Cutthroat Trout, AC and Mexicali

HOT

It was a 30 minute drive up into the mountains and the Cutthroat river. My car thermometer read 34c/ 94f. A smoke haze was in the air from fires in British Columbia (B.C.). It made the Rocky Mountains look like they were fading away. It seems B.C. now burns every July and August, and sometimes even into September. Northern Alberta too. My dog, in the back seat, was panting even though I had all the car windows down. I never use the air conditioning (AC). One exception was when I was driving home from a fishing trip in Baja in mid- June and was stuck for hours in border traffic in Mexicali city, Mexico. It was 42c/107f that day. Abby, my last dog, appreciated the cool air blasting from the cabin vents. She also appreciated the rolled-up windows as hundreds of border vendors went from vehicle to vehicle trying to sell their wares: hats, cool drinks, fruit, trinkets. Some had nothing and were simply begging. There were men, women, young children, and even very elderly people in the late afternoon 42C plus heat walking the hot asphalt trying to make a sale just 10 yards from the California border. This wasn’t an Acapulco, Cancun or Puerto Vallarta scene. Nor was it a depiction of idyllic Mexican rural life in a Diego Rivera painting. This was a “Behind the Curtain” look at Mexico. This was raw desperation and poverty I witnessed as I inched along the tall rusted metal border wall until I reached the heavily guarded portal that delivered me to the north. Justified or not, when I crossed the border I muttered to myself that “Mexico doesn’t look after its people”.

COLD

When I entered the mountain river at 11am my water thermometer read, 10c/ 51f. Almost half the air temperature. By 2pm the river was only 54f and my feet still numb. The stream had stayed cold in spite of two solid weeks and now entering a third week of extreme heat. One small creek that feeds the river was still flowing. Last year it was dry in late July. I thought that there was probably still some snow melting up high. It was probably one of many creeks helping the river stay cold when many lower elevation rivers were warming well into the 15c plus/60f and some approaching 20c/70f. Cold water in July and August is always good for trout and fishing.

The Cutthroat that I spotted in the slower flows were selective. I was able to fool some with spring creek type (barbless) dry fly patterns. Cutthroat are often regarded as being easy to catch. That’s not always true. Each Cutthroat stream is different and has its idiosyncrasies. There are no absolutes. The one I was on is usually quite challenging, especially as summer marches on and especially in the pools and slower sections. The river doesn’t hold a lot of trout. It is a quality over quantity river. Here are a couple of healthy fish that I connected with.

 

Troughs along bank sometimes hold trout

quigley pattern took fooled a big fish

big horn skull

clear water

small flow from feeder creek

cutthroat trout

bergamot blooming

big horn sheep

chewed hackle stacker drake

10 thoughts on “Cutthroat Trout, AC and Mexicali

  1. Joey: The smoke started about a week ago. Not too bad so far. Wind last few days cleared some of it out. The wind either brings it or blows it away depending on where fires are and wind direction. We need rain.

    Are you going to Ungava this yr? If so, probably soon…thanks for posting.

    bob

  2. great post love the sheephorns I’d feel compelled to take them home you can feel the ice cold water versus the summer heat I like the rough impressionistic quigley and drake ties. Thanks for sharing.

  3. You say in part of your story that your thought was “Mexico does not take care of its people” and I think that is applicable to almost all of Latin America. The long years of populist governments that have followed one another in the region have done nothing but impoverish its people in every sense. My country, Argentina, is now emerging from that harmful current with a new liberal and democratic government and I hope we can once again be a place worthy of living in peace and prosperity.
    Excuse me, I went off topic!
    Very good post
    Humberto

  4. Humberto: No apologies needed. I made the comment re: Mexico and therefore the post is just not about fishing. By the way, I always enjoy visiting the Mexican countryside; the people;the land; the sea. And when I visited Patagonia ( Argentina, Chile) in 1998-1999 enjoyed it too; I was treated well.

    Good to hear you feel your Country is rebounding.

    Rarely does a Populist regime/ reign end well, anywhere…history show us that.

    I haven’t checked your blog in awhile…I’ll check in and see what you are tying. Your season is just around the corner…best of luck.

    bob

Leave a reply to troutondries.com Cancel reply