Rio Chama

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The Pecos continues to open as the weeks progress. We have a few snow storms that try and bully us around but their bark seems worse than their bite. It will snow with intensity for a few hours off and on but once it stops the temperature cannot support it.

I was extra excited to get out on the water this weekend because of two things. 1) I have brand new line on my reel and 2) I will be using a furled leader for the first time.

The furled leader I came across was at the Reel Life’s garage sale. They were two bucks a piece so I couldn’t pass them up. I have always heard about them and now I would finally see what all the hoopla was about. The leaders I bought were unithread in a green color and 7 feet in length. Now I usually fish with a 7.5 foot leader so the first order of business was taking a couple feet off them. All I did was go from large end to small end and tie a perfection loop then snip off the excess of the large end. Easy, now I have a 7 foot furled leader.

I put anywhere from 3-4 feet of tippet on that day. I started with 3 and moved up to 4 as I moved into a deeper pool. I was fishing one of my Green Rock Work (Caddis Larva) Patterns with various droppers. They always seem to hit that Larva though but I did get a taker on a red bead head midge. I had been throwing various colors of midge out for the last few trips on the pecos and I have to assume this is related to them also liking very small red San Juan Worms.

The first fish of the day wiggle off but I could see he was on the Larva. The next fish was the motivator that took the red midge. He was small but obviously hungry.

His spots were small and he didn’t have the usual look of the Browns in that river.

I kept working this pool from a good distance as I could not find my hippers for some reason. I was wearing my knee high insulated North Carolina Specials so I was limited to where I could go. Well, pretty much all I could do was step off the ice into the water and that was about my max depth. It was right on the edge and a couple of times a little water spilled over into the boot.

So I was throwing long casts that I am not necessarily used to. I even conjured up visions of the turbo spey casting videos I watched the other day and practiced that a bit. I felt a couple of them do their thing but I was unsuccessful at getting any type of consistency.

I got the line where it needed to be and pulled in a nice looking Brown who was also hungry for some green larva, who can resist? They actually look really soft and bugggy when they are wet.

So I need to mention how the leader performed. It was excellent. I loved how it rolled out the tippet with ease. I even tried a little dry fly action and it presented excellent. Much better that any tapered mono leader I have used.

I think this will be a new staple for me. The only thing I will do next is get my hands on a furled leader made of mono and see how that stacks up to the unithread leader I had.

I also want to say that the leader made the fight a bit easier. I tend to see a lot of fish wiggle off my line but not today. Only one fish popped off and in my book that is an improvement. I will have to get out for a full day with the leader and see what ratio I have after a dozen or so fish.

All in all though I think I am a changed man…

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If anyone is still keeping up with this blog I am sure you are getting a bit tired of hearing about the Pecos and the Rio Grande. Well, get ready! I put feet in new water this weekend.

The Rio Chama just below Abiquiu dam is where I found myself on Sunday. This trip was with a few people from High Desert Angler. This isn’t a paid function it is just something they do every now and then. I think they were going to cancel it since I was the only who showed any interest in going but luckily I made a quick stop by the shop Friday night after work and a couple of the guys were in there and we made some plans.

So, on Sunday we all showed up at 9:00 AM and headed towards the river. The Rio Chama is located about 45 minutes NW of Espanola. The drive is very nice and I have been by the lake before after riding some of the FSR on my DR650 Dual Sport bike. This particular trip dropped us down the backside of the dam. After a few switchbacks you are there. The river surroundings are very scenic. It is a nice small canyon that twists along for a good little clip then opens up into your typical High Desert valleys you see all over this region.

The river is a major tributary of the Rio Grande and flows at around 80-100 cfs. Where we fished was very slow moving water with deep pools and large submerged structures, mainly large boulders that were successful in making it all the way into the river from the cliffs above.

It didn’t take long to hook up and as I pulled the first fish close I was sure it was a rainbow but as I got it closer it definitely had a browns spotting but the color of the fish was rainbow all the way. Either it is the lightest skinned brown I have ever seen or it is a hybrid of some sort.

The fish I caught that day were all about this size. Mr. Norman Maktima, a 13 year senior guide with High Desert Angler, managed to pull out a few good sized fellas.


Here is a distinguished member of the future of NM Fly Fishing. I forgot his name but he had to be around 13 or 14 years old. Just about the age when I started. He has some years behind him though.

Some of the slow sections we fished.

I only stayed for a couple hours but this will be my next trip as soon as I get a day off. I want to get a whole day in here. There is so much more to explore.

Over…

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