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Recent Fishing Reports for Washington. 8/12/04
#5
Yakima River - August 11th, 2004
supplied by: [url "http://www.fisheyesoup.com/redir.php?recKey=47,re"]The Evening Hatch[/url]
RECORDED: [Image: sun.gif] 95 ° [Image: blackSpacer.gif] FISHING: Great

Yakima River Report for Monday, August 11th, 2004

........and it continues. The fishing has been just plain good (from a boat) all week long. Fortunately, the barometer has been nowhere near stable lately and the weather patterns keep rollin' through creating fabulous fishing conditions. Unfortunately, the next few days the weather man is forecasting some EXTREME temperatures for our area which in turn could and should push the action to the mornings and evenings. Lately we have been seeing some good caddis activity throughout the lower canyon and the fish are eating both dry and pupa patterns. Lafontaine's, leviathan's, sparkle pupa's, lightning bugs, pheasant tails (CDC) and rock worm patterns have been really effective fished either in tandem with a stone pattern or dropped off the back of a big chernobyl. Although, come late in the evening, disregard everything just mentioned and throw a big dry with a little bit 'o' action tight to the bank. Last night it happened at 8:00pm sharp.

The nocturnal summer stone activity has been quite prolific lately and just because they aren't visible throughout the course of a day doesn't mean they aren't there. Yesterday, I dropped my anchor in a grassy bank and literally 40 to 50 fresh stone shucks came floating out. It definitely pays to do a little investigating along the banks from time to time to figure out just what is going on. Not everything that triggers fish activity in the insect world happens just while an angler is on the water.

Tip of the day: To effectively fish a big dry fly in close quarters to a bank, line control is key! Most often when an angler is having a hard time "sticking" fish after fish when the bite is on, the reason is simply line control. Even if an angler claims to be the greatest caster in the world, if they can't execute a proper mend, well... let's just say it can be incredibly frustrating for everybody within earshot. A "proper" mend takes place in the first 3 to 6 feet FROM the fly. If that line is not properly deposited upstream of your fly just after hitting the water, it literally takes just one second for a belly to form in your line resulting in a substantial decrease in hook setting control in the cast.

If it were easy, everybody would be doing it!
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Re: [tubeN2] Recent Fishing Reports for Washington. 8/12/04 - by tubeN2 - 08-12-2004, 02:08 PM

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