Saturday, October 29, 2011

Deschutes

For the past 6 or 7 years it has been my habit to head over to the upper Deschutes River at the end of the Oregon trout season to close out my personal fishing season. I really like the country around there, which has lots of campsites – free at this time of year – and unique scenery, along lots of big brown trout. I can fish or explore volcanoland during the day, and listen to the World Series in the evening. Followers of Basstravaganza2010 will remember that last year I left the Flint River in Georgia and raced across the US to make it back to the Deschutes before the end of Oct.

This year I decide to leave the Bullship behind and take only my pontoon boat, plus my bike so that I can leave it downstream, float down to it, and pedal back up to my car. Could not find the big chartreuse rapalas like the ones that were hot last year, so I have bought a can of spray paint and created my own.


I take the 4 PM ferry to Port Angeles on Saturday nite, and head down the Hood Canal towards Olympia. Trying to get to the river by dawn, but I make a critical mistake when I stop at a casino to check out the Oregon Ducks football game. First Ducks game I have seen this year, and they get out to a convincing lead by halftime, when I head back onto the road – 2 hours and one beer later. By 4 AM I am thru Oakridge and heading up over the Cascade summit on Hwy 58. One hour from the Deschutes when the combination of the beer and lack of sleep force me to pull over and sleep for a while. It is overcast and drizzly – perfect brown trout conditions. Around 9 AM I get to the top end of Wickiup Reservoir, home of the biggest browns, some over 30 lbs. But the big lake – which is normally drawn way down this time of year, is at least 6 ft higher than normal. The cold, wet weather of 2011 means they did not need to drain much of the lake down to supply irrigation to ag land further down the valley, and now that irg season is over they are rapidly refilling the lake. There are only a few miles between Wickiup and Crane Prairie Res, , connected by the Deschutes, which begins as the outflow from the Crane Prairie dam. Many thousands of kokanee (planted, landlocked sockeye salmon) in Wickiup head into the connecting river to spawn in fall, and the big browns head up to the top end of the channel to eat them, and also to spawn soon themselves. I toy with the idea of launching, but I settle for just throwing a big plug around the point where I park.

For as long as I am aware you could park and camp on these gravel flats for free, but now I see signs saying “No Camping”. Another free campsite lost to progress.

Instead I head over to the Deschutes downstream from the Wickiup dam, where I have a special campsite beside the river.

I build a fire, make coffee and launch the pontoon. By now the clouds are disappearing and the sun is coming out. This is the last cloudy weather (and the last good brown trout weather) I will see.


The river is running higher this year. Even tho the lake is filling, they are letting more water out of Wickiup than usual in late Oct. Everywhere I go the seasons are out of whack, water conditions vastly changed from what I am used to. How will the big trout respond to this?

I row about ½ mile upstream and start throwing the big chartreuse rap. But the river is dead. Very few fish rising. Nothing chasing my big plug until I finally get a hit back near my campsite. A small RB of all things. Lots of them in here but they seldom hit minnow imitating plugs.

This little fish was very ambitious trying to gobble up this huge plug – like Dick Cheney chomping on Afghanistan he got a little more than he bargained for.


Fishing is awful so I set up my tent and sit by the campfire listening to the baseball game.

This is “high desert” country, about 3,000 ft elev, hot in summer, but they get snow every month of the year. In late Oct I know it will be freezing at nite if it is not cloudy, and I am correct. I get up long before dawn, make coffee, and head up to the Tenino boat ramp about 5 miles upstream. I will float back down to my camp, and then ride my bike back up to Tenino to get my car.

These pontoon boats come with a rack where you can load a car battery, and a bracket on the rack where you can mount an electric motor. But in this configuration the boat is stern heavy, and if is miserably frustrating and almost impossible to steer, cuz the steering control hits you right in the back of the neck. So I have modified mine by building a bracket so I can mount the motor on the footpegs in front, and have the steering handy and useable. Notice the white stuff all over the pontoons. This is ice. It is way below freezing. And the towel on the seat, so I don’t have to sit right on the icy cold plastic.

Normally the big pool at Tenino is swarming with active fish, but there is little action this morn. The pontoon goes like a rocketship with the new motor configuration, and I can spin around like a water bug. Just to see if I can do it I motor UPSTREAM, all the way up the long pool and thru the long set of shallows up to the next big pool. I am killing the battery by fighting up against the current, but I am amazed by how well the boat performs. There are a few big fish rising, but nothing will chase the big plug. I give u p and start drifting down, using the motor to hold position when I want to cast, or even trolling back against the current. I covering the water way better than I ever could before, but the fishing is totally dead, and extremely disappointing. Must constantly keep dipping my rod into the river to melt off the ice that forms on the line guide, and there is ice fog on the river as the sun rises.


The landscape here is all gently rolling, a landscape buried in volcanic dust from the cataclysmic eruptions that occurred very recently (in geologic time) at the Mt Mazama and Newberry volcanoes, among others. These repeated eruptions buried the upper Deschutes valley in layer after layer of volcanic debris. The dust compresses into layers and turns to a kind of clay. At one place along the river you can see these layers where the river cuts into them.


This river gets fished hard nowadays, usually in summer when it is running bankful and fast with irg water. Now that the flow is mostly being contained to fill Wickiup the level is way down, and I am the only boat on the river. Lots of other folks camping along the river now, but they are all deer hunters. I have the river to myself, and I often see tailing ends of monofilament hanging in the current. With the electric motor I can often drive back upstream and locate the lures people have snagged and broken off. By the time I get back to my campsite I have salvaged probably $25 worth of lures without even trying. But not a single fish or even a bite or chase – unheard of for this spot.


A big ponderosa snag has fallen right across the road where I used to camp. Glad I was not there then. But the ground is flat and the pumice soil is firm, so people have just driven around the wreckage to get back into the campsite beside the river.

Fishing sucks here – another year long fantasy busted. I am outahere, and off to another brown trout nirvana. East Lake – literally a volcanic eruption of brown trout.

There are 2 problems with life in this part of central Oregon: 1) The place you are at might blow up at any moment; 2) The place next to where you are at might blow up at any moment, and bury you and everything else in billions of tons of volcanic dust.

Most people are familiar with Crater Lake, now a national park, a huge volcano that blew up and smothered much of western N America in dust. The remains of the hollowed out mountain after the big blast, called a caldera, filled with rainwater to create the continents deepest lake, and a new small volcanic cone erupted out of the bottom of the lake to create Wizard Island. But few people realize that only an hour’s drive up Hwy 97 to the NE is another similar geologic feature called the Newberry Caldera – another volcano that exploded and filled with rainwater to form a big lake, in which a small volcanic erupted to create an island. But inside Newberry the little volcano kept erupting and the island kept getting bigger, until it got so big it split the entire lake into 2 lakes. These lakes are now named Paulina Lake (the one to the W) and East Lake (guess which direction?)





East1



A 20 minute drive off Hwy 97 will take you from 3,000 ft on the Deschutes Valley floor up the flank of the big mountain over the rim of the caldera into the gigantic blast zone at over 6,000 ft. Unlike Crater Lake, the inside of the caldera has largely grown back into forest, and you don’t even know you are inside a volcano when you drive in over the rim, it is so huge. A few pieces of higher ground remain around the rim, like teeth in a jawbone, and they look like mountains in their own right until you realize they are only remnants on the edge of what must have once been a very large stratovolcano. The highest point is Paulina Peak.


Paulina Peak, on the crater rim, looking back from inside the caldera

Even inside the caldera you are not really aware you are inside a volcano.



It is probably 5-6 miles across the exploded rim, and numerous eruptions have occurred in here since the first big blast. Lava flows have poured out across the inside of the caldera. In the following pic you can see a big lava flow between the car and P Peak. This flow is largely obsidian. If you are turned on by obsidian flows this is the place to be, cuz it claims to be the largest ob flow in the world.

The Big Ob Flow
They say that shattered obsidian is one of the sharpest substances in the world, even sharper than a razor blade. Some surgeons even use obsidian in place of surgical steel scalpels. There is enough obsidian here to do brain surgery on the entire human race, with lots left to spare. I can’t understand why they don’t build a big brain surgery hospital here.

Both Paulina and East Lakes were fishless when Euro immigrants arrived in Oregon. Trout maniacs hiked up the mountain long before there were any roads, carrying backpacks filled with water and little trout. There are no inlet streams for spawning, but the fish thrived. They are augmented now that there is a road by annual plantings from hatcheries. Both lakes have extensive shallows where weeds and bugs thrive. Although they are at hi elevation (over 6,000 ft) and buried by massive snowfall in winter they both grow huge trout. The Oregon state record brown - over 30 lbs - trout came from Paulina. For some reason I always drive right past Paulina and fish in East Lake. There are 2 boat launches and campgrounds, and I head down to the first, along the S side of the lake. Usually it is quite windy here in the afternoon, judging by the 5 or 6 times I have fished here – all in Oct. But today it is magically glassy calm, and very clear. The cinder cone which rose up to split the original lake into 2 is in the center of the pic, and the north wall of the caldera is in the background.


I pick out a site along the long pumice beach in front of the campground, unload my gear, set up my tent, and set up the pontoon. This is a spectacular and invigorating place to camp.


This lake has many fish – mainly kokanee, RB and brown trout - but no spawning streams. The RBs are spring spawners, but the kokanee and browns are ready to spawn now. The kokanee eat plankton, the RBs eat mainly bugs, and the browns eat anything that will fit down their throat. Adult kokanee are about 12–15” long, and there are lots of them. Once a brown trout gets up around 5 lbs they are big enough to swallow and adult kokanee, and food no longer is an issue. It is just a question of how much you feel like eating. There are lots of big browns in this lake, and they are not shy about showing themselves. But they are very smart, and they never bite for me.

I launch into a gentle breeze, and talk to someone in another boat who says they have been doing well – 25 fish per day (all released), mixed kokanees and browns up to 19” – jigging deep between 30-40 ft. I also pass a bank fisherman who is catching fish on a worm & bobber. I zip across to the opposite corner of the lake past the White Slide. This front mounted motor is superb! But my big minnow imitating plugs do not get a bite. Not unexpected. The predatory trout don’t like to come up shallow where I am throwing my lures during bright daylight. But wait until the sun starts to go down. I fish all the way back to the campsite, rebuild the campfire, and start sipping on the $2.99 bottle of wine I bought in La Pine.

Late in the afternoon I am sitting in my lounge chair when big fish move into the bay and start jumping. Huge swirls disturb the bay, and then big males, resplendent in brilliant fall spawning colors, start jumping, leaping 3 feet into the air flashing brilliant yellows and reds and oranges. Hey – it’s been 11 long months and I am finally gonna get laid!!!

I head back out in the pontoon. The bay is alive with power fish. Some are jumping for joy around me. Others casually swallowing kokanee too big to fit into your frypan. I have 3 rods rigged with plugs, but finally settle on a tiny ultralite rod with 6 lb line, cuz I can cast a floating lure better with this rig. Nothing will bite as I fish up a ¼ mile from the campsite, even tho I am in the shade throwing right thru swirling feeding fish.

But the moment the sun disappears from the far side of the lake things change. I would guess that at least 50 browns over 5 lbs, many over 10, jump in the bay off the campsite beach. They really put on a show for the tourist from BC. It is stunning to be sitting in a pontoon boat and have a trout 3 ft long leap as high as your head, close enough that you could catch it out if midair with a long net.

And now they start biting on my rap. I get 9 good hits, but – how can brown trout attack a lure with 2 sharp triple hooks and not get hooked, one of the great mysteries of the universe – I catch only 2. One was a beauty about 3 lbs, got off on a big jump. Then the bite dies off as it gets darker. After a ½ hr of deadness I am right in front of the boat ramp, ready to quit, when I get into a furious bite in the near dark. 4 nice fish in 5 casts. The last one is the biggest, about 20”. I try towing into shore but I can’t hold the fish off the bottom and out of the weeds with only 6 lb test line. So I finally call for help from a nearby boat and they land the fish for me with their net. Turns out – sad to say – this was the biggest fish of the trip for me. It was very dark by then, and I had forgotten to set the flash to work when I had the guy in the other boat snap this pic.


Next morn it is icy again, but after coffee around the campfire I am ready to head out again in the predawn. I am expecting a hotter bite, but it has slowed way down. Just E of the campsite there are cliffs of layered volcanic clay. The layers chronicle the eruptions that have occurred here.


It looks like it should be deep beneath these cliff, but the water is only a couple feet deep at the base. A few huge browns have moved in against the cliffs, jumping for joy and chomping the kokanee that are spawning there. But – as usual with these big fish – they will not bite for me.

I load back up quickly and head down the mountain into La Pine, get a motel room, homemade donuts from Wickiup Junction store, and settle down to watch the World Series game 1. I also purchase a $7.99 net from a chain store. Unlike bass, these brown trout have big teeth, and I already have a bad cut on one finger from a trout fang.

Next morn before dawn I head back up to East Lake.

The entire SE corner of the lake is still volcanically active. As the level lake drops in summer and fall you can see hot springs seeping out thru the beach here. The water is high this year, but in past years people with shovels would dig out pits in the pumice beach and make little pools of the hot mineral water that bubble up. Apparently there used to be a hot spring resort on the bank here – long gone now.

Most of the springs trickle up thru the lake bottom, and on a calm cold day they seeth into a mist at the SE corner of the lake. In this pic you can see the mist from the springs in the pre-dawn.



When the lake is calm you can see the volcanic vents leaving little trails of bubbles on the surface.


Both the springwater along the beach and the bubbles in the lake are full of sulfur dioxide. When there is no wind the whole SE end of the lake smells like SO2. Once I was fishing here on a calm morning shortly after H. Chavez of Venezuela was speaking at the UN, and made his famous quip that he could tell that G. Bush had just spoken here, cuz the smell of sulfur was still in the air. I passed a guy in a float tube and he said that it smells like G. Bush was just here.

The warm springwater probably revs up the metabolism of the trout in winter, so they grow faster? And the general productivity of the lake is probably fertilized by nutrients injected from the hot vents. In any case, there are lots of big brown trout here. I catch an 18” brownie trolling a rap directly thru the sulfur bubbles.

In the afternoon it is sunny and the fish go deep. I have heard you can jig for them, so I try a couple spoons and settle on one, then measure off roughly as I drop the lure until I get down to 35 ft, and start jigging. Soon enough I catch a nice brownie – first time I have ever caught one this deep, or tried to.


It is such a nice day I head into shore and decide to climb up the volcanic cone that separates Paulina and East Lakes. It is steep, and slippery where there are pine needles. Takes me about 45 minutes of panting and staggering, often pulling myself up by grabbing trees. There is a lot of steep, exposed soil. In the following pic you can see volcanic dust (brown), larger chunks of pumice (white), and one big black chunk of obsidian. Many of the dirt slopes are covered in shattered, razor-sharp slivers of obsidian the size of knife blades. You have to be careful where you put your hands when you slip.


I finally make it to the top. Whew! The pumice beach at the campground is clearly visible on the right, and the pontoon is directly below me.



I head back down and try jigging again, but get no bites. So I try trolling. The pontoon is rigged with 2 rod holders, and is a killer rig when trolling with the silent electric motor.



There are blue Stellar’s Jays around the campsite as well as gray jays, aka camprobbers. And chipmunks. All begging for scraps. The gray jays eat right out of your hand.

The evening bite is particularly slack tonite. Few fish rising, and I only catch one. Frustrated, I look back at the cinder cone I just climbed and wonder why the fishing is so bad this year.



I decide to pull up stakes and head down to Wickiup before dawn tomorrow.

But when I get there the big lake is even higher than before, at least 6 ft higher than usual for this time of year. Usually there is a small hardcore of big trout hunters here, but today I am alone. There are a few fish swirling, but nothing biting in these radically different conditions.

Hilite of the morn is watching a heron pick up a half dead, spawned out kokanee, or which there are hundreds floating around.




These kokanee are what the big browns are gulping down. No wonder they don’t want to bother with my tiny 5” long plugs. 

The heron kept playing with the fish, holding it this way and that, until I lost interest.



A few minutes later, after I had gone back to fishing, the heron said “What the hell!”, and gulped the kokanee down whole.

I got no trace of a bite, and decided to head S, so that I can fish Miller Lake – another high cascade brown trout factory – in the afternoon. Along the Cascade Lake Hwy you come to Davis Lake. Odell Creek used to flow across a nearly flat pasture of pumice and sage until a recent eruption spewed a giant blob of lava across it. The lava flow forms a natural dam that impounds a shallow lake 3 miles long and 2 miles wide. Davis Lake. Used to be the premier fly fishery in Oregon for big wild RB trout, until some jackass (illegally) let tui chubs loose in the lake. The chubs swarmed, and then somebody (illegally) released largemouth bass into Davis Lake. The bass ate the chubs, and for a while the lake was loaded with 4-6 lb LMs, which could only be fished with a flyrod. The trout are still there, but struggling with all the competition. Fish & Wildlife Dept, in a misguided (my opinion) attempt to placate the trout fishermen, had been sponsoring catchatons to remove the larger bass and transport them to other traditional bass lakes. But the bass reproduce fast, and cannot be eradicated in this way, so the result is that Davis Lake ends up with more bass in it than ever – zillions of small ones instead of thousands of big ones. And it is the smaller bass that compete most with the trout.

The Hwy passes right around the edge of this lava flow. As you can see, it is not hard to tell where the lava stopped, and these big ponderosa pines are glad it stopped where it did.



I park beside the lava, and get out to look around.



 
Then climb up on top for a look into a desolate wasteland.


Only a couple trees have been able to gain a foothold in the huge pile of crusted slag.


The lava is made of boulders that are loosely jumbled at the “angle of repose”. They wiggle and clink together sounding like china when you climb around. Must be careful not to start a landslide that could be the end of me, or even my car.


In 2002, the year I moved to Oregon, at the end of years of drought cycle, the same year that the gigantic Biscuit Fire burned out a half million acres, another jackass had a campfire get away at the campsite at the S end of Davis Lake. The fire took off and burned around almost all of the lake, and then raced right up to the top of the mountain before firefighters could put it out.

I first came to Davis Lake a few years later, when the fire was fresh and you could catch LMs like this on a flyrod.


Davis



A thick layer of manzanita bush is growing where the pine forest used to be. Eventually it will grow back to forest again.


 
Now some of the burn has been harvested, and it is all growing back. Davis Lake is covered in a layer of ice fog this morning. The campground where the fire started is at the left edge of the fog in this pic.


I head on S down Hwy 97 to Chemult, have breakfast, and then head W up 13 miles of teeth-chattering washboard gravel to Miller Lake. I have been here a few times before, and today is the same as always. A cold wicked wind is blowing from W, down off the icy slopes of Mt Thielsen. It is too rough to fish much, and I get no bites, and kill my pontoon battery fighting against the wind. Most interesting thing is a weird looking pontoon/canoe gizmo tied to shore at a campsite. Never seen anything like this before.



At dark I race to load up and head off to Ashland, where I am planning to arrive at my sister’s place tonite. Backing out of the boat launch I accidently do something I could not repeat in 100 attempts if I tried. There are posts beside the gravel road, and a small log beside them to keep you from hitting the posts. But I roll backwards in the dark right ap onto the log, and then as the car rolls over the other side the rear fender drops right on top of a post. The right rear wheel is hung in midair, and the car is high-centered on the log, plus sitting on top of the post. Check this out:



Needless to say, it was a difficult hour’s worth of scramble to get back on the road, when all the technology I had available was a flashlite, machete, and the tiny scissors jack that comes with the car.

I am planning to return thru the Deschutes for more brown trout fishing on my way back N. In Ashland I get to visit friends and also visit Bear Creek, where I used to be chair of the Bear Creek Watershed Council. The big Chinook salmon are coming up from the Rogue R, and I stop to take a pic. The fish is under the red line. You can clearly see its tail, and its body is splotchy with while spots cuz it is getting ready to spawn and die. Great to see the big fish returning to a very urban habitat.



On Sunday nite I go over to a friend’s to have a beer and watch the world series game. On the way down the switchbacks of his driveway I roll over a rock hidden in the grass. Next morning I notice a trickle of fluid under the place where my Volvo was parked. My car is old, but it never leaks a drop of anything EVER. I check it and it looks like power steering fluid. This is the end of the Oregon trip and the end of brown trout fishing for Basstravaganza2011. I top up to Volvox with power steering fluid and blast back up I 5, getting to the Tsawassen ferry at 10:30 PM – 15 minutes before the last sailing. Soon I am asleep back home in Nanaimo.






Blank

Test

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Moving back to Van Isle

JULY, 2011

Since posting up the stuff for my trip to Cuba followed by spring bass fishing across BC, I have not done any posting to the blog. For Basstravaganza fans here is a quick update about my wanderings:


After returning to Ashland, OR, from bass fishing in the Kootenays (see previous post) I spent a number of days writing up and posting the blog. Then rented a giant double-axle U-Haul trailer, the largest I was legally allowed to tow behind a Volvo, and made a trip up to Van Isle, where I am storing my stuff in a friend’s storage unit. It was a very scary ride, by far the hugest load the old Volvox has ever been asked to haul. Had to use a bull low gear I did not know the car even had, and grind up the 4 long grades on I-5 north of Medford at 30 mph. But the little motor never complained, and I dumped the stuff off, made it back to the 10:30 PM ferry from Namaimo, and back to the mainland after midnite. One more nite in Ashland, where I loaded the car and boat full of lumber, mattresses, and whatever junk I had remaining in my storage. Then took off immediately again for a last trip north. Here is a pic taken at the rest stop in Valley of the Rogue state park. Looks like a big load, and it is, but it is tiny compared to the previous U-Haul trip.




I pulled into a rest stop south of Olympia just before dark, and parked next to the biggest truck I have ever seen. Makes the standard 18 wheeler look like a toy. I think I counted 96 wheels on this rig, which was a double ended gooseneck trailer connected to gooseneck arch dollies and the cab. Must have been nearly as long as a football field. The big wooden box it was hauling seemed to be some kind of generator.



In the pics you can see my Volvo and Bullship parked next to the biggggg rig.



It was hot and dry in Medford, and I planned to get over to Van Isle that nite, so I did not tarp down the load. But my plans came to grief when I got near Tacoma around dark, and found out that I had no lites on the boat trailer. Every time I put in a new fuse it blew as soon as I touched the brake pedal. Too dangerous to drive on I-5 thru Seattle without trailer lites at nite, so I slept in the car at a gas station. Spectacular display here – when I heard deep boom-boom-booms in the distance. Looking N I could see red balls angling out of the sky at 45 degrees, then disappearing below the trees. A couple seconds later would come the sound of explosions? What is this – meteors? Is the US getting attacked by Canada? No – this is Ft. Lewis, where they do this all the time. Target practice for attack helicopters, which were so far away I could not hear their rotors, and so high they were above the low clouds. They are getting experience firing rockets at ground targets, prior to getting sent over to kill Muslims on the other side of the world.

At dawn I tried getting past Seattle before the rush hour madness, but it started to rain. Had to pull off and tarp down the load in the boat. Later that morn I pulled into another rest stop to test my ropes and lites. There was a big cedar stump there. I like big trees.



Finally made it over to Van Isle that afternoon, and unloaded my stuff. Home at last!

But still homeless and crashing on friends couches. The rest of July was spent getting re-located, re-immigrated, and re-connected. And re-laxing after a hectic year and a half. I finally found a nice little place for me. Part of a new house in Nanaimo, where I can sleep, wash, cook and eat. Cheap and handy, with safe off-street parking for the Bullship. It is just S of downtown, and I can even see the ocean, (Nanaimo R. estuary) from my porch.





Did not have much time to fish so far this summer, but I got out a few times. My new apt is centrally located - 5 bass lakes around Nanaimo within a half hour drive. Only an hour drive up to Spider Lake to the N, and an hour and a half to the bass lakes around Victoria.

Here are a few pix from Matheson Lake west of Victoria.





I got out to Elk Lake in Victoria a couple times for the dawn bite. Fishing was slow, but not hopeless. Thick weeds along shore are driving most of the bass out into deeper water. Here is a big July SM that crushed aq buzzbait.



Later that morn I was dragging a black yum worm deep - about 15 - 18 ft - and lost a huge fish near the boat. Later caught a smaller one, a doubleheader with another local guy who was fishing next to me. We were both dragging worms deep, and hooked fish almost simultaneously. He had a scale and weighed his fish at 3 lbs 9 oz. So I brought mine over and he weighed it (this pic) at 4 lbs 2 oz.


He said he caught one on this spot a few days previous that weighed over 6.


August, 2011

I also did a lot of work on the Bullship in July, including buying and installing a new sounder. As any fan of Basstravaganza 2010 can tell you, the Boatel (V 1.0) was brought online last spring.

PIC

Obviously the work of a brilliant genius, the boatel was an economy answer to accommodation for wandering bass fishermen. Set up the boatel and sleep in the boat. Although I slept in the boat a number of times across Idaho and Wyoming I never did assemble the boatel and sleep inside the frame. Too complicated, and too much work at the end of a long day of fishing when the mosquitos are swarming outside. Like the first versions of the A-4 rocket developed by the Nazis, V 1.0 of the boatel was created by the mind of an inspired genius, but it was too damn complicated. Pynchon describes the insane complexity of the first versions of the A-4. Even if they worked, which was seldom, they were not what the SS needed – something simple, dependable, that could be used to kill people.

After a long winter of contemplation I realized that there is a much simpler solution to the boatel concept. A few pieces of plywood, cleverly cut to fit across the gaps between the seats in the Bullship, creates a solid platform or floor. And then you can set your tent up right inside the boat! (Please do not clutter up the blog with thousands of responses like: “Wow, you are a genius.” or “I stand in awe at the visionary power of your intellect.” I already know that stuff.) So here is the prototype of the Boatel V 2.1:


Now it is time to test my invention, so I head over to the W coast. Other than a quick few hour trip a year ago I have not been out on Kennedy Lake for years. Biggest lake on Van Isle. Only a few meters above sea level, so very easy for salmon and sea-trout to migrate in and out from the ocean. Receives some of the highest rainfall amounts anywhere in Canada, often over half a foot per day, and all flows out thru one gap to the ocean. So the lake itself rises during repeated floods every winter, and hi water is more than 4 meters above low water. The entire lake used to be full of driftwood, thousands of full, old-growth trees that had washed down into the lake.

In the late 1970s I spent a summer “salvaging” shake blocks by cutting into the big driftwood cedars with my chainsaw and gutting the big logs for “cream” wood. Later a small industry developed on the lake for a few years, and people drove skidders around the shore harvesting the big drift logs. Hundreds, maybe thousands of logging trucks were loaded to haul the wood away. Although the bog logs are mostly gone now, the shoreline is still littered with billions of small logs, chunks and branches. I want to go over to one of my old favorite spots, “A” Creek, where I cut tons of shake blocks years ago, and where there was a big spirit cedar I used as a hangout. Also one of the best spots in the lake to fish for trout.

Although it is located minutes away from the tourist madness of Tofino, as expected I am the only boat on the lake when I launch,


This biggest and perhaps most beautiful off all lakes on the island is devoid of jet skis, water skiers, and fisherman. In fact, other than a few beaches along the highway, it almost never sees a human any more. A big drift log that washed down the river is grounded in about 15 meters of water near Laylee Island. The top is broken off, and over the years a little ecosystem has grown up on the stub of trunk that pokes above the lake.


First bushes and grass, and now even runted trees are living out their lives on this tiny little world.



You can even see a birds nest in the grass - probably a gull.

When the clearcutting frenzy was occurring on Van Isle in the late 20th century they logged off huge swaths around the lake. In places the loggers would leave a fringe of a few trees standing along shore. Many of these ancient old veterans are still standing. A block of about a square mile was cut behind “A” beach in the 1980’s. The 2nd growth is getting tall already, but is still dwarfed by the skeletons of the big old trees left along the beach.


These trees are not dead. Cedars, especially in windy nasty spots like shorelines, will have their main stem die off, only to send up another spire from a side branch, that also dies off, but is followed by another stem that reaches to the sky and dies off. The result is the classic west-coast “cathedral top” cedar. Largely dead, but still carrying lots of green branches. Trunk rotten and hollow. (Cedars are unusual among trees in that they almost always rot from the inside out.) And very very old.

This is not a clump of trees – just many cathedral tops growing off 2 trunks, that could well be over 1,000 years old.


The big “campsite” cedar I am looking for is a short hike from the water now in August. But in February after a week of driving rain its base is surrounded by a flooded lake, and rafts of driftwood logs and chunks bashing around in the storm waves. “A” beach is very different than I remembered it. Used to be lots of open gravel and sand, with low brush here and there. But now that the thousands of big drift logs have been taken away there seems to be much less disturbance on this beach, and the vegetation is coming back. At first I can’t find the big tree. Did it fall down over the decades? Used to be able to run around this beach, but now the bush is taller than my head. I finally find my spot, and the big tree is still there. Winter floods have pushed a pile of driftwood into the hollow base. My old campsite is returning to forest. Cannot let this happen.




This is one of few trees in the world where you can set your tent up INSIDE the tree, and I want to do this tonite. One drift log is too heavy for me to move, so I start s fire about a meter from the end. If I burn the end off I may be able to move it out of the tree cave to make room for my tent.



The little clearing in front of the tree is growing up in bulrushes, so I find a round heavy short drift log and use it like a steamroller to create a “lawn” in from of my new home. By late afternoon I have burned the end off the problem log, and I can then shove it out of the hollow cedar trunk to make room for my tent.




A nasty westerly blows up in the afternoon, so I cancel fishing plans and just sit around near my campfire, working on clearing out my old spot, and thinking about old times.

Next morn I get up early and rebuild the fire. Still need to clear some big chunks of driftwood away from my front yard.


I fish hard all around the reed bed at “A” beach. This area is often loaded with sea-run cutthroat trout, but they are conspicuous by their absence today. I hook one big one, about 18”, off the end of the bar. One jump and it is gone. Otherwise no hits. Later that morn I put on my neoprene waders mask & snorkel, and swim all around the reed bed. The shallows in Kennedy Lake used to be swarming with small fish. Dace minnows, juvenile cohos, bullheads, small trout. But today I see not a single fish. And the water is very clear, probably 6 meter vis. Is there no plankton in this lake any more?

Smoke from my campfire drifts around the big cedars on shore.


In the afternoon I head across to the hwy side, and drift back to the boat launch. Fishing is better here, and I get into 4 or 5 nice cutts. Not as big as the one I lost this morn.

I tie the Bullship to shore near the boat launch and drive back into town.


Tonite is the christening of the Boatel (V 2.1), and I need to celebrate. So I buy a mickey of Capt Morgan run in Ukee, and head back to the lake. Get back to the campsite just before dark and rebuild my campfire. Low cloud is forming on the mountains across on the hwy side of the lake, as the air cools, and the humidity rises from 99 to 100 percent.



Set up the flooring and then move the tent from the big cedar into the Bullship.


Voila! Luxury accommodation in the heart of the Clayoquat wilderness. Tonite there are thousands of tourists paying huge bucks to sleep in identical sardine can motel rooms within 15 miles of me. But I have the entire lake to myself, and probably not another human within 2 miles of me tonite. I sip rum by the campfire before heading off to the boatel, anchored in the drizzle at the creek mouth. Fade off into sleep with the gentle rocking of the boatel and rhythmic slapping of the wavelets against the hull.

Next morn, early – very early. The boatel is a success. I am still alive, and still afloat. And the boatel vision – like the IKN – is still a shining star on the horizon.

One thing I had not taken into account in V 2.1: In my attempt to maximize simplicity I did not include a bathroom in the plans for the boatel. Need to bring a pee bottle along next time. At the first grey of hope in the morn I unzip the tent and look out. Even tho I am expecting it I must say it is a shock to look out of your tent flap and see nothing but water. The Bullship is very stable in the stern where it is wide, but very tippy in the bow where it is not. I manage to pee over the side, and then try to crawl back into the tent, where the zipper is open on the R side. As I am trying to stumble back into the tent in the near dark I slip. Nothing to grab onto here! And the boat is tilting ominously to the side. I lose my balance as the boat rolls, and suddenly … Man Overboard!

Item #1 in future boatel user manual: Do not fall out of the boat!

Next thing I know I am flat on my back underwater. Lucky for me I anticipated problems in the first test of the boatel, so I anchored in 2 ft of water. Also lucky for me that there is no one around to see what an asshole I am. No early morning trout fishing today. Must rebuild the big campfire in a hurry, take off my wet clothes and change into dry. Then finish off the rest of the mickey for breakfast beside a roaring fire.


The boatel looks just as noble and splendid in the morn as it did last nite. Kennedy Lake Hilton.



Today is calm and drizzly. Much better weather for trout fishing than yesterday’s sun. I load up my gear and head out. Out in the flats off “A” beach I hook into a few nice cutts. All get off. OK with me, I am using a single barbless spinner. Then I head back across the lake to the hwy side. Today I am getting into fish all along shore, especially near Thunderass Creek mouth (This is the old logger’s name for the creek, now extinct like most of the loggers. In deference to political correctness, the sign on the hwy now says Thunderous Creek.), the next little creek down the shore where I hook a big cutt, at least 18”, makes one sizzling run and catapult leap and shakes off.

Later I land a nice trout that has gulped the spinner deep into its throat. Don’t want to mutilate the fish, and I want to keep one for dinner, so this is it. A beauty 13 inch Kennedy Lake cutt.



These are beautiful fish, freshly returned from the ocean, waiting in the lake for the impending runs of sockeye and coho, upon whose eggs they will gorge. If these sea-run cutts are not the finest tasting trout in the world I would like to find one that is better. Bright pink/orange meat.


By noon I am loaded back out, and off to Port Alberni and civilization.

Aug 15

I go down to fish Shawningan Lake with Mike C. One of the great Van Isle SM lakes, and I have hardly fished it this year. We start in late afternoon and the fishing is OK, with a couple pushing 18".



In spite of the speedboat traffic we manage to get a few on buzzbaits in the evening. Gotta luv those smashing late evening buzzer hits!


Aug 17

Went out to a local Nanaimo Lake at midnite. I have been wanting to try the nite bite, and the recent full moon is fast waning. Takes me a while, but I locate a pack of meanass surface-busting smallies. Crushing surface hits, spectacular high jump leaps in the moonlite, I love nite fishing.


4 big fish on 6 casts, the 2 biggest get away beside the boat. The lake is on fire!


So I quit and go home without making another cast. I will rig up seriously for nite fishing, and come back tomorrow.

But when I go back at 11 PM the next nite the bite is not happening. I get a few smaller fish at first, and then not another bite from midnite till 2 AM, when I give up. Go figure.
Aug 20

I tried Quennel Lake, where I have hardly been this year. Fishing was slow when I was there earlier. The lake is down in late summer, so the only public access is a swampy mudhole. Nobody fishing here today, unlike in spring when it was packed with fishers. I start with a buzzbait before dawn - no hits. Then switch to a buzz frog, which DOES get bit.


The frog bite continues until the sun pokes above the horizon. Then I switch to black yum worm. I fish until 9:30 AM, and land 6 fish over 17" - the best day I have ever had here.


The fish are dark here, like the stainede water they live in. Biggest one is 19".

And I am back home making coffee before 10 AM.


Aug 23

Got tired of those 18-19" dinkers at Quennel, so I went down to Victoria to fish with Mike C. Got skunked early at Langford Lake, so we migrated over to Elk. Fishing was not fast but we stuck some good ones dragging worms deep and slow. 

Tank smallie beside the boat.


Ridiculous to catch 3 fish of 20" or more in the middle of a hot August afternoon, here in the Capitol Regional District (population 400K), right next to a screaming busy 4 lane hwy. But we did. 


Mike C with a pig

Notice the huge 7" worm I am throwing - like a small black Ukranian sausage.


You are technichally supposed to measure fish from the tip of the lower jaw (fully extended) to the fork of the tail. In which case this must be the heaviest 18" SM ever. But if the otter had not taken a bite out of its tail it would likely be over 20".

3 x 20" smallies on a hot August afternoon.

Aug 27

Went out with a variety of frogs to try the dawn bite at Quennel. Not much happening on the surface, but I got my biggest ever Quennel fish on a worm.


Amor de Cosmos

Bill Smith joined the Mormons and left Nova Scotia in 1840, moving to Iowa and then on to California to join the gold rush. In Oroville, CA, he legally changed his name to Amor de Cosmos - “lover of the universe”. In 1858 he moved to Victoria, capitol city of the British colony of Vancouver Island. The city – with a population of 300 the previous year - was booming after gold was discovered in the Fraser River. De Cosmos founded a newspaper, the Daily British Colonist, which still exists in the form of the Victoria Times – Colonist. When Van Isle joined with the mainland colony of New Caledonia in 1870, de Cosmos was elected as the second premier of the new province. He was instrumental in promoting the merger of colonies to create the new province of BC, the completion of the Canadian transcontinental railroad, and the merger of BC into the young country called Canada. In his honor a watershed in E central Van Isle has been named after him – Amor de Cosmos Creek – along with its main headwaters lake. When I first moved to BC in 1970 I spent the summer living on the beach at Wreck Bay on the W coast of the island. The next summer a few friends I had met at Wreck Bay the previous year came back for a visit, and we went on a trout fishing trip that took us into the AdC watershed. I remember parts of the trip clearly, even tho it happened 40 years ago. Am I that old?

We had no boat, but we a hatchet. And we hated the logging companies that were annihilating the towering old growth rainforest by mega-clearcutting. Like most good timber land on Van Isle, the AdC watershed had been allocated in perpetuity to giant logging companies in the form of Tree Farm Licenses – like handing over most of Iowa to Monsanto as a Corn Farm License. And the biggest and baddest multinational of them all (at that time – now extinct) was MacMillan and Bloedel, who had a big sign made of a 4' x 8' sheet of 3/4” plywood erected on posts along the logging mainline road, announcing that you were entering Tree Farm 29, or what ever it was. We chopped the sign down with our hatchet, pried the plywood sheet off, and took it with us into the woods.

The AdC watershed is unusual for coastal BC in that the land is usually not steep slopes running off huge mountains. Instead it is low and rolling, with many little lakes nestled among the hills. We carried the plywood in to a lake, chopped down a few little pine snags with our hatchet, dragged them down into the lake, and used to spikes from the sign to nail the plywood onto the poles. Voila – we had a raft! Not quite the serious fishing machine that the Bullship III is, but we could pole ourselves around out on the lake. We paddled across one lake, disassembled the raft, carried the parts over a hill, and rebuilt it on a second lake. That's the way it is in AdC land – lakes everywhere. I remember very clearly that we were catching lots of nice native cutthroat trout casting fry flies off the raft. That was the first time I ever caught trout on a dry fly.

I have never been back since. Can't even remember exactly which lakes we fished or roads we took. Don't know if the roads still exist, or if the public is allowed in to the area. So I decided to take the Bullship Boatel up to AdC land to explore the land of my old memories. Must first drive up island to Campbell River, about 1 ½ hrs from Nanaimo, where the freeway ends, then take Hwy 19 NW another 20 minutes or so, past Seymour Narrows. This is where the famous Inside Passage around Van Isle is compressed between the main island and Quadra Island to the E into a narrow channel full of raging tide rips and criss-crossed by sport fishing boats, commercial fishing boats, giant ferries and Alaska cruise ships, tugs towing log barges and log booms.

Seymour Narrows (in the distance)

A busy place for boats.

Right in the middle of it all used to be Ripple Rock.


So. They decided to blow up Ripple Rock. People in BC are used tot being confronted by huge walls of rock and enormous trees, so they have become good at blowing stuff up.


 
For many years the demolition of Ripple Rock was listed as the largest non-nuclear explosion in history, but I doubt that this is still true.


Soon I see a sign for the Blackwater Main logging road. I have already made JPG screen captures from Google earth, and saved PDF images of maps showing roads and lakes and streams, so I stop and check my little computer as I head down the road. The road is not bad for a boat & trailer if I go slow, up to 30K. The remaining old growth timber is all logged off now, and the forest is growing back as dense, tall second growth. Soon I come upon Mud Lake, and the Edhaus School which is beside it. In 1971 this was a prison – a youth detention center. There is a story from 1971 about the old prison gate on the road to the AdC lakes that I will not tell here in the blogoshpere. Past the school to road gets bumpier – used only by loggers and hunter/fishermen past here – but is still reasonably well graded. Only moments past the school I come upon a Cedar Lake visible thru the trees.


 The map shows the main road skirting the lake, but I soon come upon a fork, and a pickup with camper the other way. We squeeze by each other, and stop to talk. He says he has not been in here since 1975. “Well, I have not been in here since 1971!” He says the old Blackwater Main was de-activated when the took out the bridge below Farewell Lake. But if you keep driving down the old mainline you come to nice campsites at Cedar Lake.

And he is right! There are 2 beautiful campsites beside the lake. Free! The kind you hardly see in N America any more. There is no boat launch here, but it is easy access to launch a pontoon or cartopper. I toy with the idea of finagling the Bullship into the lake and decide not. Instead I park beside the road at the lake outlet, launch the pontoon, and relax.



 
There is nothing rising on the lake. In the evening I go for a paddle in the pontoon. Beautiful lake, clear green water, lots of weed beds. Looks very fishy, and the 2 other tourists I have met tell me it is a very good lake for cutts. But they must all be holding in the deeps right now during the dog days of August. I camp in my tent, and go for a larger excursion the next morn. The outlet of this lake was raised a few feet when the built a logging road across it. This flooded the timber around the edge of the lake, so there are lots of snags and drift logs. A superb lake with wonderful free waterfront campsites!

Before leaving I drive further down the old Blackwater Main. About 1K further along you come to Muskeg Lake, where there is a trail (86 paces) to carry a boat in.


Then a couple more Ks and you come to Farewell Lake. Used to be a road across Amor dC Creek here where it flows out of the lake. But the bridge rotted out and the mainline road was shifted over to the E. I think this road may continue back out to the hwy. Must check some day. Anyway, Farewell is another fishy looking lake (there were even some rises here.) right beside the road. There is a beautiful picinic site beside the lake, but no level ground here to pitch a tent on.


Then I hitch back up to the Bullship and head back out onto the new mainline. Want to find the Chain Lakes, which I think is where we might have fished so long ago. (Turns out I was wrong.) Further down the new Blackwater Main, at the 6K sign, is an old road leading off into the woods. Looks like, and is, the old Blackwater Main. Can't haul the Bullship down this old pair of ruts, so I unhitch and head on. There is a pullout, and I can walk down to some water. This is the very top end of Blackwater Lake.

Top end Blackwater Lake, looking upstream

Looking down to main lake
Further on is a little side road that my map tells me should lead in to the Chain Lakes. Suddenly it ends in a concrete ba rrier, and I get out to look around. I had totally forgotten that I still had the pontoon on top the car. Happned to stop right where I did. One more second and I would have destroyed the pontoon boat.


I thank Allah, Jesus, and Zorgon, god of the forest gnomes, for my good fortune. The old logging road is just a trail from here on.


The old road is still clear enough to allow you to carry a canoe, or even a pontoon. After a 10 minute walk you come to the Chain Lakes.


These are a cluster of small lakes, little jewels scattered among the 2nd growth, probably chock full of wild native cutthroat, maybe never stocked with hatchery fish, and seldom fished by anglers nowadays. Must get in here some time with the pontoon and camping gear!  The first lake connects thru a little channel into a larger pond to the E.


Another minutes walk brings you to the 2nd lake.



Gorgeous spot, but I have a boatel along, and I want to use it. Back out to the mainline, which soon runs along beside the Blackwater Lake. There is a beautiful sand campsite here. This is where we assembled our M&B raft years ago.


Lots of freshwater mussels in the bottom of this clear (not black!) water lake. One of the great unanswered mysteries of the universe is why most bivalve molluscs are content to stay in one spot, like the large clusters of mussels in this lake, while an odd few are overtaken by wanderlust and go meandering on long aimless explorations thru the slime and bottom muck. What are they seeking, while there comrades sit rooted into complacency? Are they trying to find some long lost trout fishing lake?


Wandering bivalve. You can see its trail, and the top of the shell protruding from the mud.


I picked the mussel out, had it pose for a pic, and watched it burrow back in.

 
On now to the big lake, named after the big guy himself. Amor de Cosmos Lake flows out into AdC Creek thru a shallow channel, and there is a good boat launch at the end. There is a great free campsite here too, if you are a member of that lowly landlubbing class who do not enjoy the luxury of owning a boatel. Soon I have the Bullship, loaded with the boatel, in the water.


Out onto the lake. This lake is very clear, and has many arms. It was used to transport and store logs in the old days, so be careful speeding around in a boat. Don't run into one of those many deadheads!



Out into the main lake and about 2K down to the S end there is a pretty little beach. This is the Mr Canoehead Recreation Site.
 

(For those Basstravaganza readers who are not Canadian, Mr Canoehead is a famous Canadian superhero. Had the misfortune, while on a long portage in N Ontario, of getting hit by a bolt of lighting that welded his 17 ft Grumman aluminum canoe directly onto his skull. Which is an advantage in certain circumstances – like when a villain is trying to hit you on the head – but a disadvantage in others – like when you try to turn around in a department store. Crash!) Anyway, there is a nice (FREE!) campsite here made from chainsaw milled trees.
 

A trail leads on 2 minute walk to – SURPRISE! - another lake. The other lake is called Surprise Lake, and it has an even nicer campground, with wooden platforms to pitch your tent on.
 

I continue on exploring around the lake. On the E side are a cluster of little islets. After the retreat of the most recent Ice Age the little islands, with their stunted and runted trees and bushes, were home to the zorzonians – a race of tiny forest gnomes who were only about 10 cm (about 3 ½ “) tall. Nowadays the Comox Paddlers have developed tasteful (FREE!) campsites on a number of islets. Complete with tent sites, fire pits, fish cleaning stations and toilet pits.

"My" islet is on the left.


I pick out a nice island and dump off my stuff, then gather some driftwood for a fire.


Then start throwing a roostertail spinner around. I catch a nice 12” cutt right away. Gets off just as I am taking its pic. Then never get another bite. I explore around most of the lake. Looks superb for trout – many gravelly points, rock humps, deep weedbeds and dropoffs. But the cutties, RBs, dolly vardens and kokanees that are supposed to live here are conspicuous by their absence.

On the trail in to Chain Lakes I found a few chanterelle mushrooms. All the other food I have with me is a half stick of pepperoni and a bag of ramen noodles. So I slowly sautee the sausage and shrooms over the campfire. Yum!
 

Time to set up the boatel. This time I assemble everything in the boat, on the water, just for practice. Never know, I may have to do this in for real some day, as darkness is falling in the Amazon, or under NATO attack in some oil-rich country, or under attack from mosquitos on the Wisconsin R.


Time for dinner and then a luxurious night of spendor in the boatel.


And this time, I do NOT fall into the lake when I get up the next morn.

PS: Notice that the boatel concept has already been stolen and usurped for the enjoyment of the idle rich globalist elite:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2028454/London-2012-Olympics-Boat-hotel-hoisted-Thames.html