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| You Are Here: | Game & Fish >> Washington/Oregon >> Fishing >> Trout Fishing | ||||
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Oregon's Fall River Rainbows
Central Oregon's Fall River is what it is, a beautiful little spring creek loaded with trout that are most willing to pluck dries off the surface. Here's why you should give this gem a try now.
By Justin Karnopp It was a day no different than most winter afternoons on the Fall River. The sun was shining and the temperature was comfortable, few other anglers were around, and trout started rising to blue-winged olives, which littered the water's surface like so many tiny sailboats. There were thousands of them. I tied a basic Parachute BWO imitation to a 6x tippet and tried to float my pattern through a regatta of naturals. Five or six fish rose around my fly as it drifted through the tailout, but my offering remained undisturbed. I gently picked up and cast again to the head of the run. On the second pass, one fish misjudged the bugs above it and sucked in my BWO. At the sting of the hook, the rainbow launched from the pool, putting the other fish down and causing what few neighbors I had on the river that day to glance in my direction, albeit indifferently. By the time I landed the trout, other fish in the pool were once again rising to the flotilla of hatching bugs. For the next couple of hours I landed seven hatchery fish and a wild redband. When the bugs stopped hatching, my work was done, and I jumped into my truck to make the 20-minute drive home.
The Fall River is not what I would call a "river." It is the quintessential spring creek. The creek bubbles from the ground just southwest of the resort community of Sunriver, and winds under a pine canopy until emptying into the Upper Deschutes River a dozen miles later. The water is completely transparent and one could easily cast a double-haul across almost any stretch of it. The river below the falls is closed to angling at the end of September to protect the migrating browns that swim from the Deschutes to spawn, while the rest of the river is open to fishing all year.
The Fall River is generally spoken of in three reference points: the falls, the hatchery and the headwaters. Hatchery personnel distribute rainbows evenly amongst all three areas. The falls is the lowest access point. A good trail leads down to the falls from a red cinder road a few miles below the hatchery, off Forest Road 43 (see sidebar). The water below the falls is very intriguing, featuring logjams and some big browns. Unfortunately, chemical fire retardant dumped into the river (see sidebar) did a number on most of those fish, but the population is rebuilding. Biologists say it will take a few more years for the brown fishery to recover. Between the falls and the hatchery upstream, the river is mostly placid and meandering. Some chunky rainbows and a little solitude can be found on this section even during busy times. The hatchery, by far the most popular place to fish on weekends, can be overcrowded. It offers easy access and plenty of fish and is, therefore, a good place to get your feet wet on the Fall before exploring elsewhere. There is a nice mix of glassy dry-fly pools, nymphing riffles and streamer runs to satisfy all brands of fly anglers. There are some big fish that hang below the hatchery, but they are tough to catch. A streamer and a sink-tip will turn those big boys once in a while. Private property begins just below the hatchery. The Fall River campground, upstream a couple of miles from the hatchery, offers some decent fishing. A good walk starts at the campground and goes upstream to the headwaters. Much of this area consists of slow, glassy pools loaded with logjams. Look carefully in the shadows of the dams for the trout. There are some nice redbands in this stretch that love to come up for dries. In front of the headwaters is a Forest Service building and a large parking area. The Fall River begins just above this. There is a nice pool directly in front of the headwaters that can hold fish from time to time. It seems to be a seasonal place to fish, as the trout tend to migrate into the upper Fall. However, it's always worth a peek because when the fish are in there they are usually pretty easy to dupe. The fish of the Fall River are a diverse bunch, although their diversity was greatly diminished by the fire retardant dousing. Brown trout, redband rainbows, brook trout and whitefish all inhabit the frigid water of the Fall. The river is stocked May through September with thousands of hatchery rainbows, and anglers are allowed to keep a couple of them for the pan if they so desire. Most anglers who fish here target the hatchery rainbows.
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