Current River (Licking, Missouri) — April 16 – 18, 2004

This weekend was a mini get together for members of the St. Louis Fly Tying Group on Yahoo, and some other select St. Louis area fly fisherman. I had been looking forward to this trip, since it was almost a month since I had been on the water. The trip had started out to be one that McClane and I were going to leave on Thursday night and arrive down on the Current River late that evening — instead McClane didn’t have a chance to be late……because he cancelled on this trip due to “work” commitments. I scrambled to find someone to ride down with me in the maiden fishing voyage of the 18ft travel trailer I had bought on eBay last november. The trailer has proved to be a little too much weight for my Blazer in its first outing to Washington State Park (near Desoto, MO) in March, so I borrowed my brother’s Tahoe for this trip since there was a ton of Ozark highway miles.

I finally got Mark Kotcher to ride down with me and by 8am on Friday morning, we were on our way. Towing the trailer with the Tahoe was night and day when compared to towing it with my Blazer. Gas mileage sucks while towing, but the accomodations were nice. We finally got down to the EaglesPark Campground in the Trophy Trout Management Area on the Current River, just outside of Montauk State Park around 11:30am or so. Several other people had already arrived and were on the water. We quickly set up camp, suited up, and hit the Current River at Baptist Camp and fished upstream. We ran in to Illinois bamboo rodmaker, Ron Caimi, taking a lunch break at his vehicle and said our hellos (he was part of the group that was staying at the campground and one of the tents were his) he informed us that the fish had really turned off around 11am, but the morning brought a ton of stockers on caddis imitations. The weather was unseasonably hot and the temperature was near 90 with bright blue skies, when we finally got on the water and started the trek upstream. They had previously stocked the river with several thousand Brown Trout a week earlier, but the fish were not anywhere to be seen in these section of river. As we worked our way upstream, Mark Kotcher picked up two Brown Trout on an elk hair caddis and I missed one fish. I was not feeling well on the water today (probably a combination of allergies and dehydration) and was pretty set on just walking upstream to the bluffs and fishing. We never made it up to the bluffs, and fishing was so slow and crowded that we quit fishing around 4pm and waded back to the Tahoe and decided to check out the other accesses and then head back to camp. There was a ton more cars at the Baptist Camp Access, complete with a group of guys swimming in the big hole in front of the access. At Parkers Hollow, we only saw one car and I didn’t think the water looked very attractive so back to camp we went to wait for everyone else to arrive (I drank a ton of Gatorade and actually took a nap and tied some flies — I was pretty anti-social on Friday). The others started to arrive around 5pm and set up camp and Craig made it down around 6pm.

The fishing was much of the same on Saturday morning, several of the guys in the group set out to float from Tan Vat to Parkers Hollow (including Mark Kotcher — who was trying out his pontoon boat for the first time), while Craig and I got on the water early and parked at Tan Vat access (with the plan to fish down to Baptist and back and make the trip last a full day). We got to the access around 7am and there was already a ton of cars there and as many people suiting up and getting ready to hit the water. Craig and I were already suited up so we made our way across the pool and high tailed it down river. I picked up two browns and Craig picked up one brown prior to 10am, but then the fishing just shut down. We fished down past the bluffs and were frusturated and hot — the weather was near 90 again with bright blue skies and there were more people on the river than I had ever seen. We decided to head back upstream and fish some of the runs that we had skipped over when trying to stay ahead of all the other anglers. It paid off, as I foul hooked (it was hooked underneath the mouth — so is it really a foul hook) a beautiful Brown Trout on a leech pattern but lost the fish (it was faul hooked anyway right……LOL). We both agreed to hit the car for some liquids and check out some of the other accesses and campgrounds. I took Craig to Parkers Hollow and there were at least 10 cars parked down there, complete with about 4 anglers cleaning trout in the river as we pulled in. We then hit Cedar Grove Access (man that is quite a drive from Parkers Hollow) and watched as a school bus load full of people launched at least 10 canoes on the water. On the way back to camp, we checked out Baptist Camp Access and were amazed at the amount of people and cars that were parked there. We grabbed some food and headed in to the state park so that Craig could call his wife. We were both frusturated and didn’t really feel like fishing (afterall, today was a carbon copy of yesterday) so we checked out the campground in Montauk (only 3 campsites not occupied in the whole place) and were back at camp by 2pm. After a nap and some rehydration we were tying flies in the camper as the other anglers whom had had much of the same luck (or worse) than we had made there way back.

Saturday night was when the main festitivities were to start, complete with a feast for kings and a huge bonfire (bonfire compliments of Dave Dawson — proprietor of EaglesPark Campground). We sat around the campfire and compared notes from the day as we waited for the fire to get just hot enough to start cooking. It was then that I realized we had assembled a great group of guys together to share a campfire and a river with. Gavin Poppen was in charge of cooking the meat for tonights dinner (18lbs of Pork Steaks from Mattickers Meat Market in St. Louis), Dan Burleigh prepared some kick-ass chili, and I assembed the italian salad that McClane had sent down (he volunteered to bring a salad — before he knew he couldn’t go). It was a great meal with great guys. We continued drinking until I went to bed about 2am, and some people were still up at 3am (when nature called for me). Most of what went on Saturday night, is best left at “You had to be there.”

1st Annual Campout on the Current Attendee List:

  1. Gavin Poppen
  2. Craig Stevens
  3. Keith Stevens
  4. Bill Peterburgo
  5. Craig Peterson
  6. Adam Smith
  7. John Nesselrode
  8. Dan Burleigh
  9. Andrew Arnold
  10. Matt Tucker
  11. Ron Caimi
  12. Brian Meiss
  13. Mark Kotcher
  14. Dave Dawson
  15. Norm Crisp
  16. Joe Weber
  17. Tom Hargrove
  18. Gene Horbelt
  19. Keith Gamn
  20. Several Other Unidentified People

1st Annual Campout on the Current Top 10 List

  1. Norm Crisp’s wisdom on getting older (Never Underestimate a fart)
  2. Gavin Poppen’s 6 foot bamboo rod
  3. Mark Kotcher’s maiden voyage of the personal pontoon
  4. Camp Tucker (and the fact it only has 2 windows that open)
  5. John Nesselrode & Craig Peterson’s humor
  6. The 60′ bonfire
  7. Tom Hargrove’s m-80 and the general burning of stuff
  8. Cutthroat Beer & Little Yeoman Beer
  9. Matt Tucker’s BBQ smeared all over his body
  10. Dave Dawson’s Hospitality (stay at EaglePark Campground when you are down there)

This trip was not about catching fish (seems like I would say that, since I only caught two fish), and we didn’t even fish on Sunday morning. Actually Mark Kotcher and I got up around 6am and packed up camp and headed for home (after stopping off at PJ’s Diner in Licking for breakfast). This trip reminded both Craig and I why we do not fish during the warmer months — the fish didn’t bite as well; and the river was crowded. We both left this trip, thinking that we probably won’t fish again until the fall (unless there is a cool day with some rain that just begs for us to be on the water) and spend the summer tying flies. Even though there was disappointment in the fish cooperation, I will be back for the campout next year. Until the next hook-up……………

Spring River (Mammoth Spring, Arkansas) — March 21, 2004

It was hard to sleep Saturday night, because I had to listen to McClane complain about my snoring. He cried so much about it, that he actually slept on the floor in the motel bathroom. I don’t know what he was complaining about so much, I slept great. I did tell him that I would look into some sort of snoring medicine before our Current River trip in the middle of April. Sunday morning we woke up to temps in the low 30’s (Saturday it reached a high of 83), clear skies, and windy conditions. We stowed our non-essential gear into the mini-van and headed off for breakfast at the Gooseneck Island Cafe, hoping to get the biscuits and gravy that McClane and I were really looking forward to. We got there about 7:00am and were told that they just opened and it would be another 30 minutes or more for food — so in the car we went in search of State Line Restaurant. State line Restaurant is, as it name suggests, on the Missouri / Arkansas state line. It doesn’t look like much from the outside, but the inside was nice and the food was quick and good (Kotcher even suggested that we look into this place for a steak dinner on our next trip — as the steak that came with his eggs was excellent). We had decided to check out the access near the tourist center, but the water was too high and probably too swift to fish allot of the area, so we headed back to the Lassetter Access. Conditions were tough with the wind, but today was my day. I headed downstream and fished the far bank. That is where I caught my first Cutthroat Trout. It was a small beautiful fish of about 7″ that took a #10 olive mohair leech. I picked up 10 fish in one run, and ended the morning with 17 fish (13 Cutthroat and 4 Rainbows) in less than 4 hours of fishing — with an Olive Mohair Leech picking up most of the fish (I also had luck with a brown wooly bugger, black wooly bugger, and black mohair leech). Both McClane and Kotcher picked up fish — but I don’t think either of them caught more than 7 or 8 fish (all the fish were caught on streamers of some type). The wind made fishing tough this morning, but it was an absolutely beautiful morning. We left the river by about 11:30am and headed back to St. Louis. It was another good trip to the Spring River, although it will be some time before I get to head back down that way I can’t wait. It doesn’t look like I will get to be on the water again until the big camp out on the Current River April 16 – 18 at Eagles Park Campground (we will have about 30 fly fisherman camping and fishing the river that weekend).

Spring River (Mammoth Spring, Arkansas) — March 21, 2004

It was hard to sleep Saturday night, because I had to listen to McClane complain about my snoring. He cried so much about it, that he actually slept on the floor in the motel bathroom. I don’t know what he was complaining about so much, I slept great. I did tell him that I would look into some sort of snoring medicine before our Current River trip in the middle of April. Sunday morning we woke up to temps in the low 30’s (Saturday it reached a high of 83), clear skies, and windy conditions. We stowed our non-essential gear into the mini-van and headed off for breakfast at the Gooseneck Island Cafe, hoping to get the biscuits and gravy that McClane and I were really looking forward to. We got there about 7:00am and were told that they just opened and it would be another 30 minutes or more for food — so in the car we went in search of State Line Restaurant. State line Restaurant is, as it name suggests, on the Missouri / Arkansas state line. It doesn’t look like much from the outside, but the inside was nice and the food was quick and good (Kotcher even suggested that we look into this place for a steak dinner on our next trip — as the steak that came with his eggs was excellent). We had decided to check out the access near the tourist center, but the water was too high and probably too swift to fish allot of the area, so we headed back to the Lassetter Access. Conditions were tough with the wind, but today was my day. I headed downstream and fished the far bank. That is where I caught my first Cutthroat Trout. It was a small beautiful fish of about 7″ that took a #10 olive mohair leech. I picked up 10 fish in one run, and ended the morning with 17 fish (13 Cutthroat and 4 Rainbows) in less than 4 hours of fishing — with an Olive Mohair Leech picking up most of the fish (I also had luck with a brown wooly bugger, black wooly bugger, and black mohair leech). Both McClane and Kotcher picked up fish — but I don’t think either of them caught more than 7 or 8 fish (all the fish were caught on streamers of some type). The wind made fishing tough this morning, but it was an absolutely beautiful morning. We left the river by about 11:30am and headed back to St. Louis. It was another good trip to the Spring River, although it will be some time before I get to head back down that way I can’t wait. It doesn’t look like I will get to be on the water again until the big camp out on the Current River April 16 – 18 at Eagles Park Campground (we will have about 30 fly fisherman camping and fishing the river that weekend).

Spring River (Mammoth Spring, Arkansas) — March 20, 2004

The trip started out on a rough note when we got to to the Gooseneck Island Cafe in Mammoth Spring and couldn’t get the world’s best biscuits and gravy because the cook decided not to show up today. We ordered our food as other locals started to arrive to discuss the day’s business. They were amazed by McClane’s ballerina leaps while swatting caddis in mayflies outside the restaurant window. Meanwhile, breakfast was served almost 45 minutes later after being ordered (other patrons in the restaurant still hadn’t gotten their food and one brave soul started serving coffee to everyone while the waitress cooked in the back). I must say, the Ham and Cheese Omlet and Hashbrowns I had were some of the best I have ever had — McClane seconded that by letting a verbal appreciation for the food for every hungry soul that hadn’t received their food yet. I thought McClane was going to get sporked, but they were good sports and were laughing at his sarcastic humor all while he was eating and they were not.

We got on stream about 8:30am and the first thing we noticed was the water level was considerably higher at the Lassiter Access then our last trip to the river (October 2003). Man what a beautiful river. We rigged up and walked upstream to the first set of riffles and spread out from there. Kotcher hooked up with the first fish on a black wooly bugger. McClane followed up with a fish on a soft hackle with a scud dropper. I was still fish-less. Kotcher and McClane each kept hooking up with fish with ease while I still hadn’t brought a fish to hand. I decided to walk upstream to the island and fish the faster side of the island. I did have a few hook-ups but couldn’t get a decent hook set, but I won’t make excuses — I just didn’t have it on Saturday. To make matters worse, we were all wearing FRS/GMRS radios so anytime someone hooked up they made sure to let me know like all good friends would. We had beautiful weather with the temperature in the 70’s and cloudy, but soon the storms rolled in at the Lassitter access around 11:00am and it poured down rain, thundered, and a little lightening. It brought everyone off of the river except for us fools from St. Louis. While a few of the diehards sought shelter in their vehicles at the access, McClane and Kotcher continued to hook up with fish at will directly in front of the boat ramp. What made the Lassetter Access more interesting this trip was that we were catching bonefied cutthroat out of the river (see the photo gallery for photos). I was a little unsure at first, but McClane confirmed it. What a morning to not be catching any fish on the Spring River. We fished a little while after the rain, and decided to head to the Bayou Access and try our luck there. The problem with the Bayou Access is that there really isn’t that much “fishable” water for the wading fisherman when the water is at normal flow. We pulled down into the river bottom and the place was full of cars and fisherman. I decided to wait out the fisherman that were in the first run, right at the access, while McClane and Kotcher opted to walk upstream to a dam / waterfall that Kotcher had fished successfully last April. I was not having any luck and was getting pretty fed up fast with fishing. I thought that if I wasn’t going to catch any fish anyway, I might as well be doing it while fishing with dry flies and on a bamboo rod. I headed back to the mini-van to get string up the rod. The rod I was fishing with was a Trout Camp Bamboo Fly Rod made by Waterloo, Illinois Rod Maker Ron A. Caimi. It is a 7-1/2ft, 4/5wt, bamboo rod that was an absolute pleasure to lawn cast — now it was time to give it a test on the water (a full review of my first experience with a bamboo fly rod will be coming shortly — along with photos of the Trout Camp Bamboo rod). I promptly tied on a #20 elk hair caddis and headed to the far bank. The rod casted with ease, and accuracy was not an issue. Then the wind picked up, and another storm moved in. I started fishing my way back to the car, and got back just before the sky opened up. The temperature dropped about 25 degrees, the wind picked up, the rain came down, then the small hail came down, then more rain. Kotcher made it back to the friendly confines of the mini-van just before it really opened up. We had fun giving McClane trouble over the radio, as he waded his way back to the car in the pouring rain. The storm had ended almost as quickly as it began, then the sun came out and it was an absolute beautiful afternoon. We all ended up fishing the run in front of the access for another hour or two. We all mutually agreed it was about beer-thirty, and headed up to grab a barely soda. McClane struck up a conversation with two other fly fisherman that were at the access. Gerry and Al were down for a week of Arkansas fly fishing from Wisconsin, and had stopped off for a day of fishing on the Spring River before their guide trip with Tom Hawthorne on the fabled Arkansas tailwaters the following Monday. We shared some stories of our experience on the river today, and some tips that seemed to work for everyone (I was still fishless — so I didn’t have any current tips), and the conversation made its way to the river where we began to take some insect specimens by kicking them into a kick net and by flipping some rocks and logs.

The Spring River has a wide variety of insect life — some of which was down right interesting. I am trying to convince McClane to start an Ozark Entomology site or at least help me add some content to OzarkChronicles.com. We found a ton of bright green caddis larva, small stone fly nymphs, and a bigger nymph specimen that looked to be about a size 4 (kind of looked like a stonefly nymph). None of us had ever taken a closer look at the insect life on the river — I am glad we did. After another beer, we decided to head back to the motel and then meet up with Gerry and Al at Fred’s Fish House for dinner. It was a great dinner, and great conversation. We traded lots of tips and tricks and sat around talking until we were all ready to hit the sack. We convinced Gerry and Al to try the Current River on their trip back to Wisconsin, instead of stopping off on the Spring River again and traded a ton of flies back and forth. After the email address exchange, we wished each other luck on our angling adventures and we were off to find EverClear for the insects that we had collected earlier (McClane swears that you take 70% Everclear and 30% water). The town of Mammoth Spring is in a dry county in Arkansas and you can not purchase alcohol, so you must drive to Thayer, Missouri. We found a liquor store and the lady behind the counter pulled out a pint of EverClear but told us that she wasn’t “Haus” enough to drink that stuff and didn’t need any hair on her chest. She even informed us that she had seen bigger guys then me try and drink the stuff — but they weren’t “Haus” enough either. Little did she know they were for insects, and not for the drinking. We were all pretty exhausted so we hit the sack around 11pm (without drinking too many beers). If you have read this far, I figure I should give you the important details about the fishing. McClane brought 27 fish to hand (including several Cutthroats) mainly on a soft hackle, but some fell victim to a tan scud. Kotcher had brought 20+ fish to hand (including several Cutthroats) mainly using black and olive wooly buggers, although I think he did pick a few up on an elk hair caddis. I didn’t catch a fish all day (other than a few bleeding shiners, which the bamboo rod manhandled them), and was ready to get on it the next morning.

Spring River (Mammoth Spring, Arkansas) — March 19, 2004

McClane was late again. I told him not to underestimate the amount of time it would take to get to my house in BFJC (Bum F#C$$NG Jefferson County) but apparently him and Kotcher stopped to gauk at the trash truck that was on fire on I-270. That being said, they made it (about 30 minutes later than expected) and we were on our way, leaving St. Louis around 5:30pm. They say getting there is half the fun, well when your are traveling with McClane and Kotcher you have to wait for the fun because McClane is always late. We stopped off in Roll for dinner, at Denny’s at none of the less. After peroozing the menu, McClane and I were engaged in the usual banter when I said “F$%k You” to him in front of our friendly local Denny’s waitress (insert stereotype). It was usual, but she was a quick thinker and commented that it would be OK, but only if she could watch. After busting our guts, chowing down our food, and watching our lovely quick-witted waitress flirt with McClane we were on our way. There is more to the story of our stop at Denny’s, like the bathroom from hell and other quick-witted waitress phrases but they are best told over a Boulevard Beer. Back to the fishing…….