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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 2, 1963)
If eralfr atib leUr Fishermen Brave High Country ICE BREAKS UP NEAR FALLEN GIANT Part of the ice pack at the north end of Woodpecker Lake began breaking up last weekend, but the remaining portion of the deep mountain lake was still encased in an icy shield. Fishermen had little prospect that the lake, and others BADGER LAKE SPORTS ICY SEAL A six-inch sheet of ice crusted Badger Lake, about two miles from Four Mile Lake via trail, as the trout season opened in waters alonq the Skyline Trail last Saturday, May 25. Some in trepid anglers ventured out onto the ice and slipped bait 1- RESERVOIR SPILLWAY A solitary angler appraises the spillway of the reservoir near Sprinq Creek Road before casting his line into the placid waters in the foreground. NEAT CATCH AT RESERVOIR Several hours of angling at the reservoir on Spring Creek Road yielded this catch of four crappies and three black bass for Ray Overson, 2793 Crest Street, who was among t host of fishermen producing fine catches in those waters Sunday. along tlie Skyline Trail, would be free of its icy surface before the next two or three weeks. The submerged log in the bottom of the picture depicts the transparency of the lake. through cracks in its mantle to tempt a wary fish, but the lake's inhabitants had no appetite for such offerings. The presence of warmer weather accompanied by longer day light hours is expected to melt the icy shield within the next several weeks. Other fishermen tested that part of the reservoir be hind the spillway with varied success. STILL WATERS UNVIOLATED Calm waters, relatively undisturbed by fishermen, greeted some of the anglers who tried their luck at the reservoir on Spring Creek Road last weekend. Within the next few weeks black bass will begin furrowing depressions in th bed of the reservoir to form nests far their spawn. Bass shape the nests with their tails, sending up swirls to the surface the water which betray their presence to anglers. Angler Finds On Opening By DICK BKIGCS I That peculiar variety of male the fisherman, oddly attired, ascended to the banks o lakes and streams in the Cascade Mountain Range beginning last Saturday and opened its annual campaign to coax some wary trout into snapping at a hook colorfully clothed in feathers and fuzz and barins but scant re- emblance to any organism or creature on the face of the globe. If the kaleidoscopic hues of hardware and feathered lures were more fantastically bedecked this year than last, tiie trout were less impressed, at least so far as concerned the host of an glers on hand to usher in the opening day of trout season in the high country. Few anglers who tried worms salmon eggs for bait at Lake of the Woods, Four Mile or Fish lakes closed their creels on a captured trout and a fewer num ber of the "purists," those fish ermen who tempt their prey with artificial lures, did as well. Other smaller lakes along the Skyline Trail were still clutched in the waning grip of winter. Snow clogged the trail into Woodpecker and Badger lakes and a six-inch mantle of ice shielded the angler from his in tended victims. Clearly, fishablc conditions in the mile-high trout lakes were at least three weeks away. While anglers in the frosty high country were flicking their lures or bait about the air rath er fruitlessly, their counterparts BRUSH BLOCKS HIGH TRAILS Trails into the high country wore either clogged with snow or blocked by brush as the trout fishing season officially opened in lakes and streams along the Skyline Trail, last Saturday, May 25. This tyke did considerable high stepping in his quest for a wary trout at Four Mile Lake. Trout Wary Fishing Day in the lower altitudes were bask- inc in considerably warmer tern- Iperatures and doing rattier well for themselves. Many anglers in the lowlands traveled along asphalt roads, parked adjacent to river or stream beds, and caught size able . rainbows within sight of their cars. Meanwhile, that other hardy tvpe of individual who makes an adventure of seeking out the most remote fishing spot gener ally caught nothing for his ef forts,' except, perhaps, a case of sniffles. Some such individuals sought to reach Cold Springs, starting point of the trail to Heavenly Lakes, and mired their automo bile in a quagmire near Long Lake Trail. The fishermen final ly extricated their vehicle from the mire and departed for a not i inaccessible area. Soon after, along came anoth er intrepid angler in a truck pulling a horse trailer, occupied by an appropriate animal. The horse, obviously, was to elimi nate the problem suffered by those anglers who moved exclu sively on wheels. What the horseman did at the ico covered mountain lakes when he got there I if. indeed, he did I is not known, and whether or not he ever returned is even less cer tain. The entire subject suggests that angling in the wild hinterlands may not be all it's cracked up to be. Perhaps, one can do just 1 " as well plunking a huge blob of nightcrawler. with a one - ounce sinker attached, into a roadside stream strewn with trash and beer cans. Last weekend, tbe lowlanders had a few problems, too. The Williamson River, which along with the Wood River was closed until Saturday, Mowed with the brackish coloring of the huge marsh it drains from the north. Despite its unusually mur key waters, anglers who floated an appropriate nymph into rif fles usually did well. Tfc MX sJK. -t SUMMERY TERRAIN BELIES SNOW CLOGGED TRAILS Snow-capped Mt. McLough lin looms above this forest located along the dirt-surfaced road to Cold Springs, take off point to the trail leading to the Heavenly Twins Lakes area. About three miles south of Cold Springs, near the Long Lake Trail, a quagmire makes the road impassable to traffic. Heavenly Twins and other lakes along the Skyline Trail are still locked in a mantle of snow. sti- -,tr-'"" W LOW BRIDGE AWAITS BOAT CARRYING AUTOS Slushy roads bordered with snow awaited anglers venturing into Four Mil Lake and Fish Lake during the opening of the fishing season in the high mountain country west of Klamath Falls last Sunday. In photo above, a partially fallen evergreen, axtendinq across Four Mile Lake road, com plicated the problems of those anglers who carried boats en the tops of their cars. Fishermen equipped with car-top boats stopped their vehicles in front of the tree and motored slowly under it. Fishing was generally slow in the two lakes during the open ing day weekend. 'ijlfw fllftm KLAMATH WATERS YIELD LIMIT While most anglers experienced little success in their efforts in the high lakes which opened to trout fishinq last weekend, other fisher men did considerably better in streams and rivers et lower altitudes. This limit catch came from the Klamath River and Spring Creek, with six of the rainbows coming from Sprinq Creek. One such fisherman reported hooking and releasing 20 rain bows while selecting his limit of 10. Many oilier anglers shunned the Williamson River in favor of Spring Creek, which a short time before had been slocked with some SOU trout. As usual, those who worked the transparent creek with salm on eggs made catches ap proaching limits. Diamond Lake other waters that opened to anglers Saturday produced sizeable fish, but ar- s.r" i.Jvi,'iF .s S&r? . i.3 t"Sifa- & ther south on the Klamath Riv er, Copco increased the spillage from the dam near Keno and dis rupted the fishing for the week end, Last week, most of the prize rainbows in both size and quan tity were gouig to the fishermen who ranged in the lowlands of the Klamath Basin, but some time within the next month the high lakes, disrobed of winter's touch by the warmth of sum mer, will occupy center stage for even the most steadfast of the lowlanders. ; mm: t 1 t ".7y i s : . i 'J i ' : ; - ;' 4. 1 . .A' .1 J " I