Vernon County 2.21.17

After looking at the flow gauge for the Kinni on Monday night, I decided to head south to find some clearer water. I shot a text to friend Bryan “Trapper” Voldahl and made plans to meet him Tuesday morning in Westby.

They got a good soaking of rain in Vernon County as well, but Trapper knows the area better than anyone and took me to a stream that clears quickly. I started off the day with an olive Euro pheasant tail nymph and a white and chartreuse zebra midge. Trapper isn’t much of a nympher, so he used an olive woolly bugger.

We worked our way upstream from the bridge, and I soon had my first fish of the day.

We continued upstream for a couple hundred yards and picked a fish or two out of every hole. All but one fish took the olive PT. Trapper had a couple takes on the bugger but none to hand.

Trout streams flowing through picturesque valleys like this are what makes the Driftless Area so great.

After a couple hours we jumped back in the car and headed to another stream — one that Trapper had permission on some private water. When we got there I tied on a pink scud.

Trapper tossing his woolly bugger into a promising seam. He caught one of the biggest fish of the day here.

We made our way to a run with a spring flowing into it. Trapper commented that there should be fish holding in the warmer water. Trapper quickly hooked his first fish of the day, a nice 14-inch brown. He released it too quickly for me to grab my camera. I soon got in on the action, catching a 13-incher, a 15-incher, and a couple 11 and 12-inch brookies.

After catching a couple more, the sun began to set and we called it a day. It was definitely worth the trip! I can’t wait to head down to the Vernon County area again this spring and summer. Big thanks to Trapper for guiding me throughout the day!

 

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Lower Kinni 1.27.17

I was able to get home for the weekend and fish for a couple hours on Friday from 2:30 to 4:30 pm, using a Frenchie and zebra midge. I got two small browns in the net and lost two more. It was definitely nice to get out and catch some fish in January! From what I’ve heard, the streamer fishing has been very good as well, especially during the warm fronts we’ve been having.

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Lower Kinni 9.26.16

After being in Louisiana for work since mid-August, I was able to make it home for a long weekend. Because of the high, stained water during most of my time back, I was only able to get out for a couple hours on Monday from about 10:15 am to 12:30. I tied on a Euro pheasant tail (this one with an orange hot spot instead of my normal pink) and zebra midge, and headed down the valley. The Kinni was about 10-15% higher than normal with a slight stain — great fishing conditions. The first few runs produced no fish, with only a couple hook ups and long distance releases. I finally got to a small, shaded riffle where an island separates the stream. This quickly produced five browns between 8 and 10 inches.

These are my first trout photos taken with my new Sony a6300. It produced some great images!
Gotta love those fall colors!
Gotta love those fall colors!

After catching those five, I was content with the outing and headed home to pack up for my flight later in the afternoon. I sure missed the Kinni.

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Rush River 8.7.16 Weekend Report

I’ve been out the past couple of days guiding clients and family. Nymphing has been the most successful during both mornings and evenings on pheasant tail variants, scuds, and zebra midges. I did run into a decent hatch of tricos in the morning, but the trout weren’t rising very often, with only a couple little ones splashing at a trico spinner pattern. In the evenings there are a few small BWOs coming off, and a couple trout took a hippie stomper as well.

 

My cousin Brose with his first fish on a fly. As he said, it was a beauty and a beast.
My cousin Brose with his first fish on a fly. As he said, it was a beauty and a beast.
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Lower Kinni 7.24.16

I fished the Kinni for about an hour before dark. I caught six or seven browns, including one around 12″, using a size 16 Euro pheasant tail and size 20 zebra midge. All but one took the midge. There was very little rising until right at dark when there was a pretty good midge hatch. I ran into another fisherman that had luck on scuds as well.

The stream was in great shape after Saturday’s rains. The fishing should continue to be good as we have some cooler weather coming through this week.

A solid Kinni brown.

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Rush River 7.16.16

I fished the Rush tonight from about 8:00 to dark. There was very little rising when I got to the stream, so I started the night nymphing with a Euro pheasant tail nymph and zebra midge. The fish were very willing and I caught fish on probably every two or three drifts. I caught many around 6-9 inches, and one around 13-14. Fish were holding in riffles between 1-2 feet deep. Pocket water was really productive as well. I talked to another fisherman on the way out that had success swinging BWO dries through pools just before dark.

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It looks like last night’s rain didn’t effect the streams very much, so the fishing should continue to be good. Focus on the cooler times of the day. If you’re looking for that big one, mousing after dark should be pretty good as well.

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Upper Mississippi Smallmouth 7.6.16

Back in March I entered our video “Backyard Browns” into the Great Waters Fly Expo Film Festival. I wasn’t able to make it to the expo, but got a call a few weeks later saying we had taken first place. Our prize — a float trip on the Upper Mississippi hosted by Scott Struif of The Fly Angler in Blaine, MN. We were super excited to go after smallmouth, and yesterday was our day to do it.

We met Scott and set off in Monticello, MN. The first hour or so was pretty slow — I caught one and lost another on a deer hair frog — but Andre got on the board with a couple smallies and a small pike on a copper Murdich Minnow, one of which being this dandy 17-incher!

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He also caught this nice 14-incher.

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We took a break to eat at about the half way point, and only had a couple fish in the boat. Scott assured us the best water was yet to come. Regardless, we got to take in some great views while casting.

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As we continued downstream we hooked into a bunch of smaller fish around six inches. They must have had a nice class of fish last year and should have great fishing in a couple years. I think at one point I had seven fish in the boat, with only one over nine inches. I missed quite a few more, though. We switched between poppers, clousers, and TeQueelies. The little guys loved the TeQueelies.

We were working a really good shoreline around some boulders when I noticed a wake behind my silver Murdich Minnow, and quickly the fly disappeared. I set the hook, and felt the strong pull of a river smallmouth. After a couple runs by the fish, I finally got him in the net. He measured 14-inches, my first “picture-worthy” fish of the day.

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Just a bit further downstream, Aric got snagged into some fallen trees. As Scott rowed over to get the fly out, I flicked my fly right along some other trees, not even 15 feet from the boat. After two twitches of the fly, a smallie came out and slammed it! I quickly got him into the boat, and figured if he was bigger than my first I’d get a photo. He measured the exact same size at 14 1/4″ so I quickly sent him back into the river. He was a memorable fish nonetheless.

Scott wasn’t kidding when he said we had great water ahead. The shoreline had plenty of fallen trees and boulders — perfect smallmouth habitat. I cast right next to a boulder with an overhanging tree above it, and after a couple strips of the fly, BANG! I instantly felt a strong tug at the end of my line. He made a big jump out of the water and all three of us realized I’d hooked into a big smallie. Scott anchored the boat so we wouldn’t lose a half mile of water before getting the fish in the net, but this allowed the fish to get downstream of me and into the current. He put a ton of pressure on the rod and took line off my reel. After a few minutes he finally relented and I was able to drag him near the boat and into Scott’s net. He measured 18 inches on the dot. What a tank.

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That fish ended up being our last of the night — not a bad way to finish the float. We fished over nine miles of river in about nine hours and got to take in the sunset as we arrived at the take out point.

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It was an awesome trip and we can’t thank Scott enough for taking us. Scott is also the manager at The Fly Angler, so if you’re ever in the north metro area, check out his shop. They have the best selection of fly tying materials I’ve seen. With the trout fishing slowing down a bit lately, it was awesome to get out and see some new water. We’ll definitely be doing some more smallmouth fly fishing in the future, and maybe get a kayak or two to float some of the local smallmouth rivers. I’ll be looking for a used drift boat in the meantime.

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Rush River 7.2.16

I fished the Rush tonight from about 8:00 until dark. There was very little surface activity when I arrived, so I started out with a Euro pheasant tail nymph and zebra midge. I caught five or six small browns and brookies on the nymph rig before getting to a deeper pool where there were quite a few risers. It looked like they were rising to midges, and since it was getting dark I didn’t feel like tying on a Griffith’s Gnat and barely being able to see it on the water, so I tied on a hippy stomper. I quickly pulled three browns out of the pool on the stomper before it was too dark to see the fly, including one around 11-12 inches to finish off the night.

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Lower Kinni 6.28.16

I fished the Kinni for a short outing from about 8:15 to 9:15. Like the Rush last night, there was very little rising, so I nymphed with a size 16 Frenchie and size 20 black zebra midge. I ended up catching 8 or 9 fish, and they were all around 6-8 inches. The best fishing was in fast, shallow riffles.

There were a few caddis, sulphurs, and midges out, and surface activity picked up a bit after the sun set. If you’re really jonesing for dry fly action, I’d recommend bringing some elk hair caddis, sulfur and BWO parachutes, and griffiths gnats.

Looking to learn how to fly fish or just learn more about the local streams? Let me host you on a guided outing! I’m offering 20% off rates if you schedule your trip before the end of June!

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