Little Wood River, Idaho
(excerpted from Flywater Interactive)
"The Little Wood
really is a hopper river supreme. One long-time angler on
the Little Wood tells of taking a 26-inch brown on a
hopper."
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Idaho's Little Wood River is
an outstanding river for brown
trout.
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The stretch of Little Wood River with which we will be
concerned runs between the town of Richfield and the
confluence of Silver Creek. This is a very interesting
desert trout stream, which receives its water principally --
exclusively in dry years -- from famed Silver Creek.
Access to the river is ample but not always evident. Some
of the access roads into the river from Highway 26/93 can be
a little rough and four-wheel drive is advisable. However,
Preacher Bridge, Bear Track Williams and Pagari Bride all
offer reasonable benign access to the Little Wood.
One caution: the possibility of encountering a desert
rattler is real here. Keep your eyes open, watch where you
step and, most importantly, never reach blindly up to the
bank to help yourself out of the river. Although desert
temperatures invite wet wading, neoprene is a very effective
barrier between your leg and a snake.
The lava bottom here makes for the surest footing we've
ever seen in a trout stream. You won't need cleats in the
Little Wood. The river couples riffles and runs with long
deep pools. The Little Wood averages 40 feet in width and
can be crossed easily everywhere except the pools.
Vegetation lines the banks, painting a surprising green
stripe through the desert landscape. Good lies are abundant
and evident.
While the Little Wood holds a good rainbow population,
the trophy here is the large brown trout. The Little Wood
has some deep pools -- excellent holding water for the
larger browns. A healthy number of forage fish in the Little
Wood prove important in the trout's diet.
This river is a fine place to break out your streamers to
entice the big fish lying in the deeper holes. Scott
Schnebly (of Lost River Outfitters, Ketchum) ties a streamer
known as the Philo Beto. It is a proven taker of big browns
on the Little Wood. Standard streamer patterns would also be
effective. Nocturnal fishing is a good bet if you are after
one of the really big browns. Failing that, look for a
cloudy, drizzly day. Darkness brings these big boys closer
to the surface.
The Little Wood really is a hopper river supreme. One
long-time angler on the Little Wood tells of taking a
26-inch brown on a hopper. Jack Hemingway, who has fished
the river for decades and knows it intimately, loves to fish
hoppers on hot, windy days. (He also swears by Solunar
Tables for the Little Wood.)
Dave's Hopper is excellent here, as is the Madam-X.
Another good pick is the old Muddler Minnow -- try a black
muddler. This can be fished dry as a hopper or under water
as a streamer. Concentrate on shadowed, undercut banks. Also
try skip-casting your fly up under the overhanging willows,
a risky cast with a possibility of large rewards.
If you catch a day when the trout are rising to hoppers,
you're in for a time you won't soon forget. Along with your
hoppers be sure to carry some caddis. A small white caddis
is quite common
in the summer. The fish key on it from time to time.
Before all of this hopper action begins, the Little Wood
boasts a salmonfly hatch. Depending on water temperature,
this can be as early as March, but May is a more likely bet.
The large black stonefly nymph is worth a try on any day of
the season. Try these fellows through the slow deep
water.
A caddis pupa dropper wouldn't be a mistake with the
stonefly nymph. For the small bug lover, the Little Wood
offers a good population of Baetis in the cooler months of
spring and fall. The fall also brings the large October
caddis.
A fisherman came back to town from the Little Wood one
day. When asked how he did, he replied, "Ok. I caught 150
trout. Unfortunately 146 of them were under 3 inches." It's
true that the Little Wood is king river of the dinks.
They'll drive you nuts. Take a good supply of Gink along.
Try to fish something with some real floating power because
your fly will get slimed time and time again by the hoard of
voracious 3-inchers.
The
Little Wood is very fly-fishing friendly. Two long stretches
known as Bear Track Williams collectively were donated to
the state by Jack Hemingway with the proviso that this area
be maintained as catch and release/fly fishing only water.
Bear Track Williams boasts some great lies and nary a
spinning rod will you see -- if you do run into one, you
might let him know he's lost.
The Little Wood offers a delightful change from what one
normally expects to see in a trout stream. This desert river
is a great day trip if you are visiting the Sun Valley area
and want to ditch the crowds at Silver Creek for awhile.
The Little Wood River is one of 50 rivers covered in
the CD-ROM Flywater Interactive. In
addition to the River Profiles on each of those 50 rivers,
you will find maps, photographs, hatch information, fly
charts, support services, regulations and more.
The Flywater Interactive CD-ROM sells
for $59.95 and can be ordered by telephoning 800-692-6292.
Two coffee table books, Watermark and
Flywater by Grant McClintock and Mike
Crockett, are also available. Or visit Flywater Interactive
at www.flywater.com.
Copyright © 1996 Flywater
Publishing. All rights reserved.
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