I absolutely LOVE the hero shots that proliferate the internet especially the impossibly large fish coming from little streams and creeks yet, while I have pictures and even some video of my own, the memory that I joyfully play and replay in my mind was the one that got away on Silver Creek.
Being from Southern California, the fish that grow locally rarely get to hero status and the bugs I fish are typically minuscule so in my travels to the beautiful environs of the Rocky Mountain west, I am always delighted when I get the chance to fish a size of bug that is big enough to see and a joy to tie. On my second trip to south central Idaho, my new favorite place, I continued my initiation on of the most lovely spring creeks in the world under the tutelage of a local guide and her talented husband. After fishing with them and taking as many mental notes as I could, I spent the next few days working the river as they had suggested with good success.
One late morning, with green drakes on the water, I was working my way down stream casting to the undercut banks with good success and I was having a blast. I approached a bank that is often traversed by fishers getting into the river as it is near to the stream side trail so as I debated crossing to get out and try some "new" water, I rolled a smoke and stood in the creek looking around with a grateful heart towards the God who created all of this. Deciding to continue downstream in the along the creek, I tied on a green drake pattern that I had tied myself that actually seemed to be a good imitation and greased my line up for a clean drift.
My upstream, reach cast has been getting a lot of practice and I continued to cast to the bank working on the elusive drag free drift and as the bug drifted by the bank, right at a point where the muddied, clean spot that had been worn by wading boots sliding into the water met the river, a huge wake came out from under the bank and poking out of the head of that wake was a huge, white mouth poised for chomping whatever was in the way. I lifted my 4wt rod tip up in a defensive response, almost as if I was trying to pull the fly away and just out of shock, when the weight of this lovely fish came tight against my line. It shot downstream and soon I saw my backing beginning to spool off my reel. As I walked/ran/stumbled downstream to chase this fish, I saw it jump... now I know they look bigger in the air but, this fish was huge! When it landed it sounded more like a kid's cannonball dive than a splash with a satisfying "splooosh" rather than a "splat" and it had then slowed enough for me to regain some line and some sense of "control". I've heard it said and I saw it that day, my rod was doubled over, bowing to the power of this fish.
As they do, it headed for cover and that cover was in the form of a root ball of a tree that grew along the bank and hung out, over the water. It went deep and after a few seconds of "ohmyGod, ohmyGod" I successfully horsed it out from under that root filled tangle just in time to see it jump again... I remember saying "Thank You" out loud and as it descended back into the water, I'm sure I giggled like a 12 year old watching "Porky's". The fish headed back towards the root ball and jumped towards it at which point, my 5X tippet got caught in the branches of the overhanging tree and then came the sickening (but strangely satisfying) "Pop" of my tippet as the fish sank below the root ball followed by a massive wake heading downstream unencumbered by my puny tethering. And then it got quiet.
What a great fish! The "one" that got away, etc., etc. So that's my example for ya'll. No pics, no nothing but, another reason to keep fishing and caring for those places where we get to fish. Happy Thanksgiving to you.