hey man is there an easy way to tell which rock creek is which? It’s such a generic name it seems there are several rock creeks all in different parts of oregonrogerdodger said:On the coast, NW & SW zones, they don't clip hatchery rainbows, no need in these zones. All steelhead smolt are clipped.
Also, double check the regs for the Rock creeks in NW zone, 2 are closed to fishing during part of the year, probably to protect steelhead smolt.
I was thanking that also - lots of spotsrogerdodger said:also, that looks like a cutthroat, you can tell for sure by running your finger over the tongue- coastal cutthroats have little teeth on their tongue.
I caught this one on a blue fox hot pink in-line spinner. #2troutdude said:@TerribleFisherman12 nicely done! Congrats!
If, btw, you were indeed fishing in the Rock Creek system (main stem, Big, or Little Rock Creeks)...there's a decent run of Bluebacks (sea run cutthroat). But most of them, by now, will be found just below the hatchery markers on Logsden road. The hatchery was closed down many years ago.
Sidebar: There's also a good run of silvers in that creek too. Which will kick into action when the rains come. Secret: hot pink Rooster Tails for those. ;-)
Yes; I noticed that. Bluebacks also like small brown Rooster Tails too, with a brass blade. Because they mimic crawdad fry, which they gorge on in freshwater.TerribleFisherman12 said:I caught this one on a blue fox hot pink in-line spinner. #2
Thank you, i bet that brown would work great because I saw tons of crawfish when I could still see into the watertroutdude said:Yes; I noticed that. Bluebacks also like small brown Rooster Tails too, with a brass blade. Because they mimic crawdad fry, which they gorge on in freshwater.
White tips on fins indicates rainbow or hybrid.rogerdodger said:also, that looks like a cutthroat, you can tell for sure by running your finger over the tongue- coastal cutthroats have little teeth on their tongue.