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Thread: Homeward Bound Salmon ><,> Pic Heavy

  1. Post Homeward Bound Salmon ><,> Pic Heavy

    I want to share these pics from a day of fishing this Fall that I found myself putting the fly rod down alot to capture this stunning low water salmon movement. This occurs during conditions that only mother nature can control or predict but when it does happen, the sights we see can be jaw dropping. I jumped on an opportunity to capture this with my camera and for once, not my fishing pole, not knowing if they would come out or not. My trusty camera came through! Covering this event really made me think about the life and cycles of a salmon and how the last part of it's life journey may be the most dramatic of all their cycles in life.

    Our story begins there, near the end of the salmons life journey

    Imagine if you will that you are a salmon heading home through a large deep river bound only to the end of your journey, born in some small stream that drains into this great imaginary super salmon highway. Arriving closer to your home stream you pull into tide water and see the tails of thousands of your brothers and sisters waiting in a large pool somewhere near the tides head. The smells of home have become strong for you now. You rest for a few peaceful days having already come a long ways from the deep blue oceans now far away. Strange feelings and instincts mucking about, you feel changes taking place as natures anxiety builds.



    At the top of a morning tide several days later an anxious brother from the front of the pack circles the riffle at the head of the pool to scout for confidence and then commits. Blasting with all the determination in life straight out of the hole, leaving all others behind with the feeling that it must be time.



    Brother works his way up through the shallows carefully. Not fear but purpose and instinct, to complete your lifes journey at all cost and in all condition. All the fish around you begin to mill around in circles to wake and ready themselves for the last big push. Not long after brothers departure others begin to leave in pairs and in small groups, fully commited.



    Both Pressure and confidence to move onward is building inside of you, is this your tide? It is very shallow but the others, they are going! Forces of nature over take your sense and you will go...........



    There is no stopping now. there is no turning back, only the last push to the final destination....Home. You will now work again for days making your way through your home stream, picking your tail through the rocks like a chain gang worker. Swimming through tiny side channels and under logs that lay across the stream. A gaunlet of hungry human anglers also await your arrival.





    The big push is in full swing now and you are simply another pea in the pod. You are no longer yourself. Nature has put you on an instinctual auto pilot, no GPS necessary. Some struggle, some will make it while others lacking natures drive will turn back for another wait in tidewater.



    Not you though, you made your commitment and your going the distance with brother and the others. Although your strength wavering slightly you continue onward with no cognition. Only the hydrodynamic world you live in to guide you now, you must follow the waters strongest flow or you might beach!





    After several days of travel you and the others reach the top. A sense of slowing takes over when you smell natures next cycle in the water flowing through your gills. Now stacking numbers of developing salmon again fill the small pools in this little stream, to wait yet again. Pairing will now take place over the next few days. Your journey was long and tiresome. You made it through all of lifes cycles and stages and all of its dangers for this time in your life. Time to continue the cycle again for future generations of salmon. It is your turn to find a mate as well but for now, a little rest........




    Photos & Story by Matthew Clark


    Copyright Small Stream Salmon Fishing ©2009
    Matthew C


    Golden Stone Web Design

    Fighting over the fish will only serve to divert us from our common goal.

    "If im going to sit in a bath tub in the winter, im going to make sure it's the one inside my house : )" Me

    "The more I see the less I know" Anthony Bourdain

  2. #2
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    Another excellent post Matt. Great action shots. Iv'e tried for hours to get a picture of a fish in the center of the frame. You do great work.
    -Ken
    The best fishing days are always yesterday and tomorrow

  3. #3
    Join Date
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    Default Very cool!

    In my book your a rock star Matthew C. Keep up the great work and thanks for sharing your fun artistic eye with the rest of us and the continued education.

  4. #4
    RollinontheRvr Guest

    Default Once again...

    You tell an awesome story accompanied by some fantastic photographs. Thank you Matthew, you give insight to all that can see it.

  5. #5

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    Those are all great captures. Nicely done.
    John

  6. #6
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    Matt, what a masterful combination of eye-widening, jaw dropping photos and a story that should be instilled into the heart of every Salmon and Steelhead angler. It is important to understand the journey - the trials and tribulations - of these fish before one can seriously understand and truly "catch" one. To know what it feels like. To have battled such a magnificent creature that has traveled and endured for so long. To know what it feels like to have all of that, in your hands, after you've battled it for several minutes and have landed it...

    That's what fishing is all about.

    Wonderful post.
    Original SSSF Member #6! AKA ODSKid

    Teddy Wise - Super Moderator, SSSF



    Lincoln High Class of 2008 - Oregon State Class of 2012 Fisheries and Wildlife Major - Yeah, I'm that crazy about it.

    "Many go fishing all their lives without knowing that it is not fish they are after." ~ HDT

  7. #7

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    That is some very impressive food for the soul. Not just the pictures but the words as well. Have you ever entertained the notion of putting together some sort of documentary/short story on this subject?

    It is truly remarkable when you think about these aquatic creatures. To take a journey that daunting and so far, to make it back through all of the obstacles, human and otherwisw, to return to the very same spot that they were created...its unreal!

    And I can't remember where my keys are half the time

    Thanks for the views and the read.
    "Wanna beer?" "It's 7:00 in the morning." "Scotch?" (From Mr. Mom)

    "Just goes to show you this world is full of bast****, that number increasing rapidly the further one gets away from Missoula, Montana." (A River Runs Through It)

  8. #8

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    my dad takes allot of photos when we go places. especially bonni. those are great looking pics matt

  9. #9

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    I got the chills while reading this. You have definately captured the majesty of these fish.
    fishing is a family thing and crabbing and camping and...


  10. #10
    Join Date
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    I always feel a little guilty when I pull one of these creatures out of the water knowing how far they have come and how hard they have worked and then not quite make it because of me. I don't think it will stomp me from fishing however. Thanks for posting your thought provoking composition.

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