While my client Bob and I were walking the gill trail to drop into Cheesman Canyon he said, “It is worth it just to come here and walk this trail and see the river below”. It was a beautiful image indeed; Walking on the narrow trail along the edge of the canyon with the boulder spewed river below glistening in the morning light.
I was somewhat relieved by Bob’s comment thinking in my
mind, “Well, if we don’t do very well fishing at least he is enjoying the scenery”,
knowing that Cheesman Canyon can be tough
and a bit less predictable in terms of
success. I have had good fly fishing buddies of mine get skunked in the canyon
or sometimes just get a fish or two in
the net. I had no idea how Bob and I were going to do.
Bob had fished the South Platte
before. He had fished 11 mile quite often and done well. He was looking for a
greater challenge. “I would like a chance at some bigger fish. I would like to
try Cheesman”, he said. . He wanted the Cheesman challenge and was willing to
take the risk.
I knew I couldn’t back down from the challenge. We were
committed.
As I often do when I venture into Cheeseman I tried to prep
Bob saying, “These fish are as wild as
trout get in the West. No stocking is done here. The Canyon has a self
sustaining population of rainbows and browns that have survived for decades. These
are fish that have survived the fires and mudslides, floods and droughts, and thousands
upon thousands of fishermen trying to hook them. They are wary. They are tough. They are
educated. They have seen it all. We will have to work for them.”
When I think of what makes Cheesman trout so tough to catch
is how they live on the edges. It seems these fish live on the edges even more
so than trout in other places. These fish love to hide and feed on seam lines.
They love those edges where two different current speeds and often two
different depths lay side by side and form a “line”, a “seam line, an
edge. It seems to me that I just don’t catch that many fish right in the
middle of the main runs. They want to be on an edge and so I knew Bob would
have to find good natural drifts on those seam lines.
We started working in the upper “ice box” hole. Then
quickly, a rare event for Cheesman Canyon;
Bob hooked a large Rainbow on his third cast. The fish was right where we knew
it would be; on a seam line. The fish went catapulting down river before
throwing the size 24 sparkle wing RS2. Bob asked, “What did I do wrong? What
could I have done”? I said, “Nothing,
this is what makes this place so wonderful and challenging”. And it was.
We worked both sides of the “Ice box” hole moving up and
down, across and back again. We rested fish and came back to them. We worked on
good drifts and good high stick nymphing techniques. We hit those seem lines
hard and were rewarded with a good number of fish hooked, fought and landed and
just as many lost. We fished the edges and also at times dared to add more
weight to get the fly down. I explained how that is another “edge” one has to
approach in the canyon. You have to be willing to take a chance and risk
hanging up in order to hook fish. And it seemed that every time we added a tiny
bit more of weight we hooked up.
The rainbows and Browns took mainly the RS2 but we also took
3 fish on the brown San Juan worm.
We also took a few on a black midge that was probably taken as a trico as there
were fish actively feeding on tricos. At times the fishing seemed to go dead
only to turn on again.
It was a wonderful day and I was thankful for being able to
take the chance with Bob to fish the edges of Cheesman canyon.