Da Wills and the ladies say it’s time for spring. The fishing has been great so we ain’t complaining! So great I have plenty of content for plenty of videos. Enjoy!
And yes, that was a dry fly on a spinning reel catching a dandy rainbow! Back story; we were nearing the take out and I think the spinning rod was already de-rigged and the fly rods were rigged to nymph. We saw a dry fly on a low hanging branch and grabbed it, same moment we saw a riser in a nice pocket. Anchored up I told Drew to just tie it on the spinning rod to avoid spending time re rigging something else. And there ya have it, you can cast a total of 15 feet with the wind but sometimes that’s all you need. Always exciting on the Yakima River!
This winter has been fairly warm, I mean just above freezing but not having to chip ice off the guides is so nice.
Fishing on the Yakima River in the winter can be a real treat or a real struggle. One safe bet, hit it when the weather is decent not only for your own well being, but also the trout are stoked on good weather too. Watch for that water temperature to creep up above 40 degrees and you’ll see a difference in activity. But even in the cooler temps it’s all about knowing where to go. Target the best holding water and that’s about it. I usually put in and float a good ways to the honey hole and skip any questionable water. Sometimes that means fishing only two spots in a couple miles! But it pays off.
From the video you can see i’m messing with a pretty wacky set up. My 11’6″ 7wt switch rod has become my euro rod of choice. The OPST Lazer Line works great as a “mono rig” and I run tippet straight off of that. Casting any euro set up isn’t great and this one is no exception but it works. The fish are in deep pockets so my go to combo is a jig head pats stone with a worm dropper most winter days. Needless to say it works. Looks like winter will continue for the foreseeable future, keep getting after em!