steve154
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steve154
MemberZach,
I am waiting to hear if you got slammed with any of the snow storm where you are at…
steve154
MemberI got back last night with a sore arm… 🙂
My buddy and I pulled out of my driveway Thursday morning at 3:30am and got in to Pulaski at 7:30. I snoozed the last hour of the trip and woke to severe rain and wind. We stopped at the diner, went to some shops and checked in to our hotel room. We were geared up and fishing at 10:30 and found the river all but deserted by salmon season standards. We finally got in to some fish at about 2:00 and had a blast til 4:00, when I said I had enough. We were hooking up with fresh chrome King’s that entire time, but couldn’t land them. I was using a Cabela’s XST 9′ 8wt. and 11.5 and 14lb tippet. Between the water flow, very slippery river bottom and the size of the fish it was very challenging. I think that the Lake Ontario King’s average 20-22lbs and max out much higher than that. They are amazing when fresh. Steelhead on steroids, jumps and all.
My Cabela’s wading jacket failed miserably. It was raining to the point of reducing visability and very windy. It was 55-60 degrees, but I was wet. When I finally pulled the plug I was probably in the danger zone: fine motor skills gone, speech starting to slur, uncontrolable shivering etc…it could have been ugly with the swift water. BE AWARE and keep an eye on your buddies for symptoms of hypothermia, heat stroke, dehydration etc…I learned that it doesn’t take extremes in temperature to be dangerous. I got fixed up with a hot shower, several dry layers of fleece and a nice greasy buffet dinner.(a few nips off the bottle of scotch probably didn’t actually help, but made me feel better ;)) I found out today that two guys drowned down stream from us that afternoon. I am going to invest in an inflatable belt…
Day two started at 3:30am again and we were PUMPED! We met our guide at 5:00 and went to the put in to find the water flowing at double the cfm from the day before. He gave us the option of going another day, but we decided to just go for it.
We were in to fish right away, but couldn’t land a thing. We got a few smaller ones(15+/-lbs.) close, but just couldn’t get em the last little bit. The rest we only actually saw when they were in the air, which they all did several times. The entire day went like that…Steve and Mike 0, fish 25. I saw backing way more than fly line. We never actually fished from the boat. The drill was to float, anchor along the bank and wade very close to the boat, out of the strong current. To go out too far was a certain swim.
This was my first time fishing with a guide and I was not disapointed. He had a top notch operation. The boat was clean and equipment was immaculate. He had 4 St.Croix 9wt’s with Orvis Mach reels.(I was highly impressed with the reels, by the way) He always had a rod ready to hand to us if we broke off, or wanted to switch up on flies. At 9:00 he busted out with a nice cheese/cracker and venison summer sausage platter. The cooler was full of beer, water and Gatorade and there was a thermos of coffee. Lunch consited of a huge sandwhich, chips, pickles and fruit. We laughed all day and just had a fantastic time.
My buddy and I agreed on the way home that it was well worth the money to hire the guide/drift boat for the day and will do it again next year. If anyone ever gets a chance to get up you have to experience the Salmon River. I wouldn’t want it as my home water because of the pressure it gets at this time of year, but man is it fun once in a while and being able to drift the river made A TON of difference from our past experiences. If anyone wants info drop me a line.
Steve
steve154
MemberZach,
I am taking my Kodak DX7590 and my digital video camera. I am in the process of figuring out a cheap and reliable waterproof way to carry them.
The only thing I am worried about is that every time I take a camera I jinx myself. Kinda like having a net handy…if I have it I can guarantee I won’t need it 🙂
steve154
MemberIf I were an editor I would make it an absolute policy to not publish any articles with detailed kiss and tell information on small,
steve154
MemberCameron,
Congrats on the new addition!
All kinds of great responses to your question. The one thing I will add to the list is the hip flask that my wife gave me for our anniversary a few years ago. I not only cherise it because of it’s sentimental value, but because I really enjoy taking a little nip of good scotch(my good would be others crap :))to toast an especially good fish, or when in need of
steve154
MemberGas prices are not affecting my fishing because I live really close to everything that I could want, but getting to work is killing me!!!!!I live 60+miles round trip from work and my Nissan Sentra commuter finally but the dust last week. Driving
steve154
MemberCameron,
I did get the pack and it is all geared up. I haven’t actually used it yet, but it seems like it is going to work well and it appears to be well made. Nice piece of gear at first glance, but time will tell… I will post a pic tomorrow night.
steve154
MemberAWESOME!!! Looks like you are having a blast.
steve154
MemberZach,
Anxiously waiting for some more pics!
steve154
MemberC._,
Voicing opinions is what it is all about. Thanks for the suggestion. I did briefly look at the Patagonia pack and after looking at it again I don’t know why I didn’t consider it harder. I guess I just really liked the looks of the Fishpond pack. Now you have me thinking…
Zach, I will post a pic when switch everything over to the new pack. I probably don’t carry anymore than the average guy. Maybe it just seems to be getting heavier the older I get?
steve154
MemberZach,
I found one on ebay for $117.00 shipped. They retail for $140.00+shipping. I figure that is a good enough deal. I will post a review after I get some play time in it.
Steve
I absolutely positively have to have every single thing that I carry in my vest 😉 Better to have it and not need it than to need it and not have it…
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