Sep 23

Avenue of the Giants

There are a select few places in this world where all the right ingredients come together to grow truly giant lifeforms - The Redwoods of Northern California, Sequoias of the Southern Sierra, and Humans of Houston, TX, to name a few.  The Kispiox River in Northern BC is another such place, and grows a super-race of steelhead unlike any other in the world.

At first glance, the Kispiox doesn’t look particularly out of the ordinary, a medium sized stream with beautiful swinging runs, somewhat similar to that of the lower Trask.  But as you dig a little deeper, you quickly come to realize that the Kispiox is no ordinary river, and its fish are, simply put, extraordinary.

We began our first day on the Kispiox like every other day in BC, in the wee hours of 11:30am.  Within ten minutes, we were floating by Harry Lemire and watching him release a fish that he’d just taken on a single hand rod and a dry line.  The Kispiox is that kind of magical place.

We’d planned on fishing Tungsten tips, as that had been the ticket the previous days on the Bulkley, but Mr. Lemire’s feat told us otherwise.  Fast forward seven hours of dry lines, Type-3s, and no fish…  Ken and I are swinging through upper Potato Patch on opposite sides of the river, Ken with the bright idea to go back to T-11 and myself still stuck on my “Fish will move for the Type-3!!!” mentality.

Within minutes, Ken is into a fish.  I put on a Type-6, and keep swinging.  Ken loses the fish, and a few minutes later is into another.  Same flies, same run, different tips, and I’m getting hosed.  I stubbornly continue to swing my Type-6 until Ken hooks his THIRD fish in less than 20 minutes.  I rig up 10’ of T-14, go back up to the top of the run where I’d already fished, and about 10 casts later you can guess what happens.

So it went on the Kispiox for three days.  Big flies, heavy tips, and the most jawdroppingly large and beautiful sea-run rainbows I’ve ever seen.

Four days later, leaving Smithers on our way back to the US of A, Ken looks at us and says “We’re in the middle of making a huge mistake.”

“What, eating at Dairy Queen?”

“No, leaving this place!!!”

We both get a glimmer of madness in our eyes, bust out the iPhone calendar, and decide to head back up in 4 weeks.  See you soon, BC.  


39.5”. On a 6126. Good Times.

More pics after the jump…


This fish was mentally unsound.


First landed Kispiox fish, had me screaming and my heart racing like the first time I ever landed a wild steelhead.  Black & Blue, a recurring theme…


The Black & Blue Bulkley Special.  Two fish in 5 casts on this lil’ number.


PC in BC


Sockeye on the swing.


The release.


Dolly from the Rodeo Run.


Bulkley chromer


Another Bulkley


Back to back on the Bulkley


Wish I’d have seen this beauty in real life, Mark’s beautiful Kispiox hen.


Kispiox.


Too much sour beer for Nicholas


Organized!!!


Panorama bound…


Mark’s “Silver Hilton” :)

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Notes

  1. whitefishcantjump posted this