please remember you can click on a photo to see a larger version & highlighted text are links to further information
Part One of our big summer adventure
Family & Fly Fishing
Pie, my cousin, the Big Guy, loves fresh baked pie. So when the
Big Guy planned a meet up with us for fly fishing - a shared passion - we
knew the best surprise we could give him would be pie. The Lady and I scoured
photos online of the interior of the cabin he rented at Steens Mountain Resort to confirm it had an oven for baking.
The unbaked, frozen pie rode in a place of honor as we headed north from home on
a familiar route. We passed through Hallelujah Junction and Alturas, places
filled with memories of past travels. Our overnight spot was the remote Hot Springs Campground on Hart Mountain National Antelope Refuge.
It was Wednesday afternoon. Pronghorn
were about.
Why was the place so busy, especially
midweek? We took the last remaining campsite. Our nearest neighbor's campsite
was filled with equipment trailers, ATVs, easy ups, tables and tents. Proudly
flying over the compound were US and Texas flags. All the vehicles had Oregon
plates.
"They must be Texagonians,"
the Lady observed.
They were friendly - "I'll have
coffee on at five tomorrow morning!" the probable alpha male of the group
offered as we walked by - but they were also unpleasant neighbors. Whinny
country music droned and covered the natural sounds of wildlife and the flowing
creek. They could not quietly walk to the bathroom. An ATV roared to life and
announced another run to the crapper. Their evening conversations ratcheted up
in volume as alcohol kicked in.
We could put up with it for a night
and we also have the knack of wandering far away and disappearing into the
natural surroundings. The vast sagebrush steppe of Hart Mountain is awe
inspiring and spectacular in the evening.
Marsh hawks flew low on their hunt.
Deer quietly moved through the draws, does with fawns. Mother quail herded
their almost grown chicks. The natural world was alive all around us, so much
more rejuvenating and refreshing than "Falling into a burning ring of fire,"
the country golden oldie we left behind at camp.
"Why is this place so
busy?" the Lady asked a National Fish & Wildlife ranger who stopped to
chat as we returned along the road.
"Tomorrow, August first, is the
opening day of archery season," he explained.
"That's why this place and
people are so different from our other stays here." the Lady acknowledged.
An interesting side note was the hot
spring pool was virtually unused. Two other non hunting couples were here for
the hot spring experience.
The Texagonians tipped over fairly
early and our night was quiet. Coffee was not on at five at our neighbor's camp
the next morning. They started to stir around the time we drove out after our
long early morning walk and breakfast. No crack of dawn start to archery season
this year for them.
We had lunch at the trailhead at Page
Springs in the Steens Mountain Recreation Area. We enjoyed a hike up the Dunder und
Blitzen River, or "The Blitzen", named for thunder and lightning during raging thunderstorms.
The Big Guy arrived, we moved into
our cabin - home for three nights, and got the pie in the oven. An apple pie
baking in the oven is absolute heaven.
The Big Guy suggested meeting at Steens Mountain
because both he and I have fished there many times. My last fly fishing trek down to Wildhorse Lake two years ago was a classic for me.
Therefore Wildhorse Lake was our first day of fly fishing.
The Big Guy had concerns about the
hike. He lives at sea level and the trail starts at close to 10,000 feet
near the summit of Steens. It is also a down and up hike so the climb out would
be at the end of our day.
The hike down to this alpine gem of a
lake above tree line was through a lovely garden profuse with wildflowers.
This is a beautiful small glacial
cirque we will enjoy revisiting time and time again.
We assembled our rods and started in
fishing. My first cast - a size 16 bead head pheasant tail nymph pattern under a strike
indicator - brought my first trout to the net.
The Big Guy quickly caught his first
trout. The trout were smaller in size - in length and weight - then I caught our last two visits. There is no natural reproduction
habitat available to spawning trout in this cirque. Wildhorse Lake is a
"put and grow" fishery for Lahontan Cutthroat Trout, one of the native trout of the Great Basin. From my experience, I
sensed that the lake was replanted last year with small cutthroats and it will
be a few years before they reach the size I enjoyed catching two years prior.
We have it on our calendar to return in 2022.
We still enjoyed a day of challenging
fishing here.
"I know why they are
skinny," the Big Guy commented after releasing another trout. "They
are such picky eaters!"
He was correct. We found no fly that consistently
produced takes. My best success was with a size 16 foam black ant pattern. I
would get a take from a fourth of the fish I watched approach and only if
another trout was close by. The take was driven by competition for food. A long
fine tippet helped with fooling these picky eaters.
No big cutthroats but a good day. How
could it not be at a place so special as this?
It was time to hike out, Although a
bit worried on how he would do on the climb out, the 78 year old Big Guy did
well. The beauty of the landscape and the abundant wildflowers did more to take
our breaths away than did the physical exertion.
We relaxed a bit after reaching the
top and took in the alpine terrain.
The next day of fly fishing will go
down as one of my favorites.
"Goddamnit!" The Big Guy's
outburst was explosive. It can stop you in your tracks. His is a percussive booming
voice, especially when it comes to "Goddamnit!"
He had warned us about all the vegetation.
It was thick, damn near impenetrable. "It will catch your fly and then not
let loose!" he had schooled us.
My first cast put my grasshopper
pattern on the water through the slight break in the curtain of shoulder high
grasses overhanging the creek surface, four feet lower than the ground I was
standing on. I let it drift into the undercut bank invisible below me. The
"gulp" was scary. Did someone drop a bowling ball in the creek? I
missed the fish. It took me by surprise although the Big Guy also said there
could be big trout and related stories from the past about 26 inchers that
broke off heavy tippet with a sound like a rifle shot.
The Big Guy's first cast brought
about the aforementioned "Goddamnit!"
The Lady went to help. It is her nature.
We could not see him but the shaking grasses pinpointed the Big Guy's location
along with another well punctuated "Goddamnit!"
"Are you on your knees? The Lady
asked. "I hope so because if you are on your feet, no way I'm going in
that hole to help!" A fly rod came up out of grasses on the end of his
long arm followed by the answer, "I'm on my knees." The Lady took the
fly rod.
"You need 5x tippet at a minimum,"
the Big Guy had counseled. "Anything smaller and you are just breaking off
fish."
The downside is that it takes a 26
incher on a run to break it. That means when your fly is snagged in impenetrable
weeds you cannot break it off. You are going in after it.
"You had better wear your nylon
long pants!" the Big Guy had also directed before we left the cabin that
morning. "No shorts! The grasses, teasel, stinging nettles, and thistles
will cut your legs up." We wore our long pants.
We worked our way along Bridge Creek
and an irrigation canal that delivered Blitzen River water to valley
agricultural fields. The Lady led the way. No way to see our feet through the
thick grass. It was carefully feeling your way through with your feet. The Lady
is an expert in tough terrain. We followed her, looking for any small opening
over the water that offered an opportunity to get a fly on the water.
The Lady got to thinking. She carried
the ghost net. "How in the world are you ever getting a big fish to net if
you catch one?"
"You'll have to jump through the
grass into the water and net it for us." the Big Guy answered. "After
the long drop the water could be up past your arm pits."
"Why me?" the Lady asked.
"I'm too old to do that anymore.
You're the youngest," came the answer.
"Be careful here!" the Lady
pointed out as she led. "The bank drops off here to the creek and you
can't see it. Go off my path even an inch and you're going in." I went in.
After they both determined I was still alive.........she followed up with, "I
told you. You need to listen to me."
It was hot, I'd say 90°. A good day
for rattlesnakes to take cover in the deep grass. We stepped slowly and
carefully.
We reached an old weir on Bridge
Creek. Below was a riffle and the only opportunity to enter the water after a
climb down. It would have been easier to fall again. The Lady was upstream with
the camera as I cast up and let the hopper drift through the ripple.
The Lady loves to watch the entire
sequence, studying the water, the cast, the drift, the trout rise, the take, the
fight, and the release.
We both caught trout, not many and
not any large enough to necessitate the Lady launching herself with reckless
abandon into the water up to her armpits with the ghost net. Maybe next time.
We climbed out of the tangle and
found shade under a couple of junipers. We looked downstream as we ate and
marveled that we had managed to fly fish and catch trout.
I am truthful when I say I had a
great time. It was indeed a challenge. It took patience and determination. It
was like climbing a mountain, one step at a time. We moved through the day.
Time flowed by like the creek alongside us and in a whisper a good day had
passed. Would I return and do it again? Absolutely.
How many times did I hang up a fly in
the weeds? I said a few "Goddamnits!", just not as loud as the Big
Guy.
We said our goodbyes to the Big Guy
the following morning along with making plans for our next fly fishing meet up.
Hugs were all around as we parted. The company and pie were fantastic.
We were on our way to Idaho and
Montana.
Thanks for taking us with you on this adventure, brother Monte!
ReplyDeleteYou are most welcome, brother tom!
DeleteDrove within sight of Steens today enroute to spend a few days in the mountains of Idaho. Except couldn’t see it. Rain and fog Winnemucca to Nampa. But everytime I come this way I keep thinking, “someday ...”
ReplyDeleteNow there’s a live BLM webcam on Steens.
http://www.alertwildfire.org/oregon/index.html
Often it rotates regularly, but now it’s zoomed in on a fire northwest of there. And there are two people on the trail. You go back? ;-)
David, thanks for following our travels and thanks for the camera link. Think about staying a night or two at the Frenchglen hotel and doing day driving trips up Steens on the loop road. I believe you'd enjoy that my friend.
DeleteAlways a pleasure, and the Blitzen is of course on my radar......
ReplyDeleteAs it should be! Thanks for the comment.
Delete