Friday, November 29, 2013

Winter Steelhead

With a Little bit of Work Winter Steelheading can be Really Rewarding



Most of the challenge of chasing steelhead during the winter, especially Great Lakes steelhead, can be getting past the weather. Getting yourself out there in the snow, the ice, the freezing temps.  Getting past all this can lead to a very rewarding experience.  Usually you can be blessed to be the only one on whatever piece of water you choose to fish.  Less people on the water gives you the angler room to play these winter chrome monster correctly. Swinging big, colorful steelhead flies is a great choice in our opinion.  With fewer and fewer fish in the waters as the season goes on, swinging flies for steelies can become a game of numbers, very low numbers but, but rewarding numbers.  Even fewer fish will give in and take your swung fly. With the odds already stacked against you, you cannot afford to miss sticking your fly right in front of the fish's face. These fish are on the move so you need to be methodical, graceful, and technical with your swing.  You need to know it can happen at anytime and it will.

When you really think about it you're basically searching the water on a concentric circled pattern, a grid pattern search if you will.  Pick an area to begin, cast across the current as far as possible making sure to not miss any holding waters, and let your fly swing down and across till it directly below you.  Now strip some line in take a big step down stream and repeat. Swing the fly across all holding waters and eventually you'll place that big, colorful pattern right under steelie's nose.  Keeping up on the swing can produce a great day on some winter steelhead waters, but what if the simple swing is not enough?

What if while swinging through a nice pool you get a timid, little tug that you're sure was the silver monster you've been after?  Immediately bring in your line change out that purple, black fluffy Duffy to a pattern different in action and color, I prefer to change color the most. If you're swinging purple, tie on pink, pink tie on white, black tie on orange. You get the point.  Now move back upstream and begin your swinging pattern again.  Steelhead are on the move remember so moving back upstream and beginning our swing pattern is key. If you get the same timid hit this time through change it up again. Find the color that really enrages that fish that's timidly checking out what your swinging by him.  You'll find that color and before you know it you'll have a great winter steelhead on and he'll be emptying your reel to the backing as he fights to get back downstream. Bringing that fish to hand that you had to put time and effort into is so much sweeter than the rest of them. 

Good luck out there chasing winter steelies. This is one of our favorite times of the year going after these great fish. Have fun and be safe.

Cheers

Billy

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