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Fishing Seasons
The flyfishing experience at Zendzur
is about “quality”
of fish, not “quantity.”
Anglers should not expect obscene
numbers of trout each day. For that, you’ll want to
look at the Sedanka River, or Alaska. What you can expect is a challenging,
trophy rainbow trout fishery where an angler with beginner to intermediate
experience can tie into 3 to 6 trout per day that average 4 to 8
pounds, and are occasionally double that size. Advanced anglers
skilled in reading water, wading, and casting, and who have a modest
level of self-sufficiency usually encounter considerably more action.
Almost all anglers land the largest trout of their lives during
a week at Zendzur.
There are two flyfishing methods commonly used on the
lower Zhupanova River:
Mouse
Real mice slip and fall into the river from overhanging limbs and
grass and then swim like a cork at a down-and-across angle. As they
do, they throw small V-wakes off their backs which the trout key
to. Anglers replicate this action by plopping their flies against
the opposite bank and skittering them out across the river, on tension
and under control. What follows has got to be the most exciting
thing in freshwater flyfishing. Since a live mouse in the stomach
of a rainbow trout can do considerable damage, the fish tend to
take the fly with a ferocious, bone-crushing chomp. All this, of
course, takes place on the surface, totally visible to the angler.
The skill comes in controlling your nerves to NOT set the hook when
the fish merely swirls behind it - sometime 2, 3, 4 or more times
- before actually committing.
Streamer
Salmon smolt and other juvenile fish make up a significant portion
of Kamchatka trout and chars’ diets. Woolly buggers, string
leeches, baitfish and sculpin patterns, 3-6 inches long, all work
very well on the Zhupanova throughout the season. Small fish elicit
a chase response from their predators, so often it is best to give
the fly a little movement as it swings through the water column.
When probing for a strike, it’s cast to likely structure in
the river (tree roots, riffle-pools, rocks, undercut banks, etc.)
that offer rest areas adjacent to heavier currents where fish can
surprise-attack their food.
Unlike in other parts of the world,
the number and size of rainbows you’re likely to hook on a
given day in Kamchatka is not seasonally dependant.
Instead, in picking a specific
week to visit Zendzur should be based on your preferences for weather,
for the different methods used during July, August and September,
and whether or not you are interested in a variety of species or
only rainbow trout.

July is
the warmest month of the year in Kamchatka and typically has the
most reliable weather, with daytime temperatures between 60 and
80 degrees. Rain and 50 degree days, however, can happen
any time of the year. Mouse and streamer fishing is consistent in
the Zhupanova drainage from the beginning to the end of the summer.
The Zhupanova gives up limited traditional dry fly fishing in July
when mayfly and caddis hatches are at their heaviest. In fact, there
is probably no river in the world where a larger river-resident,
native rainbow can be caught on a caddis pattern! There are no salmon
in the river at this time, but sea-run Dolly Varden do show up toward
the end of the month. By the last week of July the famous “Super
Kundzha,” a sea-run char species found only in the Zhupanova
River, begin to pour in from the sea. They are big, powerful sportfish
that take the fly well and put up a fight comparable to a king salmon
or steelhead. Though the Zhupanova is the least mosquito-intense
river in Kamchatka, there are plenty of them around in July. If
you have a low mosquito tolerance level, consider a trip later in
the season.
August
is the middle of the season.
Chum and sockeye salmon enter the river and the cycle of life is
laid out in full magnificence. Rainbows are targeted with mouse
and streamer flies throughout the month. The first two weeks of
August, too, are the peak time to intercept the Super Kundzha. By
the middle of the month the mosquitos, black flies and no-see-ums
are completely gone and the weather transitions toward fall.
September
is fall in Kamchatka. It can be chilly, in the 50-degree range.
Sunny weather (which is quite common) makes for beautiful
fishing days, but brings with it frosty nights. It is also the most
photogenic time of year to be amid the sub-arctic taiga and tundra
foliage as it turns to blazing yellows, reds and oranges with a
backdrop of snow-capped volcanoes. Trout are taken with surface
skaters and with “big nasty” leech and baitfish patterns.
The latter, fished on a sink-tip line, become more important as
water temperatures drop.
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