Low Resolution (click) | | 1993 Never published.....
Halford's Ghost: the spring creek wiggler
There was a damp, early-morning fog at Ed and Helen Nelson's Spring
Creek Ranch, a few miles south and across the river from Armstrong
Spring Creek, near Livingston, Montana. This was to be the first of
three guiding days I had scheduled with Greg LeMond and his wife Kathy.
I was plenty nervous about it. Greg had just won the Tour de France for
the third time. He was the first celebrity I had worked
with as a fishing guide and he was coming at the wrong time of year.
The last thing I wanted now were three days of slow late August,
low-water heat-wave fishing with the most important clients of my
guiding career. As it would turn out, good luck would shine on me one
more time--because I would somehow manage to string together three of
the best-ever fishing days in a row. But I didn't know that at the time.
Starting off at Nelson Spring Creek was a stroke of good luck in
itself. The fishing there is usually good and often great. Greg and
Kathy turned out to be generous and friendly folks. And Greg was a
fishing fiend. When he fell in a nasty spill in the Pyrenees, he told
me, "I tried to fall on my forearms, so I wouldn't ruin my casting
hand." Greg told me early on he wanted me to spend most of my time
with Kathy. "I need you to tell me what flies to use," he said. "But
basically, I know how to fish."
I was feeling better already. Greg had boundless energy and an almost pathologically competitive spirit.
I never saw a man move so quickly cast so many times
and fish so hard. Kathy was a quick learner too.
There were plenty of bugs on the water that morning. But the spring
creeks are a hard place to learn fly fishing. Starting a first-day fly
fisherman off at Nelson's Spring Creek is a little like asking a
teenager to compete in the Master's Golf Tournament.
By midday, when we finally broke for lunch, Greg had caught too
many fish to count. But Kathy, who had jumped missed nicked and been
refused by a zillion trout, had only actually netted one fish. She was
casting well though. All she really needed was to get a few more fish on the
line, to get her confidence going. I had a 3/4" homemade wiggler
in my box that I had been carrying around for months. Now might just be
the time to try it, I thought.
When we started back in again after lunch I sent Greg up to fish
amidst a pack of rising trout below a small diversion dam. Kathy and I
went straight to the weed channels immediately across from the picnic
tables. The fish are exposed there so it is a notoriously difficult
place to fish, but we had to start somewhere. The wiggler turned out to
be a bombshell. I don't think I've seen anything quite like it before
or since. Nelson Spring Creek trout are so fussy and so nervous I have
many times seen them refuse a natural mayfly. So when a huge
fish--on the first cast--cruised up behind the wiggler, sniffed it once
and then darted back into the weeds, I thought "Oh well, it
was worth the try." But no sooner did I finish the thought when out
came the same fish again then back into the weeds and then back out
again. And then bang! We had him. It turned out to be the same with all
of them. They tried to resist, but they couldn't do it. Two, three,
four times apiece they would refuse. And then out they would come one
more time to nail the wiggler. It was hard to believe!
After fifteen or so fish in less than an hour the wiggler finally
disintegrated. It was incredible fun while it lasted and Kathy had
learned what to look for and what to expect. She had learned when and
how to strike a fish. Later that evening,
when the sulphur duns were hatching, I had Kathy rigged up with a small
foam grasshopper--as an indicator--and a #22 Cream Midge Larvae, a
generic small nymph that works well as a Sulphur emerger. Nymph fishing
during the Sulpher hatch is the most challenging fishing imaginable.
Unlike Pale Morning Duns, which ride the surface for 20' or more before
flying way, mature Sulphur duns take off as soon as they get their wings up,
so the trout key in on the drifting nymphs and emergers.
The trout take so gently during the Sulphur hatch they seldom make an
indicator move. You have to fish by instinctive radar. When you see
a fish move anywhere in the vicinity of your fly you have to set the
hook, even if the indicator hasn't budged. In one log-jam spot up above
the midge pond Kathy caught four or five fish on a #22 nymph, without
ever taking a step!
Since then I have fished with mini wigglers many times in many
places. Like all flies their success seems to vary from day to day and
place to place. But for some reason I am at a loss to explain they are
the most consistently and predictably effective on the spring creeks.
Fishing the water with an attractor, downstream and across with a
tight straight line, isn't what spring creek fishing is all about. So
I never use wigglers when a hatch is on. But I do find myself
falling back on them in the late afternoons when most fishermen resort
to beetles or ants, or take the afternoon off while waiting for the
sulphurs to start in again.
When I'm out there on a spring creek, when the sun is hot and the
fishing is slow, when I've got a wiggler in my box, sometimes I just
can't resist, no matter how hard I try.
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