Showing posts with label fortress lake chironomids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fortress lake chironomids. Show all posts

Sunday, December 10, 2017

Top Canadian Moments 2012 - #4 - Ice Age

Every fishing season brings something new. If you fish a water regularly or are a keen observer in fishing it only once or twice a year, you'll notice little things change. Sometimes they are big things. I recall logs moving, new log jams forming, the massive amounts of gravel moved after the 2005 flood on the Red Deer, new channels open, islands form, or subtle things like an undercut that forms after high water. Lots of little or major things can change in a river.
You don't think much changes in a lake that doesn't have a big inflowing water. Sure, some trees can fall in, or dead heads can move around, but, really, it's status-quo.

Every year at Fortress Lake, we arrive and the same sequence of hatches occur. We're very thankful for the opportunity to own & operate the Fortress Lake Retreat, especially in years like 2012 where Alberta rivers were in high, generally unfishable condition for much of the prime summer months. Fortress Lake has some excellent chironomid hatches about the time high water kicks in back home.

Add the above, and it's consistent. Reliable. Gorgeous. Somewhat static but in a valley that compares to any other valley for beauty, even after 7 years of owning the Retreat, you can't help but see something different at every turn, be it time of day, angle on the lake or to the lake from a hiking vantage. There's always something different to see in a manner you hadn't.

This year, upon arrival, the differences were pretty obvious. It had clearly been a heavy avalanche year before we arrived. Along the two rock faces that come to the lake (well away from our location - we're more than safe where we are), massive avalanches had come right to the lake. In fact, one such avy covered the outlet in about 30 feet of ice and snow. The Wood R cut its way through the avalanche, but it was a winter wonderland as we drove through the ice slice, then got out to walk about the top of the avy pile. It was one of the coolest things we've experienced.
 

To go along with that pile, new avalanche chutes had come into the lake, dropping piles of trees (3 foot diameter) into the lake. New, great structure (not that the lake isn't full of wood!). It was awesome to see the sizes of trees simply snapped like twigs and either pushed aside or dumped into the lake.

To go along with all the above, it was one of the most impressive years for avalanches coming off the two shaded peaks to the south of the Retreat. Off Chisel and Sadlier peaks, avalanches rumbled and roared down the cliffs and into the spruce forests. June was perpetually alive with avalanche viewing.

And if that weren't enough, the spin-off of the cool weather, this little ice-age effect, the hummingbirds were amazing! It took time for the vegetation to get going. So, for the month of June, the hummingbird feeders were electric.

While not any one specific moment, the entire series of scenes and moments of Fortress Lake this June were spectacular. Add in the amazing chironommid hatches and a stunning rainbow event, and it was stunning. Here's a couple of videos from this June.

Thursday, November 30, 2017

Top 15 Canadian Moments of 2012 - #8 - "Worse than Poaching!"

Fortress Lake, mid to late June, has a chironomid hatch as good as it gets. When noted Stillwater author Phil Rowley pumped several hundred chironomids out of one stomach sample, he shook his head,"that's the most packed I've ever seen. Anywhere."  It is thick and the big, fat brook trout are big, fat brook trout because of it.
It's a big reason why Fisheries have found brookies at Fortress put on 1 1/2 to 2 1/4 pounds in their third year.
We see quite a few folks that have never fished the mighty chironomid hatches before and it does take some coaxing to get skeptics to have a go at the preferred method of indicator, long leader, and a small stick looking fly that looks more like someone jokingly wrapped some thread on it as took the time to actually call it a tied fly... an art form. But it works.
One particular trip this season, two fellows were catching fish but the results differed from others. I suggested to come with me in their boat, me in mine, and set up nearby. I went through the entire approach and dropped anchor off a usually good shoal. Literally, they dropped anchor 20 yards away. I set up my line and flipped it out. 30 seconds. Fish. Fought, landed, released, cast. 30 seconds. Fish. Repeat. Repeat. After each fish I suggested maybe trying where I'm fishing - take my spot for all I care. Nothing. More fish.
"Here, take my rod". They rowed over and tied off on my boat. The fellow in the front took my rod and flipped it out. I began to set up the other fellow's line with the chironomid set up. BAM! Fish. Released, I returned to rigging the other line. BAM! Fish. Released, I continued. BAM! Fish. Three fish in the time it took to rig up an indicator, swivel, and tie on a fly.
We disengaged and I simply rowed 15 yards away and again dropped anchor.
Well, for the next 2 1/2 hrs it was perpetual. Every 30 seconds they had fish. And I'm talking double header, double, double, single, double. I sat there shaking my head, them theirs. For something they'd never tried before they were getting pretty good at it. A few times we had triple headers when I cast. It was a foregone conclusion so I didn't fish too much more.
But the clincher was, upon yet another double, the fellow in the bow of the boat looked at the other and said,"This is worse than poaching!"

In watching, it was a game of "no, you net my fish first," followed by "hey, hurry up and let that one go so you can take my picture!"

A great moment. Wonderful to see. Awesome.