome flash towards the undercut but this time Billy was not to be denied. He played the fish nicely and it jumped once.
When it came into the shallows, I could see the distinct markings of a brown trout but the colors of a steelhead. This was the most chrome brown I have ever seen and it must have just come out of the lake within the hour. We were only 2 pools up from the estruary.
It was so tricked out and pimped in it’s chrominess
Billy and Tom had to bug out so we laughed all the way back to the parking lot and they bid their goodbys.
We had company on the way back
Where’s Waldo?
I dropped them off and headed back down to the river to meet up with the others and help where I was needed. Just then, Dave called to announce a pod of hot fish. By the time I showed up, Patrick and Kieth hade their 2 each in the water and the action that was hot in the first drifts had slowed. I asked Kieth who hadn’t caught a fish yet and he pointed out Sal. Another Financial Guy from Long Island. I walked up, Introduced myself and told him to follow me. I could tell he wasn’t sure about the crossing I picked, and didn’t really believe that fish existed anywhere in the world but he dutifully followed me across the current and into the next pocket. I noticed a fish in the pocket flashed once but we couldn’t get him to eat anything. We inched our way up into the slate steps that make up the head of the hole and got to the top step. I pointed the drift out as a resting spot for steelhead on the move and that their probably was something there at the moment. Sal fished it just as I asked him to and as we creaped his indicator deeper and deeper towards the seam it sunk and jumped 5 feet to the left, Set! Sal cranked back and the bottom flashed and flashed and flashed. The fish rolled up and down in and out of the leader for a second and bolted downstream. I raised my hands in victory and gave out a woop alerting Sal’s buds that he had connected with lightning hot steel. They all watched as Sal stumbled down river 100 yards or so and we landed the fish in the slack eddy perfectly. I cradled the Hen and estimated it at 34, 35 inches, 8lbs easy, maybe 10, but it was hard to tell after the spawn and I could tell that it would have been an easy 12-15 in the fall. She was obviously quickly gaining strength, weight, and color on the way back to the lake…
Sal took a picture of me holding her so we knew we’d have one, and after careful instructions about how to hold a steelhead, he quickly lost the handle as she sensed the unsure grip and kicked off…He didn’t mind though, it was his personal best steelhead as far as size goes and had it all in his head for future viewing. Hopefully, I’ll get a copy of that picture. This was his second time on the water for steelhead and little did he or I know he would be expertly snap T-ing 85 feet of compact skagit head off his newly acquired Z-axis 11 foot 7 switch the next morning.
The group decided to get an early dinner and hit the river for an evening bite so we hit the bar.
The evening was rather uneventful, we tried a few spots but even though there were steelhead porpoising around, we couldn’t buy another hook-up on the swing or indicator. After dark we headed back to Patrick’s place to strategize and tie some extra flies for Sunday.
Day 2 to come.