frozen-fire Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 No better month to go hunt for chrome than November. There is just something about going out on cold November mornings and smashing fresh chrome steelhead that is so satisfying This has been an exceptional fall with lots of hard fighting steelhead for everyone, and I'm sure the fun will continue until ice-up! I still consider myself a newbie when it comes to steelheading and I've still got a lot to learn. Bait choice, different rigs and setups, depth, time of day, temperature... so many factors that can make the difference. Most of my fish have come on roe bags this fall, but I would like to concentrate on getting into jigs and flies. It's hard to switch up when you're doing so well though. But we'll see how it goes. Enjoy the pics... some of the best photos this fall came from this past weekend. Couldn't have been possible without a great netman and cameraman (Thanks Vic!) This little guy was insane! I hooked up with this fish and fought it for about 5-10 seconds. It then wrapped me up in wood and broke me off at the leader. I retied and a few drifts later, get another fish on. I land the fish and see a line coming out of it's mouth. This was the same fish that broke me off a few casts before! While examining the fish, I realized that there was another line and hook coming out of it's mouth. So in total... there were 3 lines, 3 hooks and 3 roe bags in the mouth of this small steelhead. This fish wanted to be caught so bad. Taking everything out of its mouth. All cleaned up and set for release. Can anyone ID this thing? I found it swimming downstream.
Rod Caster Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 That's a helgramite. Some, but few bait shops carry them. I really like the first release shot...
solopaddler Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 Beautiful fish! Nice seeing the snow on the ground, the real season is about to start.
Sharkbait22 Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 Some real pruddy pictures and some hogs. Some of the nicest I've seen here. The bug is a larval Tipulidae - crane fly. Yumm.
danc Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 Very nice!! By far the best Steel shots I've seen in quite some time.
ccmtcanada Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 Way to go! Some amazing fish and pictures there I wish I could go out more often....until I can I live vicariously through reports like this!!
spinnerdoc Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 Some really clean fish and shots you got there bud. Nice reel as well.
Victor Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 I'm not sure if I should be flattered for being labeled as a "great netman and cameraman" lol
Guest ThisPlaceSucks Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 wow. some of those fish were slobs. thanks for posting.
highdrifter Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 That's a helgramite. Some, but few bait shops carry them. I really like the first release shot... Not a hellgrammite. Hellgrammites have a visible thorax and mouth parts (mandibles). Almost looks like a tulipae larvae (cranefly). Do we have an expert in benthic invertebrates in the house?!
fishindevil Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 very nice chrome man !! great pics too..
12footspringbok Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 Good pics wish I had a camera man like that. Some of those fish are hogs... Wish there were more that size up this way! Thanks for sharing!
Jon Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 Great colour in the photos! I wish mine would turn out so well. I would agree with the cranefly larvae as well. Jon
torco Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 Thanks for posting, the camera work on those pictures was excellent. Some of those shots deserve to be in a magazine or calendar somewhere!
Rod Caster Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 Not a hellgrammite. Hellgrammites have a visible thorax and mouth parts (mandibles). Almost looks like a tulipae larvae (cranefly). Do we have an expert in benthic invertebrates in the house?! oops. thanks for correction!
frozen-fire Posted November 22, 2011 Author Report Posted November 22, 2011 Thanks guys... After some googling, it is confirmed that it was a cranefly larvae (aquatic). Found out there are terrestrial forms as well. I was very surprised at the size of the thing. Considering mature crane flies have such small bodies and a rather thin abdomen. It just didn't seem like a match and no way I would've guessed crane fly just from looking at the larvae. I would have expected a much bulkier bodied insect.
Jet Posted November 22, 2011 Report Posted November 22, 2011 Wow I'm missing out!!! Great stuff Tony, maybe next opener!
Bassnbows Posted November 23, 2011 Report Posted November 23, 2011 Some very nice chromers there bud.
Victor Posted November 23, 2011 Report Posted November 23, 2011 Wow I'm missing out!!! Great stuff Tony, maybe next opener! nah. You're not missing anything here I'd trade all the fish that I caught last weekend for catching 1 out your way in the REAL rivers and pools(okay maybe i didn't catch a whole lot but still haha)
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