Weather’s cool, water’s high

What looks to be a Pale Evening Dun from last night on the East Fork. (Credit: Issac Brown)

Life has come roaring back on our local rivers, given up for dead just six months ago. If you love angling, there are fish to be caught (and released), trout that had been hiding out way up canyon top are now eating in our lower reaches. They are bigger, fatter than I’ve seen in some time. And these rainbows are busy gorging themselves on multiple hatches.

Do be careful of the high flows. As a fisher prone to swimming and wading stick averse, I told myself this twice recently, trying to get across fast water to that yummy section just out of reach. You know the one: There have got to be trout in that pocket water, the reasoning goes, but how to reach it? In a word, “carefully.” Lots of us fish solo, and taking a swim now means you’ll be holding on to breath and an increasingly curb-rashed bottom for a while, hoping a convenient fallen tree limb within reach might come to the rescue.

Meanwhile, this from intrepid angler Larry Pirrone

4 days ago

I had a successful day last week on WF. Not going to be specific where, but encountered three fish. One was a tap,tap,tap. One was a full on take and I landed a healthy and feisty 6 incher and released it. One was a full on take and he threw the hook. About three hours and I waded a lot of river. My wading staff got a workout. Used a two fly rig with a 16 Prince Nymph on point and a 16 Hornberg on dropper but fished wet. The one I landed ate the Hornberg. I saw no rising fish. There are fish there. I am encouraged.

Just remember the West Fork is still closed weekdays, apparently through December. This is our local water, incredible as that statement may seem. You’ve heard the mantra “fish locally,” right? Well, there is no time like the present.

So get out there and love all the forks of the San Gabriel (yes, even the North) before the summer rush of swimmers bums your wah. After what our mountains, our fish, ourselves have endured these last few years, it’s a friggin’ miracle.

ALL SMILES ON OUR LOCAL WATER. Can ‘beer-thirty” be far behind? ( Credit: Jim Burns)

See you on the river, Jim Burns

One thought on “Weather’s cool, water’s high”

  1. Jim, we think alike. Am thinking my next outing is East Fork. As to wading staffs I took and old trekking pole and made one and I kept me off of my butt more than once last trip. I am a fit 78 but I have to watch balance and careful of what I step on. Rocks are starting to grow some green hair! Long casts? I have been running a Skagat head with built in running line and it really helps with short AND long casts from 10′ out to 40′ with very low effort. Working a lot on my roll cast and practicing in my pool! I plan to be out somewhere this coming Wednesday. You could not pay me to go on a weekend. Nice thing is that as the level drops the brush that is right up to the water will be further back (till we get a spurt of growth. I see a good couple of years especially if we get future spring spawning runs if the lake backs up again.

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