2007

Sunday Hoodrow Report

December 31st, 2007


B Dog and I braved a very WET day and hit the mid section of the Hood, walking down from 35. Lots of walking, lots of good looking water getting pink worms and jigs floated through it. And there you have it. Water looked pretty good. Running four plus feet and holding 3 foot of viz.

H3LL

pics from xmas week

December 30th, 2007

Heres a couple of pics from Christmas week to go with the previous article, plus a picture of my daughter with here 1st fish and my nephew with his first fish this summer, a nice brown and rainbow. H2O

Christmas Week

December 28th, 2007

I was fortunate enough to have the week of Christmas  off, and  my family in town from cali. While the Girls were shopping I was able to get some time on the banks with my brother in-law Ted, and Nate. Ted and I went up to the hood on Monday and fished hard all day but the water was high(6.5) and dirty (4″ visibility) No luck for us but we did see one fish landed at the way upper box.

Nate and I went to the Kalama and the lewis on Thursday. It snowed on us all day, what a beautiful site. Nate hooked and landed a nickel 10 # wild steelie that must have came out of the water10 times, it was awesome.  We didn’t see any thing else on the kalama so we jumped over to the lewis and saw about 5 fish landed down in the long line only club. the only thing I caught that day was a buzz.

Today, Friday the 28th Ted and I went back up to the hood. What a difference from Monday.  There was 3″ of fresh snow on the ground, half way sunny skies and the water was the kind of green we all like. Some dude was posted in ‘the slot’ most of the morning with a bobber and jig not hooking anything(Sal you know the guy I’m talking about), but we fished hard and patiently waited for him to leave.   After he did I decided to drift  some sand shrimp left over from yesterday through the slot and it didn’t take long to get 2 9# chromers on the bank, one nickel bruiser of a buck and a nice chrome hen.  Unfortunately  neither of them were Teds, and my freezer finally has a couple of slabs in it.  good luck this winter fellas, hope to see you on the bank.

December heavy metal

December 28th, 2007

This December heavy metal and 3 others were landed by a good freind and local guide Jeff Mishler. Not only can he put a hurt on the metal but his ability to capture the photo and share is unreal!!!! Way to go Jeff

Courtesy Dustin Hansen Posse

December 28th, 2007


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What more can I say? A couple of these in the next four days could change my Year In Review. Slightly, but change it none-the-less.

H3LLCAT

Read My Year In Review Article

December 27th, 2007

Go to Tips and Articles to read my Year In Review.

Happy Oh Eight, Kids.

H3llcat

Sandy in the rain

December 22nd, 2007

A friend and I decided to take advantage of a free day and do a little fishing close in.  We headed to the Sandy, in the Oxbow area.  The water was high but an excellent green with visiblity of about 3 feet.  It rained heavy the whole time.  We fished a couple of good long runs.  I hooked and lost a very nice, chrome steelie.  We saw a fly guy hook and lose a fish on the other side of the river from the run we were fishing.  We also talked to some plunkers at the boat launch and heard that a couple had been caught there earlier in the day.  It was nice to finally feel the tug of a steelie and even get to see it do a good power roll on the surface before ejecting my gear.  Sal

Hoodie no go

December 21st, 2007

A couple of us headed up to hood River on Thursday.  The river had been high but started to drop Wednesday evening.  We checked it on Thursday am and it was dropping but still high.  We decided to take a risk.  As we arrived at the parking area, after the orchard drive, we was one guy walking out with a chrome 6-8 pounder.  We thought this was a good risk we had taken.  

 The river was high but imminently fishable.  There were 6 cars in the lot.  We headed to the upper hole and a dude was camping there with nothing on the bank.  We moved to the meat hole and there were 4 other guys there and still no fish on the bank.  Visiblity was about 18 inches and the water was a gorgeous green.  We fished the whole thing hard and then the upper area.  We did not get a hit and did not see anyone else with a fish on. 

It was a nice day on the river.  I guess the summers headed up with the high water and the winters are still just starting.  We stopped and had great tacos at a small Mexican place on the way down to town.  They were great.  All in all it was much better than working. 

 Sal 

Winter Stripers in Chesapeake Bay

December 20th, 2007

Friend and colleague, Rick Swanson, had told me more than once that winter striper fishing was worth checking out.  Rick works in Washington DC and grew up on Cape Cod.  He knows fishing and knows that ocean fishing with light gear can be just as exciting as river fishing for salmon and steelhead.   He had mentioned to me that the stripers move down the Atlantic Coast in the winter and congregate at the mouth of the Bay to feed.  He has made the trek there several times in the past years.  I checked my calendar and that was good.  I checked the airlines and got an amazing price from PDX to Baltimore–it was a go.  

Rick collected me at the airport and we headed out trailing his 25 foot Parker.  It took 4.5 hours cruising through Maryland and then Virginia to make our landing at the Kiptopeke Motel.  It is in a rural area and is definitely a bit of the South.  We met up with Eric and Dave who rounded out our team.  The motel was about a third full on the first night which was Wednesday.  Other folks definitely knew about the action.  Nearly hallf the boats were guide boats.  Rick knew a number of them. 

Day 1.  We were ready to roll when the sun came up.  The only rub that the flags at the motel were rippling in the wind.  There were small craft advisories on the Bay.  It was a big “no go.”  We spent the day checking out the countryside and watching enough bad TV for a lifetime.  

 Day 2.  The winds were calm and we headed out.  The launch was only 10 minutes down the road.  We smoked across the Bay at about 30mph with Rick’s 225 Yamaha doing the work.  There was light wind and the temp was a brisk 38 degrees.  The target was a bridge and some rip rap about 5-6 miles away.  We fished the rocks with light gear (steelhead like).  We casted  jigs (3/4 to 2 oz heads) and plastic minnows like a mister twister.    We had action right off the bat.  These fish hit like a frieght train and fight strong and deep, a lot like a chinook.  It was all catch and release.  We would position the boat and then let the wind and tide slowly move us along the area.  We landed 10 fish the first day and felt good about the action.  We told a few stories around the motel picnic table and went to bed happy campers.  

Day 3.  Same scenario as Day 2.  The motel parking lot had filled up with 30-40 major league boats.  Most of the guys that we saw were named Bubba and were headed for the Bay.  There was a noticeable increase in the number of boats.  We had to wait 20 minutes to launch and hit the water.  We were ready for action.  The temp had creeped up to about 42 and the wind was light.  I bagged a nice 10 pounder on my first cast and figured this was going to be a fish fest.  Action from that point on was very slow.  We worked a number of areas and ended the day with 6 fish in the boat.  We all figured maybe tomorrow.  Returning to the motel we compared notes with other folks.  It sounded like no one had knocked em dead.  Rick’s friend and Guide, Captain Michael Critzer (website: www.coastalflyfisher.com) pulled us aside and said he had an offer for us.  We moved to a secure location and listened to the details.  Mike had heard through some buddies that they had gone out in the ocean, instead of the Bay and fished where they saw feeding sea birds.  It was not a for sure deal but Mike said that his clients were ready to give it a go.  We said “we are on.”  

Day 4.  We quietly headed out at about 7am and turned left up the Bay.  After a bit of a drive, we pulled into a nice launch adjacent to an old fishing town.  AmazinglyIt was overcast with light wind.  We headed out following the channel markers.  The first couple of miles were working through the flats and barrier islands.  We finally hit the open ocean and headed North and East to look for diving sea birds.  We kept the boats a couple of miles apart and stayed in contact over the radio.    After an hour of driving around, Rick said “Sit down and hang on. I see birds and were are going to make a bee line for them.”  As we pulled up near the birds, we could see fish slashing on the surface.  Rick told us to start casting anywhere near the action.  In no time we had a triple going.  The action was hot and heavy.  The birds would move and we would follow.  Rick hauled out some surface plugs.  We would chuck them in the middle of the diving zone and reel fast, popping them heavily on the return.  The bass would slash at them often knocking them in the air rather than taking them.  About anything was working including flies.  Mike and his crew were having a ball as well.  It certainly looked like the gamble had been a good one.  

The action continued.  The birds would move and we would follow.  Most of the time we had 3 on at a time.  Rick lost what was probably the biggest of the day when the fish straightened out the hook on his jig after about 15 minutes of towing us around.  I hooked a Dandy on my Curado and watched it take line on the first run.  I turned it and figured that was all of the major action.  The second run was even better.  The only problem was that I could see there was only about 30 yards of line left before i would get spooled.  I yelled at Eric that iI was about to be spooled and to follow the fish.  Unfotunately it seemed like he was not familiar with the meaning of “being spooled.”  I yelled again with more volume and urgency.  We turned and followed the fish until I had gotten enough line back to resume a fair fight.  After 25 minutes of battling, I boated a 20 pounder.  Great fun.  This was the day we had to drive home and after about 3.5 hours of crazy action we needed to leave.  Captain Mike stayed and we headed back.  We had boated around 30 stripers and 5-6 blue fish (kind of like a miniature tuna or mackeral–good fighters). 

It was a long haul back to the Baltimore area but it allowed lots of good discussion about the fishing.  Rick said, “If you think this was good, you will have to come back and try the fishing in the Cape Cod area.”  I told him that was a deal. 

Thanks again Rick, Dave, Eric and Michael for a memorable trip.   

The trip was a lot of flying but it was great to try a different kind of fishing and to get to have the proper appreciation for the striper as a major league game fish.  I would definitely do it again!

Sal 

  

   

   

Sal Does The Striped Bass Dance, Chesapeake-Style

December 18th, 2007


Hey Sal, we’d love a story! Great pics! We are all so jealous!

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Thanks to Rick, for all he did for Pops on this trip!

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Looks like an amazing trip, Dad!