Wow! What a monster! Great fishAnother Rivers Inlet, BC king...I caught two this trip that were about the same size; one was 52 & one was 57. I don't recall which one this is.
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The best fishing partner I ever had has fished and hunted all over the country, and he ended up on the Oregon coast for several years (about 15) he had a lot of stories about the white river, and the different fisheries on that river… it’s one of the few places that I would like to fish that isn’t on the west coast, and isn’t salt water… from his accounts, it sounded like an awesome place.
The White River is (was?) all of the things your friend claimed. I fished it twice -- once during the 1980s & again in the 1990s. Stayed at Gaston's Resort & caught lots of nice trout both times. I have a bunch of 35mm slides but only one other scanned. Only reason the two got scanned was for an online article I wrote way back when. Here's the other one.The best fishing partner I ever had has fished and hunted all over the country, and he ended up on the Oregon coast for several years (about 15) he had a lot of stories about the white river, and the different fisheries on that river… it’s one of the few places that I would like to fish that isn’t on the west coast, and isn’t salt water… from his accounts, it sounded like an awesome place.
one of the really cool parts to me was how finicky those trout sounded like they could be in certain scenarios, and the lengths one had to go to do well.... very comparable to sight fishing summer steelhead late season in warm, clear, skinny water.... seems like those fish just won't bite, until you figure out the lengths you need to go, then it's excellent fishing.The White River is (was?) all of the things your friend claimed. I fished it twice -- once during the 1980s & again in the 1990s. Stayed at Gaston's Resort & caught lots of nice trout both times. I have a bunch of 35mm slides but only one other scanned. Only reason the two got scanned was for an online article I wrote way back when. Here's the other one.
Foggy morning on the White River, Arkansas
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Yup, one doesn't expect there to be a big, cold water river with trout that far south, I guess. That water coming out of the bottom of Bull Shoals is frigid, however, making it a perfect tailwater fishery. It's not quite the equal to a few in the West I've fished like the Green River below Flaming Gorge in UT, the Colorado at Lee's Ferry below Lake Powell in AZ, the South Platte below Eleven Mile Res. in CO & the San Juan below Navajo in NM, but it's no slouch either.one of the really cool parts to me was how finicky those trout sounded like they could be in certain scenarios, and the lengths one had to go to do well.... very comparable to sight fishing summer steelhead late season in warm, clear, skinny water.... seems like those fish just won't bite, until you figure out the lengths you need to go, then it's excellent fishing.
really does sound like an amazing river in a region you don't expect there to be a river system like that with the fishing opportunities it has.
if you have the article handy, post it up, i'm sure lots of us would enjoy reading it.
It is still a world class fishery. Spectacular trout fishing at the upper reaches, transitioning to smallmouth then to all the warm water species.The White River is (was?) all of the things your friend claimed. I fished it twice -- once during the 1980s & again in the 1990s. Stayed at Gaston's Resort & caught lots of nice trout both times. I have a bunch of 35mm slides but only one other scanned. Only reason the two got scanned was for an online article I wrote way back when. Here's the other one.
Foggy morning on the White River, Arkansas
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Love it! I spent a couple summers in anchorage about 30 years ago. My aunt and uncle lived there and my cousin and I went up 2 summers in a row, worked odd jobs, and fished whenever we could. Some of my favorite memories were hiking in to our “secret spot” to avoid the crowds and catching sockeye on the Russian river.Sockeye fishing on the Kenai has been ranging from good to great the last couple of weeks. I don’t think we’ve fished longer than an hour for a limit in 7 outings. The river was wide open until this last Saturday. It seems everyone was waiting for the run to slow down to show up. Trout fishing is slow, as to be expected. The river is getting beat pretty hard.
Our 2.5 year old is really into it this year. I'm excited for the pinks to show up so he can participate a little bit!
We went to only the first take-out point, so I don't think we got to the warm-water stretch. Have the smallmouth been there a long time? I don't recall them even mentioned back then. I love catching them on flyrod poppers.It is still a world class fishery. Spectacular trout fishing at the upper reaches, transitioning to smallmouth then to all the warm water species.
When you get down to where Crooked Creek runs in you can find smallies. Crooked Creek is a fantastic smallmouth fishery. I grew up fishing the lower end of the river where it is bass, bream, crappie and catfish. It's a big river down at the lower end where it dumps into the Mississippi. There have been a few years where some trout venture all the way down and get caught. Same for smallmouths. A buddy caught a smallmouth last year way down on the lower end. Doesnt happen often though. Pretty awesome fishery taken as a whole considering you can catch stripes, white, black and smallmouth bass, bream, crappie, catfish, brown, rainbow, and cutthroat trout depending on the section of river you are fishing.We went to only the first take-out point, so I don't think we got to the warm-water stretch. Have the smallmouth been there a long time? I don't recall them even mentioned back then. I love catching them on flyrod poppers.