Time: 1:00PM – 3:00PM
Location: National Forest
East Fork of Brush Creek 07/11/2026 Photo Album
Saturday fly fishing was devoted to a pair of kids at the campsite. Alden and Emma were the son and daughter of Jacy and Dana, who were friends of my daughter. They were both eleven years old. Jacy accompanied us on our brook trout adventure, and she lugged along a flexible rubber bag with handles to hold the fish that we kept for dinner, hopefully.
I decided to begin this adventure at the series of beaver ponds that I scouted on Friday. I removed my Fenwick five weight fiberglass pole from mothballs for this outing, as I wanted to avoid damage to my more expensive rods. I rigged the Fenwick with the red hippie stomper, but I also assembled my Orvis Access four weight. On the line on this rod I placed a size 14 olive green stimulator.
Alden and I carefully waded into the creek below a beaver dam, and I refreshed his memory on casting. This included gripping the line with his left hand and clasping the cork rod handle with his right hand thumb up. I allowed him to make some short casts, but it was evident that his novice casting ability would inhibit our efforts to catch dinner. If there is another occasion next year, I plan to practice casting on the road near the campsite, before we enter the stream.
Alden acknowledged that he was in over his head, and he handed the Fenwick to me. I began casting the red stomper, but unlike Friday, success was not instantaneous. After a half hour of intense casting, I managed to land two sub six inch brook trout and one barely above my six inch minimum. We kept number three in the hard sided bag for a bit, but eventually I decided to move, and we released the diminutive brookie. Besides the slow action on my flies, I was not seeing many rising fish, so for some reason, the circumstances shifted from Friday. I cycled through the stimulator, a Jake’s gulp beetle, a deer hair caddis, and a black parachute ant; but I never found the key to success in this area. I suspect that the lack of cloud cover and the timing of fishing in the early afternoon were factors.
We all adjourned to the beaver ponds next to Jacy, Alden and Emma’s campsite. I continued to provide the casting, and over the course of the next 1.5 hours I landed nine additional brook trout. We kept five for dinner, released one, and three escaped in the process of transferring from my net to the flexible bucket. I returned to the peacock body hippie stomper, and it served me well.
I awkwardly climbed up a steep and very high beaver dam to reach the rim. Jacy was actually concerned for my well being, as I teetered a few times, when my wading boots sank through the web of sticks forming the dam. Once I reached the top, however, I was in perfect position to cast to the placid pond with totally open backcasting space.
Eventually the brook trout wised up to my offering, so Alden and I carefully exited the dam and circled around on land. In order to access the main portion of the deep beaver pond, we had to carefully wade through spaced out clumps of shrubs that were inundated by the backed up water. Alden wore his swimsuit and summer shoes, so he led the way. We found a path to the edge of the deep drop off, and I managed to land a few brook trout to up our dinner total to the target quantity of five.
I decided to move to another bush clump that took me ten feet away from Alden. There was a deep trough between me and the next one, and I made an exploratory poke with my wading staff. It was definitely deep, but not over my waders. I took the plunge, literally. There was a hole in the trough that perhaps led to a beaver tunnel, and my left foot just kept going down, until water trickled over the top of the waders. I was not happy, but fortunately it was a minor amount and actually felt good during the hot afternoon.
I continued casting from the new clump for another ten minutes or so, and I landed three or four decent brook trout. As is usually the case, the harder a place is to reach, the better the fishing. With our goal of five fish for dinner attained, I carefully shuffled my way back through the muck and called it quits. Alden had a blast transferring my catches from the net to the bag, and seeing his excitement made it all worthwhile.
Fish Landed: 10

Nice One
Beaver Pond Fly Fishing
Fish Cleaning in Progress
The Last One
Five for Tacos
In the Pan
Hand Size
Hot Spot Where the Flow Was Entering
After the Brief Shower
Orange Belly
New Lace for My Simms Wading Boot
Early Brown Trout
Parachute Green Drake Along the Bank
Aligned
Nice Spot
Steep Gradient
Better Focus
Such a Pretty Pool
Starting Run and Pool
Stunning Rainbow Trout
Poised Torpedo
Long and Deep Pocket
Covered in Ink Spots
Home of Beast Brown
Pink Cheek
Rock Garden Ahead
Bankside Home
Early Brown Trout
Attractive Section
Decent Hole
Very Nice Pool
High Gradient
Prize of the Day
Very Promising
One of the Better Brown Trout
Prime Lie
Silvery Brook Trout
Just Above the Angled Log
Pleased with This Catch
Brown Trout Lair
Meadow Point
The Cove
Mirror Smooth
Mt. Princeton
Great Start
Promising Pool
Evidence of a Double
The Larger of the Double Featured
Riffled Surface
A Fine Rainbow Joins the Party
Looking Ahead
Beast of the Day
Rainbow Trout Lurking
Starting Point
Foam Is Home
Small Jewel
Promising Water Ahead
Best Fish of the Day
Center Run
Yellow Sally
Prickly Pears Were in Bloom Everywhere
Gnarly Beauty
Upstream from Start
Scored
Comma Formation
A Nice Run Ahead
Took Me Through Some Rapids
Home of Nice Brown Trout
Turned Around
Another Fine Brown Trout