Tuesday, February 5, 2013

South Platte: Patience Pays Off By: Zac Hill


The South Platte River provides some of the most accessible, and beautiful trout habitat in all of Colorado.  This river excites, and frustrates beginners and pros alike.  I have found that this treasure does give up big fish in the winter months.  Your effectiveness is going to be based on the details of tail water fishing.  These reminders will help you get started, or challenge you to tighten up your game. Remember fish don’t want to be caught.


     First, pick a stretch of water that you can fish for 4 hours.  This does not require a mile of stream.  Fifty, to sixty yards of water should suffice.  The purpose of this is to locate fish in this section, and work the water thoroughly.  Too many fishers rush from run to run and then wonder why the results are mixed.  Slow and steady is the key to the Platte.   Fish are going to hold in water that is deeper than the normal bottom.  The old freestone runs still exist and fish prefer to use them where available.  You can get away with bigger flies in these sections.  Rubber legged hare’s ears and small stone nymphs in fourteens are great lead flies. Dropping flies like RS-2’s and Ju Ju midges or baetis are also great.  Many flies will do.  If you have fish in your run and they are not taking your flies, change them!  Variety is the spice of fishing.

     The real key is to achieve a dead drift scenario to help these flies work.  Practice your drifting techniques by mending your line behind a strike indicator to match the speed of the water.  I have seen countless fisher man standing in prime water wasting that spot by poor drifting.  If you need help contact any fly shop, they are here to help.  Working a good stretch of water should take you hours.  Fish can be anywhere.  Take the time to fish the water that isn’t your favorite.  Even, if you get out of your comfort zone.  Learn by doing. 

     Watch for fish visually.  Take a slow walk along the waters edge and observe trout.  I catch a lot of fish that I have scared first.  When you spook a fish from its feeding spot remember where it was.  Better yet, just stand still and wait patiently.  It will surprise you how fast they come back to where they just were!  Fish have favorite spots.  When they feel it is safe, they will come right back to that spot.  You can scare all the fish in the run, if you want.  Just remember where they were! 

     Finally just get out there and try.  The Platte is not magical and it doesn’t hate you.  It has been expertly fished by the whole world.  A few shaky outings is just the learning curve on a tough stream.  The rewards can be awesome.  This stream does hold big fish.  I recently went to fish the Platte a few weeks ago on a whim.  I caught five fish in about five hours.  Doesn’t seem great, until I tell you four of them were over twenty inches.  The best a twenty two inch rainbow, calmly took a size twenty RS-2 drifted perfectly by his nose.  Oh, and by the way, it was drift thirty three I think it was.  Good things come to those who put the work in.  Trial and error is a fine way to learn. 

Tight Lines,

Zac

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