Amazing vacation day
Posted: Tue Nov 20, 2012 2:16 pm
Now this is the way to enjoy a vacation!
I started off fishing the Gunnison at 6:45 AM. Light enough to fish, but the sun was 45 minutes from being up. I started at a run where the Gunnison and North Fork of the Gunnison converge. Unofficially to me and my friends it is known as the “Rock”. I started off with a Yellow egg as an attractor, a size 12 Partridge and Peacock dropped off that, and an Redheaded Stepchild SH, size 18 dropped off that.
In 45 minutes of fishing the I caught maybe 20 fish. Most were 12 to 14 inch Browns with a couple 14 to 16 inch Bows. The Bows took the Partridge, and all the Browns took the Redhead.. Here’s the largest Bow out of that section.
The sun was making its way over the rim of the canyon. I had fished the Rock pretty hard so I moved about a quarter mile upstream to the Sucker Hole. This is the spot Hank and I fished. I pulled a dozen Bows out of it. The smallest was 18 inches. The largest was 21 inches. I also pulled one Brown out of this section. He was 19.5 inches long…I could not quite stretch him out to 20 inches. The two brown pictures are the same fish. I did not take pictures of every Bow. Only the ones I had to land near the bank. All the Bows took the Partridge and Peacock, and the Brown took the Redhead .
About half way between the Rock, and the Sucker hole is a riffle. The riffle is maybe 75 yards long. Maybe 25 feet off the bank is a trough that runs the entire length of the riffle. Kind of a secret spot for me. It is hidden in plain sight. The riffle is too shallow to support fish. Or so it appears. That trough is 3 feet wide, 2 feet deep, and the trout like to lay in it. I can usually pull a few fish out of it. On a good day I can get maybe 6 to 8 trout hooked. Today was the exception. I think I caught close to 20. One fish was 16 inches and he was the smallest by far. In this stretch I am guessing the average length was 20+ inches. I landed one that was 23 and lost one that was 24 atleast. They were all Browns, and they all took the Peacock and Partridge. After the first 5 fish the fly was a shambles. I cut it and the redhead off, and replaced them with two peacock and partridge. WOW, did I slam them….Heres the pics that did turn out.
probabIy one in four or five fish were photographed, and that’s ok. I had a very good morning.
The patterns..
I started off fishing the Gunnison at 6:45 AM. Light enough to fish, but the sun was 45 minutes from being up. I started at a run where the Gunnison and North Fork of the Gunnison converge. Unofficially to me and my friends it is known as the “Rock”. I started off with a Yellow egg as an attractor, a size 12 Partridge and Peacock dropped off that, and an Redheaded Stepchild SH, size 18 dropped off that.
In 45 minutes of fishing the I caught maybe 20 fish. Most were 12 to 14 inch Browns with a couple 14 to 16 inch Bows. The Bows took the Partridge, and all the Browns took the Redhead.. Here’s the largest Bow out of that section.
The sun was making its way over the rim of the canyon. I had fished the Rock pretty hard so I moved about a quarter mile upstream to the Sucker Hole. This is the spot Hank and I fished. I pulled a dozen Bows out of it. The smallest was 18 inches. The largest was 21 inches. I also pulled one Brown out of this section. He was 19.5 inches long…I could not quite stretch him out to 20 inches. The two brown pictures are the same fish. I did not take pictures of every Bow. Only the ones I had to land near the bank. All the Bows took the Partridge and Peacock, and the Brown took the Redhead .
About half way between the Rock, and the Sucker hole is a riffle. The riffle is maybe 75 yards long. Maybe 25 feet off the bank is a trough that runs the entire length of the riffle. Kind of a secret spot for me. It is hidden in plain sight. The riffle is too shallow to support fish. Or so it appears. That trough is 3 feet wide, 2 feet deep, and the trout like to lay in it. I can usually pull a few fish out of it. On a good day I can get maybe 6 to 8 trout hooked. Today was the exception. I think I caught close to 20. One fish was 16 inches and he was the smallest by far. In this stretch I am guessing the average length was 20+ inches. I landed one that was 23 and lost one that was 24 atleast. They were all Browns, and they all took the Peacock and Partridge. After the first 5 fish the fly was a shambles. I cut it and the redhead off, and replaced them with two peacock and partridge. WOW, did I slam them….Heres the pics that did turn out.
probabIy one in four or five fish were photographed, and that’s ok. I had a very good morning.
The patterns..