G’day,
Initially
fishing was a little slow here in Patagonia. Very HOT
for this time of year. Saturday the 19th
it was 95 when I fished the Airport stream.
But there was no wind. I’ve had
days with wind gusts of 45 mph on the pampas.
Less than a dozen fish in 4 hours and only one good fish. All took a size 6 foam hopper.
The next day
I fished one of my favorite smaller streams that has a nice mix of browns and
rainbows. First fish of the day was a
brown about 16 inches. May have been the
broadest fish of that size I’ve ever caught.
Almost looked like a body builder.
Not quite as hot as Saturday but still near or at 90. Water was warm by 1:30.
Early on a size 16 caddis was the fly of choice but later in the day a
size 8 fat Albert worked better.
I’m teaching
a teenage Chilean how to fly fish. He is
going to “work” for me – do the shopping for lunches and the like. Benjamin is a fencer and quite good I
understand. He understands timing and
grace as opposed to brute force.
He is
doing very well on his casting. On
Monday I took him to a small river/big stream that is full of 8 to 10 inch
browns. It was like fishing for brook
trout in the western mountains – how many do you want to catch! The best way to learn to catch fish is to
catch fish, so this was the place to take him.
Benjamin takes coaching very well and soon understood where the fish
were and where they weren’t. I bet he
got 20+ fish on a little caddis.
On Tuesday
the weather was distinctly cooler and we went to one of my top three rivers in
the world (Hameshop Brook in New Hampshire where I learned to fish and French
Creek in Wyoming are the other two).
This stream has nice pools separated by stretches of pocket water. Some of the pools are below vertical rock
outcrops and are likely 8 to 10 feet
deep.
For some reason this is a stimulator stream – orange or yellow in size
12 or 14, it doesn’t matter. You will
get a few on a caddis or a fat Albert but the most and the biggest are on the
stimulator. I’ve checked the benthos and
there are more green caddis than anything else but it is still stimulator that
get them. I gave Benjamin all the best
locations and most of the stream. He did
OK for himself.
On the 26th
my Dutch friend Gerlof and I headed north to
fish. Last year we fished a river near
the Argentinean boarder. It was
fantastic. Over the winter we both
studied Google Earth views of the region and found a tributary that drained a
remote area of the Argentina
pampas without any visible road access.
Our plan was to drive as far as we could and then walk/fish our way up
to the tributary. We camped that night
in Argentina at the mouth of
the tributary and the next morning planned our assault.
Google Earth
is a great resource for adventurous fly fishers. But it does have a few drawbacks. It only gives you a plain view. You can get some idea of topography but not
the intimate details. In the Andes topography is critical. Most rivers, once they leave the pampas, flow
through a deep, steep gorge at one or more locations. Some of them are passable by careful wading,
swimming or in some cases you can “mountaineer” your way around them. Most of them end up being impassable. That was the case with ours. We gave it our best try but finally turned
back when we started to think that if we did manage to make it to the other
side we would have to make it back! Most
mountaineers die on the descent and not the ascent.
Now it was
time for Plan B. Since we couldn’t reach
that area of the pampas why not try another?
The “other area” would be the Argentinian pampas region of the main
river. When most people think of
international border crossings they vision a distinct location. In truth it is
rarely like that. Generally the
respective immigration/passport control points are some distance apart with a
kind of “no man’s land” between them. I could tell you about Turkey but that is another story! At
the point where we wanted to go in Argentina
the control stations are nearly 50 Km apart and only get 2 or 3 passages a
day. Most of that 50 km are on the
Argentinian side of the frontier. The
Chileans had no problem with letting us make an “semi-official” entry into Argentina.
If we got caught by Argentinian authorities, the Chilean authorities
would, in all likelihood, deny any knowledge of our crossing and likely say we
were smugglers. Of course they did
hedge their bets by keeping our entry/exit form. On we went, fording several streams, until we
reached the river after about 25 Km.
Over the
years Gerlof had fished this river a few times, officially, closer to its
headwaters. The only access in – other
than our backdoor entry – is across the big ranch that owns the area. Because
it is so remote and roads so bad the area is rarely if ever fished. We fished
the main river all afternoon and into the early evening, getting more than a fair
share of 14-16 inch browns. He knew of one tributary, something over 5 Km from
where we camped, that is often rated as one of the world’s best small,
non-spring, creeks and his favorite Patagonian small stream locations. There is a lodge associated with the
ranch. Some clients make the drive in
but many fly to the ranch’s airstrip.
Every few days they float clients down the river. During the float they stop at the mouth of
this special stream and let clients fish the first 0.5 to 1 Km of the
stream. Since we didn’t know when the
next float day was, we started our hike early in the morning to be the first
ones there and avoid any confrontations with the floaters.
We didn’t
run into anyone and had the stream all to ourselves. Within the first 100 meters I understood why
this stream has the reputation it does.
The water is vodka clear (why does gin get all the props?) and an easy
wade. Most of the day was sight fishing to big browns and rainbows that are almost cutthroat
dumb! When we didn’t see a fish it was
no big deal. Just slap a hopper on the
edge of the willows and let it float a foot or two. Near the willows
having an exit strategy was
critical! Realizing we had a long
trudge back to camp over many Km of loose gravel bars and through brush, we
finally forced ourselves to quit.
There were a
few more days of fishing, all good, but now I’m back in Coyhaique waiting for
the next adventure.
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