I glanced down off the trail and noticed a deep pool with a
strong current going through it. It was
a steep downhill slide to the pool, but if I had learned anything about
backcountry fishing, it was that pools like this are worth fishing. I scrambled down and let my “hopper-dropper”
float through the rapid. The hopper
almost immediately popped under, indicating something had taken my “dropper”
(in this case a copper john). I caught
one hard-fighting, 16” cut-throat on each sides of the pool. As I climbed back onto the trail, I felt
fully alive and in love with backcountry fishing. Over a fire that night, my friend Benn and I
discussed our amazing two days of fishing in the Bob Marshall.
As good as it was, two full days of tough hiking was a high
price to pay for two full days of fishing.
If only we could just continue down the river, past the remote ranger
station at Big Prairie, through the narrow canyon slots and walk out into the
Spotted Bear parking lot forty-some miles to the north. As tempting as that was, we only had four
days. A trip like that would take more
than a week if we hoped to hike it and fish just the best spots as we
walked. Plus, we’d be completely
exhausted from hiking hard to keep pace in-between fishing holes. Not that we’re against exhaustion, but this
was a fishing trip, not endurance training.
Of course there was always the raft option. We had some connections to horses and rafts,
but the logistics and costs involved in an endeavor like that get difficult quickly. As we hiked out on the fourth day, we decided
one way or the other we had to come back, even if it meant a ten-day trip to do
the river full justice.
Then we discovered packrafts! Small, durable, ultralight, inflatable,
packable (weigh less than 5lbs and pack to the size of a 2-man tent), high-performing, rafts designed for the Alaskan wilderness. Three years after that first trip into the
Bob, we went back in, this time with Benn’s brother, another mutual friend and
my wife. The trip took six days. One day of hard hiking, one day that involved
several portages around log jams and four days of uninterrupted fishing and
floating bliss! Our meals were amazing
as each one of us tried to outdo the other with our assigned night of cooking
(meals included: jumbleia, chicken dumplings, Paiute mountain pizza, fish
burritos, and pad Thai). Fishing was
excellent, although the fish were slightly picky at times. We saw bull trout on two occasions and the
second one bit into a 10” cutthroat that was being reeled in. Camping spots were excellent and even included
an island one night. We stopped and saw
a girl who was in our wedding at the Big Prairie ranger station. This isolated settlement seems to come
straight from the 1870s and is an experience in itself.
We ended our trip in the picturesque slot canyons that take
you to the edge of Meadow Creek Gorge (a dangerous class IV + stretch of river
that we decided to save for a later date when we have more experience and
helmets). We actually missed the
pull-out (a sign that says “danger pull out now”) and had to climb up a small
slot cliff, but with packrafts this is easily done! Benn’s family was even nice enough to shuttle
our car back to Hungry Horse so we ate the customary burger, fries and shake
and returned home.
During the planning stages of this trip, I decided to buy two
packrafts rather than rent them with the intention of starting my own rental
company. The time for that is now
here! Backcountry Packrafts Rentals LLC
is officially open for business! As I
researched packrafts I realized the myriad of other outdoor activities
packrafts can be combined with. You
would be amazed at what you can load on a packraft and still be able to run
rapids. A short list of activities to be
combined with packrafting include:
fishing, hunting, mountain biking, skiing, camping, mountaineering, rock
climbing and canyoneering. Packrafts are
the ultimate Montana raft because they are capable of running Montana rapids
and add to so many things Montanan’s already enjoy. Not a Montanan? We ship anywhere in the lower 48! So check us out backcountrypackrafts.com: a
company that’s true Montana!
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