August 6th - The heat, the feast, the hopper catcherThe August heat usually means it is time to move the office to the Thompson River valley. After the long weekend crowd had dispersed, Mark and I decided to pay those aggressive rainbow trout a visit and meet up with Chris at the same time for some jack chinook salmon fishing this week. Stubborn trout and slippery boulders can make these excursions very frustrating at times, but past trips have always brought unexpected excitement and new findings that keep drawing us back.
We arrived in Spences Bridge at 12:30pm and were greeted by Roy and Sarah at
Acacia Grove RV Park and Cabins. It took no time to find the Leaf site, because it looks like he moved the entire Chilliwack to it.
How everything was packed into that truck was quite baffling to us. Acacia Grove makes camping luxurious. We took refuge from the heat in the air-conditioned leisure room.
Chris showed us the jack chinook salmon that he had caught that morning. After some fish talk, I was quite anxious and wanting to get out despite of the heat. Mark and I eventually geared up so we could head down to a stretch of river next to the campground to see if any trout was stupid enough to engulf a fly in this heat.
Silver twins, ready for action
Spences Bridge
Mark, casting and hoping for a tug
Resulted in a nasty wind knot
The afternoon scouting under the scorching sun was not rewarding as expected. A few tugs were felt, but they were from tinies that did not know any better. The only wiggly object that was unfortunately brought back with the stonefly nymph was this juvenile salmon.
We came back to camp at 5:00pm, slightly exhausted from the heat and hungry for both food and fish. The dinner menu included two jack chinook salmon that Dennis had caught, as well as vegetables that Chris had bought from a nearby market. This was just a bit better than the hot dogs that Mark and I had brought.
Can dinner get fresher than this?
Chris had full control of his stove
Waiting for our fish in the BBQ
Five star camp dinner
After dinner, it was time for some serious business. The evening hours usually bring out the biggest trout that are seeking for a surface feed. While Mark and I reorganized our fly tackle, Chris wandered off with his butterfly net.
his first target species were hopping all over the place, but hard to get a hold of.
We decided to leave Chris behind because by the time he had collected enough hoppers, most fish would have gone to bed.
We followed Dennis to a spot nearby where it apparently had been productive.
Upon our arrival, I sent out a golden stonefly nymph to see if I could be tugged. Meanwhile, Mark immediately generated some splashes further downstream but none stayed on his hook. After three or four connections, I decided to find out what the secret was. It turned out that he had been teasing them with a dry fly.
Just to make it more challenging, Chris arrived with his freshly caught hoppers, which he sent out with a spinning rod.
I chose to walk downstream from both of them where I spotted some rises. A few drifts later, a tiny bob beneath the surface buried the fly. My dry fly experience is minimal, so even though I was staring at it intently, it took two more seconds to register that some fish had gotten it in its mouth.
I set the hook, which was actually unnecessary because the trout was already swimming away with it. It took a few robust runs like what most rainbow trout from Interior BC would do before surrendering itself in the shallows. The scar at the edge of its jaw indicates that this fish was already caught before, a pretty typical sign in a fishery where catch and release is primarily practiced.
Meanwhile, Chris had also connected with one, which obviously couldn't resist his hopper. Once it surfaced, he called me over for a photo opportunity because it was apparently his biggest ever. I took a peek when I reached him and it surely was big, estimating in the 20 inches mark.
A quick photo snap and it was on its way back to grow bigger.
Mark finished the evening by practicing extreme catch and release. None of the eight bows that he connected with came anywhere close to shore. We called it a day as the moon rose in the dimly lit sky. The early start on the next day was going to be promising.