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standing stock still they would cruise into range. If they
saw a fly land, they would bolt, but a very long, slow drift
allowed them to find the fly and gulp it down. Magnificent
2lb cuts. I hope the photos of do them justice. Back to the
campground.
Woke about
7am and by 8am was fishing the Lamar. Several risers were
taking tiny stuff, took two on a large dun pattern. One good
one about 2lb, lots more followed, most about 1-1½lb.
By 11am
I had only fished two long, flat pools. I drove back to Slough
Creek, had some lunch and tried further up. I wanted to see
it all. This stream is famous and I needed a good look at
it. I picked up two cruisers, one of which had me out to the
backing – fighting and jumping like a rainbow, and the
second fought like a brown. Cuts are considered dumb as trout
go, but they were great fun anyway.
Returned to tower falls late afternoon. Walked
down the gorge track to |
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the Yellowstone where the
streams meet. Parts of the hills are white with soda rock,
nothing grows, it stinks of sulphur, everything is alkaline
encrusted.
I caught
several small fish here, they all came up for the dun, fished
blind in the rough ripple water. Hiked back up the track and
was knackered at the end having fished three famous rivers
in a single day. Slept like a baby, bears never entered my
dreams.
Tuesday.
I remembered yesterday was my birthday. I spend it on Slough
Creek. One to remember.
I headed up the road to the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone
and Yellowstone Falls. I recommend anyone going there to visit
Artist
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Point. It is too awesome to attempt to describe. The battery
in my camera is flat and I can’t get an adapter for
the charger anywhere, so no pictures for the next couple of
days, maybe in West Yellowstone I will pick one up.
I fished
the top meadows of the Gibbon for 10” brook trout. These
beautiful fish are a delight to the eye. They sparkle with
white tips and blue and purple spots. I caught 15 or so before
moving on.
Gibbon
Meadows sees a much larger stream, 40 feet wide with deep
undercut banks, heavy weed growth and open sandy patches.
It meanders around this open meadow. I returned about 18-20
brownies that smashed the black NZ cicada, sometimes they
must have seen it coming through the air, slashing at it as
it landed. They
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were the most willing
fish I have ever seen. I will have to photograph these sections
on the way back.
The Gibbon
joins the Madison at Madison Junction, where the Firehole
enters. The Madison meadows are incredible. Grazing elk herds
in the distance, meandering Madison much like the Ahuriri
in New Zealand. It is only waist deep but wider than two Breakaway
bends.
Volcanic
rocks litter the stream bed with bank of weed between the
head sized boulders. The surface is a continuous ripple 200
metres wide, and as far as the eye can see upstream and downstream.
The Madison is a giant version of the Gibbon.
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