Change It Up – 6/3/2015

Guest Blog from WCA Guide Jim Murray

Patti enjoying a great day on the Missouri. Photo by Jim Murray

Patti enjoying a great day on the Missouri. Photo by Jim Murray

Fishing reports have been all across the boards lately, some people seem to be getting into fish fairly consistently, others are doing “ok”, and others seem to be having some tough days out there. There is definitely some change in the air, and multiple theories abound. “Fish are full” “bugs aren’t consistent” “weather changed” “fish are weird”, etc.

Things definitely have cooled a bit, but with all the different theories, there is one constant theme: CHANGE. Anglers that are changing it up seem to be having success, while anglers that continue to do what worked last month/week/day/hour seem to be struggling a bit more often. Don’t be afraid to try something new and different. The fish aren’t as grabby as they have been, but they still need to eat. The challenge is figuring it out. What’s working? The talk around the shop is: “going old school” “Firebeads” “Big Dries” “9 ft to bottom fly” “2 ft to bottom fly” “weight” “no weight” “mayfly nymphs” “Caddis nymphs”. See a pattern? Not really, other than: change. The anglers that are trying new and different techniques are finding fish. So if you are not finding your flies in the mouths of trout as often as you like, switch it up. Throw different bugs. Shorten your nymph rig. Lengthen it. Throw dries. And as always, focus on the right water and a good drift. The fish are there. They like to eat. They want to eat. They need to eat. So make ‘em happy. Give them what they want!

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Weekend Update

Blue Skies, plenty of sunshine and lots of yellow flowers along Little Prickly Pear make everything ok. photo by Wolf Creek Angler

Blue Skies, plenty of sunshine and lots of yellow flowers along Little Prickly Pear make everything ok. photo by Wolf Creek Angler

We had a break from the gloomy wet weather yesterday with a bright and sunny day that lifted everyone’s spirits. We’re loving all of the precipitation for sure but it’s amazing what a little sunshine can do to change your state of mind.
Back to the gloomy weather today but looking on the bright side, it’s perfect streamer weather and it sounds like nymphing has been just fine as well save a few tough reports I heard from yesterday. What about dries you ask? On the spotty side right now as we await the arrival of the PMDs but that’s not to say there are no opportunities. Those who know where to go are finding plenty of action on top.

The weather pattern looks to be holding for the coming week with a chance for showers and thunderstorms most days. Highs in the 80’s tomorrow and Monday – more normal temps in the low 70’s for the remainder of the week.
We’ve got several vacancies for the early part of the week before we kick into full-on summer season mode late in the week. Book a night or two for yourself today and while you’re at it why not book yourself a guide trip and let our guides do all the work while you just catch fish?

Just back from Missoula this morning where the rivers are running muddy so if you are from that neck of the woods and you want to fish this week – make it the Missouri. We are here to help you out with anything you may need for your day on the water. Lodging, shuttles, , RO drift boats (including the brand new, much anticipated and much talked about Tailwater Skiff), friendly service and advice, all kinds of packs and accessories and wading gear and clothing from the likes of Fishpond, Kast, Redington, Umpqua and Simms and of course, the largest selection of Missouri River flies ever assembled under one roof in Wolf Creek Montana. Stop in and see us today and see what the buzz is about. Open daily at 7 am.

Weekend Outlook

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It’s going to be a great weekend to get out and fish the Missouri with overcast to partly sunny skies and a chance for showers and thunderstorms each day. Friday looks great with a mix of sun and clouds and a high of 71. Things heat up on Saturday and Sunday with highs near 80.

The potential remains for some great streamer fishing, especially below the Dearborn which continues to churn. The same goes for the worm which should definitely be a component of your nymphing plan for the next while. Tailwater sows and various mayfly nymphs have been effective as of late including LGM’s, PMD Magic Fly, Rainbow Warriors, Autocads, Military May, Peeps Shows, 2 Bit Hookers, Black PT’s, Hot Belly PT in purple, Olive WD40’s and Pearl lightning bugs. We’ve also seen a resurgence in Zebra sales in both black and purple with silver tungsten beads and various caddis patterns like the weight fly in purple or gold have certainly had their moments.

Dry Fly potential is ever-present with baetis and midges and the occasional caddis around but we seem to have officially reached the in-between hatches stage as we await the PMD’s.

Sparkle Minnows and Kreelex have definitely led the charge in streamers for the past week. We just got in a brown and yellow Kreelex that I can’t wait to try and of course we are well stocked on my favorite the Circus Peanut in tan, olive, black or white. We’ve got everything you need for streamer fishing on the MO and beyond with a wide selection of Streamer Tip and Outbound Short lines from Rio and Streamer Max from Airflo which has been my go to line this season. Looking for a streamer rod? We’ve  got St Croix Bank Robber rods available for demo. Designed by Kelly Galloup these 9′ 7 weight rods are exceptional streamer sticks with plenty of backbone for casting big weighted flies effortlessly and with exact precision. Try one today and if you like it so much you decide you want to purchase one we’ll knock the rental price off of your purchase.

We’re also offering Galloups’s High Stick Drifter for demo. This 10′ 5 weight with a special light-weight tip offers superb sensitivity and control without the fatigue associated with holding the rod high for long periods of time. Call ahead and reserve your Bank Robber or High Stick Drifter demo rod today.

We’ve got a couple of vacancies for the weekend and a bit of a lull through the middle of next week before things kick into gear again with full lodging and lots of trips going out beginning late next week and running through the summer season. We’re taking a breath now while we can as we prepare for the summer rush. It would be a great time to book a room and a trip for yourself – guides are standing by. It’s the calm before the storm.

See you soon at Wolf Creek Angler, your full service Missouri River fly shop and guide service located just minutes from Holter Dam and Wolf Creek Bridge – nobody’s closer!

Missouri River Memorial Day Fishing Report

Guest Blog from WCA Guide Jim Murray

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The big boys are out in full force on the Missouri as May turns to June. Reports of large fish being caught from the Dam to Cascade are becoming the norm. The fish are big, fat and happy. The much needed precipitation we’ve gotten over the last week has caused some fluctuation with the flows and a water temp, which has led to some inconsistent fishing depending on the days, but overall reports have been good to great. Pressure on the river is definitely increasing as well, as the season is kicking into high gear, which means you may have to kick your game up a notch or two to continue to get it done out there. Paying close attention to your presentation, whether nymphing or throwing dries, is becoming even more crucial, as fish are starting to see A LOT of flies. Anglers that continue to get good drifts, in the right zone, continue to have success.

The canyon continues to fish well, and I have been spending a lot of time down there, while many of my guide buddies continue to put great days together while fishing between Wolf Creek and Spite Hill. With these water fluctuations and wet weather, the worm has been a consistent producer, along with your mayfly nymph of choice. On Saturday, bugs were EVERYWHERE on the water, and the fish responded. I’ve noticed that I’ve had more success with “bigger” mayfly nymphs (size 16 vs. 18 or 20), as the fish are starting to see PMD nymphs. I’ve had mixed success fishing caddis nymphs, some days the fish seem to really key in on them, others, not so much. It’s only a matter of time (days?) until the caddis becomes a consistent producer out here.

The dry fly bite has been great, with reports of blind casting dries such as an Adams or Caddis producing fish. Finding pods of rising fish is becoming easier and easier, and the fish, while not as gullible as they were maybe a month ago, are still willing to eat a properly presented dry fly. Again, a good presentation is absolutely crucial. Those that practice this catch fish, those that don’t, well, don’t.

All in all, the Missouri is fishing great right now, and the fish are big and fat! The season is kicking into high gear, and we can’t wait. It’s going to be a great summer on the Mo!

Mid Week Missouri River Fishing Report

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Guest Blog from WCA Guide Matt Hargrave

Met a buddy and fellow guide at the shop Monday morning. I picked through the fly bin grabbing some usual suspects (#18 pt little green machine and some #18 olive s&m nymphs), and decided to grab some nymphs I never fish. I’ve been doing a lot of experimenting lately. Fishing different water and different patterns. This time I picked up some #12 bh flashback pt’s, some #14 hare’s ears, a downey baetis nymph, a bwo magic fly, and a two bit hooker. I am guilty of sticking to tried and true patterns and water that I know hold fish. I also know to improve as an angler and a guide that I need to expand my arsenal and my knowledge of the Missouri. Sometime’s you gotta take chances.

We floated Mid-Mt. Palace. The day was overcast, 60, but with a cold wind. I picked up a nice brown right away on the lgm. Sometime’s landing a fish that quickly is a bad sign. That was not the case that day. The fish were hungry and ate everything I presented to them.

Later in the day, my buddy Josh started wrecking them fishing blind with a brown para adams. I stuck with the short leash and landed fish everywhere you would think a trout would be.

Towards the evening we anchored on a pod of fish that would not go down. We all touched and caught several fish out of that pod, only leaving it because it was getting too late to fish. Just before the take out, Chad and I doubled up on two dry fly eating fish. Perfect way to end an epic day.

Moral of the story is to get out there and get out of your comfort zone. Start building confidence in different patterns and different water. Growing as an angler is what everyone should be striving for—Matt

Doubled UP

Doubled UP

Mid Week Missouri River Fishing Report 5/6/15

WCA Guide Nick Kaufman with a dry fly eating Missouri River brown. This is how we spend our days off.

WCA Guide Nick Kaufman with a dry fly eating Missouri River brown. This is how we spend our days off.

The spring crescendo continues on the Missouri as the daylight hours stretch and the bugs intensify and the numbers of fish feasting on the surface increase almost daily.
BWO’s, midges, March Browns and rumours of Caddis in the canyon mean the dry fly fishing is about to go insane and while you wait the nymphing has been keeping rods bend daily river wide.
We don’t have much new to report on the nymphing side of it. Green Machines are THE bug of choice. Shallow rigging has been successful depending on the day and the time of day and the deeper rigs are consistently working on the sunnier days which we’ve had no shortage of lately. Try a purple weight fly, Tungsten Tailwater Sow, Wire Worm, Hot Belly PT or a tan czech for a point fly and follow it with your LGM, S & M, Peep, Military May, Micro May, Magic Fly, Olive WD40. 2 Bit Hooker or various sow bug patterns and search the water columns until you find the fish. A BB split or two helps on the longer rigs, go weightless on the short rigs – the tungsten beads will get you where you need to be.
If you find fish up throw the kitchen sink at them. If you want to keep it simple throw an Adams and a bwo cdc emerger at them and build from there. We’ve got all kinds of cool BWO patterns at the ready. Come check them out and see if you can find something you like, chances are pretty good that if you like your bugs you will fish them with confidence and the fish will like them too.
How about streamers? We’ve been throwing them and getting some fish to move on Sparkle Minnows, Tan Circus Peanuts and brown Polar Leeches. Overcast skies on tap for tomorrow – could be a great streamer day which will give you something to do while you’re out there looking for heads.
Stop by the shop for a shuttle on your way out and stock up on all the dries, nymphs and streamers you will need as well as leaders, tippet, tools, Flyagra, Strike Foundry Lil Nugget Indicators, Buffs, Kast Extreme Fishing Gear and all kinds of cool WCA logo gear.

Missouri River Weekend Report 5/2/15

Danya Ann taming the MO - photo by Matt Hargrave

Danya Ann taming the MO – photo by Matt Hargrave

Widespread reports of Full-On sick nymphing the past couple of days river wide. Sunny skies and some stiff winds have limited dry fly opportunities during the day though it sounds like those returning to the water in the evenings have been rewarded with some near-epic conditions and lots of fish willing to eat.
Green Machines have been THE bug, hands down, no matter what the section though it sounds like the Pink Amex and the Rainbow Czech have had their moments as well. We restocked LGM’s this morning and while the #18 PT’s had been the most frequently picked over the grays are reportedly working as well, if not better, in some places so don’t hesitate to try them. Firebead sows and FB Rainbow Weight Flies have seen a bit of a resurgence over the past few days and we’ve been selling a ton of Olive WD 40’s. Purple Weight flies, tailwater sows, BWO Magic Fly, S & M’s , Micro Mays, 2 Bit Hookers, wire worms….all have been catching a lot of fish and last but not least…I haven’t heard too many reports about Peep Shows but for what its’ worth this bin had probably 8-10 dozen bugs in it when I opened this morning…

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I haven’t heard any streamer reports though we’re thinking that should be on your agenda as well in the coming days.
Bottom line? The fishing is damn good right now no matter where you go. The word is that fish are more concentrated in the canyon section but that they are smaller overall than in the upper sections where there are reportedly fewer fish at the moment but much bigger average size. Pick a stretch and enjoy!
Lodging just shy of full this evening and opening up tomorrow and Monday before the next wave comes in on Tuesday. Completely booked mid-week but a few openings here and there towards next weekend. Guides at the ready. Don’t miss out on this awesome spring fishing. Book your trip on the Missouri today.

Make us your first stop on the way to the river for shuttles, bugs (other than #16 dark Peep Shows), bobbers, boats, fishing licenses, ice, Buffs and gloves for hot or cold weather, Rio and Trout Hunter leaders and tippet,  all kinds of tools and accessories, a great cup of coffee,  friendly and knowledgeable service, honest advice and much much more.

See you at WCA

 

WCA Events Update

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May is going to be a busy month on the Missouri. An early spring has kick started the 2015 season. Lots of folks around already and a bunch of stuff going on in addition to great fishing on the MO. Here’s what’s happening the next few weeks in and around Wolf Creek Montana.

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Friday May 15th. Ales For Trails – Pioneer Park in Helena from 5 – 9 PM. Helena Ales for Trails is about contributing to the common good in Helena by raising funds for the Helena trail system. This year’s event will benefit Centennial Trail which is a paved non-vehicle path that will connect Spring Meadow Lake to East Helena.

This year will feature 40+ beer varieties from up to 15 different craft breweries. Participants will also have the opportunity to taste cider and wine. Live music by David Casey and Kate Plummer.

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Saturday, May 16th. 9th Annual Craig Caddis Festival. 4 pm – ??  Barbeque Contest, Parade, Kids Activities, Silent Auction, Raffle, Live Music and all-around shenanigans in Craig Montana with proceeds going to support the Craig Volunteer Fire Department. We’ve decided to pass on the barbeque contest portion of the event this year but we are donating items for the auction and we will be around enjoying the festivities.

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Saturday, May 16th. Montana 2015 General Fishing Season Opener. Get out and fish the creeks. We can’t wait!

Not the Dub C A Soiree - but cool anyways.

Not the Dub C A Soiree – but cool anyways.

Saturday, May 23rd. The Inaugural Dub C A Soiree – Wolf Creek Angler, Wolf Creek Montana.

Come join us as we usher in another great season on the Missouri River with the Inaugural WCA Soiree. Great deals in the shop all day, food and fun and live music from Helena’s Sleeping Giants starting at 5 pm. You don’t want to miss this one. Limited lodging still available. Book yours today.

In addition to these big weekend events May will be a busy time at Wolf Creek Angler with crowds descending upon the region to fish our world-famous river. It should be prime time for streamer fishing and dry fly fishing will definitely be drawing a crowd. May is definitely a favorite month amongst the fly shop contingent as we enjoy spectacular fishing coupled with relative peace and solitude – the calm before the storm of the summer season.

We hope you join us for all of these events and great fishing on the Missouri River.

 

Two Days Left…

Dry Fly Eat on the Missouri - photo by Wolf Creek Angler

Dry Fly Eat on the Missouri – photo by Wolf Creek Angler

Just two days remain to take advantage of our $300 spring special guide trips and winter lodging rates. The screaming deals come to an end on Thursday.
Good to great fishing continues depending on the day with midges and baetis aplenty and if you are lucky enough to have cloud cover you may just have the best dry fly fishing day you’ve ever had…or not.

The bugs are around on the sunny days as well but the fish eating them…not so much. Wade anglers are loving the sub 4K flows and are consistently having good days. Most of the tough day reports we’ve heard have been from the boat guys and usually the ones doing the Dam to Craig stretch. Our advice? Keep at it. Change bugs, change depths, change the water you are fishing, add weight and go deep, remove weight and go shallow. The fish are there, you just need to find them. Some are doing well with a shorter rig and no weight, others are going 10′ ish overall length with a bb or two and finding fish that way. Typically we’re thinking deep on these bright and sunny days but that isn’t always the case.

Shorten your float and work the water, that’s the best way to figure it out. I’m notoriously doing longer floats than I should, a product of my streamer chucking past, but if you aren’t throwing streamers the shorter floats make sense. You can spend time working the nymphing runs until you find the fish and you’ve got plenty of time to fish to any pods of rising fish you come across. If you try picking things apart this way on a 10 or 12 mile float you will almost always end up pushing through good water to get to the takeout at a reasonable time.

Hot flies? Olive WD-40’s, LGM’s, S & M’s, Two Bit Hookers, Dark Peep Shows, Magic Fly BWO, Hot Belly PT, MicroMays, Military Mays, Poxyback Baetis, beadless Zebras, Angel Case Emergers and miscellaneous sow bugs. Effective baetis dries are all over the map but I will say we’ve seen a run on CDC BWO’s and CDC Oliver Emergers over the past few days.

The only streamer reports I’ve heard as of late haven’t been very good but that’s no reason not to throw them. As that water continues to warm up it should result in some great streamer action. We’ve just replenished our Sparkle Minnow supply and we finally got in some more of Craven’s Dirty Hippy Rainbow. My go-to continues to be the tan Circus Peanut. Come by and check out our ever-increasing streamer selection.

It’s another busy week of lodging at WCA. We’ve got just two units left for the weekend so call soon if you need a room or a boat or a guide trip or all of the above. Open daily at 7:30 AM for all of your Missouri River fly fishing needs.

Weekend Report

Missouri River Baetis Box

Missouri River Baetis Box

We’ve heard a couple of reports of tough fishing from yesterday and today but for the most part what we’re hearing is that it’s good to great out there.

Plenty of baetis, plenty of midges and plenty of fish up willing to eat a well presented fly. People are amazed by the sheer number of bugs on the water and it can be overwhelming and frustrating trying to get the fish to eat your fly when it is amongst so many naturals. This is the time for precision. Pick one fish in particular and deliver your fly to that fish without drag. Chances are they won’t move for it and they won’t eat it if it’s anything other than dead drifted directly to them. A well executed reach cast is a critical component of Missouri River dry fly fishing. It’s this technical challenge that brings many to fish the Missouri and also sends many away empty handed cursing the fish and the river.

Change bugs often and work on that delivery and presentation. More often than not it’s presentation issues which cause problems but there are plenty of times when a perfectly presented fly gets refused as well. How much fun would it be if they ate every well presented fly every time? It would probably get pretty boring pretty quickly. Are you up for the Missouri River dry fly challenge?

There are countless patterns out there and most of them work at one time or another. A good generic place to start would be a Hi Vis Parachute Adams or Purple Haze trailed with a cdc baetis emerger or some kind of cripple pattern. We’ve got bins full of all kinds of BWO patterns so come pick out some you like and try them. There are no true magic flies out there (other than the Parachute Adams) but there are a lot of flies that work and work well more often than not. What usually happens is that someone has a great day with some bug and the word gets out and the next thing you know everyone is out of them. Not to worry, there are countless others that will work just as well. We all tend to do it from time to time, but try not to get caught in the Magic Fly Trap.

Nymphing reports continue to be good with many opting for a shorter overall rig. Go to flies continue to be the S & M, Little Green Machine, Hot Belly Pheasant Tail in purple, Military May, Micro May, Juju Baetis and many more. Stop by the shop and we’d be happy to get you set up with flies, shuttles, boat rentals, leaders, tippet, indicators, rods, reels, floatants, and anything else you might need. We’re also happy to answer any questions you have about rigging, location, presentation, time of day or anything else you want to ask us. We may not always have the answer but we’ll always tell you everything we know and do whatever we can to help.

Shop open daily 7:30 AM to 5 PM.

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Top to bottom from the left Row 1. Hi Vis Parachute BWO, Purple Haze, Hi Vis Para Olive, Hi Vis Parachute Adams. Row 2 Smith’s BWO CDC Hackle Stacker, Parachute BWO, Split Wing Parachute BWO, Parachute Olive Spinner, WCA Stacker, Polywing Spinner. Row 3 BWO Parachute Emerger, CDC Baetis Emerger, Cripple Thorax, BWO Biot Cripple, Nyman’s DOA Cripple Baetis, BWO Flash Cripple, Drown Spinner BWO. Row 4 RS2 CDC, Quiqley’s Hackle Stacker BWO, Almost Dun BWO. Row 5 (Nymphs) Mason’s Peep Show Dark, Purple Lightning Bug, Magic Fly BWO, S & M Olive, Two Bit Hooker Red, Little Green Machine, Kyle’s Superflash PT Olive, Juju Baetis

 

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