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April 1st, 2013 Newsletter

We hope you had a wonderful Easter weekend.  This past week has been great.  We were all able to get out on the water and take advantage of the beautiful weather.   This newsletter has a Fishing Forecast that focuses on the April fly fishing options, a weekend guide trip with Curt as our Trip Of The Week, we let you know about a new fox product we have in stock, and answer another one of your  fly fishing questions.
Trip of The Week
 
Dave and Franko came out to the Olympic Peninsula for two days of winter steelhead fishing with Curt.  Their timing was perfect with the rivers in shape and great weather.

They spent the first day fishing close to tidewater hoping to find a fresh fish on the swing, and Dave succeeded with this perfect hen.



The next day they floated higher up and mixed it up by swinging the best spots and nymphing from the boat between wading spots.  Dave continued his luck from the day before  with this great wild steelhead he hooked dead drifting a glo-bug. 



Franko wasn't gonna let Dave have all the fun so he swung up this acrobatic steelhead before it threw the hook. 

 

While the steelhead fishing has been tougher than usual this winter it always pays to fish when you can as it only takes one great fish to make an exceptional trip.

Fishing Forecast
 

April is a month of changes when it comes to fishing on the Olympic Peninsula.  Winter steelhead fishing winds down and other fisheries start emerging.  

 

The larger glacial rivers close mid-month and every other stream besides the Sol Duc closes at the end of the month.  There are still fresh fish entering the rivers.  Warmer water temperatures mean that steelhead will really react to swung fly presentations.  For an extra challenge, try fishing for the spring chinook heading up the Sol Duc River. 

 

 

 

The lowland lake opener is fast approaching.  Many lakes are open year-round and the upcoming warm weather should get the hatches going.  Look for chironomids and small mayflies to get the trout looking towards the surface.  Of course, buggers and leeches fished on a sinking line will work when nothing else is happening. 

 

The saltwater fishing just gets better the further we get into Spring.  The cutthroat fishing will pick up as more fish enter the saltwater after spawning and the numbers of chum fry increase.  April is prime time for chum fry emergence.  Out on the Pacific Ocean and western Strait rockfish and lingcod are a great option for anglers with boats.  Lingcod  season in Area 4 (Neah Bay) opens April 16th and spring is one of the best times to find the larger fish in the shallows (30-50').  Rockfish are available all along the kelp beds and suspended over rocky structure.  

 

 

Silver Fox
  
Silver fox is a beautiful new material perfect for tying long wings and tails on steelhead, atlantic salmon, and saltwater patterns.  It looks great on tube flies.  This video gives you a quick idea what you can do with this new addition to our fly tying material selection.

Silver Fox Tube Fly 
Silver Fox Tube Fly


Click Here to purchase Silver Fox. 
2013 Questions
 
 

This weeks question comes from Bennett Colvin in Colorado.

 

"I have been wanting to try to fly fish deep using streamers for lake trout, salmon, trout, and arctic char.   I was wondering if you could describe the set up that you guys use to get into the salmon out of the boats in the ocean?  Items like rod size, line... if you use a shooting line and what size heads etc., how deep can one reasonably fish, flies etc would be awesome.   Being here in Colorado this technique is not used much but I think it could be very effective."   

 

The timing for this question couldn't be better.  While Bennett plans on fishing lakes in Colorado our saltwater season on the coast is just about to start.  Dredging can help one reach fish often thought out of reach to fly fishermen no matter where you live.

 

Most of our dredging uses rods in the 8-10 weight range.  If you have to fish a lighter rod, RIO's Deep 7 Lake Line can get you 20-30' deep with rods in the 6 weight range.  A 6 weight rigged with this line is the perfect setup for offshore pink salmon when you need to get deep (and this summer we are expecting over 6 million pinks to swim by Port Angeles).  

 

For serious dredging, a shooting head system is the way to go.  Let's start with running lines.  For maximum depth, a mono running line is your best bet but it is harder to handle and can have more tangling issues than the second option, which are intermediate running lines like RIO's Coldwater Intermediate Running Line.  The .030 sized intermediate line is the best all around running line for balancing sink rate and line handling.

 

For the sinking heads we are lucky to be blessed with some great options.  The  30' Coil Packs of RIO's T-14 and T-17 are what we typically use.  For an 8 wt. rod, we will cut the 30' of T-14 back to approximately 25'.   

 

25' of T-14 can reach the 40-50' range and T-17 can reach the 60-75' range.  Under ideal conditions you can get deeper but those depths can be reached without too much effort by casting up-drift letting the line come tight after the boat drifts over it.  The picture below shows a rock snagged from the bottom at the Winter Hole off Port Angeles in 70' of water using 30' of T-17. 

 

 

 

Weighted flies work best for this.  Not only do they sink fast and give the flies an up and down action during the retreive but they reduce tangling with the sinking line on the way down.  If the fly is too buoyant the sinking line will sink much faster than the line and the fly will tangle with the line as it gets vertical in the water.  Clouser Minnows and Shock and Awe's are great flies for fishing deep water.

 

Hope that helps.  Good luck and send us some pictures of the big lake trout you hook. 

We look forward to seeing you in the shop or out on the water.
  
Your Fly Fishing Partners,
  
Dave, Curt, Sean, Chris and Bella
Waters West   |   140 W. Front St., Port Angeles, WA 98362   |   (360) 417-0937