I'm reading Enos Bradner's 1950 book, Northwest Angling. The steelhead fishing really was something to write home about, and there were no hatchery steelhead. All wild. And almost always killed when landed. It's hard to think about now, but it really was only a few years ago that you could reliably fish for steelhead in 160 different rivers and streams in WA state and expect to catch one. To think that number has shrunk to just a handful of streams with far more restrictive seasons is just so damn depressing!
The Fortson Hole photo above made me think back. I can't possible remember how many steelhead I caught out of that one pool, especially before 1980 when it was a long pool of 2 distinct sections. A friend of mine and his brother somehow had the advance knowledge when the first returns of Skamania summer steelhead came to the NF Stilly, probably 1968. They were experience conventional gear fishermen, but real crackers at fly fishing. They were at Fortson at daylight on opening day (Saturday of Memorial Day weekend) with no one else there. They hooked fish after fish, losing most of them, but finally landing a couple limits between them. That hole must have been plugged with fish. Fishing it in the 70s, if the water was clear enough on opening day, I never counted more than 10 or 12 steelhead, but by 4th of July there were always 60 or more. Steelhead hatcheries produced some incredible returns of adult fish from their outset up through the 1980s before the downturn began in 1990 - 92.
Those were the days, my friend . . .