Seasons
There isn’t a finer, more predictable
dry fly, trophy trout fishery in Bristol Bay than the Copper River.
Each June and early July the
stream experiences strong hatches of caddis, small stones,
and a variety of mayflies, and the river’s healthy population
of big rainbows take full advantage of this floating smorgasbord.
A typical early season day sees anglers fishing nymphs beneath indicators
during the normally cool mornings, switching to dry flies after
lunch when warming temperatures spark prolific hatches. Small streamers,
imitating the masses of outgoing sockeye salmon smolt, are also
very effective, and sometimes account for the largest fish of each
day. Bob loves this time of year, and offers both jet boat fishing
in the lower stretches of the stream, and upper river floats which
we feel are a “must do” for adventurous anglers. A fly
out to the Gibralter River normally entails a full day float, with
streamers normally producing excellent daylong action. As well,
for those who love to fish dries all day long in beautiful surroundings,
Bob has some “sleeper” streams that are loaded with
12-16 inch rainbows, are fished by no-one else, and provide non-stop
action on attractor dries.

In early July immense squadrons
of sockeye salmon invade the Copper and Gibralter rivers, and
change the fisheries dramatically. Suddenly, every run, riffle and
pool are flooded with these chrome sea-runs, which quickly morph
into their Discovery Channel wardrobes of brilliant reds and vivid
greens. Before long they are pairing up, digging spawning redds,
and laying eggs in numbers that stagger the imagination. Suddenly,
trout that had weeks before been perfectly satisfied chomping nymphs
and sipping dries, now have eyes only for this massive infusion
of protein that literally surrounds them. Dead-drifting single egg
patterns becomes highly productive, and trout that had previously
been healthy by any standards, now quickly lapse into figures defined
by gluttony. The Copper River tends to harbor excellent numbers
of 18-23 inch trout during the months of July and August, while
the Gibralter is just stupid with numbers of rainbows, of all sizes.
Also, from mid-August through early September, Bob routinely flies
anglers to a small coastal river that fills with dime-bright silver
salmon and sea run dollies, making for a fun diversion from the
daily rainbows. Late July sees a good push of chum salmon here,
as well, which are a great fly rod fish.
By early September, the sockeyes
are fading into memory, but their decomposing carcasses provide
one last major feeding binge for all of the region’s streams.
This is the single best month for serious trophy trout hunters,
as good numbers of oversized rainbows ascend (and descend) from
area lakes into integral rivers. If you are going to have a chance
at the elusive 30-inch trout, this is when it will most likely occur.
Anglers still do well on egg patterns, but streamers emulating chunks
of rotting salmon flesh are very productive now, and often account
for the largest rainbows. The overnight upper Copper River floats
can be amazing, this time of year, weather permitting – the
changing colors are spectacular, and the upper river is normally
full of big trout.
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