High Country Fishing Trip

Make sure he never takes up Muskie fishing then! Catching panfish and predatory fish are two different things.
100%, he was saying he wants to go to the Olympic peninsula for steelhead, I was like “find somebody else to go with bro”. I don’t want to hear him shit all over the trip when he “only”’catches 2-3 steelhead.

Also I don’t know if steelhead really count as predators the way large rainbows do but o get and agree with your point.
 
Make sure he never takes up Muskie fishing then! Catching panfish and predatory fish are two different things.
100%, he was saying he wants to go to the Olympic peninsula for steelhead, I was like “find somebody else to go with bro”. I don’t want to hear him shit all over the trip when he “only”’catches 2-3 steelhead.

Also I don’t know if steelhead really count as predators the way large rainbows do but o get and agree with your point
 
The 2026 season is well underway with super early access to high country lakes this year. I haven’t knocked out any wilderness area lakes so far, but I did use the early melt off window to access some more popular/easy access lakes that get too much traffic starting July 4th through the summer for me to normally consider dealing with the crowds and Bluetooth speakers on the trails, crowds at the lakes and on the line of traffic on the shelf roads.

I was expecting super easy fishing this early, but all of the lakes so far have been surprisingly difficult, probably due to post spawning behaviors. Also had some super high winds to deal with: 50-60 mph gusts which just shut things down completely.

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I love fishing alpine lakes, but every time I've tried to do it before July 4 my experience has been the same - windy...
 
I love fishing alpine lakes, but every time I've tried to do it before July 4 my experience has been the same - windy...

Yeah, my conclusion is that having a spinner setup is the only practical way you could reasonably fish in super high winds. The winds super cool the surface so the fish drop to depths where the temps are stable. They are probably just sitting there mostly inactive, but if you drop something in front of them at 30-40 feet, they may take it.
 
We were in the Rawah Wilderness last June. I just gave up on fly fishing but, my son & my buddy did pretty good in the wind with spinners. It was so miserable up there we ended up dropping down 1000' to a lake surrounded by trees for some relief. Hindsight, I think we were pretty close to the ice out because the snow line was still around those 11k lakes. Without the wind they may have been covered yet.

I do think there may be something to the post spawn fish being pickier. Similar situation in Central Colorado a couple years ago over July 4th weekend, but we couldn't get anything to bite even on spinners. We didn't catch 1 fish the whole weekend.
 
And the deep bacountry/High Country has kicked off. Spent 5 days out in the deep backcountry hitting 7 lakes, 6 of which were new to me. Of the 7, 2 ended up being barren despite checking every box on paper—large enough, deep enough, and holding both inlets and outlets. One of those two barren basins is even a named lake that I thought was a sure shot. On the flip side, 3 out of 4 unnamed lakes had fish in them, with one being an absolute surprise—almost surely an example of an aerial stocking pilot going rogue decades ago.

It was a long, grueling 9-hour day just getting back in there to establish a basecamp at a larger lake. From that hub, we hit the surrounding shelves, which involved some sketchy mountaineering and massive days covering miles well above treeline. The wind was constant, and the sun was relentless.

Conditions ranged across the entire spectrum. Fishing the larger basecamp lake was a tough; it holds a low-to-moderate population that wasn't inspired to expend much energy for food (I had fished this lake previously in August and found it similarly challenging). Conversely, the unnamed action-lakes provided aggressive strikes on every single cast until we actually got bored of catching them. In those zones, we just ran an assembly line: one person cast and caught while the other unhooked and pulled flies, landing a fish roughly every 45 seconds. For the basins that appeared barren, I still spent at least a solid hour dredging Woolly Buggers, leeches, zebra midges, and scuds just to be entirely certain.

Two interesting details to note:

  1. We took a cross-country route on the way out which threw some brutal elevation loss and gain at us, but I wanted to explore a particular shelf for bighorn sheep. Along the way, we came across an isolated alpine pond at 13,000 feet with no inlet or outlet. It was entirely covered up with elk sign from them wading in to cool off, and the water was absolutely crawling with Tiger Salamanders—looking like tiny, ancient catfish with legs.
  2. We kept hearing a helicopter in the drainage, and then suddenly, the Search & Rescue chopper was hovering right over us, the pilot looking straight down. I debated signaling, but knowing how easily standard hand gestures can be misinterpreted as distress signs, we decided to just stand still and watch. He eventually concluded we were fine and resumed his grid search.
Ultimately, this trip solidified one major conclusion: a lack of fishing pressure does not equal easy fishing. One of these unnamed lakes sat in a heavily guarded, out-of-the-way location with zero logical access—completely invisible unless you are standing directly on top of a neighboring 13k summit. It showed absolutely zero sign of historic human activity: no old fire rings, no rocks left in the shape of a tent, no tangled line in the willows, no rusted out steel cans. I’d wager we were the first humans to put a line in that water in years, maybe decades. Yet, those fish were still intensely selective and temperamental.

Pics to follow.
 
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