February 2016 Marsh & Bayou | Page 51

with Capt. JP Morel It seems as if winter has given us a pass and by the way it looks we may be into summer in a few weeks, although I hope not. Many deer hunters I have talked with are lamenting the warm winter and blaming such for the somewhat poor deer hunting. I guess it depends on where you hunt but even a few of my Alabama friends have not seen the usual numbers of deer. Hunting and fishing varies from year to year and of course from where one pursues their chosen outdoor activity. I was in Canada last November celebrating a 90th birthday for my father-in-law. The weather was quite nice and I had made plans for a fly-fishing trip for steelhead. It was my first and perhaps last steelhead trip unless I am stranded for months on end and the only thing to fish for is steelhead. Even then I’ll have to give it serious thought. I left relatively good weather and drove 2 hours north to my destination and should have gotten the hint as 45 minutes out I began to see snow. The next clue was the drizzling rain as I pulled in to Tim Horton’s for a hot chocolate. In Canada Tim Horton’s is like our Starbucks, one on every other corner and they have fabulous donuts. The next obvious clue was having to find a covered shelter in order to put on waders so the rain would not wet the inside of the waders. I’m starting to believe that fly fishermen are perhaps nuts. It was around 42 degrees and raining and then after the drift boat floats into the river I’m told that with steelhead you are fishing for 1 to 3 bites a day, yes, a full day. Well, I made the best of it and casted in every pool doing the dead drift and I caught a brown trout all of maybe 13 inches. One brown trout after casting all day in miserable weather was all I had. I have no proof of catching said trout, as it was difficult to take a photo in the cold rain. The hot shore lunch was a welcome respite from the fishing. All I could think of after 5 hours of being rained on was thank God I live in coastal Louisiana where we don’t fish for 1 to 3 bites a day and we can fish year round. After 7 hours I was looking for the take out point with all the anticipation of a five year old on Christmas Eve. When my guide said this is the last pool and the truck is around the next bend I almost yelled out hallelujah put this sucker on the bank. So the point is if you really like to fish give steelhead a try but if you really like to catch fish stay in southeastern Louisiana. The Canadian Final Thought Steelhead, the fish not the person fishing regulations book is literally a book. Bass season starts in June and I don’t mean that June is simply when they start biting. One cannot legally fish for bass until June. This river opens on this date and the eastern side of the lake has a different limit from the west side and you can’t trout fish below that bridge until Mars and Saturn line up and you get the gist of it. I will go back to Canada and fish but it’s going to be for trout or smallmouth bass or anything but steelhead. It’s a beautiful country and does have some great fishing. The real point here is that we have a tremendous fishery unlike anything I have ever seen in my limited travel. So take it from those that have traveled all over the world but still come here every year, fishing Louisiana is off the charts. We hear it all the time. Appreciate what we have and take care of our fishery because it truly is amazing and it’s the only one we have. February 2016 www.marshandbayou.com 51