Hello again fellow anglers and readers of our outdoor
adventures. First off sorry about the large file size
but I reduced it as much as possible so I can give
you a idea of the text that follows and make you feel
like your right with us as we venture out.
We at steelheadheaven have been testing products
on the market to give us that extra advantage to hooking
into that steelhead that is not all that interested
and turn him into raging bull. The fly attached is
one that Archie has been making for some time now
and has fine tuned it.
He
was so kind as to teach me the proper way to tie this
fly and the recipe for success, which I am going to
share with you today. It starts with a tail of rabbit
fur(black or purple). Tied onto a size 1/0 Mustad
Salmon Hook. The rib is a 5gr. copper wire. I then
tie in a palmered hackle from an old cape of soft
Chinese Black, after stripping the barbules away from
one side (it makes the fly look more sparse when finished
and helps the fly sink). Then comes the key to the
fly. As Arch is set that I learn how to dub flys that
is our next step. I use Lite-Brite Fire Fox and Dub
the body to give it a flashy green. Then the palmered
hackle and finally the rib. For the head I dub it
with orange or red seal fur and finally use that magical
tool of a whip finisher, that is a pain to use but
when you get it mastered it is the stuff and your
head is secure. Arch tells me that it took him years
to develop this fly and a week to teach me. Looks
like I owe him a cold one!
I added the pictures of the fish he is going to describe
in the story below as well as a pic I took with the
fly in the Steelheads mouth. It was a interesting
digital picture as I was not sure how it would turn
out but if you look carefully you will notice the
bright red cheeks of the steelie as he was landing
it, awesome.
I also added a picture of a scenic snow capped mountain
while we did a drift on the Upper Kalum River. Take
note as you can see a switched backed trail going
up, up, and away. This is our pullout and the end
of our drift. Our clients get a real gas out of this
one as it is a Mountain Goats paradise. Unfortunately
you cannot see the lodge in this picture but it is
hidden somewhere at the top.
Enjoy and tight lines! Tracey
John Hittel
I
look up at a sky the color of tarnished and faded
zinc…and I wonder again at our idiocy. Sweat
streams down from my eyes, temporarily blinding me
with microscopic daggers of pain that all somehow
simultaneously stab at my pupils, much like an imagined
stream of carbonic acid. My right hand lifts toward
my brow and I strain to overcome the rictus in my
fingers, managing somehow to free their frozen grip
from the sling of my pole, and the river of sweat
gets magically diverted to my finger tips. Tears brought
on by the pain of learning to see again fog my vision,
but shadows and light gradually coalesce into trees.
I can see the edges of the river now, hidden between
the branches and boughs…it is the only thing
preventing me from turning back to the warmth of the
truck. I look over at Tracey and laugh out loud. He
is the ‘kid’ after all, at least as it pertains
to comparing his age to mine and he is in much better
shape…yet he too, is bent over at the waist and
sucking air in gasps and gulps that threaten to draw
in the snow at our feet . We are fools, but you already
knew that…
The skipper and I wear our rods now as quivers. My
Sage is snuggled safely inside her PVC cocoon and
sits draped across my back in a crude, homemade contraption
that makes walking with a fishing rod a breeze. Both
hands are free to tug at branches and push off with
our ski poles…we are ‘fancy walking’
across a carpet of white in matched pairs of borrowed
snowshoes. We are wending our way along side a small
feeder stream that melds into the Kalum in a likely
riffle of tinted river, mixing with water from the
creek, as clear as crystal. A full day of fishing
stretches downstream from the confluence, and we know
from the lack of other footprints or vehicles at the
trailhead that we will have the river to ourselves.
Conditions are far from ideal, with cold water lulling
most of the Steelhead into a lethargy of soft takes
and hugging the bottom. Still, the sun is shining,
the air is blessedly devoid of wind and we are in
with a chance.
The
skipper is tossing a black GP and systematically covers
the water below me. Each of his feathered casts drapes
across the water in a repeating and ever changing
pattern and I can tell from the frequency that his
fly catches on the bottom that he is using a heavier
tip than I. The Kalum is very low at this time of
year. I look across at the opposite shore and realize
that my eyes are even with the high water mark from
days long past. Many if not most, local fly fishers
stay with a floating line and longer leader at this
time of year, but both of us have chosen sink tips
as a hedge against a wind blowing up. I am using a
fly of my own invention, called simply ‘Archie’s
Leech’. I developed it specifically for the low
waters of winter, but it is very effective year round
and has duped dozens of fish, many of them on this
river.
There is nothing finer than hooking a Steelhead behind
your fishing partner. The absolute, best rush is to
hook one when he or she has waded a little too far
into the water and have a streak of panicked silver
leap into air and splash right beside them. The skipper
wasn’t actually very far into the water at all,
but the prettiest fish I ever landed in my life was
laying quietly within eight feet of shore. The take
was so soft, I thought at first I had brushed against
a rock. The instant I lifted my rod tip, I knew different!
The little doe burst into the air within two feet
of the skipper’s right leg and I laughed out
loud when he jumped even higher than the fish. She
took me well into my backing on a water gulping rush
that ended only when she shot across the top of a
set of bouldered rapids, some forty yards below us.
When I saw her leap free of the water again, I thought
the fish was quite dark, and envisioned a beaten up,
colored male. When the little steelie resisted her
way close enough to have a good look at her for the
first time, and she obligingly made a slow turn broadside
to the sun, my mouth nearly dropped open in shock.
“Man! What a beauty!” There is nothing prettier
than a brightly colored, rainbow hued Steelhead, all
plump with energy and splashed in silver. No other
fish looks quite like it. I could almost hear the
skipper thinking “magazine cover”.
I laughed at the look on the skipper’s face…I
thought he was going to cry. He snapped one picture
of the fish just as she was leaping free of the water,
my fly clamped viciously in her mouth and a second
just as I was slipping the fly free. Neither of us
was prepared for the violence of her turn, and we
both looked on helplessly as she shot back between
my legs to freedom. A jealous flatlander named Robert
replied to my description of the event and my admitting
that we had both wanted to take a couple more pictures
of the beauty – “Pretty fish; I am happy
she got away before you two mauled her some more.
She has more important things to do.” And he
was right, of course. A couple of years back, a famous
fishing personality from back East made the news here
in Kitimat by going through the humiliating experience
of being ticketed for abusing a fish. I don’t
know the exact story and I certainly can’t claim
to know what is true, but I understand he was accused
of repeatedly letting the fish take out line time
after time, just to get some underwater footage. If
it is true, he should be ashamed of himself and I
certainly wouldn’t desire such ignominious fame.
I
seldom even touch Steelhead I catch, beyond holding
them by the wrist to prevent them from slapping themselves
against rocks in the shallows. It takes only a second
to pop the hook free. If you lay the fish on her side,
she will generally stay still until she is righted
again. If the fish needs reviving, it will be obvious.
There is no need to move the fish back and forth.
Just aim the head into some mild current, keep the
fish submerged and usually in a few seconds, a twitch
of remembered strength will signal that the fish is
ready to move back to the safety of deeper water.
As most of you know, the Kitimat River sports a hatchery,
and because of this, the river is one of the only
remaining bodies of water where one is permitted to
kill a Steelhead. The fish must be marked, and the
murderer must stop fishing (for anything) for the
remainder of that day. Sadly, many times I have borne
witness to some ridiculous displays, all because there
are still many who view Steelhead as meat. More often
than I care to remember, I have watched some idiot
dragging a flopping, gasping for air Steelhead several
feet up onto a rocky shore and then, looked on stunned,
at the same moron kicking the incredibly stressed
and possibly dying animal back into the water! The
fish was not marked…it will be Kraft dinner for
supper again, I sumise. A few of the times and despite
I have no proof of my assertion, I suspect from the
clues of the poacher’s body language, it was
only because I looked on that the wild fish was released.
I have seen guys hold a Steelhead out of the water
for longer than even Houdini could hold his breath.
I have watched in horror as more than one angler held
a fish high for the camera and then dropped it on
the rocks when it wriggled free of his grasp. In each
and every instance, I wished she were better trained…so
I could sic my dog on them. Robert was right to chastise
me…I too, am glad she got away.
See you on the river,
Archie