06-07-2004, 05:15 PM
Skagit River - June 6th, 2004
supplied by: [url "http://www.fisheyesoup.com/redir.php?recKey=48,re"][#0000ff]Dickson Flyfishing Steelhead Guides[/#0000ff][/url]
FISHING: Poor
[url "http://waterdata.usgs.gov/wa/nwis/current?type=flow&group_key=NONE&search_site_no_station_nm=skagit"][#0000ff]water levels - click here[/#0000ff][/url]
The Skagit (7,100 cfs) is really nothing above an incidental for hatchery steelhead. Even the Cascade River is running dirty, so the surface gig, has gone away for a bit. The Sauk (6,000 cfs and zero vis.) is totally gone as is the Suiattle. Wait until after the snow melt, and try the big canyon pools above the Whitechuck River. Pretty cool for wild rainbows and monster Dollies later this summer.
supplied by: [url "http://www.fisheyesoup.com/redir.php?recKey=48,re"][#0000ff]Dickson Flyfishing Steelhead Guides[/#0000ff][/url]
FISHING: Poor
[url "http://waterdata.usgs.gov/wa/nwis/current?type=flow&group_key=NONE&search_site_no_station_nm=skagit"][#0000ff]water levels - click here[/#0000ff][/url]
The Skagit (7,100 cfs) is really nothing above an incidental for hatchery steelhead. Even the Cascade River is running dirty, so the surface gig, has gone away for a bit. The Sauk (6,000 cfs and zero vis.) is totally gone as is the Suiattle. Wait until after the snow melt, and try the big canyon pools above the Whitechuck River. Pretty cool for wild rainbows and monster Dollies later this summer.