RANTINGS AND RAVINGS OF AN OLD MAN TRULY RUINED BY SPORT

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Fly Fishing: River Updates...

No excuses, just been awhile since last post...sorry vow to not let happen again. Anyway Beav is really crankin'...875 out the gate and risin' daily...how far the dam (pun intended) masters intend to take it who knows. One thing sure as hell a lot a water runnin' down a mighty narrow ditch trust me makes of a mighty tiring day on the sticks...Plus you need a lot of river to make a full day of fishing since in many spots stopping the boat is out the question.

Good news is the river is really fishing good, at least most days...caddis, yellow sallies, pmds topside; lightning bugs, lightning bugs and lightning bugs underneath...did I mention lightning bugs? Gold seems to work best but yesterday we spanked 'em pretty good on pearl jobs the only lightning bugs (sorry) left in the shop...sort a tells ya something, eh?

On the other hand the Big Hole continues to drop 639 this morning at Maiden Rock...though actually the last couple days has been in a sort of holding pattern. I rowed Melrose to Brown's couple days ago and touched nary a rock though a couple spots took a bit of ingenious, cat-like moves on the sticks to get down unscathed, ahem, ahem, not to brag you understand. Fishing's been pretty good specially if you harbor no qualms going to the dark side whenever the topside stuff wanes...

I got no such shame and rigged Nick right from the get go with...you guessed it...a pair gold lightning bugs and he beaned trout and a bunch of whitefish all the way the take out...we hauled the last brown trout right into the takeout...much to the chagrin of a bunch drunken Ideeho yahoos who apparently were in the midst of washing down the taste of skunk with yet another few cans a brown vitamins...what a goddamn circus...the curtain call being when the head yahoo backed the trailer BAM! into the aluminum boat and weren't for Nick might still be chasin' it downriver...real entertaining this bunch...oh well...and I might mention also tis damn hot out there, don't forget the sun dope and wide, wide brim noggin' wear...over and out...

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Fly Fishing: Big Hole Update...

Big Hole continues to drop "like a rock", dropping below 1000 cfs at Melrose for the first time since early spring. Barring unforeseen heavy rains (don't hold your breath) won't be long until floating a hard boat will be more a matter of bouncing rock to rock, more an adventure in dragging the boat than actual floating. On the plus side topwater action has really come on in the past couple weeks and should remain so over the next couple months or until the river and drought gods conspire to shut things down...alas most observers I've talked to expect some sort of shut down later this summer...at least hoot owl restrictions and maybe worse...best keep our fingers and toes crossed, eh?

With the lower flows browns, especially the big boys and girls are once again starting to show up in the skinniest spots...like fish the weak side...hint, hint...Forecast is for hot and hotter, dry and drier... so best get out early as the lower the water gets the warmer and afternoons the bite will most likely die, die, die.... 

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Fly Fishing: Montana Grayling

We hadn't fished the upper Ruby River for a couple years. So with that in mind we decided yesterday was high time to rectify things...check out how the grayling are doing and enjoy what is agruably one the more scenic trout streams anywhere. Set in the shadow of the stunning Snowcrest Mountains one side and the wildlife rich Gravellys (a favorite griz hangout to say nothing of elk, moose, mule deer and just about every other critter roams the Big Sky) the river corridor winds like a crazed snake thru several large ranches (Turner's sprawling Snowcrest Ranch is one) and eventually swallowed by the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest. With many miles of public water to fish where to start is the biggest question.

We started in a familiar run and several casts into it Gale hooked a large grayling (above). Note the fly: orange Stimi. No surprise there since Gale seldom chucks anything but...Anyway several hours later we called the reunion good and called it a day. For more on what this grayling thing is all about read the excerpt below from one of the Montana Grayling Recovery Program Annual Reports.

Arctic Grayling Recovery Program

The AGRP was formed in 1989 after declines in the Big Hole grayling population caused concerns among fisheries managers and conservationists. The program’s goals are to address ecological factors limiting the fluvial Big Hole grayling population, monitor and enhance essential habitats, monitor abundance, distribution, and population demographics, restore additional fluvial grayling populations within native range, develop relationships that promote conservation actions and inform the general public of fluvial grayling conservation efforts and status. The AGRP includes representatives from FWP, BLM, USFS, USFWS, MNHP, MCAFS, Montana State University (MSU), University of Montana (UM), Montana Trout Unlimited (TU), Pennsylvania Power and Light (PPL Montana), and the National Park Service (NPS).

Big Hole River

Introduction

The fluvial Arctic grayling population of the Big Hole River represents the last strictly fluvial, native grayling population in the contiguous United States. The population abundance and distribution declined in the 1980’s, resulting in an increase in efforts to understand population dynamics, identify critical habitats, and implement conservation projects to address limiting factors. These efforts have been directed primarily through the Arctic Grayling Recovery Program (AGRP) and the Candidate Conservation Agreement with Assurances Program (CCAA) for fluvial Arctic Grayling in the Upper Big Hole River.

CCAA Program

The CCAA program was developed in the Big Hole drainage as a tool to implement conservation actions for Arctic grayling on private lands. Under this agreement the USFWS issued Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks an ESA section 10(a)(1)(A) Enhancement of Survival Permit. The agreement was executed on August 1, 2006, which gave FWP the authority to enroll non-federal landowners within the CCAA Project Area (Figure 2). Enrolled non-federal landowners are provided incidental take coverage and regulatory assurances once the non-federal landowner, FWP and the USFWS counter-sign the Certificate of Inclusion and the site-specific conservation plan for the enrolled property (FWP and USFWS 2006). Since acquiring the Enhancement of Survival permit, FWP has enrolled thirty-two private landowners, including 155,301 acres of private land and 7,650 acres of state land into the CCAA program. The CCAA includes partnering agencies that assist with the implementation and monitoring of the Conservation actions and include the Department of Natural Resources and Conservation (DNRC), U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resource and Conservation Service (NRCS), and USFWS collectively referred to as the Agencies.
Site-specific conservation plans will be developed with each landowner by an interdisciplinary technical team made up of individuals representing FWP, USFWS, NRCS and DNRC, The conservation guidelines of the CCAA will be met by implementing conservation measures that:

 Improve streamflows

 Improve and protect the function of riparian habitats

 Identify and reduce or eliminate entrainment threats to grayling

 Remove barriers to grayling migration

The CCAA Program will help alleviate private property concerns, as well as generate support from private landowners which will improve habitat conditions for grayling throughout the Project Area (FWP and USFWS 2006). The goal for the population of grayling inhabiting the Project Area is to increase the abundance and distribution of grayling within the Project Area (FWP and USFWS 2006). The Agencies will monitor biological and habitat response to conservation efforts, project performance, and CCAA enrollee compliance throughout the life of the CCAA agreement. Biological monitoring consists of annually monitoring ten reaches to determine grayling population demographics and abundance. Monitoring reaches will include one mainstem and one tributary reach within each CCAA management segment. Surveys are also conducted in irrigation ditches on enrolled properties to assess the impacts of entrainment on the Big Hole grayling population. Habitat variables monitored include a vegetative/riparian function component outlined by the NRCS Riparian Assessment Method, channel morphology, instream water temperatures and streamflow discharge. Permanent cross section and pebble count at a mainstem and tributary site have been established within each CCAA management segment to document changes in channel morphology. Instream water temperatures and streamflow discharge are recorded at mainstem and tributary sites in each CCAA segment between April 1 and October 31. FWP will use seasonal streamflow data, channel morphology parameters and stream temperature in each management segment to correlate grayling population trends to habitat conditions. The data collected from these monitoring reaches and the resulting analyses will help the Agencies implement adaptive management plans and respond to changing conditions (FWP and USFWS 2006).

Arctic grayling conservation objectives initiated through the AGRP and the CCAA program within the Big Hole Drainage from January 1 through December 31, 2008 included in this report were to:

1. Promote and initiate habitat-improvement projects that include: enhancing riparian and channel function, enabling fish passage, improving stream flow dynamics and minimizing entrainment into irrigation systems in the Big Hole River basin on private land through CCAA enrollment area.

2. Develop and promote landowner relationships and continually educate public and interest groups of grayling conservation needs and status.

3. Monitor water temperatures, instream flows and habitat parameters in the Big Hole River and its’ tributaries.

4. Monitor abundance and distribution of grayling and sympatric native and sport fish species in the upper Big Hole basin.


Grayling conservation efforts have been reported in the AGRP Annual Report since 1991