Sponsors
1) Yellowfinrods.com You MUST check out my friend Jon Hill’s CUSTOM fly rods that are almost ALL UNDER $250!!!
They’re simply beautiful in the hand and perform like any custom $1,500+ rod!
Yes, you can get custom grips, reel seats and eyelets; yes he will do your CUSTOM engraving at NO EXTRA cost. That is why he is busy building rods rather than fishing them. His passion and rod quality are equally full of life’s beauty and craftsmanship.
2) Tim Johnson- He has graciously allowed me to showcase his works of art that he draws/sketches/oil paints. You can view them at timjohnsongallery.com
Please help us conserve this beautiful place by:
1) PACK-it-IN & PACK-it-OUT 2) Practice CATCH & RELEASE, OR KEEP a few fish to eat at camp. Remember, the bigger fish are the spawners and DON’T taste as good as a smaller one anyway! 3) Take out OTHERS’ trash left behind.
If you’d like to buy Matt a “coffee,” click
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This helps support all the adventures’ gas, editing time and gear & supplies to provide you all with more wonderful places to find and fly fish!
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If you recognize these lakes, please JUST leave a ‘wink’ ;) in the comments. Thank you
From: Pg. 18 of my personal book of secret spots, I target Arctic Grayling and Rio Grande Cutthroats.
Arctic Grayling “thymallus arcticus”
NOT native to Colorado, but are an exotic freshwater species with a soft, delicate mouth which often makes them more difficult to set a hook.
They are EXTREMELY hard to find In Colorado OUTSIDE of Joe Wright Reservoir (Cache la Poudre watershed) and Pearl Lake near Steamboat. There are currently only 4 other” lakes I know of in the Collegiate Peaks, Colorado that hold these fish - and Hartenstein Lake no longer has them. (Much like Kelly Lake no longer has California Golden Trout). There are some lakes in the Grand Mesa, which I have no experience with.
Rio Grande Cutthroat “Oncorhynchus clarki virginalis”
NATIVE to Colorado; they grow big and are generally, a faster growing species of Cutt than our Greenbacks or CRCs.
Historically, in 1541, Francisco de Coronado’s army would have encountered these gems in the headwaters of the Pecos River, south of present day Santa Fe. The Rio Grande Cutt also has the special distinction of being “...the southernmost distribution of any form of cutthroat”. - Behnke’s Summer 1988 article in TROUT Magazine, ‘Rio Grande Cutthroat’.
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