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Aspens and Wildflowers
#1
SATURDAY:

Since my great friend Aaron was still in town, we agreed that a good old camp out was in order and we migrated south for the weekend.

Due to a very late start, we got to the water around mid afternoon. Wanting to set up a base camp there, we postponed that idea for the sake of hiking in to the lake we wanted to check on.

Fishing the first lake for a little while was too much to resist, so the two of us made slow progress to get from A to B.

Aaron got a small tiger to hand after trying for quite some time. I never scored on that lake.

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It wasn't long before we realized that our daylight wasn't going to last forever and hopped off trail for a bit of bushwhacking. The hike wasn't easy, but that's a good thing out there.

Marching through tall green grass, fallen timber and wildflowers, the scenery was reward enough.

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It's such great country

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The footwork ate up precious time, leaving little for fishing, though we still took a stab at it.

The surface showed plenty of activity, though I messed up my fly gear immediately. My preferred tactic for brookies would have to do.

Aaron was the first to score.

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The size wasn't what we were looking for, knowing of better fish present, but it was nice to break the silence at that lake. Another small one also paid me a visit.

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A few more small ones came in for me before I found one with any size to it.

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That was a better fish. Certainly not the biggest in the pond, but it was great to find something that filled my hand better. Doing so in such a setting was something to be grateful for.

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Another mid sized brookie came in and some more runts, but I didn't find the hogs, this trip. Aaron got a better one right as it was time to leave.

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It was getting late and we hadn't even set up camp yet at point A. Time to gaze across the pond one last time, then make a challenging push up a heavily forested hillside.

Goodnight, nameless brookie pond.

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Once we'd reached the car, we noticed the full moon rising and thought we'd hang out on the shore, drown some worms and have some fresh brookies for dinner.

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Watching the last of the day's light retreat to the west over glassy water was something I really enjoyed. It's usually a site I take in from a highway. Watching from almost 10,000 feet next to a placid lake without a soul around for miles is what it's all about.

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The moon was pretty cool too. We stayed up until 1:30, appreciating its company. We even caught a couple of small rainbows while we were at it.

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__________________________________

MORNING:

Due to our late night, the sun beat us to the water by a long shot. We considered our options for the day and settled on a creek that I suggested.

At first, the fishing was slow. We saw only two fish in the entire stretch that we tried at first. The only bite that came of that was missed. Downstream a mile or so might be better.

We took another hike and ended up where the water was flowing a little bit better and harbored more fish. The fishy holes actually had fish in them, but they weren't just biting anything.

A marabou jig got a few cutthroat to play.

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The stream had plenty of hiding spots for fish of any size.

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At one hole, Aaron and I sat and watched a slightly bigger cutthroat rise over and over, but couldn't figure out what it was coming up for. There were plenty of bugs all around, so it could have been anything.

Determined to catch it, we both threw all sorts of junk at it, hoping it would react. Nothing worked. Eventually, I opened up my fly box and started trying different nymphs with no luck.

After watching yet another rise from this fish, only feet away from us, I tied on a mayfly pattern and placed it on the surface a few feet ahead of it.

Right in front of us, we watched as it effortlessly moved up to kiss the top. Amazed, I lifted my spinning rod and set the hook to a fun battle in the small hole.

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It wasn't big, but it was a great way to cash in on all the effort that was put into finally coercing a strike.

The next one got me back though. The creek started twisting its way through some dead fall and a floating Rapala seemed like a suitable lure to work around the structure.

Turns out I was right, but while I was unhooking a medium sized cutt, it went into fits and hooked me deeply. In all of my time fishing, it took until that moment to finally bury a hook past the barb into my flesh.

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After the initial hooking, the fish continued to thrash with all of its weight driving the hook deeper. That sucked. As soon as I could, I got the other hook out of the fish and it was free to go.

I, on the other hand (get it?), was still captive. With my free hand, I maneuvered my backpack around and grabbed some needle nose pliers for something a bit more rigid than my hemostats.

After a deep breath and some happy thoughts, the hook was removed without having to clip it. That's still a win in my book.

Back to business, a cute little friend got ambitious.

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Unfortunately, Aaron started the day with a killer headache that never let up. It really affected his enthusiasm for fishing and threw him off his game. Though we were pitching the same gear, he still got a fat skunk on the day.

One last cutt came out of hiding for me before we had to hike back to the car, exhausted and overheating (I was in my PVC waders).

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It was hard to watch him get shrugged all day, but I suppose going empty handed in such a pretty area would still be pretty nice.

Happy Fishing, Humans.

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#2
Great as always.
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#3
Nice tale, sir. You have an "eye" for the camera, as well. Those aren't snaps; they're photos.
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#4
Nice Report and photos Loah. Sorry to see that treble buried so deeply into your hand but glad to see it came out OK.

Gaetz
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#5
Looks like some good times were had down there LOAH. Those were some pretty places you visited, thanks for sharing.

Too bad the visitor got the ugly skunk on Day 2, but as you know, you can lead a horse to water, but you can't make them drink.

Rainbow Rapalas are cutthroat killers. As I like to say, "life is tuff as a rainbow trout in a river".

[cool]Keep up the adventures, something tells me you will.[cool]
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#6
headache @ 10,000 feet = generally mountain sickness or altitude sickness.
Been there, done that.
Drink fluids, take pill for headache. Unfortunately, it is advised alchohol not be drunken.


"Most common at 8,000 feet or above, where the oxygen content is half what it is at sea level, AMS leaves many visitors to high-altitude ski resorts gasping for breath. The body responds to the decrease in oxygen by breathing faster, but this often isn't enough. Lack of oxygen makes membranes in the lungs and brain leak, causing headache and nausea. Symptoms usually start within a few hours at altitude."
[url "http://www.skinet.com/skinet/instruction/article/0,26908,432890,00.html"]http://www.skinet.com/skinet/instruction/article/0,26908,432890,00.html[/url]
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#7
Or, it could just be a plain ol' headache. For those of us who live at altitude, 10,000 feet is not a big deal.
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#8
It really might have been the altitude. He's been living near sea level for a couple of years and isn't used to the elevation here anymore.

He took a couple of Excedrin (my go-to for that) and had plenty of water, but the headache wouldn't budge for him.

We weren't drinking (wish we were), so that couldn't have played a role.
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