Tuesday, June 24, 2008

weekend update & BPM email.....

First up, my email from bigpikemike.com has been non functional for a while now. It appears we just got it rectified so if you have been trying to send an email to that address and it got bumped back, please send again~! enough of that, on with the fishing reports.

Friday 6/20: I spent the evening with Greg from Osceola WI on the mighty Kinni. Greg had purchased a fly rod some 10 years ago and it was finally time to give it a shot! Better late than never I say. We got a late afternoon start and headed waaaay down river past all the other anglers, maybe 2.5 miles or so to a spot I particularly like at dark. Having never fished before Greg was quick to pick up the idea of a simple roll cast and mending and lo & behold, his 3rd drift or so and he got a nice little brown! With some work and time, Greg got himself a few more trout and really got a nice feel for the rod and mending in particular. There was a wide variety of bugs coming off, little olives, caddis, stones, brown drakes and lastly the sulphers, which attracted a crowd at dark. Most of my guiding is morning oriented, so it was nice to get out in the evening this time. Thanks Greg and good luck!

Speaking on the Kinni...Jennifer and I made our first kayak trip of the season on saturday and had a great time. I've always been into the kayaks and am slowly warming her up to the idea that maybe we should buy a second boat and do it more often. The Kinni is a perfect first experience, just enough challenges to keep a beginner on their toes and I really enjoy the middle section of river from a scouting standpoint. After kayaking we made our way to Little Whisky to camp and fish a little around the property. Oh ya, we grilled out some Salmon from last weekend which was just fabulous! Anyway, I got in just a few minutes of fishing, mostly probing the depths with streamers and actually did really well, especially as dark rolled around. I pulled a 17 & 20" out of the same hole on a big muddler, got me thinking hmmmm....what if a fella started at 9 and fished till 3am or something crazy. Well I'm going to try to do just that this weekend. I'm guiding saturday and reckon I'll head to little whisky and fish streamers till all hours...anyone wanna join me?

Lastly, Fritzy and I were chasing muskies on a good report from Swervy. We made a bee line to the Kinni area and despite seeing a bunch of fish, just could not get one to eat. We fished hard till almost 11pm and I'll be doing the same tonight with Rodger Bradford, we'll see how long I can keep him interested. RB's been muskie fishing with me a half dozen times now and has yet to boat a muskie, although he's had some good bites and follows. Might have to throw for smallies to get a tug and then switch up to the big girls. I'm going to be throwing big flies on a sweet new 10wt courtesy of master builder Tom Schenk of Holcombe WI. I'll post a late night report if I'm not too stunned...

See ya soon!

BigPikeMike

Friday, June 20, 2008

the week that was....

Wow, it's been a helluva week of angling, this boy has been all over the board...Lets re-cap it shall we?

Thursday 6-12: Fished the mighty Kinni with Leo and Janet from Rockford Ill. We met them in Chicago at the Fly Show and they came up for a long weekend to explore our area. Sadly, the water was still high and in fact, rose about 4" in the 5 or so hours we fished. Needless to say the fishing was tough although Janet managed a nice little brown nymphing out of the current areas. Sometimes the timing is just tough and with all the rain we've had we're pretty lucky compared to some folks.
Friday 6-13: More high water, this time with a group on the Croix. My boat was the smallie rig and good thing because the smallies are biting well on the croix. We fished south of Afton mostly, pitching tubes and spinner baits into the trees and dock areas. We did find numbers but no slobs, save for Steve's 16" on a pepper tube. Thanks for a fun day guys, hope you had a nice outing!
Saturday & Sunday: DOS RIOS! Friday I left immediately for Dos Rios WI for the first salmon trip of the year. Got in late, slept a couple hours and was ready for the first light bite...which never came. Here was the deal, the twin rivers had dumped an enormous amount of mud and sediment in the lake, in the early a.m. we had no clue as to the depth of breadth of the mudline and this turned out to be the key for the weekend. Once the sun came up and we found the edge, we lit them up! The mud from the rivers, including the Manitowak was out to 125 to 175fow, maybe 4-6 miles off shore. We found a really solid edge of blue water vs. mud and worked the edge hard and started picking up fish almost immediately. Spoons on stealth leadcore rigs and clean lines were the keys as usual and saturdays box was the biggest at the cleaning station. So much so that the local charter guys cornered Ben for the details on what we were doing out there. Our trolling program is tough for them to match for a number of reasons, namely speed and style of gear. it's tough for the charters to run stealth gear, IE: put it down efficiently and keep it at the right speed. Our ability to change quick, check speed and move quietly is what keeps us on the top of the heap at the end of the day. Needless to say saturday we were off the water @ 10:30 with 8 in the box (5 four year old kings and some nice steelies inc a 32"). Overall we went 17 for 25, released a bunch of 2-5lb lakers and a couple smaller silver-fish too. Ben's got himself a new fillet knife, looks like some damn Ninja tool, he cuts, I pack....After a nap and re-grouping we gave the afternoon a shot, but storms in the area picked up the wind from the SE and that's bad in Dos Rios, we got blown off the water and had to settle for the sunday morning troll instead.
Sunday morning we found the same program, but the ever changing mudline challenged us just a bit more and we had to work till 1 or so to fill our box. Not as many big kings on sunday, but lots of nice fish and fewer lakers, although we did kill one for the smoker.
As fun as this is, the drive over and back, plus the bodily wear and tear means I am stunned for a couple days afterwards (sorry Jennifer!) It's tough fishing but soooo worth it!

Monday 6-16: Today was my favorite kind of trip on the Croix, the mixed bag day! Fished with Max and Taylor Kearns of the St Croix Valley. We started out focusing on smallies to get on the board, feel some tugs and get a feel for the high water, which had gone up 2' over the weekend! We found smallies in the usual places, tight to shore, rocks and sand etc. having had our fill of smallies and a sweet lunch break at Afton State Park, we decided to fill the remainder of the day with Muskies and Walleyes. Headed up to Afton to cast for a bit, neither fella had boated a musky so despite the mid-afternoon timing we donned bucktails and topraiders and gave it a go. From his "Bill Dance" seated position up front, Max almost instantly had a follow on the TR and the fish was hot, so we stayed in the area and hunted for a couple more. Mind you. 1:30 in the afternoon here....Well 15 minutes or so and 25 casts later Max hooked up at boat side on the same TR. The fish exploded out of nowhere and grabbed the bait, Max put the Almighty wood to him and it was game on. He was able to keep the beast close at hand and it was in the net in less than 15 seconds. Not the epic lengthy battle but rather the boat side meltdown and chaos of a musky on a short line. Good Work! High fives all around! Remember, this was from a seated position, I'll have to try that...stealth.. So we got our muskie, then decided to roll for some walleyes out in the main lake. Dealing with a 15mph north wind, we set up on the humps and did manage to get a couple but kept none for the box, just a nice way to round out the day. 5 species, mixed bag and a heckuva good day!

As if that's not enough!
In doing some recon for tonight's trip, I went to the Kinni last night with Ingy. It was his first time with a fly rod in a couple summers but he did just fine. We hiked a long way down, which is the norm for me, escape the hoards....Despite the sporadic bug activity which included Stoneflies of all things, fishing was pretty tough. I mostly fished a caddis just as a searching pattern, pitching to cover and small slots. got a number of grabs but I'll be damned if I didn't got skunked. Tough one for the Guide to admit but it happens. However I learned enough to be fully ready for tonight's action, busting out the big stimulator's to get their attention, especially as dark rolls around. I'll have a report later this evening, including pics from the previous weeks action!

Jennifer and I are going to kayak the kinni tomorrow and have a nice camp out in El Paso, very much looking forward to an evening away with my lady!

more to come, stay tuned!

Thursday, June 12, 2008

weekend at hand


Greetings All.....


It's been a pretty slow week fishing wise for me, with all the rain we've been having the streams have been on a regular pattern of flood or near flood conditions since last week. Nothing like what SW WI has been seeing but enough to make the fishing very tough. Fortunately our waters drain pretty quickly and my favorite fishing is generally on falling water so here's to hoping next week is dry and calm...


This weekend marks the first of what should be 3 trips to Dos Rios (Two Rivers, WI) salmon fishing with my bro Ben Hayes. This is almost always the highlight of the summers fishing and over the past 4 or 5 years we have dialed in a system which always seems to put us at the top of the heap at the cleaning station. We definitely do it differently than most of the others out there, clean lines and a stealth approach are our keys. T'rivers is the shit, the last crappy fishing village in WI. There are no harbor side condo's, just the old mills and seagull marina to welcome you back in after your day. We generally target kings and steelhead, although we do get the occasional brown and coho. We'll miss the friday night sunset bite but have all day saturday and sunday to fill a box. I'll have images and the box score on monday.


Walleye fishing on the croix has slowed with the water levels going through the roof. Fish are scattered from 6 to 30' over a variety of bottom terrain. I'll be out tomorrow with a large group and hopefully we'll find enough to make it interesting. This afternoon finds me on the Kinni with 2 clients, water is high and off color so I reckon we'll bust out the streamers and try to coax some fish into chasing. It's an overlooked tactic on the Kinni, we'll see what happens!


Good luck & Peace.....


BigPikeMike

Friday, June 6, 2008

rain

It's looking bleak for a while, local streams are blown out and we're in a pattern that looks to hold for a while. I'm starting on my ark.......

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Trilliums

There's a particular spot on the Rush, upstream of Stonehammer Rd where the canopy is high and the wildflowers cover the rolling ground like a carpet of color. Wild Geranium, Phlox and Trillium dominate along with a host of others of which I don't know the name. Most were in shades of purple it seemed, even the Trillium which were starting to lose their milky white to the summer season. It's my favorite spot on the Rush, Francis and I visited twice during our days together. I'd like to think it's as much to enjoy the flowers as catch a few fish.

As a client, Francis reminded me of why I love to guide as I do. Each outing has it's challenges, having been a frequent client of guides in many different places for many different species, Francis embraced the challenge that is the spring creek trout and sporting a beautiful cane rod, proceeded to master the techniques needed to fool these wary creatures. Not to say there weren't moments of trial, maybe 10 flies in 30 minutes trying to match or even come close to the variety of bugs available on the water. At any time there was nothing at all, or a mixed bag of Hendricksons, Sulphers, midges, caddis of several varieties and even the odd crane fly. Despite a bum knee, Francis indulged my insistence at covering a little more ground in the interest of not only seeing more water, but enjoying the scenery and finding that perfect spot to enjoy lunch and reflect upon the day.

Overall, the fishing last week was good. The timing of the hatches varied from day to day but the advantage of having 4 days was that there's a good chance to be around when something does decide to happen. I was lucky enough to get out on Monday with another great client, Seth from Stillwater. He was new to trout fishing (save for an adventure on the North Island of New Zealand) and with a little coaching on his cast and mending, took to it just great and had a terrific morning of angling. After parting ways with Seth, I dragged the boat to the river and chased muskies for a couple hours. Fritzy and I did manage to raise a few fish but no takers. Water temp was upper 60's and had actually gone up from the weekends rains. I'll be back at them here this weekend sometime and have a trip friday for the croix mixed bag. Look for more updates in the next couple days.

bigpikemike