View this email in your browser
We sent you this newsletter because of your interest in Northern New Mexico and Southern Colorado fly fishing and/or your relationship with Land of Enchantment Guides. Click here to reconfirm that you want to continue receiving our newsletters. If you don't wish to receive any emails from us, please click here to unsubscribe.
Land of Enchantment Guides
Fly Fishing Trips Throughout Northern New Mexico & Southern Colorado
LATE SPRING & SUMMER NEWSLETTER ~ 2016
Paula & Charlie F. with a nice Quinlan Ranch double last month.

Saturday, May 28th, 2016
Hi Everybody,

Early summer is here in northern New Mexico and southern Colorado - all of our rivers, lakes and streams are looking great and making us very optimistic that we will have terrific fishing for the rest of the summer and fall. Even more so than last year, we had an amazing amount of rain and late snow storms during April and early May. Right now many rivers are in run-off but this should subside within the next week or two, depending on the location. The fishing has been excellent this spring and, with the water conditions and levels where they are at right now, it should stay this way - yeee-haaa!

We hope you all had a good winter and are ready for a great fishing season. For more up to date information please check out our most recent Fishing Report and Facebook and Instagram pages (there are links to them at the bottom of the newsletter). As well, don't hesitate to contact us at anytime if you have any questions and/or would like to book a trip.

Enjoy the newsletter! <°)))))>< <°)))))>< <°)))))>< <°)))))>< <°)))))>< <°)))))><

We're Back at the Valles Caldera
Mid-May Fishing on San Antonio Creek on the Valles Caldera

Last October the National Park Service (NPS) took over the management and operation of the Valles Caldera National Preserve (VCNP) and it is now officially a National Park. Though we had to go through a fair number bureaucratic hoops and a somewhat arduous process, Land of Enchantment Guides is now the only guide service permitted by the VCNP and the NPS to take people fishing on the Valles Caldera.

The VCNP is an amazing place and well worthy of National Park status. Comprised of almost 90,000 acres of pristine landscapes, it is one of the most beautiful spots in New Mexico. The three major fishing locations are San Antonio Creek, the East Fork of the Jemez and Jaramillo Creek. All of these streams flow though large alpine meadows, offering anglers many miles of great fishing and easy access. There is a large elk herd on the VCNP along with many other types of wildlife.

We have been doing quite a few trips on the VCNP this month and the fishing has been very good. We started off in early May using smaller nymphs but now with the warmer weather, we are having lots of great dry fly action. There also seems to be a fair number of larger fish than in years past. So far this season, we have had clients get into a few 16" fish and one that was almost 18". These are whoppers for this kind of water! As always, there are lots of smaller wild brown trout in the 8" to 14" size range. Please give us a call for more details.
Run-off & San Juan River "Flush"
Jack L. with a Beautiful Rainbow - High Water Streamer Fishing on the Conejos

With the warmer weather we have been having for the last week or so many of our rivers and streams are in full snow-melt/run-off conditions. On some rivers the run-off has peaked or is already finished (i.e. the Pecos, the Jemez, Vallecitos and all of the streams on the Valles Caldera). These locations and the lakes on the Bar X Bar and Quinlan Ranches are where we have been fishing the most over the last few weeks.

The Bureau of Reclamation (BOR) has been doing some major releases out of both El Vado Dam on the Chama River and Navajo Dam on the San Juan River. This is actually a terrific thing for the heath of the fishery in both of these spots. These higher flows somewhat mimic natural run-off conditions and will clean much of the debris and silt from these areas. This in turn helps the insect population and the overall habitat of the river which then means bigger and healthier fish.

Right now the releases out of El Vado Dam are in the 2,500 cubic feet per second (cfs) range. There was a new turbine installed at the dam which is being tested over the next few weeks so the releases will be fluctuating at higer levels until the tests are completed. Once finished, the flows will be reduced to a more typical summer regime and the fishing should be epic.

For the first time in 3 or 4 years, there is a major release or "flush" being done on the San Juan River. The BOR began ramping the flows up on May 18th and reached their targeted peak release level of 5,000 cfs on May 22nd. The release will stay at 5,000 cfs for up to 31 days, or until the spring runoff on the Animas River is complete. If all 31 days at peak are utilized, the release will begin decreasing on June 23rd, reaching 500 cfs on July 4th where the release/flows should remain throughout much of the summer and fall. Until the flows are reduced at the beginning of July, the best way to fish the San Juan will be out of the boat. Once the flows are at the 500 cfs level, the wade fishing should be the best it has been in long time.

We have had some great fishing on many locations as the run-off was coming up using big streamers. We will be targeting these same areas again as the run-off starts to subside.

Tips & Skills ~ Catch and Release Techniques

Releasing the fish we catch is the best way we have for preserving a quality fishery. If you want to have good fishing tomorrow, please release the fish you catch today. Just because a fish swims away after it leaves your hands, does not necessarily mean it is in good shape. A fish that is carelessly handled and then released, may die later the same day or may be so weakened and injured that it dies a week or month later. It takes care and caring to properly catch and release a fish so it stays healthy. Here are some guidelines to try and follow:

  • When holding a fish, either for a picture or to look at it, always use both hands. Cradle the fish by cupping your hands under the forward part of the body and the tail. (Don't pick a fish up with one hand in the middle as you see in so many photos; it hurts the fish - especially larger ones picked up this way).
  • Where applicable, use barbless hooks. An easily removed hook reduces the amount of fish handling. You can pinch the barbs down with a pair of pliers or hemostats.
  • Try and land your fish as quickly as possible. The longer you play a fish, the more exhausted it becomes and the less likely it is to recover.
  • Before handling a fish and/or taking it out of a net, wet both of your hands. This helps prevent the removal of a fish's protective slime.
  • Don't squeeze the fish; don't put your fingers in its mouth, gills or on its eyes; don't grab its tail and lift it out of the water.
  • Back the hook out carefully. If it helps or is needed, use a suitable tool such as forceps, pliers, or a de-hooking/catch and release tool.
  • Try and keep the fish in the water at all times. If you want to take a photo of the fish out of the water, get everything set up, then lift the fish up and snap the photo quickly. Put the fish back in the water immediately after you take the picture. Try and limit the fish's time out of the water to less than 15 seconds.
  • Don't let it flop around out of the water, on the ground or in the bottom of a boat. If possible, un-hook your fish and take any photos of it over or better yet, in the water - those pictures of a trout lying in the grass are not a good idea and very harmful to the fish.
  • If the fish is hooked any deeper than the lips or in a part of the mouth where you can un-hook it easily, clip off the fly and let the fish go leaving the fly in it (the hook will rust out quickly).
  • If a fish rolls over on its side or back, it's exhausted. You will need to give the fish special care (see the next section).
  • If your fish is exhausted and appears weak and overly tired, you will need to revive it. To revive a fish, grasp it gently in front of the tail and just behind the gills by cupping your hand underneath the belly. Move it gently back and forth so water works through its gills, providing it oxygen. Don't let go the first time the fish tries to swim away; let it go the second time, making sure it is revived. Try and do this in an area where there isn't much current. If need be, you can block the current with your upstream leg and revive your fish in the quiet water behind it.
  • Don't dump a fish into fast water. It can start to tumble and not be able to get to a safe location where it can rest and breathe. Try and let it go gently in calmer water so it can swim away easily, at its own pace and find some shelter.

Thank you in advance for releasing the fish you catch. We owe these fish quite a debt of gratitude for letting us catch them and providing us with such enjoyment. The least we can do in return is to release them correctly and try to guarantee their continued survival and health. The quote below says it all...

"The finest gift you can give to any fisherman is to put a good fish back, and who knows if the fish that you caught isn't someone else's gift to you?"
Lee Wulff

For more fly fishing tips and skills, please check out the Fishing Tips & Skills page on our website. It is primarily excerpts from the literature we use in the fly fishing classes we give. Hopefully you will find some things that will help to make your time on the water more productive and enjoyable.

TROUT Magazine Article ~ Spring 2016
Land of Enchantment Guides, Shane and Noah were featured in the "Pocket Water" section of TU's (Trout Unlimited) Spring Edition of their magazine TROUT - we're very honored and flattered that they chose to write about us. Here are a couple of links to .pdf files of the article and/or the full magazine:

Trout Unlimited is a national organization dedicated to conserving and restoring North America's cold-water fisheries and their watersheds. For more information or to become a member, check out their website: www.tu.org

Give us a call anytime for up to date fishing and weather conditions or just to say hi and to talk trout. We hope to see you this season!

From all of us at Land of Enchantment Guides...

Stay well!

Noah Parker
Land of Enchantment Guides
(505) 629-5688 or (505) 927-5356
trout@loeflyfishing.com

PO Box 55 ~ Velarde, New Mexico 87582


Unsubscribe