Fall, for most outdoor enthusiasts delivers the broadest and most productive palette of options of the year.
Bass and other warm water species go on the hunt for protein in an effort to bulk up before winter. They feed, at times, with reckless abandon which can make for some pretty fast fishing.
There’s upland game bird hunting. Stalking pheasant and other tasty fowl through fields and canyons with your trusty bird dog by your side.
There’s no shortage of salmon fishing opportunities. Whether it’s late-arriving silver salmon or bay-bound chinook, there are dozens of great opportunities to choose from.
Of course, big game pulls enthusiastic hunters out of town and into the backwoods in all directions across the Northwest. Hopefully, you’ve spent time scouting, tuning your body and mind up well in advance of the hunt.
Cutthroat trout fresh from the sea can be found in a number of coastal rivers. They’re largely overlooked and grow big and thick in these streams. Fly fishing is effective but so are spinners, spoons and bait.
Sometime in early October, you can watch schools of kokanee salmon, crimson red, some with pronounced humps and kype, stage in front of Trapper Creek at the west end of the lake. Thousands will charge into the creek on their short migration upstream into a peat pool where they’ll spawn.