The Green River is famous for 3 of it's
hatches; winter midges, Blue Winged Olives, and Mormon Crickets (Cicada's
have been nonexistent of late, so we won't go there). BWO's show
up as early as the beginning of April and stick around well into June.
The Evening Hatch usually pays the hatch a visit around the end of
April when fish are feeding off the top, without a care in the world. Last
weekend was our vist... and surprise. We arrived with 20mph winds
blowing knots into every cast. We figured it was going to be a day
of nymphing and lots of weight in the now 4600 cfs water level. We
fished all day and noticed there was something missing, the fish never
fed on top. Chalk it up to the wind? There were bugs all over
the water. Day two, no wind, snow, sunshine, snow, no fish on top,
and still bugs all over the water. We managed to pick up fish...
nymphing.... again. C'mon, this is April 30th, there were bugs all
over, what was up with the fishes? This was literally the craziest
BWO hatch I've seen on the Green. Gear Guide Wyatt was pimping some
new Simms gear and the new Rio Gold line, and was high rod for the weekend.
Fun? Yes. Fish? Yes. Bewildered? Yes. Going back?
Yes...... maybe terrestrial patterns in late May....after a morning of
streamers and midges...
Any wonder why they call it the Green River?
The Baetis were doing their thing, the fish were not
The Tree Sparrows were about the only thing feeding on top. With the wind, they could hover close to the surface and pluck the bugs as they surfaced
Gear Guide Wyatt with a nice toothy Brown
This Brown put his shoulder into Sweets' Sage.
2 comments:
i need to fish! nice pics
Wow!! Those are some amazing pics! That baetis one really caught my eye!! Great blog, you got a new follower
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