Summer trout games

I’ve had some time outdoors with friends and family lately and in between other activities, some small trout have been harassed.

Last week we did a big group camp out for the Fourth. I don’t think I had ever actually fished this river before, only the one it flows into, but I had fished the confluence. I vaguely recalled a local guy telling me gets ‘em there on Prince Nymphs, so that’s what I fished. You could say I didn’t Tie A Ton of flies for this. I used an 8’6” 4 wt with an indi and one size 8 or 10 prince nymph. It worked for fish up to 12” around camp. One hot afternoon I crossed the river in just swim trunks, sandals with a rod and the one fly tied on, nothing else. That was pretty fun. I was prepared to swim because it was dang hot and it’s a rather slick river to wade. I thought I’d swim back down but I chickened out. The water was 48 degrees, which makes me gasp to near incapacitation when it hits my chest and I didn’t want to impose my stupidity on my fly pole and break it. I can wet wade that cold cold water all day but I am not much for truly swimming in it.

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I got my octogenarian pops visiting. I might have nearly killed him yesterday dragging him up to a mountain stream and hiking him up the trail, because the 5” fish a mile up are waaaaay better than the ones by the trailhead. :rolleyes: Okay I admit I just like it up there and forget that my abilities and comfort zone are different than others. Anyway, we did both survive, I didn’t have to drag his butt out or call SAR and we caught a bunch of pretty little jewels. The fish were not completely suicidal, especially the slightly larger ones; we cycled through some dry fly patterns and even droppers to see what worked best. We used a pair of 2 wt Redington CTs (one is 7’6” and one has been customized to 7’4” 😉).

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He said he had a good time and enjoyed the beautiful water and plentiful, pretty, willing little fish. But I think our future PNW fishing adventures are going to be MUCH more low impact and/or boat-based!
Grateful for this time with Pops…and that I didn’t kill him!
 
I knew that wasps were aerial, but have never seen an aerial yellow jacket nest.

For me yellow jackets are the worst, followed by hornets and wasps, honey bees are the lowest threat. About the order of likely hood of getting stung by…

Thanks for the knowledge, I am always learning.
 
I don’t know if anyone noticed this from the first pic of that first pool I hiked down to, but I did notice it from across the stream. I had to go over there and go under it to continue on upstream. I didn’t linger to see if the insects I could see were yellowjackets or hornets.

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I think you should get a long stick and give it a poke. You know, for science sake. ;)
 
I think you should get a long stick and give it a poke. You know, for science sake. ;)
I bet a fly pole would work real good for that. Come on up, I can take you right to it.
But maybe we can bring binoculars to try before the pokey stick.
 
I bet a fly pole would work real good for that. Come on up, I can take you right to it.
But maybe we can bring binoculars to try before the pokey stick.
Having experienced a single bald-faced hornet sting, I can safely say OH HELL NO! That said, a video of someone else stupid enough to try that would be hilarious.
 
Having experienced a single bald-faced hornet sting, I can safely say OH HELL NO! That said, a video of someone else stupid enough to try that would be hilarious.
Yeah they hurt like the dickens.

We do need the binoculars to see what stinging, swarming insect it is so we can select the appropriate gear. Bald faced hornet nests are best poked with a 5 weight, aerial yellowjackets I like a 4 weight, but for the ground nesters you actually want a stiff 7 or 8 weight with a sturdy tip.
 
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