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Rock Creek

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map_region_western.gifRock creek  - Big Enough to Float Fish!


Overview below map

Regional Fly Shops



Rock Creek is probably the most famous creek in western Montana. It is a 20-minute drive from Missoula, traveling east on Interstate 90.   It is included in the River section, as it is floatable in the spring and into early summer.

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Rock Creek By Mark E. Jones


Allow your mind to conjure up a classic, free flowing trout stream located in the Rocky Mountains of western Montana, and you will have created a mental image of Rock Creek. Rock Creek is located approximately 25 miles east of Missoula, Montana where, after flowing through fifty miles of mostly national forest service lands, it enters the Clark Fork River. It remains one of the true "Blue Ribbon" fisheries of the West, supporting large populations of browns and cutthroats. (Note: Whirling disease has impacted the rainbow population, but they are still present in the system.)W-Rock-Angler.jpg

Rock Creek is a mostly free flowing, classic Western trout water. Although Rock Creek is open year around, and provides some excellent angling opportunities before high water, the fishing season typically commences with the salmon fly hatch in late May or early June.

The salmon fly hatch on Rock Creek is somewhat more predictable than many Western rivers, and the angler arriving on the creek during the second or third week of June will have the opportunity to present large salmon fly imitations (size, 2,4 or 6) to hungry fish. Because of the high water, the same angler will also encounter difficult wading conditions and may find themselves competing for the relatively few wadable areas with other bank anglers. However, if you are a strong wader and not opposed to a day of slipping and sliding, June fishing on Rock Creek can be productive. During these high flows, fishing from a well equipped raft is far more productive. This success is attributable to the float fishing angler's ability to access all available holding water with long, drag free floats.  Commerical outfitters and private floating is permitted until July 1, at which time all fishing from boats is prohibited.

As June gives way to July and August, Rock Creek quickly recedes and becomes more "wader friendly." The boats are gone, and at this time one can expect to encounter large golden stone flies intermingled with assorted mayflies and caddis. The hectic pace of fishing the salmon fly hatch quiets and gives way to the more typical attempt to match the hatch. Rock Creek trout are easily fooled, and the lower water defines the obvious holding water.

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A few special words are required about the spruce moth fishing in August. Generally, in early August, Rock Creek provides some incredible morning fishing to the angler using any reasonable light colored, down-winged imitation. Any size 12 elk hair caddis will do. Depending on the day, the fishing will commence early and continue until 10:30 or 11:00 am. Then, the bugs simply disappear and the fish take up their more subtle forms of feeding.

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Fishing in September and October on Rock Creek is not as predictable as in the early summer months. For whatever reason, Rock Creek trout become more selective and difficult to catch. This is not to say that one cannot expect outstanding fishing, but only that the fall fishing does not match the incredible catch rate of early summer. During this time, the lower twelve miles provide opportunities for spawning brown trout, and sporadic may mayfly hatches are present. The upper reaches are most productively fished during the heat of the day with smaller mayfly offerings and any size stonefly nymph. Regardless of the time of year, Rock Creek will provide any angler with a picturesque setting and catchable trout.

Rock Creek is easily accessible and has numerous forest service campgrounds.

About the Author: Mark E. Jones guided the waters of western Montana for more than twenty years. He practices law in Missoula, Montana.


Campgrounds: Update summer 2010

Norton Campground: Follow Rock Creek Road 11 miles south of I-90 on Rock Creek Road. 10 campsites. Drinking water from hand pump. Toilet facilities.

Dalles Campground: 14.5 miles from I-90. 10 campsites. Drinking water from hand pump.
Harry's Flat Campground: 17 miles south from I-90. 18 campsites. Drinking water from hand pump.

Bitterroot Flat Campground: 23 miles from I-90. 15 campsites. Drinking water from hand pump.

Sira Campground: 28 miles from I-90. Four campsites. No drinking water.

 

ZugBug-MB.jpgNymphing on Rock Creek for Bigger and Better Returns

By Doug Persico

Western Montana fly fishers overwhelmingly rate Rock Creek as their favorite dry fly stream. Generating legendary hatches, this quintessential stream offers riffles, pools, long runs and deep holes. Best of all, it is the perfect size to wade and cast, especially to rising fish. Except for a fairly brief period in the spring during the spring runoff, the stream can be waded almost anywhere along its 50 odd miles, and it is almost never crowded compared to the more fabled waters of the Yellowstone Park area.

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However, if a fisherman were to consider Rock Creek as only a dry fly stream, he or she would be missing the best fishing opportunity Rock Creek has to offer. Rock Creek nymph fishing exceeds its reputation as a classic dry fly fishery. Nymphing produces consistently bigger fish and greater numbers of fish. Best of all, nymph fishing produces during those times when there is no dry fly fishing.

Techniques

Dead drifting a nymph on the bottom and fishing a nymph on or near the surface, either by itself or in tandem with another fly, are the two most productive methods of nymph fishing. Dead drifting simply means figuring out where the fish are holding on the bottom, weighting either the fly or the leader enough to get the fly down to where the fish are, and drifting the fly through the holding water until a fish takes it. Recognizing the take and setting the hook follow. Sounds simple, right? It is, until you consider such questions as, how do you know if you are deep enough, and how do you recognize the take.

The answer to the first question is easy. If you are getting hung up on the bottom and losing an occasional fly, you're deep enough. To answer the second question opens up one of the big debates currently in fly fishing -- are strike indicators nothing more than bobbers and an open acknowledgment that the fly fisher hasn't mastered his craft?

Most of my customers use strike indicators to recognize takes when dead drifting a nymph. Strike indicators are simply something the angler can see under any condition. They are attached to the leader far enough away from the fly so that they can be seen on the surface as the fly drifts on or near the bottom. The strike indicator telegraphs to the fisherman the fact that the nymph is no longer drifting. The angler must then quickly set the hook before the fish spits the fly out. Strike indicators are a valuable aid to increase productivity. As a fly shop owner, I make and sell indicators, and I consider them a valuable source of revenue for the shop.

The other method of nymphing used most often on Rock Creek is fishing a nymph unweighted either as a wet fly on the swing or as a trailer to a dry fly. To fish a nymph on the swing, simply cast across the current and start stripping line slowly in as the fly starts swinging below you. In most cases the fish will hook itself.

A technique that is becoming increasingly popular is to fish an emerger imitation in tandem with a dry fly during the hatches. A section of tippet is attached to the bend of a dry fly hook. The tippet section is from 16 to 18 inches long, and an emerger nymph is attached. The dry is drifted and catches fish in its own right as well as acts as a strike indicator for the trailing nymph. This method is proving itself deadly and increases in popularity every year.

Fly Patterns

Just as there are a number of techniques that work on Rock Creek, there are a number of patterns that seem to work well. Some patterns work well all the time, and some work best during a particular time of year. If I were limited to just one pattern and size of nymph to use on Rock Creek all year long, that pattern would be a size 10 Prince, with or without a bead head. For some reason known only to the trout, this pattern works any time of year. Other patterns will work better than a Prince at various times, but day in and day out during the entire year, a size 10 Prince will always produce fish.

During the winter the fish are not very active, but when the weather is warm and sunny enough, and there is no slush ice floating down the creek, a dark stonefly dead drifted through the deep holes can produce some big browns. I sell more Kauffman and Brookes' stoneflies in sizes 4 and 6 than all other patterns combined.

During the latter part of March, Skwala stoneflies and Western March Browns start to hatch. This is the time to dead drift smaller stone fly patterns for the Skwala and size 14 Pheasant Tails for the March Browns. It is also the time to trail a crippled March Brown emerger behind a dry fly. We have particularly good results sinking a Quigley Cripple in the surface film behind a size 14 Parachute Adams or even a size 10 Skwala Stimulator. For a lot of locals, this time of the year is their favorite. I know that this is my favorite time of year to fish dries on Rock Creek, as long as I can trail the emerging nymph behind them.

Once the Skwala and March Brown hatches are over, we begin the countdown to the Salmon Fly. This hatch is easily the best known in the state, since it occurs in a lot of our major streams. I consider Rock Creek's hatch to be at least as good as any in the state. However, to a dedicated nympher, the hatch itself is less important than the weeks preceding it. During this time there are caddis emerging. Dry attractor patterns are fooling some good trout, but the nymph fisherman knows that the major story is being told on the stream bottom where both the Salmon Fly and Golden Stone nymphs are preparing for their destiny.

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Both of these stonefly species hatch on land. When the time is right, the nymphs wiggle out of the water, split their cases, and emerge as adults from the cases and climb onto bushes near the stream banks, which is where they will spend the major part of their adult lives. Prior to this momentous event, the stonefly larva have been moving around the stream bottom. The trout, of course, are not indifferent to this movement since the larva of the various stoneflies is a major part of their diet. As the date for their hatching gets closer, the larva migrate closer to the stream bank. Finally, on the appointed day, out they come.

Not all stoneflies hatch on the same day. The hatch is progressive. It starts near the mouth of the creek and progresses several miles upstream from where the insects are actually hatching. I dead drift a big black nymph as close to the bank as I can get it. Anyway, I used to fish like that. Since opening a fly shop, my outings during the stonefly season have been few and far between. I have sold a lot of large black nymphs, however.

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After the stoneflies are done, Rock Creek settles into its summer pattern. The primary hatches are caddis and Pale Morning Duns. This is the premier time to fish emerging nymphs just under the surface, trailing behind a high floating dry. Sparkle Duns and Quigleys work extremely well for PMDs and Sparkle Pupas are devastating in the evenings as caddis imitations. For those anglers who like the bottom, Gold Ribbed Hares Ears, Pheasant Tails and the ever popular Prince, either with or without bead heads, will almost always take fish.

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As the season starts to wind down, the hatches change. Late August brings the Blue-Wing Olive and the beginning of the Giant Orange Caddis. Fishing the olives is pretty much like fishing the PMDs. Small Pheasant Tails do a good job on the bottom, and olive Sparkle Duns in the surface film can be killers.

But the real star of the fall on Rock Creek is the big orange caddis. This guy is big with a body almost two inches long. If you want to see the adult, they will be on the water in the evening although not in large numbers. My personal experience with this insect, at least as a dry, has been frustrating. I can count on one hand the number of fish I have taken on dry imitations of this caddis.

A couple of years ago I began experimenting with different nymph patterns to try and imitate the insect. After a lot of false starts, I came up with a size 8 Serendipity. This is perhaps the simplest caddis nymph there is, but it has proved to be absolute dynamite on Rock Creek in the fall. It can be dead drifted on the bottom for big browns or fished as a wet fly to imitate an ovipositing caddis. In either case, we've had a lot of success with the pattern.

The orange caddis stays with us until the snow starts to fly. As soon as the ice and snow start to build up on the banks, both the trout and the anglers seem to go into hibernation. The cycle has been completed, and we are back into the stone fly larva on the bottom we started with. If you're planning to fish Rock Creek at any time during the year, the techniques and patterns discussed here should help to make your experience more enjoyable. Even if you're a dryfly bigot, remember that there will be times when there is no dry fly fishing. And if you're going to fish and want to catch something other than a cold, you're going to have to go under the surface. And when you do, you will be surprised both by how challenging it is and by how rewarding it is.


Glacier National Park Fishing Book Recommendations

 

Fishing Glacier National Park by Russ Schneider

"Russ Schneider, author and outdoor guide, has compiled information on 64 bodies of water in the park and on the North and Middle Forks of the Flathead River....The book leads you to streams and lakes where you'll find kokanee salmon, mountain whitefish, artic grayling, and trout."

 

Yellowstone National Park Fishing Book Recommendations

 

Fishing Yellowstone National Park by Richard Parks

 

Fishing Yellowstone National Park tells the angler where to go -along the roads and off the beaten path--how to get there, which species of fish populate the lakes and streams, and what to tie on the end of the line for best results."  I concur with this back cover quote.  Although I have numerous books on fishing Yellowstone National Park, this is the book that I found that I returned to most often.

 

The Yellowstone Fly-Fishing Guide by Craig Mathews and Clayton Molinero

 

Mathews and Molinero's book is another excellent guidebook on Yellowstone National Park fishing.  I found this guide to be very helpful on covering both the waters to fish as well as those to pass, as being barren or poor fishing in general.  I especially enjoyed the hatch charts and the recommended choice of fly patterns for specific waters.

 

fly fishing the Yellowstone in the park by Bob Jacklin and Gary LaFontaine

 

It is almost unimaginable that a visiting angler to Yellowstone National Park would fail to wet a line on the Yellowstone River.  This book is an excellent resource to park fishing on the Yellowstone River.  It is invaluable in saving you time in its detailed descriptions of all the fishing sections, and it is especially valuable in helping you with fly selection and streamside tips from two experts.

 

Hiking Yellowstone National Park by Bill Schneider

 

In addition to the fishing guides recommended above, I highly recommend this book if you plan to fish the backcountry or take some day hikes to fish some of the wonderful lakes and creeks that Yellowstone National Park offers.  Like all of the Falcon guide books, this one offers excellent maps, trail conditions and what to expect from destination point to destination point.

 

Fly Fishing the Mountain Lakes by Gary LaFotaine

 

Not only is this an excellent source of information for fly-fishing the high country lakes, it is entertaining as well.  If you plan on fishing Montana's backcountry, this is a must read!  If you haven't acquired LaFontaine's recognized classics, then be sure to order one of his pioneering books on fly-fishing listed below under the heading, "Fly-fishing Instructional Book Recommendations".

 

Montana Fishing Guide Book Recommendations:  Since my own book went out of publication, I have just ordered two new Montana guide books through Amazon to review in the months ahead.  I remember how puzzled I was when someone wrote a negative review on Amazon complaining that I devoted too much content on camping.  Oddly enough he did not read the title of my book, "Montana Fly-Fishing and Camping Guide."  He took umbrage that I organized the book not by watershed, which can be most confusing at times, but by Montana state highways and roads within a specific region.  All of this information was in the introductory pitch.  I never rebutted his comments, as I was closing out my inventory.  What is most troubling to me is the number of negative, ignorant reviews that I find on Amazon.  Readers, be leery of wanna-be critics who rate books as 1 or 2!  Until I have a chance to review the new Montana guide books, I am going to recommend an out-of-print guide book by Greg Thomas that you can buy used really cheap along with a revised guide book by Mike Sample.  Sure, Thomas' book will be a little out dated regarding the Super Fund cleanup project on the Clark Fork or the latest update on whirling disease, but it is a darn good resource guidebook for Montana.  Sample's old book, The Angler's Guide to Montana served me well so I am quite confident that his new book will be exceptional as well.  I love a good guide book.  They save me precious time and money.  Ask yourself if you want a guide book that you can mark up, dog-ear and toss on the dashboard, or do you want something to lay out on your coffee table in your den.  If you are like me, you will want both, and from more than one author!

 

Flyfisher's Guide to Montana by Greg Thomas

 


Fishing Montana: An Angler's Guide to the Big Sky's Best Streams and Lakes by Mike Sample

 

River Safety - A Floater's Guide by Stan Bradshaw

 

If you are inexperienced in float fishing Western rivers, I highly recommend this book.  Anyone can oar a raft or drift boat down the river and think that they are skilled after a few outings, and yet every season river mishaps occur all over the state.  If you want to be a responsible oarsman, and you have had limited experience navigating class II and III water, buy this book.

 

Fly-fishing Instructional Book Recommendations

 

The L.L. Bean Ultimate Book of Fly Fishing by Macauley Lord, Dick Talleur and Dave Whitlock

 

If I had a nickel for every how-to-fly fishing book that has been published during the last 20 years, I'd be fishing around the world in some pretty exotic places. My article "Mastering the Basics of Fly Fishing" was begun years ago when I was preparing an outline for an introductory course for fathers and sons. Recently I was perusing the shelves for a primer to double check that I hadn't left anything out of my article. The Ultimate Book of Fly Fishing may be an overstatement; nonetheless, it is

a wonderful primer for the novice or beginner. The book is divided into three sections: Fly Fishing, Fly Casting, Fly Tying. The photographs and diagrams are exceptional, and I couldn't resist adding another fly-fishing book to my collection.

 

Fly Fishing - A Trailside Guide by John Merwin

 

John Mervin, founding editor and publisher of Fly Rod and Reel magazine, has written a highly informative and well organized how-to guide for fly-fishing. The reader will find no fluff in this book, and the illustrations and photographs are superb. The price is right too! I especially liked the Gear Talk and Tips sections scattered throughout the book, as well as the diagrams for tying knots. Mervin's voice is personal and direct.

 

Specialty Books on Fly Fishing

 

Nymph-Fishing Rivers & Streams by Rick Hafele   (plus DVD)

 

If you have mastered the basics of fly-fishing but concentrate your efforts on the surface or bouncing a nymph along the bottom, then this book is the gateway instructional book to help you fish the entire column of water.  I love this book!  And it comes with a DVD.  Now, if I just had a second one to mark up like a textbook....

 

Fly-Fishing Stillwaters for Trophy Trout by Denny Rickards

 

I am shocked!  Once again I went to Amazon to look up the information for Rickards book.  As a resident of Montana, I never found the time to hone my skills for stillwater fly-fishing.  When I arrived in Oregon in the Klamath Falls area, I asked a number of guides what book they recommended for stillwater angling.  Overwhelming the response was Denny Rickards' book.  And yet today I found a scathing, angry review of his book on Amazon that personally attacked Denny Rickards.  The review carried on as if the reviewer had a personal vendetta against Rickards.  All I can say is that I agree with the reviewers who gave four and five star ratings.  Am I a friend of Rickards?  No.  Is Rickards iconoclastic? Yes.  Does his book and his system deserve high praise? Yes.

 

Morris and Chan on Fly Fishing Trout Lakes by Skip Morris and Brian Chan

 

Although I placed Rickards' book above this book, I highly recommend Morris and Chan's book on par with Rickards' book.  In fact, if you are really serious about learning stillwater tactics, you need both books.

 

The Fish Bum's Guide to Catching Larger Trout by Mike Croft.


An illustrated cartoon manual on "stillwater tactics for the intermediate fly angler," this is a delightful book.  It is a great primer!  I learned a great deal from this book and was delighted with the humor and comical illustrations.

 

Fly Patterns for Stillwaters by Phillip Rowley


So, you have made a commitment to stillwater fishing and you need a resource for fly patterns, this is the book.  In addition to the fly-tying instructions and beautiful photographs this book is packed with information on the food base in lakes and how and why to develop effective patterns.  He provides excellent advice and tips on seasonal tips, tactics and presentations.


Note: If you are just beginning to collect fly fishing books, you will greatly value any of Gary LaFontaine's books.

 

The Dry Fly, New Angles by Gary LaFontaine

 

 

Trout Flies - Proven Patterns by Gary LaFontaine

 

Trout Stream Insects by Dick Pobst

 

A great pocket guide to the major hatches.

 

Bassin' with a Fly Rod by Jack Ellis

 

If you live near bass country, quit longing for your next trout adventure.  Get out your fly rod and have a blast.  Jack Ellis, author of The Sunfishes, traces the history of fly-fishing for bass as well as providing specific techniques for catching large-mouth bass. I really enjoyed reading the parts were he debunks the writers who churn out expert opinion that no one else can duplicate. Having been a fly-fisher for trout all my life, this book was exactly what I was looking for in my new pursuit of bass in the Sacramento delta waters.

 

Fly-Fishing the Montana Spring Creeks by John Mingo

 

I am not entirely sure how to recommend this book.  I found it to be very informative and a good read.  The problem is that it is narrowly focused on fishing "pay-to-play" spring creeks in the Livingston area of Montana.  Nonetheless, I found a great deal of information on nymph fishing that I can apply to the slow-waters of Montana.  Unfortunately, I cannot afford to pay for a spring creek outing, nor can I buy a two-weight fly rod.  If you are thinking, well, I can, then this is the book for you!  (It also comes with a CD inside.)

 

 

 

 

me-jpgMontana's combined wilderness expanse and its roadless areas provide backcountry anglers with unparalleled opportunities.  Almost all of the wilderness and protected areas lie between Glacier National Park and Yellowstone National Park, which is the focus of this site.  I have included some of my forays under this category, but I welcome contributions from readers. 


Send a short narrative and photographs to the author of this site, David Archer, at dave @ glaciertoyellowstone. com.  You will have your own copyright and may remove your article and photographs at any time with a written directive.  I sincerely hope that you will share your Montana wilderness fishing adventures, as at age 65 this old guy is slowing down!


South Fork of the Flathead River


Elizabeth Lake, Glacier National Park


Sun River: North Fork and South Fork of the Sun River


Upper Dearborn River - Devil's Glen


Save Your Back and Pack Your Ass