Mark's Novel on Kindle

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Chili Rock



The Chili Rock on lower Rio de los Pinos and Osier Creek confluence.

Friday, June 26, 2009

Fishing Around Durango


While Mac is in Amarillo, working his way back to Durango House, we're fishing around Durango. the rest of the state is getting tons of rain so it's good we took a few days off. The monsoon, they call it. We get started again July 2nd, heading north to Trappers Lake, Grand Mesa Lakes, Steamboat. Can't wait.

Amy and I received one of our new books in the mail today --Top 30 Things to do in Durango from Wayfinder Press. They did a great job with our book and the cover for the Telluride book looks super too.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Double hookup in Spain



three summers ago on a secret surprise of a stream in northern Spain, my guide/friend Bruno and I hooked up each with a fat rainbow. I kept mine, he lost his. Such is life.

Links to follow our exploits week by week




http://www.amarillo.com/stories/061409/out_out1.shtml

Amy got in the fish-catching game too



Rivers and lakes we tackled in the recent Crested Butte foray:

East, Taylor, Spring, Slate, Rocky, Willow, Texas, Gunnison, Cement, Taylor Res. That's all I remember for now. That is all.

Look closely at holding trout below Taylor Dam

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Some of the things we've done and seen in Crested Butte




Crested Butte



Mac and Jorgen are firemen. Fire starters, fire tenders, fire hoggers. They make great fires, no doubt. The logs they saw and cut and hatchet are even and symmetrical and pretty. Their fires are roaring and big and long. They are mad because the lighter I threw in there (secretly when they weren't looking) blew up and nearly took off Mac's eyebrows. Wah Wah. Here is my most recent fire. It burned. Sticks and logs of all lengths. I left limbs on just because I could.

Sunday, June 21, 2009



Jorgen and MDW looking into Hermosa Canyon. J-Dub had a banner day, cutts, rainbows and brookies.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Next stop: Crested Butte




Mac ran back to Amarillo to be with his kids for Father's Day. My daughter Sarah is 24 and living in Daphne AL so Amy and I will be taking the dogs, Princess and Piper, to Crested Butte for some research. Amy and I have two books coming out next month --- Top 30 Things to Do in Telluride, Top 30 Things to Do in Durango --- and we're already working on the next two. One is Crested Butte so our research will be dual purpose.

We'll day hike, hit 7 creeks, 3 rivers, several lakes and reservoirs and generally have a blast. It's one thing for me and the guys to camp and smell and act like boys so it'll be interesting to see how Amy camps out without a shower for a few days. Maybe I can get her to go Blazing Saddles around the campfire.

Link to Amarillo Globe News article (second in the series for the paper chronicling the 50 days across Colorado): www.amarillo.com/stories/062109/out_13714011.shtml

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Rio de los Pinos


Jorgen Wouters is Norwegian.


The Norwegian Nightcrawler. The Dunkin' Dutchman. The Hiking Viking. Jorgen (pronounced your-gun) was Mark's editor at Gorp.com ten years ago, lives in the country in New York state, fishes and catches fish on great streams like the Beaverkill and Willowemoc and Deerfield. He is the red-bearded Felix, everything in its place, order (a good Teuton, right?)
Jorgen joined us on our journey after a jaunt from new jersey. He fishes a 5-weight on rivers that require long casts with a five-weight. We are in the middle of fishing rivers that require short casts with a 3-4 weight. Impasse? Perhaps.
We camped at the Trujillo Meadows CG at Rio de los Pinos and Trujillo Meadows Reservoir. The wind was Amarillo-like and didn't let up all week. 20-40 mph type stuff. Made casting tough esp long casts. Our days began at 6 or 630, quick breakfast of oatmeal, coffee, bananas. On the river by 8. Snack lunch of Ede's jerky, Clif bars and water whenever we broke. Then on to the next trib or part of the river. Rio Grande Cutts, rainbows, browns and brookies. Mac caught one 18+-inch rainbow. Dinner usually at 6 or 7, take down our notes, download pics, campfire by 9, drinks and smokes til we got sleepy. Beat that.
Jorgen cast in the wind and his Royal Wulff got away from him and stuck in his ear. Full to the shank. Blood and gore and guffaws from me and Mac. Rules of the camp, right? Two weeks in and we've fished over 15 rivers, 4 lakes, caught hundreds of fish and the season is still not in full swing. There is something wrong with the reservoir, upper and lower drainage of the Rio De Los Pinos. The insects, the habitat, the lack of fish -- something is up and the Fish/Game folks think so too. Jorgen had wide eyes when we went up the road to upper Rio de los Pinos (huge craters filled with water, narrow tree-lined "road.") His got bigger when, as we walked out of the river through 3-foot deep snowbanks, we saw fresh bear tracks by the Jeep. Heh heh.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Fishing Durango as Home Base


You can follow our jaunt across Colorado in the Sunday editions of the Amarillo Globe News. http://amarillo.com/outdoors/

DURANGO, Colo.

We're on our first leg of the journey, 50 days camping and fishing across Colorado - research for a book we are writing for Johnson Books. Tough job, we know. The book? "Colorado Fishing, Home Bases." Due out next spring.

Things went well for the first two hours of the trip. When we saw the $600 Malibu Mini-X kayak fly off the roof of the Jeep while we were traveling 65 mph on Interstate 40, things quickly went awry. The kayak drifted down to the pavement, missing all traffic (miracle) and came to rest pointed westward as 18-wheelers were barreling down the highway at it.

We saved it, strapped it tighter and made it to Durango.

Durango is one of the coolest mountain villages in the country. Located in one of the most scenic valleys in the state, Durango is an outdoor recreation lover's heaven. This old rail and mining town harkens back to the West with its cowboy saloons and turn-of-the-century charm. Durango is a high-energy town, a town setting where the mountains and mesas of the high desert meet. Durango is one of the West's latest boomtowns, more and more reliant now on medical and teleworking communities. Because of Fort Lewis and its college students, the town keeps a youthful vibe.

Great thing about Durango: all of the choices of places to trout fish.

Here are the places we have angled so far, doing well on each:

Hermosa Creek: The water gurgles and percolates around grey-white rocks, dumps and drops into plunge pools, slashes under cut banks, wiggles and riffles, dances and dips. The trout are bigger than they ought to be in a stream this size. Hike-in wilderness stream ideal for teaching beginning flyfishers or for vets who want to catch strong wild trout and fish dry flies in a forested canyon creek

Lime Creek: Delightful mountain stream, ideal for beginning anglers, perfect for flyfishers. The upper end of Lime Creek is brushy and tough to fish, the lower section requires a good hike in and the middle section requires you to drive on a hairy road. It's worth every bit of the trouble. Full of brook trout that rise willingly to dries, Lime is one of the finest small streams in the San Juans.

Other area fisheries: Vallecito Reservoir, Cascade Creek, Animas River, Florida River, McPhee Reservoir, Upper Dolores River and Junction Creek.

Eats: Serious Texas BBQ, 3535 North Main Ave., 970-247-2240. Look for Mark's photo on the wall next to Willie Nelson. Order the pulled pork sandwich.

Digs: Strater Hotel, 699 Main Ave., 970-247-4431. Built in 1887, The Strator is a downtown landmark.

Flyshop: Duranglers, 923 Main Ave., 970-385-4081. The shop offers custom-guided fly fishing trips, equipment, flies and information on the area.

Anglers Mark Williams and W. Chad McPhail are writing a series on the best home bases in Colorado. This was the first installment. Upcoming: Pagosa Springs, Telluride, Crested Butte, Aspen, Breckenridge, Grand Mesa Lakes and Salida.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

saguache and la jara and cochetopa and the trailer



We have been out one week now, usually in primitive, out-of-the-way places 30 miles from any town, 15 miles back in the wilderness. We are camping at primitive sites for the most part so we rely on our own water and fire. The A-Liner is sweet. Up in 20 seconds, down in 20 seconds. The beds are pretty comfortable, the propane gas stove keeps us cooking in out of the elements instead of out in the elements. Windy, cold days so far but we've hit so many headwaters streams loaded with cutts and browns, our arms are tired from casting and catching. We were skeptical at first of the Simms shoes/waders but now we are 100% converts. We've been in Pagosa, Saguache, Cochetopa and La Jara areas. The next four days, we;ll be in Conejos hitting Osier, Cascade and Rio de los Pinos.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009



We are in the third day of the trip and the usual gremlins and misadventures are showing up. Kayak flying off the top of the Jeep while going down I-40, batteries falling off the trailer, a stimulator fly embedding itself to the shank in my finger, and that's just the start of things. Love our Simms boots, Sage rods and A-Liner trailer.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Getting ready




The Runoff Game. We are contestants in this annual spring/early summer wheel of fortune. We leave June 7th after speaking at the Frontiers in Writing Conference in Amarillo, bound for a night at our place in Bayfield. We will wake up the morning of the 8th lighting out for somewhere. Could be Grand Mesa Lakes. Flattops Wilderness. The Front Range. We just don't know. We will call our friends at flyshops, look online at stream flows, check the internet for postings on water clarity and insect hatches and we'll take our best guess. That's what it is. A credible hunch. And we have the entire state to choose from which, for us, in early June, is a crapshoot.

We'll be outfitted in a combo of our own used ratty gear and some try-this-new-stuff-out equipment from Riverfields Fly Shop and Dave Rittenberry in Amarillo. We'll be in Mark's four-door Jeep Wrangler Unlimited pulling a pop-up ALiner from Columbia Northwest and using flyline from Monic. We'll be fishing 50 days this summer, from Steamboat to Grand Junction, Aspen to Telluride, Cuchara to Estes Park.

We've bought groceries but still have to get some goodies at Trader Joes in Santa Fe. We have packed and re-packed the ALiner (which has oodles of pack space and the way we roll, we pack more stuff). We put together first aid kits, fix tire kits, snacks for the trail, bought homemade jerky, ordered bulk cigars, stocked up on tippet and leader and flies and other gee-gaws. It's amazing the difference in packing for a week-long tent camping trip vs. a 50-day pop-up trip. And we just know we're forgetting something. Still, we have rods, reels, flies, wading boots, cigars and whiskey. We can do without the other stuff.