Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Salmon Fishing In the Oregon Rivers and Tidewaters

Many people want to catch a salmon on their fly rod, but where to start and what to do is another whole drill. Just getting a 10wt and having some flies that are known to catch salmon is not all it takes to catch these mighty fish. You have to be in the right place at the right time, and the window of opportunity is short and runs out fast. When you time it all together it can be "Fish On" for lots of time during a fishing session. When you are in the wrong place at the wrong time it seems like salmon are something that is mythological to catch on your fly rod.
Super chrome bright Chinook like this one will eat flies very willingly, & can be a sturdy battle on a 10wt.
 So here are some basic rules for salmon fishing on a fly rod in Oregon (these are my rules, and obviously everyone has their opinions):
  • You should be using a stout 9wt or a 10wt for Chinook salmon (I use a 10wt Helios2) 
  • You can use a stout switch rod (something that throws at least 400 grains)
  • You will need different lines for different styles of fishing, and each line fishes a niche of salmon fishing with a fly rod.
  • Flies for different portions of the salmon migration will cover for the different niches of salmon fishing with a fly rod. (example: Clouser Minnows for tidewater and fresh from the salt / egg patterns, traditional salmon flies like comets, or leech patterns for upriver fish) 
This Chinook Salmon caught in freshwater less than 1 mile from the Ocean took a Clouser Minnow
This Chrome bright Coho Salmon took a dead drifted orange glo-bug egg fly on milepost 15 of a river above tidewater
Chinook caught about 9 miles upriver on a fly called a "Salmon Candy" (just like a Cotton Candy jazzed up with flash)
The next thing to talk about is the fly lines to use, and with what flies to match up for those lines. When you fish an egg pattern, you do not do it on a shooting head or on an Intermediate Striper line. You would need a floating line like a Salmon/Steelhead taper matched with a strike indicator for flies like egg patterns or leeches to be fished on a dead drift presentation. On the other hand if you want to catch those sea lice ridden chrome bright Chinook on a swung/slow stripped Clouser minnow, you better be equipped with sinking shooting tapers (intermediate, Type II, and Type III most of the time) matched with an intermediate sinking running line for the best versatility or a Intermediate Striper line for a better casting option that is popular amongst many salmon fly fishers in Oregon. The same line options would be what you would want if you are going to fish a pool with bright healthy fish rolling in a river several miles up whether you are fishing Orange Comets or pink leeches.
A tidewater/lower river pool Chinook salmon setup for Oregon consists of a 10wt Single hand rod paired with a heavy duty large arbor reel lined up with a clear intermediate shooting taper looped onto an intermediate running line. A Clouser Minnow like this one is a great choice for those grabby fish.
A switch rod with a floating line is an excellent choice for fishing the freshwater portion of rivers with shelves, bottlenecks, and runs. It is easy to switch back and forth from using poly leaders for swinging spots to a tapered leader, egg pattern or leech, and a strike indicator for dead drift presentations. 
For the salmon fishing spots now, they are for you to find on your own, but words of advice. Salmon fishing is something that is popular, and you will likely have some other people around who know how to catch them. There are secret spots, but they are more likely to be upriver in the freshwater portions of rivers. Those bottleneck in the river spots and shallow shelves are the secrets to be found that can offer solitude and epic salmon fishing on a fly rod. Anything tidal or near the tidal stretches of rivers will not be a secret, and there will likely be anglers around. Where to stand in a spot, and the little secrets of how to get them consistently can still be your secret that you discovered. There are only so many holes on the lower reaches of rivers and tidal areas, and these fine fish attract the people and fishing pressure. If you are out salmon fishing and you don't see fish rolling, or people around you are likely in the wrong area. Not to say that you cannot be at a good salmon fishery with nobody present (I have been at epic places salmon fishing with nobody buy my wife and I around), but chances are if you had an epic day out there, then that you were at the right place at the right time.
Spots like this can concentrate fish because it bottlenecks the fish, and it is skinny upriver where the fish would have their backs sticking out of the water, and it is very wide and broad downriver exposing the fish and making them vulnerable.
Shelves (3-5 inch deep water) across the river make fish passage too shallow, but the little slot on the far bank (which is 4-5 feet deep) is where every fish must swim through on their way upstream.
When the average depth of the river can be from inches to a few feet deep; you can assume a pool that is as big as an Olympic swimming pool is going to have lots of fresh salmon in it (especially when it is about 1 mile from the ocean).
One final and most important piece of advice I would have for salmon fly fishing in Oregon is that you have to be "the good fishing report" and you cannot wait to "hear the good fishing report". It is typically too late if you wait to hear about the good fishing before you decide to go. You have to speculate when to go, and not go when you were told it was good because it will likely be too late, and you will have missed it.

Not much is better than landing a Chinook salmon like this in September through December in Oregon on your fly rod.

An excellent fly box representing what an Oregon Chinook Salmon selection for tidal / freshwater lower rivers should look like.

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Bonefish Bonanza - 10/28 through 10/30 - Report

This is a short little photo/video blurb from my past El Pescador "Belize Bonefish Bonanza" Trip through Orvis. I fished on 10-28 through 10-30, and I was there for the day before that and the morning after also. There will be more pics and video to come, but I need to get my footage off of my boat partner Bob's laptop when he gets back (he stayed longer and added more days to the trip). I am also going to have pics from other people on the trip who were not in my boat; so stay tuned for more to come. I just have been so excited about how amazing of a time I experienced; so I had to share the pieces of footage I do have on me for right now.

Bob with one of the many Jacks during the amazing blitz we experienced
Stunning flats all over the place....
Bob with another jack, and you can tell Emir is getting one off for me at the same time....
Scanning the flats for nervous water.....
Little, but my first official bonefish in Belize.....Scrappy and on a H2 9' 6wt Saltwater model
Bob's first landed bonefish in Belize...
Working for tarpon in a channel where they were rolling....
Gordy working the polling platform....He is like an Osprey with his eyes...
Life is rough when this is what you have to stare at....... Gorgeous scenery!!
Mangroves line the waters....
Captain Emir and his son Gordy (soon to be Captain) were amazing to be in the boat with.
A brief interlude with a tarpon....
Click Here to Watch Video 

Sunday, October 12, 2014

Don't Forget the Summer Steelhead Action Heats Up In the Fall

Many people in Oregon think that you can only have good steelheading at the Deschutes in the fall. If you are into fishing in a setting that will have less anglers than the reputation of the mighty D, then try a river anywhere from the Clackamas all the way down to the Rogue. They all have summer steelhead, and the valley rivers like the North Santiam, South Santiam, the Middle Fork Willamette, "The Town Run" Willamette, and the McKenzie all can provide steelhead action that would pleasantly shock a Deschutes steelhead angler (The McKenzie and upper Middle Fork Willamette also prove that way for trout too). Most PDXers don't even think the Clackamas fishes for steelhead after the summer is over, and summer steelhead don't even spawn until the following January through March (same time as the winter fish, but a bit on the earlier side). The North Umpqua and Rogue are some of the best and most beautiful summer steelhead rivers in the world, and they both can go off in the fall. My point is to let everyone know that there is lots of awesome fishing for summer steelhead to be had over the next several weeks, and whether you decide to hit the Deschutes, McKenzie, or the Rogue, they will all be fishing with awesome fall conditions.

Friday, October 3, 2014

It's Time For Fall Salmon Fly Fishing!

During the heat of battle.....
Catching a big bay chrome bright Chinook is a pinnacle for one's bucket list...


Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Jetting Around & Chrome Hunting

My good friend and great guide Ethan whose guide service is Ethan Nickel Outfitters recently got a nice little jet boat for cruising around. We finally had a common day off to go fishing, and it was a total blast jetting around and hunting for chrome. Check out a fish that we tied into while on our outing. 

Friday, August 22, 2014

There is still limited space for my Wild Waters Fly Fishing October 4-6th NorCal trip. Click the link below to learn more about this amazing trip. 

Fishing at several rivers....

Awesome accommodations with a stellar view....
Super awesome food is provided.....
Memorable fish will be caught....
Rainbows that have turbo charged runs....
or email me at steelheadmarz@yahoo.com regarding the trip.

Sunday, August 3, 2014

Carpocalypse Fly Fishing Tournament - August 9th and 10th - Check it out!!!


If you have not tried out the Carpocalypse Fly Fishing Tournament, this weekend is your opportunity to check it out. This is a super fun time, and there will be lots of great people to share the time with.

Monday, May 12, 2014

O-So-Good


This past weekend my wife Nikki and I took an adventure east for our first anniversary to fish a sweet tailwater fishery with numerous large fish that tend to act like they live in a spring creek. It was the perfect timing for the first heavy duty pale morning dun hatches with fish feeding greedily like they were kids eating candy with a craze. There were also sporadic caddis mixed in here and there with some good pulses of "hatch-a-tivity", and the fish would gorge on them for those moments. Fish were eating midges in the pond like pools, but there was no need to mess with that technical type of fishing compared to the action you could see and receive with the PMD's. Below is a little photo essay to see what we got to see and experience out there......
The view from where we decided to set up the camp, and the look of the weather when we arrived...
After we set up camp, a little "evening rise" was occurring with pale morning duns and caddis...
This one really filled the net up. It was actually longer than the net from tip of the handle.
The desert landscape was loaded with spring blooms all over.
Catching browns with my Superfine Touch & CFO Reel is too fun & way too classic!
The smaller fish like this are far and few, but they are very scrappy and are really pretty too.
You know you have good fishing when your net is filled like this many times during the day.
The CDC PMD Comparadun was by far the best "fish catching fly" of the day for us. Too many fish for this fly....
For many hours of the day we caught fish like this on dead drifted size 16 Pale Morning Duns.
Smiles result from gorgeous canyons surrounding you with fish rising to dry flies all around you, and you have tight lines.
A nice deep bodied brown trout that crushed a CDC PMD Comparadun.
A close up view of one of Nikki's slabola browns that I got to see slurp her little PMD dry fly
"The Camp"
Letting this girl get ready for her swim off after we were lucky enough to admire her.
The scenery is awesome in every direction you look....
The hardest fighting most athletic browns out there tend to the be the 15"-18"ers.
Browns are really cool where some of them have lots of spots, and some have few that are spaced apart.
We thought how this arch must have a name; yet how many people actually know of it.....?
Netting another fine fish!
What a fishery! To think that you catch lots of these in a given day on the water.....
Fish on! A little finesse with authority goes a long way.....
Nikki seemed to catch several of the biggest fish of the trip, and all on dry flies.
Streamers worked really well, and it was actually a change of pace from dry fly fishing.
This side channel had some really gorgeous cobbles lining it....
A rather sweet agate that was next to the obvious one that you can see in the picture above.
This same side channel had a little spot on the downstream end where I hooked and lost my largest brown.

The view every which way was really stunning....
Fishing the "evening rise" with a caddis hatch that was occurring in the riffle above....
This wall had a bunch of rock doves that would occasionally get charged by a golden eagle.
Wild roses were abound, and there was even a grove of them in a riparian area I walked through
We were really fortunate to experience lots of these gorgeous fish, and most caught on dry flies.
Before we headed back home, we had to say goodbye to our new friends we made camping.
We were sad to leave, but we will be back again....
Eventually we had to decide to head back home, but the drive home out of the canyon is stunning.
A classic Magritte sky and a road to the horizon......
A little white knuckling through the Cabbage Hill stretch of Highway 84.
Quite the scenery seeing the Cabbage Hill landscape all green with its spring dress on.
Luckily we had none of this to experience......
Lots of giant wind turbines on the ride to stare at.....