Wednesday, February 19, 2025

A New Year and a New River


The only moment of sun over four days...

In the winter of 1781-1782 Mt. Hood erupted sending hot pyroclastic flows and a lahar down the Sandy River basin radically altering the landscape. The lahar filled the river’s channel and covered an old growth forest with 26 ft. of volcanic ash, mud, sand, and debris. When Lewis and Clark arrived at the river’s delta entering the Columbia, the river was still recovering from the immediate aftermath of the eruption and devastation of the lahar. Therefore, the name they gave this system reflected what they saw and learned from indigenous tribes. The river has since reclaimed its bed but the remnants of the Old Maid eruption period are still highly visible when floating down the lower sections of the river as it carves its way towards the Columbia. The river’s native steelhead populations, like they have for eons, adapted to this changing environment because the eruption is a naturally occurring process. On the other hand human industrialization, clearcutting, hatcheries, and the damming of the river had a much larger negative impact on the system and the entire PNW. Nonetheless, the steelhead persisted. Over the years, I heard a lot about the Sandy River and was always looking forward to one day fishing it. 


Over the new year, I was fortunate to spend the first few mornings gearing up in the dark surrounded by moss covered trees and the sounds of a high Sandy River. With each passing minute, new light illuminated the day’s playground and conditions. Having never been on the Sandy, each bend revealed rapids, runs, and buckets to swing through with the ever present hope that my fly would intercept with a steelhead’s journey. It was a constant state of optimism and anticipation. As John Buchan once said, “a perpetual series of occasions of hope”. Looking back on it, the river, and the hunt, are all just one big metaphor for life and the new year ahead.



No salt, no steel?

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Someday


Someday, I'll make it there, I swear...

Out of reach. Privatized. Too expensive. Too exclusive. Not enough information. The sport of kings. I have to hire a guide? A lottery system? Beats? Where am I going to stay? The list could go on and on, but these are a few of the excuses that repeated in my head over the last decade whenever I entertained the idea of heading north to go Atlantic salmon fishing in eastern Canada. Each time I seriously considered making a DIY trip at the end of the school year, all of those questions and doubts would inevitably squash the idea in my head. I always gave into fear and the unknown. One winter evening, I was listening to a live Instagram session between Topher Browne and Travis Johnson that discussed all things Atlantics when I did something I normally never do: ask a question. I wanted them to talk about DIY fishing, but didn't want to feel like a parasite seeking information. Instead I asked something that I actually find very interesting: "Do you ever think the PNW would adopt the "pay to play," model of eastern Canada in order to protect increasingly smaller populations of steelhead?" Topher laughed out loud at my mere mention of "pay to play". I believe his exact words were, "anyone that thinks that probably hasn't done much Atlantic salmon fishing". 


Touché Topher, 
touché...