Henry's Fork. We went up to Island Park basically on a whim, and it was cold and pouring down rain. There was virtually no one around. Gorgeous place to fish. I got a recommendation to try the Buffalo River right near there but we got turned around and couldn't find it.
South Fork of the Snake River. I got a guide and a full day float. I'm definitely fishing this river again one day. Definitely recommend checking it out.
Any of the alpine lakes. My wife is not an angler but loves hiking, so I packed a rod on our hikes. I believe many of these fish are stocked but some are wild. Either way, it's an interesting challenge catching fish in water that is so clear it almost looks invisible.
Definitely want to go back, especially to target some of the smaller streams with less pressure. The one big recommendation I'd have is thinking about late August/early September, which is when there are fewer folks out. The weather for us was still in the 60s to low 80s. It's tricky--a week or two after we came home, they got snow.
On Tuesday, July 30, 2019 at 4:48:11 PM UTC-4 r...@robsnowhite.com wrote:
We have friends on Lake Pend Oreille. I was dropped off at some random tributary of the lake while the others hiked. I found cutthroat in the lower stretches (none had any remarkable size). I fished upstream and with no particular change in scenery or topography the cutthroat were gone and were replaced by gigantic bull trout. I've never come across a more aggressive salmonid which is probably why no cuts were up there. One of the best days I've ever had fishing. Foam terrestrials for cuts, big streamers for the bulls.Hopefully you find something similar.Rob Snowhite
North Fork Coeur d'Alene. Premium cutty water, they are not the smartest or the most technical fish, but wicked fun with big terrestrials mid summer. I was there last July, was a good time, but it was 90 degrees and the water was really really skinny. The surrounding areas are very pretty, lots of tribs and feeder creeks and there is public land surrounding the river for amazing riverside camping.
On Monday, July 29, 2019 at 8:58:43 PM UTC-4, Carl wrote:There's always the Henry's fork, but I try to avoid the crowds.I recommend getting a Delorme Topo Atlas and rent a 4wd vehicle and just try them all. It depends on where you want to fly into and what area you want to fish.
The big names like Silver Creek and the Henry's fork are neat, but I prefer finding a mountain stream and just getting out there. There are miles and miles of accessible water.Carl--Carl ZmolaOn Sat, Jul 20, 2019 at 3:06 PM abbie mcmullen <abbie....@gmail.com> wrote:I have been reading a LOT on Idaho recently. Has anyone fished there? What river has been your favorite? Particularly for DIY wade fishing??
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