tokul brook
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tokul brook
I,ve been meaning to tell you all about my strange day at tokulcreek last friday .First off i forgot my waders then left to go home to get them ,forgot my rod on top of my car as i drove off to get my waders ,relized that about ahalf mile later stopped turned around went back looked nothing .now im bummed head for home see rod in road munched .it should be noted my Shimano reel was scratched but still works.anyway go home get rod and waders .Get back to Tokul ,at this point i just had to laugh and said lets try to make the best of it.Here,s how it went 2 spawners ,1whitefish,1chrome nate(miss clip ) 7lb,er and then this .at first i thought it was a dolly /bulltrout but the red spots by my thumb show that its a brookie .I,ll be honest i,ve only caught 5 brookies in my life but they looked just like this i,ve caught hundreds of dollies in Alaska they have pink spots .Anyway what a day
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RE:tokul brook
Nope that is a dolly. The real identifying feature you want to look for is the dorsal fin which unfortunately you have covered in your hand. If it is a brook it will have "Snake like" striations on the dorsal fin as well as back/shoulders.
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RE:tokul brook
Well at least you turned your day around
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RE:tokul brook
No brookies that I know of in the Snoqualmie system. Looks like a dolly/bull trout to me. Sounds like you had a good day of catching though, way to hang in there!
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RE:tokul brook
The upper Snoqualmie might have brookies but prolly not Tokul.Looks like a young dolly to me.The last time I gave an opinion I got my head bitten off.
When youre up to your rear end in alligators,its hard to remember that the initial plan was to drain the swamp.
RE:tokul brook
Naw, Rac, I'm with you. I think it's a dolly.racfish wrote:The upper Snoqualmie might have brookies but prolly not Tokul.Looks like a young dolly to me.The last time I gave an opinion I got my head bitten off.
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RE:tokul brook
[lol] Thank goodness for your incredible regenerative powers racfish.[lol]racfish wrote:The upper Snoqualmie might have brookies but prolly not Tokul.Looks like a young dolly to me.The last time I gave an opinion I got my head bitten off.
With your head grown back, Please keep giving the "racfish opinions" the site wouldn't be the same without them.
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RE:tokul brook
hello post deleted
Last edited by Anonymous on Thu Feb 10, 2011 5:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
When youre up to your rear end in alligators,its hard to remember that the initial plan was to drain the swamp.
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RE:tokul brook
nice brookie cuda
RE:tokul brook
It does. I've caught several (including a 15" specimen) on the upper South Fork.racfish wrote:The upper Snoqualmie might have brookies but prolly not Tokul.Looks like a young dolly to me.The last time I gave an opinion I got my head bitten off.
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RE:tokul brook
Brook trout are found in a number of locations in the Snoqualmie drainage. More specifically they are found in Tokul Creek basin. They are found through out the upper Tokul Creek basin (the flat in the spur 10 country) in various beaver ponds as well as the creek itself.
Of course it could also be the case that a brook trout escaped from the hatchery (do not know whether brookies are currently being raised at the Tokul Creek hatchery)
That said it is impossible to say with certainity whether the fish is a brook or bull. As Matt said the easiest way to tell the difference is to look at the dorsal fin - the brooks have black spots on the fin while the bulls do not.
One thing that does argue that the fish might be a brookie is the bent fin rays in the pectoral fin that we can see in the picture. The most likely explaination for those bent rays is that there was some erosion of the fin in a hatchery. It is nearly always the case that as the fins grow back out there will bends or waves in the rays at the point were the erosionn ended.
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Of course it could also be the case that a brook trout escaped from the hatchery (do not know whether brookies are currently being raised at the Tokul Creek hatchery)
That said it is impossible to say with certainity whether the fish is a brook or bull. As Matt said the easiest way to tell the difference is to look at the dorsal fin - the brooks have black spots on the fin while the bulls do not.
One thing that does argue that the fish might be a brookie is the bent fin rays in the pectoral fin that we can see in the picture. The most likely explaination for those bent rays is that there was some erosion of the fin in a hatchery. It is nearly always the case that as the fins grow back out there will bends or waves in the rays at the point were the erosionn ended.
Tight lines
Curt
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RE:tokul brook
I caught them in upper Tokul Creek in the 70's. Took the road up past the lodge...whatever the new name is. Drove back and flyfished for brookies.
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RE:tokul brook
As long as we are on this subject (more or less), I've never understood the difference between a Dolly and a Bull Trout, if there is a difference.
I've caught Dollys/Bulls in lots of different places. Metolius River in Oregon used to have lots as did the Clakamas, when I lived in Spokane I traveled a lot and caught them in the Kootenai River, Clarks Fork and in rivers around Kalispell, caught them near Ketchikan, and around Puget Sound.
Is there a difference?
I've caught Dollys/Bulls in lots of different places. Metolius River in Oregon used to have lots as did the Clakamas, when I lived in Spokane I traveled a lot and caught them in the Kootenai River, Clarks Fork and in rivers around Kalispell, caught them near Ketchikan, and around Puget Sound.
Is there a difference?
RE:tokul brook
Nope, they're the same thing. Kind of like Kokanee, Silvers, Blue Backs and Land locked Sockeye Salmon are all the same thing. Mostly depends on where your from.BARCHASER wrote:As long as we are on this subject (more or less), I've never understood the difference between a Dolly and a Bull Trout, if there is a difference.I've caught Dollys/Bulls in lots of different places. Metolius River in Oregon used to have lots as did the Clakamas, when I lived in Spokane I traveled a lot and caught them in the Kootenai River, Clarks Fork and in rivers around Kalispell, caught them near Ketchikan, and around Puget Sound.Is there a difference?
Last edited by Anonymous on Thu Feb 24, 2011 1:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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RE:tokul brook
Dont forget Chinook is a Tyee is a King. 3 names =1 fish.Also a Chum is a Pink is a Dog....LOL....
When youre up to your rear end in alligators,its hard to remember that the initial plan was to drain the swamp.
RE:tokul brook
Dolly Varden are considerd "sea run" and Bull Trout are considered "resident/landlocked" that's the difference.Big D wrote:Nope, they're the same thing. Kind of like Kokanee, Silvers, Blue Backs and Land locked Sockeye Salmon are all the same thing. Mostly depends on where your from.BARCHASER wrote:As long as we are on this subject (more or less), I've never understood the difference between a Dolly and a Bull Trout, if there is a difference.I've caught Dollys/Bulls in lots of different places. Metolius River in Oregon used to have lots as did the Clakamas, when I lived in Spokane I traveled a lot and caught them in the Kootenai River, Clarks Fork and in rivers around Kalispell, caught them near Ketchikan, and around Puget Sound.Is there a difference?
Last edited by Anonymous on Thu Feb 24, 2011 2:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.
RE:tokul brook
? A chum and a pink are two different fish...racfish wrote:Also a Chum is a Pink is a Dog....LOL....
"When I grow up I want to be,
One of the harvesters of the sea.
I think before my days are done,
I want to be a fisherman."
One of the harvesters of the sea.
I think before my days are done,
I want to be a fisherman."
RE:tokul brook
Like I stated "Mostly depends on where your from." While living in Alaska we called them Dolly Vardens and Sea run Dolly Vardens. Here in Douglas County the Game department calls them Bull Trout in the Entiat River system which can hardly be considered land locked.RiverRock wrote:Dolly Varden are considerd "sea run" and Bull Trout are considered "resident/landlocked" that's the difference.
Bragging may not bring happiness, but no man having caught a large fish goes home through an alley.
Fair Winds & Following Seas.
Big D
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RE:tokul brook
Yes Dolly Varden and bull trout are two different species. Though they look very similar genetically they are very different.
The thinking is that during the last Ice Age that the char survived into two different refugia (ice free areas). One being a coastal area; the Queen Charlotte Islands where the Dolly Varden developed and an interior area (Montana) where bull trout developed. When the ice melted the fish spreaded out colonizing a number of rivers over a large area.
As RiverRock pointed out generally the Dolly Varden included the anadromous life history and bull trout does not. However as often is the case in teh fish world there are exceptions. One major such exception is here in Western Washington where extensive genetic testing has found that the anadromous char in the Puget Sound rivers are bull trout and not Dolly Varden. It would be safe to say that few us of have caught a Dolly Varden in Washington waters. There are some Dolly Varden in the area but to everyone's surprise they have only been found as small resident fish in a handful of headwater streams. A couple local areas where they have been confirmed include a couple Nooksack headwater tribs (in both North and South forks), some small Skagit river tribs in BC above Ross Lake and above Sol Duc falls on the coast.
Tight lines
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The thinking is that during the last Ice Age that the char survived into two different refugia (ice free areas). One being a coastal area; the Queen Charlotte Islands where the Dolly Varden developed and an interior area (Montana) where bull trout developed. When the ice melted the fish spreaded out colonizing a number of rivers over a large area.
As RiverRock pointed out generally the Dolly Varden included the anadromous life history and bull trout does not. However as often is the case in teh fish world there are exceptions. One major such exception is here in Western Washington where extensive genetic testing has found that the anadromous char in the Puget Sound rivers are bull trout and not Dolly Varden. It would be safe to say that few us of have caught a Dolly Varden in Washington waters. There are some Dolly Varden in the area but to everyone's surprise they have only been found as small resident fish in a handful of headwater streams. A couple local areas where they have been confirmed include a couple Nooksack headwater tribs (in both North and South forks), some small Skagit river tribs in BC above Ross Lake and above Sol Duc falls on the coast.
Tight lines
Curt
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RE:tokul brook
The fish in the picture I'm 100% sure is a brook trout . If you had not covered up it's dorsal fin it would have shown the worm like markings that define a Brookie. But judging from the number of light tan spots on it's upper back and the red dots with the blue halo's around them on it's lower side. You can also see just below your thumb in the blow up below the tan spots start to connect into the worm like pattern, that's what makes me sure it's a Brookie, as Bull trout never have this. I know there are Brookies in Tokul creek as I fished it as a kid back in the 60's and I caught many of them out of it in the upper reaches of the stream.
It was one of my favorite places to fish back then. I rode my bike some 25 miles out to it. Them were the good old days. My other fav. was Lake Ballinger.
It was one of my favorite places to fish back then. I rode my bike some 25 miles out to it. Them were the good old days. My other fav. was Lake Ballinger.
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