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I fished the opener as has been my habit for several years. The outcome was atypical, though, with very little action. I tried a variety of offerings, including trolling flies behind a dodger which normally pays great dividends, God's Tooth spoons, spinners, and bait. Over three days I think I landed about four fish.
I went out again this evening, resolved to target fish in two ways. I rigged one rod with God's Tooth spoons tipped with worms and went deeper, trying to get down to where I've previously had good luck connecting with the holdover trout and steelhead in the 16-18" class.
For the second rod, I broke out an old 3-weight fly rod with an unidentifiable sinking line. I replaced the leader, and tied on a black leech with some purple flash.
The Bible says in Luke that if the people remain silent, the rocks will cry out. In my case, when they see me break out a fly rod and start casting, the rocks start snickering and outright guffawing. I think the trees got in some chuckles, too. I think I saw an otter do a face-palm.
So rather than casting, I trolled it about 50' behind the boat.
Final results:
Deep rod with spoons: 0/0.
Fly rod: 12/16.
The best part of the day wasn't catching the larger number of fish, though. It was the experience. I'd forgotten how sweet the simplicity of a fly rod is. It's just you and the fish, and on a 3-weight, every fish feels like a fighter. There weren't many people on the lake, and by the end of the evening I had it to myself. I stowed the gear rod and spent about 90 minutes just pulling the fly around. Great fun! It was so quiet and serene that I put on some music and whistled and sang as I trolled around. (The rocks snickered at my singing, too, and a small pack of coyotes stopped by to see who was doing all that howling.)
It was so nice not to have to worry about bait, depth, boat speed, watching a sonar, etc. Just chuck it back about 50' and relax. I'll definitely be doing that some more.
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