Showing posts with label Taylor River. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taylor River. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Post-Interview Fishing Trip

After an almost-full summer in the mountains, I realized that I wasn't ready to go back to the real world, so I started looking at jobs at ski resorts.  My dream when I was in elementary school was to be a fly fishing guide in the summer and a ski instructor in the winter.  After checking the fly fishing guide box this summer, I figured I might as well look into life as a ski instructor.

One of the few resorts I looked into was Crested Butte, which is less than two hours from Lake City.  After sending in some applications, I hit the road for an interview in CB.  Once that was over, I went straight to the Taylor River to catch the early afternoon hatches.  The wind was extremely strong, but some bugs were on the water, and the fishing was good for a couple of hours.


Snow on the mountains around Crested Butte in September

The road between Crested Butte and the Taylor River (with the mountains around Crested Butte in the distance)

Brown trout with a double chin



Avalanche Hole



Monday, November 25, 2013

Weekend at Bernie's

After getting back to Lake City, I gathered my fishing gear and headed north to Breckenridge to meet up with my friend Bernie.  We spent the first afternoon sight casting for picky rainbows on the Blue River in Silverthorne.  The next morning we got up well before dawn to fish the Frying Pan River near Aspen.  We got into some great hatches of PMDs and green drakes, so we had a very active afternoon. That evening we got some time on the "toilet bowl"--the run just below the dam.  I lost a huge rainbow, and then Bernie broke his rod on a tiny fish, so that put a damper on an otherwise great day of fishing.  Fortunately, one of our favorite restaurants is near the river: a little, very authentic taqueria.  Nothing dulls the pain of watching a monster rainbow break you off quite like cow-face and pig-stomach tacos.  Delicious.

Pretty Frying Pan River rainbow on a PMD

Pretty Frying Pan River brown on a dry.  These fish eat mysis shrimp, which is why they have so much red in them.

A nice evening rainbow.  Definitely didn't make up for the big rainbow that got away though.

Double Rainbow: What does it mean?

The next day we headed to the Taylor River.  After a slow morning, things heated up with a solid PMD/BWO hatch in the afternoon that got some big fish rising.  Unfortunately, today was another day that featured "the one that got away."  Bernie and I both hooked into a huge brown that we guessed was 27 inches.  When I hooked him, I thought I was hung on the huge bolder where he was hiding, but then that bolder slid out into the current and started head shaking.  When he started fighting up stream, he popped off, and I collapsed onto the bank, completely devastated.

Bernie with a nice brown that we actually did land on the Taylor. 

Solid rainbow on a tiny BWO dry fly.

Our next stop was hitting the famous trico hatch on the "Dream Stream" section of the South Platte River.  For the third straight day, we were out of the house before first light.

First light in South Park Basin

Sunrise over the Dream Stream



We were the first to the river, but the hatch wasn't coming off as heavily as we hoped.  We eventually found pockets of bugs and rising fish and caught some nice ones before things shut off early in the afternoon.

Bernie watching the water for falling tricos and rising fish

To our surprise, we were the only ones on the river for a while




Sunset over Breckenridge
For our last day, we went back to the Frying Pan for another day of catching fish on dries, but again, the big fish eluded us.

Sunrise from I-40 just outside Vail


Morning in Basalt

Early afternoon on the Pan

We finished the day at the "Toilet Bowl," the run right below the spillway

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Taylor River

After a couple of successful trips to the Lake Fork, my friends and I decided to change it up and drive over to the Taylor River.  We got up by 3:30 a.m. so we could be at the river before 7 a.m to stake a claim to the best spots.

Mitchell started off an amazing day of fishing with a 20-inch rainbow at 7 a.m., and by the time we left late that afternoon, we had landed 58 fish between the four of us--with four of those fish measuring at least 20 inches.

Sunrise over the Taylor

First fish of the day--not a bad start

Mitchell with a nice cutthroat

Close up of the cutthroat

A solid, very pretty rainbow

A bigger rainbow

Up close

Big horn sheep were coming down the cliffs (trust me, they are in this picture)

Can you spot the bighorn sheep in them middle of this frame?

Peter with a beautiful rainbow

Peter with a nice brown

Kevin with a beast of a rainbow; we landed this guy after an epic battle


Nice rainbow

This rainbow had very few spots compared to the others we caught

50% brown trout, 50% snake, 50% eel

20-inch rainbow

21-inch rainbow

Double Rainbow



The pot of gold at the end of the rainbow is at Wal-Mart?



Sunset on the drive back