DATE: Thursday, December 29, 2011
TIME: 1:45 PM TO 4:30 PM
WEATHER: Low 60s, partly cloudy
WATER CONDITIONS: 0 units
LOCATIONS FISHED: Norfork River, Mill Dam Eddy to below McClellan’s dock and return
FLIES USED: #16 olive Norfork River scud, #16 red/black zebra midge
ROD USED: Winston 10’ 4-weight WT
HATCHES: Midges, blue winged olives
OTHER: I fished with Wayne and Bill. As we walked in near Mill Dam Eddy, we noticed that the river was full of fishers, at least at Mill Dam Eddy and downstream. As we walked further, the upstream reach was crowded as well, with fishers everywhere. The pool above the island below McClellan’s had a couple of “openings” and Bill and I set up shop there, leaving Wayne downstream of Mill Dam Eddy. I took a couple of fish on the zebra midge, and motioned for Bill to come upstream and join me and he took a couple of fish as well. Fishers in the first riffle departed, but had been standing in the lane where fish usually hold, so we continued upstream. No fewer than a dozen one-man pontoons, kayaks, etc. passed, each with at least one fisher and some with two; this was in addition to the dozen or so fishers already there when we arrived. All but one of the mobile fishers transited the water where Bill was fishing; he is so much a gentleman that he would not complain. To avoid this traffic, I fished the tiny left riffle in the plunge pool hard, missing 3 fish, and catching only one. I waded and walked upstream to the area above Otter Creek where I had success a week ago, knowing that few, if any, fishers had fished it. Again, I cast far to river left, and picked up fish, forcing a drift via mending. It seemed each time I would mend a fish would be on the scud; no fish took the zebra midge. I waded further upstream as far as I could go, depth wise, without getting wet, fishing river left, and caught a total of a dozen fish, though it took longer than last week. About half the fish were between 14 and 16 inches long. As the sun began sinking below the river right horizon, I walked rather quickly downstream to join Bill and Wayne.
NOTE: Continuing to post regarding the healing of the river, today, the single channel that had formed by the merging of the two channels at the end of the island at Mill Dam Eddy had more than doubled in size, and much of the gravel bar prohibiting further widening had formed on very loose material. Material quickly moves when one walks on it. I fully expect it to erode further with increased generation. It is truly amazing that the river continues to “heal”.