by midger » November 27th, 2010, 4:03 pm
There has been a lot of good input from folks so far. September can be a great fishing month for all the western waters.
We could probably answer better with more info. You never said specifically how long you planned to fish on this trip. That would help you determine the amount of water you want to try to cover. You also never said whether you planned to hire a guide for all or part of your trip, camping or motel, driving distances you are willing to endure, etc.
California does have some good waters, but it can be a long drive to reach some of them and you have to hit them at the right time to create an epic trip. That being said, September can be very good in Northern California in and around Redding. From there you'd have access to the Upper/lower Sacramento (the lower being a primarily guide/floating river), the Pit, McCloud, Hat Creek, Trinity, etc. You'd have all these rivers within a 1-1.5 hour drive if you based out of Redding. You could fly into Redding or cheaper flights into Sacramento then drive the 3 hours to Redding.
Another great area would be the West Yellowstone area. You could base out of there and fish some of the flyfisher's "mecca" waters on the Madison, Firehole, LaMar, Yellowstone, Henry's Fork (Idaho), Henry's Lake, Hebgen, etc. Here you'd have absolutely gorgeous scenery in addition to being there during the prime of the season. Great time to chuck streamers for summer fattened fish, and the temperatures aren't bad this time of the season. Yes it can be cold early in the mornings, but the daytime temps will usually rise enough so that you'll still see baetis and caddis hatches coming off--especially on the Firehole. You could fly into Pocatello Idaho and drive up the Henry's Fork to reach West Yellowstone. You'd pass Henry's Lake and the Madison enroute to WYS.
I can't overwarn you about driving too far. Many folks try to hit the Green in Utah below Flaming Gorge (a wonderful fishery), go up and fish the Green near Pinedale, the Snake and Flat Creek out of Jacksonhole, and hit the Yellowstone Park waters-----this creates a lot of driving which in turn minimizes your fishing time. Unless your trip will be 3-4 weeks, I'd either base out of an area that had a diverse amount of fishable waters within a one hour radius or I'd plan to fly a lot between the destination waters.
Have fun planning your trip.
Mike
"Should you cast your fly into a branch overhead or into a bush behind you, or miss a fish striking, or lose him,or slip into a hole up to your armpits-keep your temper; above all things don't swear, for he that swears will catch no fish."