Our first stop was the North Fork of the Duchesne River.
The first fish I caught was a Rainbow, and that was a good thing because it was the only one I caught all day and proved to be the most difficult specie on our list to catch. With the exception of that Bow and a Cutthroat that Dusty caught, all we caught were a bunch of nice little Brookies.
Sam giving Dusty some tips.
One of Dusty's Brook Trout.
Another little Brookie.
We saw evidence of a stonefly hatch (shucks on rocks). And this half dead adult.
Next we went to the West Fork of the Duchesne River to try to knock the Cutt’s off the list. Sam caught the first Cutt then Dusty. I believe they ended up catching a few more Cutt’s each. I was only able to land one. Sam also caught one Rainbow (his only one for the day) and a Cuttbow (not on the list). When we saw the moose down stream, we decided to head upstream.
With only a Brown left on mine and Sam’s list and a Brown and Rainbow on Dusty’s list, we headed for Rock Creek. Not far up the 17-mile dirt Blind stream road it started to rain hard and a lot of water was running down the road. Up on top we could see that a hail storm had passed through ahead of us.
We fished Rock Creek a few miles below the dam for awhile. Sam was able to catch one Brown and achieve his grand slam, but with the fishing being worse than we expected at this location, we decided to try the lower end of Rock Creek.
Can you guess what these two are up to? I will let you know at the end of the post.
On lower Rock Creek I was glad I had my waders on, but opted not to tell the boys that when Flint and I had taken the scouts fishing at this same spot a couple years ago, three of the scouts wading in shorts ended up with leaches attached to their legs. At this spot we all caught some Browns. Now all we needed was to get Dusty hooked up with a Rainbow. When we got in the truck to leave I told Sam and Dusty to check for leaches, there were none to be found, but I couldn’t help but notice that Dusty kept looking at his legs and seemed a little fidgety.
The last stop of the day was the upper stretches of the West Fork of the Duchesne. This location was very overgrown with willows, and their were several beaver dams. We didn't have much time, because it was late, but we all ended up catching a few Cutt's each.
Last off all the pictures of Sam and Dusty bent over in the water was because Dusty had lost his shoe to the mud. After 10-15 minutes of searching it was found.
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looks like a good day fishing! of course sam caught his grand slam! someone needs to outfish that boy! lol.
ReplyDeletethat's what i thought the pics were, a lost shoe, unfortunetly its happened to me! :)
i caught 4 browns...not one. so technically i had 2 slams plus a bonus fish. and i caught the most and biggest fish...but who's keeping track?
ReplyDeleteJust kiddin'
sam