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Where can floattubing flyfishermen go in freezing winter (December, January and February) to catch nice trout? A typical answer is nowhere because most of popular lakes are frozen in cold winter, but I have a new answer to that lingering question now. Get out and try Rufus Woods Lake (actually, a section of Columbia River between Grand Coulee Hydro Dam and Chief Joe Hydro Dam) above Chief Joe Hydro Dam. If you like to challenge freezing winter and uncomfortably cold water, you will not be disappointed because Rufus Woods Lake will satisfy your needs and you may be even rewarded with a handful of healthy triploids.
My first trip to Rufus Woods was November 30, just a week ago, and it was as cold as today, 27 degrees F or so around noon. I hooked only two at Brandt Landing (approximately five miles upstream from Chief Joe Hydro Dam and on the Douglas County side), but landed only one 15" triploid. The other fish was so strong as to pull me towards the middle of mighty Columbia River. I did not know how strong the current might be in the middle, so I did not want to be pulled to the middle by a fish and, in fact, I tried to horse it in. Sadly, it broke off my 3X tippet. The pull was much stronger than 11-pound Lahotan Cutthroat at Grimes Lake. I will never know how big it was and I will never forget the 5 minutes of strong pull I felt. Legendary hard-fighting Rufus Woods Lake native rainbow or monster triploid?
My second trip was December 1 and I fished along the east shoreline above the forebay of Chief Joe Hydro Dam. My favorite rigging (12-3X Olive Woolly Bugger, 10' 3X tippet, 3X 13' tapered leader, and SR6 uniform sinking line) produced only one 16" triploid. My third trip was yesterday, December 8, and I fished along the west shoreline between Bridgeport State Park and Chief Joe Hydro Dam. I ended up landing five triploids (one 19" and four ranging 15" to 17").
Finally today, my fourth trip to Rufus Woods Lake was a smashing success. It was cloudy, cold at 24 degrees F in the morning and 28 degrees F in the afternoon, and calm without any wind at all. Only thing I did differently today was that I fished along and around the trash boom at the forebay area of Chief Joe Hydro Dam. I fished from 10 AM till 2 PM and landed approximately 15 triploids ranging 16" to 21". I even crossed the might Columbia River without any difficulty. Even though Rufus Woods Lake is a section of Columbia River, it truly deserves to be called "Lake" because it hardly has any strong current at all. Flyfishing on my float tube was absolutely awesome today.
Coooo--old winter, so what? There is a hope for all floattubing flyfishermen. Try Rufus Woods Lake this winter!
S Cho from Wenatchee
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