North 40 Fly Shop eMagazine October 2017 | Page 64

DRY FLIES & BIG RAINBOWS AN IDAHOAN’S GUIDE TO MONTANA’S LOWER CLARK FORK RIVER BY TYLER BALICH I spent the majority of my guiding career on Mon- tana’s Clark Fork River, driving from my home in Coeur d’ Alene, Idaho, to St. Regis, which is the first place this big, wide and mostly flat-surfaced gem comes into view. Sometimes I would make this trip 100 times between late spring and late fall. To do so I had to commit to a 95-mile drive each way. Needless to say, this river has a spot in my heart. The Clark Fork begins near Anaconda, Mon- tana at the confluence of Warm Springs and Silver Bow creeks, and continues downstream about 200 miles before flowing into Idaho’s Lake Pend Oreille. Through its length this river offers great trout fishing, although populations dimin- ish downstream from the Flathead River conflu- ence at Paradise, where warm water species, including smallmouth bass and pike, take over. Along its length, the Clark Fork receives water from countless tributaries, including some that read like a hit-list to any dedicated angler—the Little Blackfoot River, Flint Creek, Rock Creek, the Blackfoot River, Rattlesnake Creek, the Bitterroot River, Fish Creek, and the Thompson River. I never ventured much farther than the area just below Alberton Gorge, which is a true white- water stretch located about 40 miles down- stream from Missoula. But I hit the sections be- tween Alberton Gorge and Paradise hard. That is the water I know best, and part of the reason why I didn’t go farther upstream is because I’m a driftboat junkie. If I can choose between walking 64 The Clark Fork’s broad, flat surface makes the trout as picky as they come. Matching the hatch correctly, and delivering a fly to fish on a dead drift is critical to success.