When I was a kid we lived in Nevada. My dad would load up the Bronco and we'd drive up to Little Lava Lake in Oregon, and camp right next to the Deschutes, where it runs out of the lake, for a couple of weeks each summer, for a couple years. Then life happened and we never went back.
I did go back there a few years ago and things sure have changed. The river is not the same, and the forest is diseased and in bad shape.
But back then at Little Lava Lake where the Deschutes River is born... the trees were healthy, and the river was robust and full of fish. In the evenings, the river in front of our campsite would come alive with little 6" to 8" trout feeding. So many dimpling the surface it would look like it was raining. So much fun.
The place in the photo below is a mile or so down river from our camp site. I'm sitting on that rock, fishing into a big log jam and a big hole that was at least 15' deep. I was using a light tippet, and the first fish that hit busted my fly right off. So I took about a foot of leader off, and tried again. Another hit, another fly gone! More shortening of leader, another fly lost.
By this time, I'm totally freaking out. Shaking so much I can hardly tie a fly on. These fish were huge compared to the little trout I'd been catching. These were big broad sided slabs of rainbow trout, flashing silver as they'd swim out from under the log jam to get to my fly.
I finally shortened my leader to where the tip was about equal to 12lb test and started catching fish, just as my dad discovered me and my honey hole. So we both started catching fish. Big beautiful fat rainbow trout, all 16" to 18" long, some even bigger. Epic. To this day, the best fishing I've ever experienced. Enough to keep me hooked for another 50 plus years. My dad & I still talk about that day. He sent me this photo not too long ago to remind us both how wonderful it was.
