09-29-2011, 10:33 PM
I spent most of Wednesday fishing at a place not too far from Poky and thought I'd share my experiences there as a get-to-know-you sort of exercise.
I won't explicitly state where this was, but I'll drop hints along the way; I doubt it will be much of a mystery.
I arrived at, uh ... Location X ... at 8:30 a.m. and started with a spinner. Landed a modest cutt on my fourth or fifth cast but nothing else, so I switched to nightcrawlers. First cast and I immediately had something on. Because of the morning glare, I couldn't see anything. All I knew was it was large and strong.
After several minutes, I finally got it out of the sun and close to shore. My disappointment was palpable--a sucker! Time: 9:01 a.m.
![[Image: 092811_Sucker.jpg]](http://i150.photobucket.com/albums/s98/darrellid/McSnake/092811_Sucker.jpg)
I was shocked because every other sucker I have ever caught surrendered almost immediately. But this guy had no quit and kept pulling my drag out in an effort to stay in the middle of the channel. From the butt end of my ultralight rod to the first ferrule is more than 25 inches, so this fish was at least that long.
Incidentally, some boaters I met later in the day informed me that suckers make the best cut bait for trout. Can anyone confirm this? Also, I returned the sucker because my understanding is they are native. Is this accurate, or am I doing the river a disservice?
The first hole fell silent after that melee, so I retied a spinner and moved to my favorite spot--a confluence of two braids. Four casts into it and I hooked up with another cutt. This one turned out to be a 20-incher with some of the nicest coloring I've seen all year. Time: 9:58 a.m.
![[Image: 092811_Cutt.jpg]](http://i150.photobucket.com/albums/s98/darrellid/McSnake/092811_Cutt.jpg)
The confluence forms a long, wide riffle, and I fished this with no luck for a while before deciding to explore. After much wading and bushwhacking, I stumbled upon a new-to-me hole that yielded pure rainbows on my first three casts, including this 13-inch, football-shaped hen with the second. Time: 11:38 a.m.
![[Image: 092811_Footbow.jpg]](http://i150.photobucket.com/albums/s98/darrellid/McSnake/092811_Footbow.jpg)
I'm told that trout with this body type are typically reservoir fish. Is this true?
I hooked into a couple of more fish but couldn't keep them on. Not being able to work my way any further upstream (Location X is essentially a glorified oxbow of the Snake), I headed back to the confluence, losing a lure along the way. The substitute spinner paid dividends as I reached the point, enticing a long, slender 'bow to take. This one was in the 20-inch neighborhood, as well. Time: 1:02 p.m.
![[Image: 092811_Bow.jpg]](http://i150.photobucket.com/albums/s98/darrellid/McSnake/092811_Bow.jpg)
After more exploring, I landed another skinny 'bow as I was fording the channel just downstream from where I'd started the day. This fella measured out at about 18 inches. Time: 2:17 p.m.
![[Image: 092811_OtherBow.jpg]](http://i150.photobucket.com/albums/s98/darrellid/McSnake/092811_OtherBow.jpg)
I continued to explore for the next two hours, but I didn't land anything of significance--a few planter-sized 'bows, a cutt parr, and a brown not much larger than the lure I used to catch it.
Nevertheless, this was easily the best day I've had at ... Location X . I've fished there many times over the years and the results have always been mixed. I've never caught a lot of fish, but it's relatively big water, so there's always that chance to hook into something heavy.
This was my fourth trip in the past two weeks. I didn't catch many fish on the other trips, but I did land a few lunkers. (Anything 20" and up is big to me; I'd never even caught a 20-incher until this month.) I'll post pics of those if there's interest.
[signature]
I won't explicitly state where this was, but I'll drop hints along the way; I doubt it will be much of a mystery.
I arrived at, uh ... Location X ... at 8:30 a.m. and started with a spinner. Landed a modest cutt on my fourth or fifth cast but nothing else, so I switched to nightcrawlers. First cast and I immediately had something on. Because of the morning glare, I couldn't see anything. All I knew was it was large and strong.
After several minutes, I finally got it out of the sun and close to shore. My disappointment was palpable--a sucker! Time: 9:01 a.m.
![[Image: 092811_Sucker.jpg]](http://i150.photobucket.com/albums/s98/darrellid/McSnake/092811_Sucker.jpg)
I was shocked because every other sucker I have ever caught surrendered almost immediately. But this guy had no quit and kept pulling my drag out in an effort to stay in the middle of the channel. From the butt end of my ultralight rod to the first ferrule is more than 25 inches, so this fish was at least that long.
Incidentally, some boaters I met later in the day informed me that suckers make the best cut bait for trout. Can anyone confirm this? Also, I returned the sucker because my understanding is they are native. Is this accurate, or am I doing the river a disservice?
The first hole fell silent after that melee, so I retied a spinner and moved to my favorite spot--a confluence of two braids. Four casts into it and I hooked up with another cutt. This one turned out to be a 20-incher with some of the nicest coloring I've seen all year. Time: 9:58 a.m.
![[Image: 092811_Cutt.jpg]](http://i150.photobucket.com/albums/s98/darrellid/McSnake/092811_Cutt.jpg)
The confluence forms a long, wide riffle, and I fished this with no luck for a while before deciding to explore. After much wading and bushwhacking, I stumbled upon a new-to-me hole that yielded pure rainbows on my first three casts, including this 13-inch, football-shaped hen with the second. Time: 11:38 a.m.
![[Image: 092811_Footbow.jpg]](http://i150.photobucket.com/albums/s98/darrellid/McSnake/092811_Footbow.jpg)
I'm told that trout with this body type are typically reservoir fish. Is this true?
I hooked into a couple of more fish but couldn't keep them on. Not being able to work my way any further upstream (Location X is essentially a glorified oxbow of the Snake), I headed back to the confluence, losing a lure along the way. The substitute spinner paid dividends as I reached the point, enticing a long, slender 'bow to take. This one was in the 20-inch neighborhood, as well. Time: 1:02 p.m.
![[Image: 092811_Bow.jpg]](http://i150.photobucket.com/albums/s98/darrellid/McSnake/092811_Bow.jpg)
After more exploring, I landed another skinny 'bow as I was fording the channel just downstream from where I'd started the day. This fella measured out at about 18 inches. Time: 2:17 p.m.
![[Image: 092811_OtherBow.jpg]](http://i150.photobucket.com/albums/s98/darrellid/McSnake/092811_OtherBow.jpg)
I continued to explore for the next two hours, but I didn't land anything of significance--a few planter-sized 'bows, a cutt parr, and a brown not much larger than the lure I used to catch it.
Nevertheless, this was easily the best day I've had at ... Location X . I've fished there many times over the years and the results have always been mixed. I've never caught a lot of fish, but it's relatively big water, so there's always that chance to hook into something heavy.
This was my fourth trip in the past two weeks. I didn't catch many fish on the other trips, but I did land a few lunkers. (Anything 20" and up is big to me; I'd never even caught a 20-incher until this month.) I'll post pics of those if there's interest.
[signature]