|
Doug Stewart fly fishing for Steelhead on the Deschutes |
The
sun had just ducked behind the western ridge of Long Canyon and my
two clients began to don their wading gear. It was a perfect
evening—shade on the water, no wind and fly fishing one of the best
runs on the Deschutes River, the Box Car run. Compared to other water
types it was quite long, stretching from an upper riffle that flowed
into a long glide. From there numerous large rocks broke the surface
creating ideal resting areas for steelhead. It was a classic run.
As
my clients were rigging up, out of nowhere a lone fly fisher abruptly
walked into our camp and said, “Good evening fellas,” and then
proceeded to wade into our water. We were stunned, and as I went to
confront him he hooked a steelhead on his first cast but lost it after one
jump. I quickly confronted him and said, “Hey, Buddy, what in the
heck do you think you’re doing?”
“Well,”
he said. "No one was fishing it, so I just….”
I
rudely interrupted him, “You can’t just barge right into
someone’s water!"
He
dropped his head slightly and said, “I’m sorry. I’m new on this
river. Please forgive me.”
I
accepted his apology and told him that to avoid a conflict ask other
anglers first before you step into their water. As he turned to leave, out of empathy for him I said, “Listen, you made an honest
mistake, so why don’t you go to the riffle above and fish behind
us.”
As
my clients stepped into the water and begin casting, we heard a holler
and looked upstream. Amazingly, the novice had hooked and was playing
a nice steelhead which he eventually landed. Unfortunately, my
clients didn’t hook any fish the rest of that evening which
prompted some light-hearted bantering. “Yep,” one of them said.
“You pay a guide to get you into fish and you get skunked.”
“But,”
the other one countered, “he takes pity on a complete stranger and
for nothing gets him into fish. Can you beat that?” Fortunately, I
was able to get both of them into fish the next day, so in spite of
my embarrassment, it turned out to be a successful trip.