8.19.2012

DEAN RIVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA 2012

British Columbia's Best Steelhead Fishing

It has been just over a week since I returned from hosting a trip to the Dean River in British Columbia. The thrill of the trip has not yet worn off, and I doubt it will for months to come. My batteries have been completely recharged and I am ready for the long steelhead season on the Deschutes – which is already in full swing.

Dean River - British Colombia
Dean River - A Steelheader's Paradise

An Overview Of The Dean River, British Columbia

The Dean River is a magical place - it is a place where you might have the honor of hooking the most spectacular steelhead ever to grace the end of your fly line. It is a place where, not too many years ago, the steelhead fishing went from epic to very difficult. Anglers who had been faithfully making a pilgrimage to the Dean for dozens of years suddenly found it a challenge to hook one or two steelhead for the week. Many anglers dropped off the “Dean’s list” forfeiting their reservations for one of the few spots in a lodge, declaring “The Dean is dead!” But those who made such declarations forgot one important thing about steelhead – they are damn hard to kill off. In our backyard, the Columbia River basin, we have thrown many a wrench into the machinery that makes up the life-cycle of the steelhead.  Dams, clear cut logging on steelhead spawning tributaries, commercial netting,  industrial pollution, more dams, hatchery fish with inferior genetics commingling with wild stock, regulations which allow bait fishing and treble barbed hooks, tribal netting, overgrazing and riparian destruction, more dams yet our wild steelhead have survived. In some years, mostly due to good ocean conditions, they have even thrived. The Dean fish have obstacles to overcome too, some introduced by nature, and many introduced by man, but they have cycled through the bad times and are far from dead (as previously declared) – they are very, very much alive.



Dean River Lodge - Moose Lake Lodge - British Columbia

I have been fortunate to book six guided spots on the Dean for the first week of August at Blackwell’s Lodge.  We fish the lower 3 miles of the Dean, from the canyon to the confluence with saltwater, and share this stretch with only a few other anglers. The Blackwell guides, Steve Morrow and April Vokey, make their hard work seem effortless, and give us, the anglers, a fantastic experience on the water.   They are there with a camera if we want a grip and grin, but they also sense when we need some space and some time to be one with the river and the surroundings. The lodge staff, Diana and Dana (April’s sister), make all the meals memorable and the atmosphere light and happy.  Justin Blackwell entertains us in the evenings with stories of bush flying in the Canadian outback, and amazes us with his ability to fix everything from generators, to toilets, to wi-fi systems and satellite phones. The lodge and cabins sit on a perch overlooking the saltwater fiord known as the Dean River Channel, and we enjoy cool breezes and the call of the loon in the evening and early morning when we are not on the river fishing. Lodge dogs scare away stray bears that get too close to the grounds and are excellent tail-wagging escorts to and fro from the lodge to the cabins.



Blackwell's Lodge on the Dean River
Blackwell's Dean River Lodge 

Fly Fishing Conditions On The Dean River

Our week was spectacular, conditions were perfect, and the steelhead were happy.  To me, a perfect steelhead trip is one which offers each and every angler on the trip some good opportunities to hook steelhead, some steelhead on the end of the line, adrenaline surges and a feeling of helplessness on at least a couple of fish, and I always hope for everyone to have a chance to look a steelhead directly in the eye for just a moment before allowing it to continue its journey. Hooking huge numbers of fish is not part of my recipe for a perfect trip, nor is landing every fish we hook. This may sound odd to some of you, but I feel that steelhead are a special fish because they are not easy to hook. They are special because they are a fish of 1000 casts. They are special because finding one is like finding a needle in a haystack.


The banks of the Dean River
Enjoying a day on the banks of the Dean River




April Vokey - Amy Hazel
Dean River Guide April Vokey - Deschutes Angler Fly Shop owner Amy Hazel


Beautiful Dean River Steelhead
Peter Heitman's Amazing Dean River Steelhead


The Dean River Steelhead

The needles that we coaxed from the haystack were absolutely spectacular!! Peter Heitman from Colorado landed a steelhead that measured over 40” and was the largest steelhead the guide had seen landed during his season. This fish may have weighed in excess of 25 lbs. – but it was photographed and released without a scale or a tape measure. The health of the fish should always come first. I landed one on the first day that went 36” by the tape, which I was able to use while the fish rested in the current in a net. Many fish in the 12-16 lb range were brought to hand and many others gave us the fin in mid air as they cartwheeled down the river after spitting the fly, straightening the hook, or taking our tippet and fly. Everyone got their butts kicked – everyone. When hearing the disappointment in one angler’s voice about the one that got away, I said, “You didn’t come to the Dean River to LAND fish did you? I thought you came here for an ass whuppin! If you want to LAND every fish you hook then you should be fishing for Bluegill” (I mean no offense to Bluegill by bringing their names into this – you are beautiful fish, the fish  of my childhood in Minnesota, the fish that made me fall in love with sight fishing – I love you, Bluegill! 


Peter Heitman Glowing Chrome!
Bob Thacker Showing Off  A Beauty

Amy Hazel with a Dean River Steelhead
Amy Hazel of Deschutes Angler Fly Shop hooking into Dean River Steel

Dean River Steelhead
Gorgeous chrome Dean River Steelhead


There were days on the Dean where each angler in my group hooked multiple steelhead and there were days which yielded zero steelhead to some anglers, including me on day three.  I actually respect the fishery more for giving me a blank day now and then because that is, to me, a real steelhead experience – having to work for the fish you hook.


Amy Hazel with 20lbs. of Dean River Chrome
Amy Hazel with 18lbs. of Dean River Chrome

Trophy Dean River Steelhead
Amy Hazel with a Trophy Dean River Steelhead

One morning a particular spot yielded four steelhead to my flies in a matter of an hour. These were flies that I had designed for the trip, that I had tied in the dark winter with Dean dreams in my head, that had never before been swung past a steelhead, that had no names and that (by my own rule) could not be given a name until fooling a steelhead. When our guide came up river with another angler from our group, I waved him over to put that angler in my run and I sat back to watch him hook a few more out of the pool. I took photos, I walked along the river, I sat on a log, and I breathed it all in. I named a couple of my flies from that morning’s success. When I climbed into the float plane at the end of the week, I had completely recharged my batteries.

All five of my guys who fished the Dean with me last year have expressed a desire to return to the river next year. My waiting list for an open spot is eight anglers long and growing.  Making the Dean’s List could require a wait of several years, but the first steelhead you hook will make it worth the wait.