North 40 Fly Shop eMagazine October 2017 | Page 16

TRIP ROAD TRIP DO YOU STAND A CHANCE ON YOUR OWN WHILE FISHING THE OLYMPIC PENINSULA’S EARLY RUN STEELHEAD? OR, DO YOU NEED A GUIDE? BY DAVE McCOY Summer trout fishing is on its last legs, and shorter days bring steelhead to mind on a daily basis. This may be the case for you, too. And, if so, I wouldn’t doubt you’re thinking that Washington’s notorious Olympic Peninsula is a worthy destination . . . for many reasons, not the least being a shot at some big, wild steelhead fresh in from the ocean. “Done,” you might be saying right now. “The OP it is.” If that’s the case, there are several things you need to consider before stringing a rod and starting to huck. First, timing is everything, as this is a rainforest that gets more than a hundred inches of rain a year, guaranteed. In addition, remember that every river here is a freestone— meaning no dams—and they rise and fall with the nuances of the weather. When you fish the OP, you may start using the catchphrase, Fluctuation happens. Ideal conditions offer a river on the drop, after a freshet, but even the greatest weather forecasters can blow a diagnosis, so the only way to know what’s really happening on these rivers, at any given time, is to be there and endure whatever you find. You may find hatchery fish arriving as early as late November on the Bogachiel, followed silently by wild steelhead in late December and throughout January. These wild fish, which average about eight to 12 pounds, with some giants thrown in that measure over the 40- inch mark, are somewhat ignored during this 16