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Post Info TOPIC: Upper Klamath Report


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Upper Klamath Report
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Drove up on Friday with a friend.  On Saturday we were joined by a buddy and fished the upper Klamath east of 5.  Overcast and cold.  We waded and caught 50 plus fish, mainly half pounders and wild, with a half dozen from 5 to 7 pounds. 
It was so good my friend and I decided to fish it again on Sunday.  Clear and sunny.  Fished all the same spots with very different results.  By two o'clock 2 fish total.  Drove to a new spot and fished it to end the day.  Maybe ten fish total for the day with two nice steelhead.  The two days were like night and day.  All the fish on day two were caught in the shade.
Both days we used large rubber legs, glo bugs, and princes.
East Bay Ed

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What a great experience, a 50 fish day with steelies!  That is absolutely awesome.  We also fished the Klamath on Friday, and I'll tell you what, you got the better experience.  We fished quite a bit lower, about 20 miles above Happy Camp.

Talk about a disapointing experience . . . we shelled out $225 apiece to drift this section of river and looked forward to a great day of fishing.  During the drift, the guide (who shall remain nameless) mentions that he has NEVER drifted this section of river before????????  Heeeeelllllloooooo?????  Thanks for scouting the river on our dime and time.  It was a slow day.  Between the three of us, one 7 lb. steelhead, one 16" rainbow, one 10" rainbow and many salmon smolts.

After about the 5th time he mentioned that "the fish are in here, we just need to find them", I casually mentioned that we thought that he had that figured out.  One of my beliefs in paying to hire a guide, is that the learning curve in finding fish in a new body of water is shortened through his expertise and knowledge.  It's not a guarantee of hooking or landing them.

I mean, I understand.  Hiring a guide does not make a good catch day an absolute.  And afterall, he did do all of the rowing.  But I don't understand taking clients out on a part of river that you have never seen before.  What was he thinking?  Am I being too particular here? I'm sure if fishing was great, we would have thought he was a hero.

This expereince behind us, we were on the river, in great weather, having a blast no matter what.  I guess the circusmstances chapped me a bit.

-- Edited by ONEWEIGHT at 17:56, 2008-11-24

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Way to Get them East Bay Ed!  Sounds like a lot of fun, beautiful river.

Onewieght> Bad days are bound to happen on the river. With that said, when you pay a guide for guide fees, you pay for his (or her) knowledge, experience, not lack thereof.  A lot of people can row a boat, not everyone has the time to be on the water as much as a guide to garner the experience. (once again what you pay for is experience).  Basically, it appears as though you paid for a man to row a boat down a stream, you should have paid him minimum wage.  

I don't understand people who hold themselves out as guides on a river, who don't have the experience/knowledge to cary such a title.  

If this happened in any other work context (outside of guiding), a client would be pissed off, and rightfully so.  

Normally i wouldn't suggest not tipping, as a tip should be representative of how hard the guide worked, not how many fish you catch, but in this case I hope you paid the reasonable value for his services/knowledge, 0


-- Edited by drifter at 18:03, 2008-11-24

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Oneweight, I agree with you and Drifter. I hire a guide because I'm unfamilar with a river and need their experience. (not to mention I need to make use of a driftboat) I've hired a guide 4 times over the past five years.  I would expect the guide to know the river and to save everyone the embarrassment/anger of a bad experience. If the guide doesn't know the river then I think he/she has a professional obligation to let the client know. This allows you to search for another guide that is familiar with the water. It also allows the guide to fish water he/she is more accustomed to.

I fish the upper Klamath several times a year, from summer (depending of the cps) through February. Fishing the Klamath is difficult, especially when the water is high. I've hired guides for the Upper K. before. We actually contacted one last week to find out if he might be available this time, and told him we would contact him Friday if we wanted to use him on Sunday. This time the cfs was low enough to allow us to fish by wading and we decided to fish on our own.

I have to get this off my chest too. There is another problem I have with guides, and that is that they often blow quickly through prime water with nothing more then a comment of where to throw your fly and/or a high five if we catch a fish. We as fishermen recognize good water when we see it. When we've caught fish in a particular stretch we have asked the guide if he/she can anchor. Sometimes if the water is slow enough we have asked if he/she could make another pass through it. It's good to talk to a guide about this in advance to find out how flexible they are. One guide actually thanked my fishing partner for suggesting this on a stretch of the Klamath.

Fishing is expensive enough as it is. If I'm going to pay my hard earned money for my once a year trip, I'd like to believe it is for a positive experience. I don't expect super days just because I'm with a guide. (And there are days when the fish gods aren't smiling.) But I would like to believe that the person I fish with knows the river and is able to give me an opportunity to have a good time.

East Bay Ed

-- Edited by East Bay Ed at 21:35, 2008-11-24

-- Edited by East Bay Ed at 21:36, 2008-11-24

-- Edited by East Bay Ed at 21:38, 2008-11-24

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Aww, man, that sucks! I'd feel like my money was wasted too. I don't know very many Klamath guides...but I have never looked into it either.

Hope that next time you catch big metalheads until your arms fall off!

East bay Ed -

Blowin thru prime water is a bad idea. Good guides will row you back thru a run multiple time if they deem the spot worthy. I remember my buddy rowed and back rowed his clients thru a spot 7 times and got thick Sac footballs each time (double hook ups). Can't say this happens all the time, but a good guide knows when to do it.

That said every river fishes differently, and sometimes water that looks good to you, but the guide may know it doesn't fish.....

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I'm a bit suprised that you are unwilling to name the guide. It seems that the sort of experience you had warranted stopping payment on your check and reporting him to the better buisness bureau. I'd be screaming his name to everyone and suggesting that people avoid him. The implied contract between the guide and client is that the person who is "guiding" should be familiar in fishing terms with the body of water being fished. Its impossible to guide someone on a piece of water you've never fished. If they are not, accepting a clients money seems unfathomable. I understand that he might have seemed like a good guy, but he was a good guy who gave it to you up the a. I'd at least demand a free session. Point him in the direction of this forum and tell him you'll release his name if he dosen't hook you up. Blackmailing someone may not be your style, but that guide indirectly misrepresented himself to you, and which is worse?

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Personally, I'd recommend taking the high-road. If you're feeling bad about the value you got for what you paid for then either call him or write him a letter and state that you were disappointed and explain exactly why. Explain that as you thought about it afterward you felt it important to provide some feedback. Let him know what your expectations were going into it and where he failed to meet them. If there were things that were positive (like condition of boat, equipment, attitude, etc.) you'll probably get a better response if you recognize those and even explain why that is why you tipped him, but his lack of experience on the river is why you probably wouldn't book him again and why you wouldn't recommend him to a friend.

I'd leave it at that. If he's good, he'll come back and offer you something, if not he won't, but if he doesn't he's probably not a guide you would want to spend another day with anyway and you can chalk it up to experience and move on. There's no room for monkey business when it comes to fishing.

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If he was a good guide, would he have pulled this? Your way is much classier, and even handed, and I agree a letter might be the best way to present your case. What I'm worried about is that this guide is taking advantage of the sense of generosity and comradary that fishermen, and fly fishers to an even greater extent, feel for each other. Oneweight is obviously a classy and well mannered guy to have dealt with the situation with such aplomb, but dosen't it get you guys mad to think that this dorkus guide took $250 for rowing a boat, and offering fishing platitudes when it became obvious he had no clue where the fish were? Its my belief that he is taking advantage of the good nature that fishermen feel for each other. As far as I'm concerned, anyone who would take money from a fellow fishermen and then provide him with the experience provided to Oneweight is not one of us, and does not deserve the respect and courtesy that Oneweight provided. I'm also slightly suprised that Bono hasn't chirped in on this one since ethical guiding seems to be a subject close to his heart. Lets review the mistakes this guide made:
1. He took customers out on a stretch of river that he was not particularly familiar with.
2. He did not tell them he was unfamiliar with the stretch until they were on the drift boat and committed to the trip
3. He did not offer to reduce the fee when the trip turned out bad, and the customers were unsatisfied with the quality of fishing. (This one is a bit tricky, since I don't believe guides control when the fish bite, but this guy was obviously working outside his comfort zone, and his unfamiliarity probably directly effected his clients chance of angling success)

Remember we are all part of the family of fishermen, but most of us who post here belong to a subset of that group that is made up of Ethical fishermen. Maybe your guide just had a bad day, and made a bad call, maybe his holes wheren't working out, and he'd heard the drifting was good, and was honestly trying to provide the best experience possible for his client. Even assuming this, the ethical thing to do when it didn't work out would be to return the clients money, because taking someone to a place you are not familiar with is a gamble, and why should he have the right to gamble with your money? I may still be a novice fly fishermen, but ethics I know. If this guy had a bad day, made a bad call, he should compensate you for it. If he's just incompetent he should be exposed to fellow anglers so they can steer clear of him. If he's unethical, and unscrupulous he should be brought to task (and to court if possible) and every effort should be made to expose him. What is clear is that no matter how you stir it, he acted in the wrong. Oneweight, I'm sorry if I sound a bit preachy, but the story kind of made me mad and I just felt the need to throw out my two bits. Its your situation, and you should do what you think is right.  Errrgh!  The thought of that guy walking away with $675 after that just makes me mad!  In what way did he deserve $100 bucks an hour?

-- Edited by Psyfisher at 14:12, 2008-11-26

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Thanks for all of the thoughts and insight guys.  I didn't think that I was going nuts, but you never know.  Here's what I can say for the guide . . . he was a pleasant person, great guy. I'm sure he knows his stuff upside down, he was very knowledgable and helpful.  He took time to teach us some things during the day.  I always try to learn something new from each guide I take.  He gave us a couple of great tips. I think he took a gamble and it didn't pay off as far as the drift.  He did get back in touch with us and offer us a free drift up there, unsolicited.  In my mind a total class act. 

I am not a guy who busts guides chops.  I understand what they have to deal with.  I am buddies with a guy who guides in Truckee, and use him with client group outings a couple of times each summer.

Greg commenting on this could put him in a difficult situation, weighing judgement on another tradepeson without all info of the situation in front of him.  I know I wouldn't be comfortable jumping into the middle of something under those circumstances. Best left unsaid I believe.

Communication is the key to most misunderstandings in life.  I agree, the oness is  in our group to communicate any negative/ positive feedback to the guide.  How else would he know?  In this case, he beat us to the punch with his offer.  All that goes well ends well.

Thanks for all of your input.  Lest us not forget, the real subject is East Bay Ed's great day of fishing!  Sorry to pig up on your post.

-- Edited by ONEWEIGHT at 17:26, 2008-11-26

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Hey oneweight, I'm glad that worked out for you and that he came back to you first without your having to say anything. Next time catch some fish!

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ONEWEIGHT wrote:

I think he took a gamble and it didn't pay off as far as the drift.  He did get back in touch with us and offer us a free drift up there, unsolicited.  In my mind a total class act. 


That was classy.



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Hearing that made my Thanksgiving Oneweight. Its good to hear that its pretty much the best case scenario. Good guide who took a risk to find fish for his clients and then made right when it didn't go well. Its funny how a bad situation can transform itself to a feel good story.  I don't usually like to hear that I'm wrong, but in this case I'm glad.

East Bay Ed, that sounds like one of those days you never forget.

Happy Thanksgiving Guys

-- Edited by Psyfisher at 15:48, 2008-11-27

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Pretty cool read from national geographic about the Klamath I found on the Kiene's board http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/20...ver/rymer-text

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I agree OW; my belief is he hasn't done very well lately on his usual fishing grounds and is venturing out. Happens a lot; at least he was honest. Once I get a guide that is honest, I dig for information as to what he knows about the river, make the most of it, but still can be dissipointing.

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OW,

Nevertheless, nothing is more disspointing to be on a river, being skunked, and learning your guide does not know the river. Glad it turned out for you, its not the fish, its the experience and seems like tha call back to you with the free offer made the experience.

VD

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Hey guys and gals, my buddy and I fished the Klamath last weekend. It was slow. We drifted the upper section from Irongate damn down to Klamathon bridge on friday and got 2 half pounders. Saturday we decided to hit new water. We figured it couldn't be much worse. So we drifted the Cade Mt. drift from China Point to Indian Creek(right in Happy Camp). We each caught a couple small ones then aroud noon I hooked into a pig. My buddy had to row through a rocky run while I fought this steelie but we were able to net this wild fatty. We caught about 10 more smaller fish the rest of the day. Sunday we fished the upper section again and only got this 18" halfpounder. We need rain, which it looks like we are going to get this weekend.

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Nice fish!  What were you using?

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Great report and nice wild steel. sweet....

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Nice fish swinger. You gotta love those hard fighting wild fish.

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#4 black rubber legs with 3x tippet and a six wieght rod.

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Glad you got into some fish Swinger.  I always like those big rubber legs with some sort of dropper.
East Bay Ed


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Swinger,

What a great workout on a 6 weight!!  That first one must have had that rod down to the water.  The Klamath was on and now it seems to have slowed down.  Maybe a good rain this weekend will push a new run upriver.

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