Dec 14, 2010

Lotso fish

After digging through the old hard drive, I remembered that I digitized some footage of my short time up Steamboat Creek with Lee. You know, the guy who protects the steelhead sitting in a pool waiting for the right water conditions to continue upstream?

It was early morning when I arrived. Terrible time to be trying to shoot video into the water (Best light is around 1pm in July/August if you plan to go and want to get the best view). You can see a bunch of fish here, what you cannot see are hundreds of other fish that were lurking below. With polarized glasses, you could see a good deal of 'em down there. More than what the video shows. But you still can't see all of them that early in the day. Lee told me that there were more than 500 in the pool at that time. And yes, he does count them.

Taking a drive up the creek and sitting with Lee is something everyone should do. He has a lot of knowledge of steelhead to keep your attention. As a fisherman himself, he can offer some presentation tips based on what he has learned of the years.

He is the first one to tell me, that he thought that steelhead most likely jump out of the water... Not to eat, not to chase something, but to look around, above the water line. He talked about how steelhead would often do this before navigating up water falls. Or if they think a predator is near (bear). He demonstrated it by walking away and coming back. Some fish reacted by jumping up to see what was going on! After having this discussion, it really made sense. Several times on the Umpqua. I waded quietly in the water, swinging a fly. And right where my fly was swinging, an enormous steelhead would jump a foot or three out of the water. I thought to myself, "a steelhead that may be interested in eating!" Wrong, he was probably seeing if some dumb fisherman was swinging a fly and if he should continue to ignore the strange item floating by.

Click for higher res version..

(watch for the jumping fish, almost caught on camera! :)
Nice and shiny bright

After this day, I paid more attention to the jumping steelhead I saw on other trips. I did feel like fish were checking me out. Perhaps Lee is crazy, and now I'm crazy too, but it does make sense. He shared some interesting stories of jumping steelhead and how he came to his conclusions. Ask him if you ever visit.

He also validated my beliefs that steelhead are very curious and will grab something just to see what it is. Especially if it is new to them. Either by its look or how it moves. This guy actually keeps a log of what falls in the water and what the fish do with it (ignore it, mouth it, chase it, etc). More interesting tidbits of information to ponder. My sudden craze of chugging skaters or even pulsing a wet fly makes more sense than ever. Trout/steelhead are curious and will go after something different.

p.s. Lee also believes that Steelhead do not shy away from direct sun in the hot part of the day. He thinks it is a mistake to avoid water because it isn't shaded. What steelhead don't like, is change. So if it is sunny and the light is falling and the shadow line is crossing the river, they avoid that line. Staying either in full shade or sun.

1 comment:

Mark Kautz said...

Hey Rick. Thanks for the info. It gets me one step closer to that elusive Steelhead.

Mark