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Steelhead Report

The rivers are starting to show a few signs of fall. Chinook are starting to turn the gravels, the leaves are starting to turn and I saw a few october caddis erraticly dipping here and there on the river. Both the Rogue and North Umpqua are starting to fish better and should continue on that track as we get into fall even more.

Dirk "Don't Jerk" Dittemore passing by an unwilling steelhead. Can you find it?

In two days with Dirk and his buddies Todd and Dave we rose five fish, not hooking any due to pre-mature jerkulation. That is an easy thing to do, none of these guys ever fish dries for steelhead before, and when you see a fish erupt on your fly you tend to get a little excited. A few fish were really shy about coming to the fly, we had one come to three different flies. Dirk did the right thing, he never flinched, the fish was just a player. Players are a lot of fun but it also makes you scratch your head a bit.

Craig Zarling getting there.

 

Reunited and it feels so good.

Rogue water is dropping and the runs are looking better with each drop. The fishing in the upper river is doing ok. Did a lower float with Craig and Sue Zarling, hoping to find some on there way up. The water looked great but at the end of a long day of swinging we came up empty. I really thought we would see a few fish that day. That's steelheading though, we rolled the dice, some days you get some days you don't.
On a lighter note:

Bo poised for hot steelhead action.

Evan Unti with a nice Dean fish, notice the awesome Great Lakes rod position. Nice Evan.

North Umpqua Fishing Report

On the dry The fishing on the North Umpqua continues to be, to say the least staying consistant. We've seen some really good fishing with the dry fly some days and not so good on others. Today we rose three and landed one of those fish. One fish came to the fly three times on one swing, rushing it with a slashing strike all three times but couldn't connect, it was awesome. Seeing a fish the size of steelhead come up like that will change you, it's unexplainable you just got to see it for yourself. We changed up on her and she got stung the first pass with another dry, she came unbottuned on a hot tail walk followed by a cartwheel.

Dikran into one

As of the 26th of July we have about 4,500 fish over Winchester Dam, thats the entire run we had last year. The river's not fishing like there are that many fish around. There were still a few coming over the dam on sunday when I stop at the ladder, that's pretty good for this time of year. My theory on the fishing is that the water temperature below the fly-water is still cool enough that the fish are taking their time getting to us. We'll see how it pans out.