B Saturday, June 12, 2021 The Observer & Baker City Herald Visions of rushing streams, wild trout S tream trout snuck up on me this year. It hasn’t always been so. There was a time when a frantic feeling of anticipation accompanied opening day of trout fi shing. When I’d wake up in the dark before the alarm went off with butterfl ies in my stomach. My high school buddies and I hit a river trail before the morn- ing sun lit up canyon walls, with a goal to be fi rst on the water. When rivers ran high and roily, we’d hop barbwire fences and drop a worm in feeder creeks that ran through pastures surrounded by “No Trespassing” signs. Back when catching the biggest and most trout was the closest most of us got to sex. Nowadays I’m more apt to start the season on the Umatilla River near our family cabin. The river runs bankfull, still charged with high-elevation snowmelt. Evidence of the February 2020 “100-year fl ood” is everywhere: brush pinned shoulder high in the crooks of streamside alder, me- anders straightened, deep pools gouged out, log jams that stem Renegade lead fl y (its white hackle allows me to track my offering) and Prince Nymph dropper. Light rain sprinkles the water’s surface. A waterproof jacket would DENNIS DAUBLE have been a better choice than a hooded sweatshirt. My favorite the fl ow, and long, wide stretches stream bird, the American dipper, of exposed cobble. chatters past. Cottonwood and wil- Dennis Dauble/Contributed Photo It’s 6 a.m. Opening day of trout low shoots poke out from crevices Native rainbow trout of the Blue Mountains are of the “redband” strain. season, 2021. No longer able to of bare cobble as if to promise a Most exhibit dark oval parr marks and a narrow red stripe along their ignore light creeping under the riparian corridor will once again window shade, I roll out of bed and provide cooling shade for trout dur- lateral line. start a pot of coffee. The cabin’s ing the heat of summer. porch thermometer reads 38 F and The next hour is spent working rain drips lightly from the metal current margins, pocket pools, and roof. Three hours later, after a shallow runs. There is no fl ash of hearty breakfast of sausage, scram- trout on my best casts. I refl ect bled eggs, and day-old doughnut, back to Boy Scout days when I I shove a fat log in the woodstove held “Atlas” salmon eggs in my and head upriver. Air temperature mouth to speed up the process of has warmed to 42. The tops of fi r re-baiting. trees toss in an upriver breeze. See Trout/Page 6B The fi rst stop is a braided section formed where rushing fl ow meets Dennis Dauble/Contributed Photo an immovable basalt formation Dabbing a fl y or using a bow- and splits in two. To get to the best and-arrow cast to put a fl y into hole requires fording knee-deep water so cold my teeth chatter. The small pools can lead to catching rainbow trout from rivers next challenge is tying a clinch running high and roily knot against muted light when in the spring. I put together a two fl y tandem: THE NATURAL WORLD 7 steps to fly-fishing freedom ON THE TRAIL GARY LEWIS Stroll into any fl y shop in Eastern Oregon and chances are the person who walks in behind you has never fl y-fi shed before. They’re looking to get into the sport and don’t know how to start. Here’s what happens. Somebody has invited them on a trip. Perhaps it’s a “bucket list” thing — they need to check it off as something they’ve done. Maybe they just moved here from California and have always wanted to fl y-fi sh. Maybe they saw a movie with the young Brad Pitt casting a fl y on a rollicking cutthroat stream. For whatever reason, they are here and ready to fl y-fi sh. They’re a bit scared, afraid what other people might think when they see them hang a fl y in a tree. Here’s the thing. We all start at zero, ground level. No one is born knowing how to tie a knot or execute a roll cast or dead-drift a dry. We have to learn it. Sometimes at an early age. Sometimes later. Fly-fi shermen, despite our self- righteous tendencies, are welcoming. We like to see people learn to cast, select a fl y and take it to water. Yet the fi rst-timer’s fear, it lingers. Picture the president of a successful company. He does everything well, he is Gary Lewis/Contributed Photo admired, successful and now he wants to fl y-fi sh. He knows he has no skills, he Mikayla Lewis with a fl y rod rainbow, one of 9 caught and released in an evening’s fi shing. Mikayla was casting and retrieving a CJ Rufus streamer. knows he has to start at ground level and work his way into a sport in which he is a latecomer. Some people never get past this point. It is time to face the fear, pick up a rod and learn a new way of life. That’s what it is. Let’s say you are fi shing next week. This might be the fi rst time, it might be the fi rst time in a long time. If you want to hide the fact you are a rank amateur, here is how to get ready for the fi rst trip. Take a casting lesson You’re going to have to admit to some- one that you don’t know how to cast. Go into a fl y shop. Schedule a lesson. Learn the simple pick-up and lay-down, the basic overhead and the roll cast. It can all be taught and absorbed in an hour. Learn a knot Go online and learn to tie the improved Gary Lewis/Contributed Photo clinch knot. That’s the only one you really This Eastern Oregon rainbow fell for a CJ Rufus, a streamer with a marabou need to know right now. Later on you underwing and lots of fl ash. will want to learn the blood knot and the surgeon’s knot, but that can wait. your own. It doesn’t have to cost a lot of videos and practice simple casts in the money. There are combo outfi ts on the backyard. Get a fl y rod shelves at sporting goods stores. Don’t borrow someone else’s gear. Get See Fishing/Page 6B Put it together, watch some YouTube Tom Claycomb/Contributed Photo Spending time with your daddy is the best gift that you could ever give him. Gift ideas for an outdoors dad It’s almost Father’s Day. I don’t know about you but my father was always hard to buy a gift for, not that he was picky, he just didn’t really need anything. So, I always ended up buying him a pair of leather gloves to use for building fence and working BASE CAMP our cattle. Look- ing back, maybe I TOM CLAYCOMB should have been a more creative shopper because him and mom bought a trailer in their later years and traveled around a bit. So I guess I could of bought him some camping gear. But before you jump off the cliff, if your dad is an outdoorsman there are a million gifts that you can buy him. And if you shop wisely you don’t have to spend that much. So, let’s go over some of the items you might want to consider for dad. CAMPING • Tents. Check out Alps Mountaineering tents. • Propane camp stove • Cooking gear. Cast iron skillets, utensils, plates etc. • Camp tables. We always are short of tables. • Cooking setups. They make cool multi-level tables to cook on and hold your cooking supplies. • Lantern, fl ashlights. I’ve been testing some Black- fi re lights this year that are awesome. • Tarp(s) HUNTING • Knives of Alaska Professional Boning Knife. • Ammo. Ha ... if you can fi nd any. • UMAREX Synergis .22 cal. air gun. • UMAREX .25 cal. Gauntlet. • Knives. Outdoorsmen love knives. Smith’s Consum- er Products offers some economical folders. • Knives of Alaska has some well-designed, high quality hunting/fi shing knives. • Knife sharpening stones. Smith’s Consumer Prod- ucts owns the market. Get him a fi ne diamond stone. • Calls Turkey (4-Play), varmint (FOXPRO), crow, elk and duck calls. • GRIPSHIELD Keeps your hands dry for competi- tion shooting. See Gifts/Page 6B