Rock Island Lake Fishing Camp

Just finished up five full days of fishing at Rock Island Fishing Camp with @Yardus @troutpocket and @Irafly. The camp consists of a main lodge, several cabins, ice shack, smoker and outbuildings. It is off the grid with no cell service and rustic overall but with nice services like heated showers and a comfortable dining area full of fishing lore.

It is the epitome of a perfect fishing camp and is run by great hosts James, Cathy and Genie. We were super impressed by the meals served, the professionalism and the knowledge shared by the hosts. I would highly recommend this fishing camp.

In regards to the fishing we found water temps around 62-66 degrees depending on the elevation we fished. We had generally overcast and cloudy weather with the threat of rain. It was quite pleasant overall for August. Each day we fished a different lake. The quality of the fish was good with a lot of 15 to 18 inch fish mixed in. Even the smaller fish fought above their weight class. You truely feel like every cast could produce the stillwater fish of a lifetime here!

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Next up the story of the universe fish....
 
The first full day we had we hit a lake that required a 45 minute mosquito filled hike in. We got on the water and instantly noticed small water boat man in the thousands. Truely an impressive hatch.

Hours went by without a bite. Our focus only interrupted by the occasional sound of a five plus pound trout crushing the water. This was clearly big fish water but we struggled for any sort of bite. The fish seemed stuffed and off the bite. Infact I didn't have a bite until almost two pm. I tied on a little red jig:

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Made a cast and started my retrieve. In frustration I declared, "universe give me a strike!!!" Loud enough for my friends to hear. In an instant I was fast into a big strong fish. It jumped almost over my head (I was in my tube). I yelled and I yelled as I landed the big beast.

I still can't fathom the odds. The fish had to have been closing in on my fly at the exact moment I said that phrase. On a full day of fishing that only produced 3 total strikes for me.

You have to believe for it to work I guess....🙃

It ended up being the biggest fish of the trip:

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On a trip full of memories this one will stay impregnated in my mind always. I've caught bigger fish but never after reaching out to the fish gods😁

We all want another crack at this lake!
 
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I was watching The Bear last night and one of the characters said “You don’t remember the food so much, but the people.” Or something like that anyway. The food was fantastic, with a meal plan if you wanted it, and most days we indeed wanted it. With breakfast at 8:00 and dinner at 6:00, it forced us not to kill ourselves over the course of 6 days of fishing.

But what really stood out was the people. Genie has been involved with the camp for 40 years and if you took the time to listen, she had phenomenal stories. I was sitting in the kitchen petting the camp cat after we finished fishing one lake where we all caught several fish in the 17”-18” range and @Yardus and I put on an indicator clinic. Genie casually starts talking about a guy who came up every year and he also really loved to fish that lake. Turns out the guy was Brian Chan. Wish I had known at the time. She got a kick though out of my story of showing Chan my indicator tattoo. You need to personally hear her tell the story of the biggest fish caught out of the lake right at camp to really full appreciate it, it involves brothers and a “How to Flyfish” book draped over a face during a nap. The story of the biggest fish up on their wall though will likely leave you bit teary eyed. Besides the stories, Genie genuinely cared about the camp, the food she served, her family and the people who visited. Truly good people.

James had his stories as well (the story of when he met Phil Rowley on Roche will stick with me as well as the tale of huge trout eating traveling sedges at midnight ), but he also really impressed us with his knowledge of the lakes, the flora/fauna and his get after it attitude. He will attempt to tell you that he is in his 70s, but I still question his assessment of that number. In very positive ways, James kept things honest and in the end also enduring. I don’t know how he pulled it off, but I think each person at camp personally felt that they had his undivided attention.

Cathy kept things quiet… at first, but I think we won her over! What a lifetime of experiences. I never really got the whole story, but I know she managed a fish hatchery at some point and she worked in a firehouse as well. She works at the camp during the season, but it was clear that she stayed busy fishing and hunting during the off season as well with her many friends. Even though there there were boats right there at camp, she would still take out her own float tube to fish, I’m sure that @Billy and @Tim L would appreciate that. She was almost always available to help clean fish and she happily shared her methods of smoking the trout up. Her dog absolutely doted on her and although a bit gruff at first, in the end was quite the sweetheart.

Honestly I could have stayed all season and just hung with those people. I guess in order to run a camp like that, you need to be the type of people that quickly become other peoples favorites and these three did that for me.

I think we were all a bit reluctant at first to talk the place up too much, because we all know we will be back again and again and we don’t want to struggle to find times to visit, but when you experience something magical you just need to share.

James and Genie are in the center, Genie has the Bills shirt on (She loved the Seahawks game she attended last year and will happily do it again!). Cathy is on the right.
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As for the fishing. I know a lot of people were asking about the water temps, and that’s part of the beauty of the area. It was a hot summer up there and none of the lakes we fished were too warm for the fish. That’s what makes it a great August Stillwater opportunity. Granted August does change the fishing and you will not find the bigger fish up in the classic shoals that you’ll see in videos of the area.

No fish in these areas, except for some small guys.
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Day 1:
The lakes were not push overs, even the camp lake of Rock Island proved difficult at first until we figured out some patterns. We rolled in late morning on Monday the 12th and we were all antsy to hit the water. The sky was mostly clear with warm sun and a storm system way out on the horizon. James had us full of anticipation by talking up the lake and its abundant population of eager, albeit small (biggest I found was 14.5”) fish. @Yardus and I put the trolling motor on a boat and headed out to explore. We didn’t hit a fish until we reached the far end of the lake and by that time I needed to assure him that the storm system from earlier was obviously heading away from us not closer.IMG_6930.jpeg
As such we should stay and fish the farrrrrrr end of the lake…. Finally, we found a gorgeous little culdesac where I hooked up and landed a nice 14” fish. We started making plans to anchor up when the first giant plop of rain…wait, not rain…hail hit us. IMG_6934.jpegIMG_6933.jpegWe did not bring any type of rain gear with us and the tight tree line right up to the shore where we were made seeking shelter a bit of an issue. We managed to find a tiny slot to put the boat up on shore and then for the next 45 minutes we did our best to shelter squeezed into a tight group of trees. That worked until the trees themselves reached saturation. Luckily that was about the time the storm calmed down so we headed back out to head in. Unfortunately large pods of 10”-12” trout sipping dries on the surface caused us pause as we headed in. They were not push overs, and my cold shaking hands made casting and tying difficult, but a well placed soft hackle always produced a take. On one particular point, I managed to win the group contest for smallest fish of the trip. Which believe it or not is big bragging rights. IMG_6942.jpegIMG_6938.jpeg
We finally made it back down to the end of the lake and that’s when we really found the zone. The fish were sitting in a fairly large 20+’ bowl and you needed to let your fly get down on the bottom to find them. Several fish later we joined @Billy and @troutpocket on a point for some exciting small fish dry fly action.
 
Once we arrived Rock Lake Fish Camp, James gave us a quick lowdown on the opperation and we nodded, smiled and raced down to the water to get some lines wet as soon as possible. It was a beautiful sunny day so Ira and I jumped in a boat and headed out.
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About halfway down the lake we noticed a thunderstorm in the distance but decided that it wasn't going to hit us... Wrong! We made it about 5min into the squal before hitting the eject button and heading for cover. We were completely soaked!

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Once we arrived Rock Lake Fish Camp, James gave us a quick lowdown on the opperation and we nodded, smiled and raced down to the water to get some lines wet as soon as possible. It was a beautiful sunny day so Ira and I jumped in a boat and headed out.
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About halfway down the lake we noticed a thunderstorm in the distance but decided that it wasn't going to hit us... Wrong! We made it about 5min into the squal before hitting the eject button and heading for cover. We were completely soaked!

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When you say distance you mean over me! 🤣

I found myself in my tube roaring with laughter during this down pour. I've had a fancy fishing rain coat for 2 years I've never used and it was sitting in the truck up at camp.

I took a break, dried myself with a towel and then wore the rain coat and absolutely hammered them the next 2 hours comfortable as can be.
 
Once we arrived Rock Lake Fish Camp, James gave us a quick lowdown on the opperation and we nodded, smiled and raced down to the water to get some lines wet as soon as possible. It was a beautiful sunny day so Ira and I jumped in a boat and headed out.
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About halfway down the lake we noticed a thunderstorm in the distance but decided that it wasn't going to hit us... Wrong! We made it about 5min into the squal before hitting the eject button and heading for cover. We were completely soaked!

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If you can find a way to post the deafening roar of the storm, that would be fun. Kind of neat that we ran into another one right outside of Marysville on the way home.IMG_7037.jpegIMG_7038.jpeg
 
Camp life was outstanding. Our cabin was comfortable and we quickly covered every available spot with wet gear after the storm on Day 1.
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Meals in the main lodge were most welcome every morning and evening.
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Lunch was build your own sandwich with fruit and fresh made cookies.
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Then it was time to head out.
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Camp life was outstanding. Our cabin was comfortable and we quickly covered every available spot with wet gear after the storm on Day 1.
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Meals in the main lodge were most welcome every morning and evening.
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Lunch was build your own sandwich with fruit and fresh made cookies.
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Then it was time to head out.
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It looks like I'm teaching Ken and Ira how to make a proper sandwich🤣
 
A few more photos. Still adjusting to a rocky re-entry to the grind.

Some more fish…typical Kamloops rainbow
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Evening dock fishing
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Ira getting it done
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A keeper!
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They eat dragons, eh?
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Ken slaying during a chironomid bite
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Chironomids work even in a tube
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The Owls Are Not What They Seem!
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Weird catch of the week. We saw lots of tadpoles throughout the trip but this one was 30’ down, apparently?
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Day 2: Expectation

After talking to James the night before, we all decided to hike 45 minutes (30 if you are @Billy) into a lake with big fish potential. I prepared for this, I was ready, I purposefully increased the number and distance of my daily walks so I wouldn’t drag the rest of the group down (not that they would have waited for me anyway 😁) and when all was said and done, I feel I handled the cardio/physical part of in and out quite well. What I was not prepared for were the “hatches”.

The hike in was filled with enough edible plants that I felt I could make it at least a week on the show Alone… ok at least 3 days, which is longer than some contestants, just saying. No pictures of the huckleberries and blue berries, or the remains of both after passing through the digestive tract of black bears, who clearly frequented the area to not just shit in the woods, but to shit on the trails and rub their musk on the flora, just to make it clear that they were around. In fact I think that some of them would watch us hike into a lake, wait for us to pass by, run out, squat and plop on the trail, rub up against a tree and then scram again before we hiked out. For the most part I agiled myself around the freshest offerings.

Cauliflower? Not sure of the other, maybe a boletus, but there were some chanterelles, turkey tails and some oysters.IMG_6962.jpegIMG_6954.jpeg


Hatch number one turned out to be the sight of 1000s of water boatmen covering multiple areas of the lake. Now being on a lake when they are starting to drop, can be very productive with the right pattern, because the fish will aggressively attack them without much caution. Unfortunately, they will keep doing that until they are stuffed and even more unfortunately, like a late stage ant hatch, the fish will struggle to digest the bugs and they will get a bit of a tummy ache for a couple of days. Not that you can’t catch fish during these times, hell we all know that even though we are stuffed to the gills (pun intended), that we will still tickle our palate with a well placed snack, but the fish will definitely go off the bite. I avoided sharing this knowledge with the rest of the group, let’s keep up a nice bit of cheer after that treacherous last 100 yards down the slope to the lake, but I kept it in the back of my head none the less. Hell, fish buck the norm all the time, right? 4.5 hours later, one quick hit while my fly was dropping down in the water column, one missed take down for @troutpocket and nothing for the other two and I guess I proved myself right.

All those white spots you see are boatmen being pushed by my floating line.

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Unfortunately/fortunately for us, the first bowling ball hit the water slightly after we started. Those kinds of violent fish reveals keep a person trudging along with anticipation. But even anticipation gets old after awhile, so I decided to voice my desire to blow the popsicle stand for a couple hours of small fish fun at the home lake before dinner. I caught the whiff of some begrudging acceptance of skunkedness from the others and hope started to illuminate for me again. Then @Billy had to go and evoke the will of the fish gods by openly complaining about the lack of action and then proclaiming/pleading with the universe to give him a strike….”Bamm!” I’m curious if any of you heard him down here in the states? The timing of the whole thing…
I turned in time to watch the fish jump and land (more cantaloupe versus bowling ball) and I worried about the size of his net, so I rowed o er to assist. Billy managed just fine.


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Well that ended any talk of heading back early so we continued to grind it out. Billy worked that same area over pretty hard and I decided to buckle down and work hard the area where troutpocket and I had hooked up earlier. No love, but at one point as I was about to leave the area one of the 10 pound bowling balls decided to mess with me by breaching full flying fish into a perfectly place beam of sunshine. That was the kind of fish that made me stop every thing and reevaluate my gear. Drag? Check! Tippet? Check? Who was I kidding, hooking a fish like that… you can’t really prepare for it. Several attempted incantations uttered by myself and others later, mostly proved fruitless. Billy did manage to hook one more big fish, one that was likely bigger than his first and hat gave me just a sliver more pinch of momentum to keep grinding. So cast, count, strip, strippppp, stripstrip, strip strip strip… and hook up. Oh the expectations! Bowling balls throughout the day, Billy’s two hook ups the flying 10 pounder! Here we go!!!!!!! Straight at me, suspense for a few more seconds, a quick turn to the left, still not 100% sure, first flash of color, maybe? Final reveal…Guess which one is mine?IMG_0358.jpeg
Just slightly smaller, but still washed me off of that stank!

The second hatch ended up gracing us on the way out. Turns out you absolutely need at least one free hand while hiking out of places like this. Not sure how I didn’t break a rod tip while frustratingly brushing mosquitos out of my face, off my neck, off my elbows…even from behind my glasses. But the next day I wasn’t sore, so there is that.



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Day 2 - A different perspective...

Followed some of the most hard core fishy dudes I know a long way into the wild with an arthritic hip. Multiple bear signs. No Pictures. One takedown. Skunked.

Wondering if I'm going to make it out of here alive...
 
sounds like a great trip. thx for the trip report. we did a trip into the Rustic Resort - which i think is just south of where u guys were, a few years ago, and had a great time.
 
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