Off trail

Dave Westburg

Fish the classics
Forum Supporter
Screen Shot 2022-08-13 at 9.32.27 AM.png
Phil K and I took our bamboo fly rods off trail in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness yesterday. The day started well stalking healthy cutts in a small tarn. You can see a rise at the bottom of this picture. Phil caught one on a wet beetle and his 7'6" Orvis. I caught a couple on a size 12 hard body ant wet fly and a 8'6" Phillipson
Screen Shot 2022-08-13 at 9.31.40 AM.png
Then it was two hours of brushy steep sidehilling to this beautiful lake which wdfw says received 200 fish in 2021, 2019 and 2016. Callibaetis mayflies and spinners, travelling sedges and large dragonfly nymphs in abundance but no fish seen or caught. I dry hole like this about once a year on high lakes but have enough success to make the game worth it.
Screen Shot 2022-08-13 at 9.45.05 AM.png
Phil K has a smile on his face which shows the human capacity for endurance. He obviously wasn't thinking about the 3 hour brush-filled steep hand-over-hand scramble on the way out.
Screen Shot 2022-08-13 at 9.39.11 AM.png
 
Last edited:
I had wanted to get out with Dave for some time, and was really excited about this trip. We had the potential to string together four lakes, and my expectations for a near-epic fishing day were high. I knew the first lake we visited was less than an hour's slogging up trail and held fish, so the day started pleasantly.
The map showed what seemed like a fairly easy route to our second, off trail lake; a mere half mile of steep sidehilling would put us in the lake basin from which we could zig-zag down to the smaller pothole below. It's still early in the day, and Dave still has a big smile as we ascended some reasonable rock slides.

DSC04742 copy.jpg

I seem to need constant reminding not to underestimate the difficulty of managing steep subalpine westslope terrain, and just getting to this second lake took a disconcerting amount of Tarzan traversing through Huckleberry, Alder, dense Fir, and Mountain Ash with detours up and down to avoid cliffy terrain. It took a full hour to cover that half mile, but the lake looked promising with plenty of depth, structure , and an abundance of insect activity.

DSC04744 copy.jpg

We were surprised not to see any rises (possibly one small fish in shallow?) but rigged and launched. It was a lovely lake, pleasant temps, light breeze; even the mosquitos weren't bad.

DSC04751 (1) copy.jpg

DSC04752 copy.jpg

There should have been fish everywhere. We saw big Caddis scooting all around, Callebaetis hatching, midge shucks, this big Dragonfly casing, and even a Bumblebee drifting on the surface. But nothing eating?

DSC04761 copy.jpg

After an hour so we decided to pack it up and try the next lake. I made the strategic mistake of planning to refill my water at our next stop and later regretted the decision. Not surprisingly, yarding our way back out of the basin was considerably harder than the mostly downhill trek in. By the time we'd managed that and crossed a few more steep rockslides, we'd had our fill of brush thrashing, and Dave's smile was loosing some if its sparkle.

DSC04766 copy.jpg

By now, it was clear that getting to that next pothole wouldn't be TOO bad, but that our original intention of dropping from there down to the fourth lake and out was a no-go. Those contour lines spelled trouble! OK, easy enough, we go back to the first lake, pound trail out and maybe hit that last lake from below.
We should have done just that, but along the way got suckered into trying one more straight shot out, slithered down an ever-steepening drainage, and eventually hit impassibly steep dropoffs. Now the suffering really began. We were hot, tired, thirsty and a bit let-down; and now resigned to a steep uphill traverse back to the trail. Occasional brief open spots and log walkways were a welcome break, but for the most part it was a strenuous uphill battle, clinging to the dense undergrowth for traction the entire way.

DSC04769 copy.jpg

DSC04772 copy.jpg

We saw quite a bit of bear sign along the way, and my wife had observed a large black specimen in the meadows above just a few weeks prior. There were a number of trees peeled of bark. This was in dense, difficult, steep forest though I suppose if you're a bear it would seem like no big deal.

DSC04777 copy.jpg

All in all it was a really difficult day. We probably covered less than five miles, and didn't even do much elevation, but the off trail portion was quite physically and mentally demanding. We were both quite whupped, and maybe now I'd learn better avoidance skills. Of course, I'm already looking over the map again and thinking of how I'd do it differently next time, and wondering where all those hundreds of planted fish are. Maybe it's a Chironomid and bobber game?
 
Last edited:
Most excellent posts (even if my knees did get sore just reading them, lol.).
 
Tough time of year in most places. Brush is at the peak thickness. You may find late fall before the snows to much better and also hungrier fish. But those adventures are fun, even if tough, and when one finally pays gold, it means so much more....
 
Tough time of year in most places. Brush is at the peak thickness. You may find late fall before the snows to much better and also hungrier fish. But those adventures are fun, even if tough, and when one finally pays gold, it means so much more....
I really think the one lake we fished was barren. I'm used to seeing rises or seeing fish cruising in a lake as clear as this one. Saw neither at this lake.
 
I can’t speak for Dave, but 24 hours later, I’m kind of sore. Quads and Triceps got a good workout.
 
Back
Top