
The Fishing on the Rio Grande
Hooking up with a big sea run brown is an emotional
fishing experience that defies accurate description.
Most fish grab a streamer or nymph on
the swing, and your first notion is you’ve hooked a snag.
But there are damn few snags in the Rio Grande. It’s about
this time when the three-foot long “snag” starts violently
shaking its head, and its time to plant your feet and get ready
for a fight.
After weighing and measuring the length
and girth of nearly 6,000 sea trout for three years in a row,
University of Montana biologists have developed a very accurate
formula for estimating their weight, without the use of a Boga
or other accurate scale.
Weight(lbs)=64.16 x (fork length (m) x girth (m))1.4676

The problem with that formula is most
of the elephant fish landed bottom out all but the largest of
scales. However, using the proven UM formula, it’s
safe to say that around a dozen browns over thirty pounds have
been caught by anglers on the Estancia Maria Behety each season
for the past eight years. Each and every season!
These big brown trout are much like Pacific
salmon and steelhead, in that they’re most active in low
light conditions. The scientists call them nega-phototropic,
and as the sun gets higher, fish retreat to the deepest parts
of the pools. Perhaps it’s because they’re used to
the deeper sea, or they feel exposed to predators in bright sunlight,
but it’s a fact they’re more aggressive and much more
likely to strike a fly in the early morning, late evening, or
when it’s overcast. In mid-day, when the sun is at its highest,
they’re unlikely to respond to even the most perfectly presented
fly. One of the reasons so many photos of the Rio Grande mega
trout look like deer caught in the headlights is that most are
caught early or late in the day.
Most anglers arrive shortly after first
light and will see dozens of fish rolling on the surface of the
pools in the blush of the dawn. Action is usually red hot
for a couple of hours and then begins to taper off. The reverse
is true at the end of the day, and it’s maddening to leave
the river when the light has disappeared and the fish are still
exploding all around.
The fishing schedule at all of our fine lodges on
the Rio Grande is designed around the best fishing times. Really,
the Argentines have mastered the art of squeezing two fishing
days into one.

A Typical Fishing Day on the Rio Grande
Fishermen start each morning with a light
breakfast of fresh fruit, cereals, yogurt, toast and coffee, as
well as a full American Breakfast (if they have the room), followed
by a full morning of fishing. Each two anglers share a
guide and vehicle. Their beat usually consists of two to four
pools, all for themselves. Fishermen typically return to the lodge
by 1 o’clock in the afternoon where a delicious midday meal,
perfectly complemented by local wines, is served, followed by
a well-earned siesta. Anglers, well-fed and rested, fish the evening
session right up to (and sometimes beyond) the brilliant Tierra
del Fuego sunsets. They’ll then return to their respective
lodges, in time to regale each other with tales of giant fish,
then sit down to yet another meal that would put many five-star
restaurants to shame.
By this time you have been ridden hard and put
away wet, only to rise the next morning and start it all over
again. What a wonderful way to be treated...EAT, SLEEP, FISH,
EAT, SLEEP, FISH, EAT, SLEEP...
The Fishing and the Wind
Much is said about the winds of Tierra
del Fuego and it is seldom that any of it is good. The
truth is that the Rio Grande isn’t super wide, casts are
seldom seventy feet, and almost never directly into the wind.
Competent casters have little difficulty adjusting to the almost
constant gusts and even those that struggle agree quickly that
the results are worth every effort.
Tackle and techniques on the Rio Grande
are not very complicated. Anglers choose from a broad range
of lines, tips and terminal tackle according to the water conditions.
Experienced steelhead and Atlantic Salmon fishermen immediately
feel “in their element.” Quartering downstream with
streamers or dead drifting nymphs are the most common methods
used, and skated dry flies are terrific when the conditions are
right.
The Rio Grande is one of the easiest streams
to wade in the Americas. The river is seldom more than
thigh deep, and can be easily crossed between pools. There’s
no moss on a bottom made of nothing but perfect spawning habitat
ranging in size from pea gravel to golf ball sized rocks. Leave
your studded boots at home because there isn’t a rock big
enough on the Rio Grande to trip over.