Sharphooks
Well-Known Member
I just walked in the door from a three week trip to the North Country. I do with truck and camper in October what I do in my boat in July.
This is the third year in a row I booked a ferry for Haida Gwaii. (Gotta love sub-contracting the Hecate Strait crossing to BC Ferries....they do it way better then I'd do it in my 28 footer, especially in October…ha ha)
It's a huge ordeal for me to get to Rupert from my house---lots of windshield time, dodging 18 wheelers to stay alive….. but the pay-back once you get to the Promised Land is well worth the effort.
If I could sum up this trip, I'd be lying if the word "rain" wasn't part of the description. It was off the chart precip for the entire trip. This was Witset Falls on the way in:
I've been going to this part of BC since 1976 and I have never, and I mean NEVER, seen so much precip so fast and effecting the rivers as bad and for as long a period as I saw this Fall. The BUlkley at Witset Falls was almost spilling over the rim of the canyon----a first for my pair of eyes
The mud it carried (mostly from the Telkwa, which I'm guessing is a logged wasteland in its upper reaches) succeeded in putting out the Skeena at the confluence and pretty much kept the Skeena out (unfishable) for two to three weeks.
This rain dynamic put a capital "I" in the word irony. Here we had some of the best steelhead returns in many years in the Skeena and its tributaries and no way to get at them.....lots of long faces in Smithers
When I arrived in P. Rupert it was Biblical Rain. I visited a few of my customers in Port Edwards and while camped out in a parking lot across from one of the processing plants, it was like someone trained a fire hose on my camper for 12 straight hours. The water got in to my camper and got under the mattress.....not a great way to start the trip.
I got a bit dejected because with all that rain, I had to draw the conclusion that all the rivers on Haida Gwaii would be pumping mud which is what I saw driving from Hazelton to RUpert---every river, creek and ditch I saw was the color of red dirt.
I rolled the dice and sent a text to a guy I met on the ferry last year who lives in Sandspit, asking him for guidance. He immediately responded, telling me to get my arse over to Moresby. That was an absolute string of pearls. Silly me--I learned that rain in Rupert does not necessarily mean rain on Haida Gwaii. The river I had in mind was in absolutely prime condition when I got there and absolutely full of fish
I was doing a heli trip to a remote lodge after this Haida Gwaii trip and same as last year, being a non-meat kind of guy I knew I had to bring my own fish or I'd be staring at beef for 7 days so I brought out the wood shampoo and filled my freezer with some beautiful bucks
I always wanted to try what’s called a “Clouser” fly. I ordered a few from a fly-Tyer in Florida (tied on heavy stainless hooks that I knew would sink like a rock) The idea was to use a heavy Clouser on a floating line with a long leader….absolutely deadly!!!!
Graham Island was a different story---the Tlell and the Yakoun were high and colored, fishable, but just barely. That was OK---I did my most favorite thing in this world---I built a rip-roarer of a fire with drift wood on the beach where the Tlell dumps into Hecate Strait. I got a coho fillet picture perfect in my stand-up grill then washed away all my troubles with a bottle of wine
On my B-day, I drove to Juskatla and fished some small creeks. They were high and roiling but I could see that one night of cold weather would bring them into shape
One of them I found did just that on my B-day. Not only that---the sun came out! It was hands down one of the most beautiful spots I've seen on Haida Gwaii. The coho were huge and hard to hang on to. Seeing the backing of my fly line on my reels became the norm......4 or 5 jumps and a screaming reel....to a steelhead fisherman that's all we need to be happy
This was my parking spot for my B-day
This was the dog playing in the fields of the Lord while I fished:
Best B-day present ever!!!!!!!!
This is the third year in a row I booked a ferry for Haida Gwaii. (Gotta love sub-contracting the Hecate Strait crossing to BC Ferries....they do it way better then I'd do it in my 28 footer, especially in October…ha ha)
It's a huge ordeal for me to get to Rupert from my house---lots of windshield time, dodging 18 wheelers to stay alive….. but the pay-back once you get to the Promised Land is well worth the effort.
If I could sum up this trip, I'd be lying if the word "rain" wasn't part of the description. It was off the chart precip for the entire trip. This was Witset Falls on the way in:
I've been going to this part of BC since 1976 and I have never, and I mean NEVER, seen so much precip so fast and effecting the rivers as bad and for as long a period as I saw this Fall. The BUlkley at Witset Falls was almost spilling over the rim of the canyon----a first for my pair of eyes
The mud it carried (mostly from the Telkwa, which I'm guessing is a logged wasteland in its upper reaches) succeeded in putting out the Skeena at the confluence and pretty much kept the Skeena out (unfishable) for two to three weeks.
This rain dynamic put a capital "I" in the word irony. Here we had some of the best steelhead returns in many years in the Skeena and its tributaries and no way to get at them.....lots of long faces in Smithers
When I arrived in P. Rupert it was Biblical Rain. I visited a few of my customers in Port Edwards and while camped out in a parking lot across from one of the processing plants, it was like someone trained a fire hose on my camper for 12 straight hours. The water got in to my camper and got under the mattress.....not a great way to start the trip.
I got a bit dejected because with all that rain, I had to draw the conclusion that all the rivers on Haida Gwaii would be pumping mud which is what I saw driving from Hazelton to RUpert---every river, creek and ditch I saw was the color of red dirt.
I rolled the dice and sent a text to a guy I met on the ferry last year who lives in Sandspit, asking him for guidance. He immediately responded, telling me to get my arse over to Moresby. That was an absolute string of pearls. Silly me--I learned that rain in Rupert does not necessarily mean rain on Haida Gwaii. The river I had in mind was in absolutely prime condition when I got there and absolutely full of fish
I was doing a heli trip to a remote lodge after this Haida Gwaii trip and same as last year, being a non-meat kind of guy I knew I had to bring my own fish or I'd be staring at beef for 7 days so I brought out the wood shampoo and filled my freezer with some beautiful bucks
I always wanted to try what’s called a “Clouser” fly. I ordered a few from a fly-Tyer in Florida (tied on heavy stainless hooks that I knew would sink like a rock) The idea was to use a heavy Clouser on a floating line with a long leader….absolutely deadly!!!!
Graham Island was a different story---the Tlell and the Yakoun were high and colored, fishable, but just barely. That was OK---I did my most favorite thing in this world---I built a rip-roarer of a fire with drift wood on the beach where the Tlell dumps into Hecate Strait. I got a coho fillet picture perfect in my stand-up grill then washed away all my troubles with a bottle of wine
On my B-day, I drove to Juskatla and fished some small creeks. They were high and roiling but I could see that one night of cold weather would bring them into shape
One of them I found did just that on my B-day. Not only that---the sun came out! It was hands down one of the most beautiful spots I've seen on Haida Gwaii. The coho were huge and hard to hang on to. Seeing the backing of my fly line on my reels became the norm......4 or 5 jumps and a screaming reel....to a steelhead fisherman that's all we need to be happy
This was my parking spot for my B-day
This was the dog playing in the fields of the Lord while I fished:
Best B-day present ever!!!!!!!!
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