Fishing Big Water – One Key Tip

by | Oct 9, 2024 | 3 comments

I sat in the passenger seat of Dad’s Chevy pickup, eager with anticipation after forty hours of travel. With a camper in tow, our progress through the Rockies was concluding in a final slow decent into the valley.

I’ll never forget the moment I looked down on the Yellowstone river for the first time. We stopped the truck and camper in a small pull-off to let the dog run and stretch our bodies with satisfaction.

“That’s a big river,” I said aloud. Dad nodded.

When we fished it, the rocks, the currents, the undercuts and the grasshoppers were all bigger than I’d expected. It was, in fact, the biggest water I’d ever fished. And for one full day I made the same big mistake. I tried to fish too much of it.

Fishing big trout rivers demands one key character trait. Discipline. And having that discipline leads you to solving all the other problems that might arise with big waters.

Let me point out that I’m talking about wade fishing. If you can get a boat onto a big river, do it. Because that’s a hell of a fun way to fish for trout too.

Most trout fishing takes place on medium to small rivers and streams. I think that’s fair. But the wade angler who visits a valley that’s two, three of four times larger than what they’re used to can easily become lost. I did on that first trip out west. And I’ve made the same error every time I’ve visited big trout rivers back home as well . . .

I try to cover too much.

I still do it. I start lengthening my drifts and extending my reach. I start accepting sub-par drifts and retrieves just because the fly lands in some juicy water far away. But getting the fly to that water isn’t good enough. The fly has to be believable and the presentation has to be there. We all know it. However, most anglers are tempted by big water. We fall for the trap. The river dares us to fish the far side, and it tricks us away from the things we do well.

READ: Troutbitten | Get a Good Drift, Then Move On

These are easy mistakes to make on big water. But discipline solves the problems. Actively planning and following through is an elusive quest with a fishing rod in hand. Most of us want to be creative. We want to follow our whims. The shady side of that boulder sure looks good, right? So why not make a few casts? Then fifteen minutes later, you’ve wasted time, energy and confidence with bad drifts and poor judgment.

The common advice is to break a big river into many small rivers and fish each of them. That’s good stuff. And I have routinely done well by choosing whichever bank I can wade near, then fishing just the first thirty feet out from it. Nothing more, no matter how much the middle of the river calls to me.

Other times, I’ve walked a half mile just to find the next riffle that I could wade. Then I’ve chosen one or two prominent rocks, fished the three lanes downstream of them (five lanes, really) and only then allowed myself to think about what’s next.

Make a plan. Follow through. Then reevaluate.

And the next plan for a big river should always start with the question, “What water can I fish well?”

Fish hard, friends.

 

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Enjoy the day.
Domenick Swentosky
T R O U T B I T T E N
domenick@troutbitten.com

 

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Domenick Swentosky

Central Pennsylvania

Hi. I’m a father of two young boys, a husband, author, fly fishing guide and a musician. I fish for wild brown trout in the cool limestone waters of Central Pennsylvania year round. This is my home, and I love it. Friends. Family. And the river.

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3 Comments

  1. Thanks, Dom. I much prefer a smaller river to a big one. It’s just a lot easier for me to read the flows and spot the fish holding spots in a smaller water, that’s it. The big flows can hide the features that the fish like, so I struggle just to figure out where to target. And while floating a hopper/dropper rig near the bank while you’re sittin’ comfy on a drift boat with a beer in your hand is a ton o’ fun – anyone can catch fish that way. I much prefer the challenge of picking apart some pocketwater, for example. To each his own, I guess!

    Reply
  2. A year ago we saw the mighty Yellowstone. A lot bigger then we estimated. Didn’t get to fish it. Then we realized all the Montana rivers were much bigger then our Colorado rivers. We fished and floated the Bighorn and then fished the Madison. I needed this article a year ago Dom. But reading it now made me smile about the Yellowstone.

    Thank you!

    Reply
    • Dom, you are wise beyond your years. I fished the Yellowstone from a boat and it was an awesome trip. I also fished via waders the Gallatin and it was fun. I did suffer from trying to get that next hole, riffle, etc. This is great advice.

      Reply

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Domenick Swentosky

Central Pennsylvania

Hi. I’m a father of two young boys, a husband, author, fly fishing guide and a musician. I fish for wild brown trout in the cool limestone waters of Central Pennsylvania year round. This is my home, and I love it. Friends. Family. And the river.

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