STEELHEADING WITH FLOATS
by Dave Vedder
"Let me live
harmlessly, and near the brink
Of Trent or Avon and have a dwelling place;
Where I may see my quill or cork down sink
With eager bite of Perch or Bleak or Dace;
And on the world and my creator think:"
--Sir Henry Cotton Circa 1645
Nineties anglers are
discovering a "new" and deadly technique for tricking
steelhead. This "new" technique, as is so often the case, is
simply a variation on angling methods used centuries ago by the pioneers
of our sport. The float, or bobber as some persist in calling it, has
been in use for hundreds of years. (I think of bobbers as those red and
white plastic gadgets used by small children.)
Today savvy steelheaders have developed a
sophisticated system for fishing with floats to take steelhead under
even the most difficult conditions. Late spring steelheading can be some
of the season's most rewarding angling, but it can be extraordinarily
difficult. Switching to a float can seriously increase your chances of
coming in contact with a spring steelhead.

Center-pin reels improve line
control.
PHOTO CREDIT: DAVE VEDDER
Imagine, if you will, a perfect run. One
you know holds steelhead. The lie is upstream from you, and you have no
way to get above it. In addition, the lie hugs an undercut bank on the
far side of the stream and the bottom is a jumble of rocks as grabby as
a covey of bedsprings. With conventional steelhead tackle this lie is
unfishable. You know how hard it is to make an upstream cast without
snagging the rocky bottom. And you know it's impossible to keep your
lure or bait in a lie that is parallel to the far bank. If you did hit a
fish before a snag, your chances of feeling the bite on a slack line are
slim. A modern float system will solve all those problems with ease.
Upstream Casts
Upstream casts with a float are as simple
as down and across casts with conventional techniques. All you do is
flip the float upstream and begin reeling in line as it moves downstream
toward you. Your float and lure glide in a natural drift just above the
snaggy bottom - hang-ups will be a thing of the past. Stream hydraulics
will keep your lure floating, along in a perfect line, in the heart of
the lie. When a strike comes, even if it's the subtle mouthing of a
lethargic spring steelhead, a delicately balanced float will instantly
alert you. Fish on! It's as easy as that.
Precise
Line Control
Another advantage of floats is the ease
of placing your lure smack-dab in the middle of a steelhead's living
room. Suppose you want to fish a seam where slow and fast currents meet.
No problem. Simply cast your float past the seam and retrieve line until
your float is just at the edge of the seam. Now, free spool line while
the float bounces along in perfect position to pass over the fish.
The float really shows its stuff when
working pocket water behind boulders. You can flip the float past your
target, then reel in until the float and its payload are swirling
merrily in the back eddy. You can let your lure swirl in the back eddy
as long as you like. Try that with conventional gear and your tackle
will look as though it's been in a blender.
A major drawback of conventional
steelheading techniques is the short time that the lure spends in a
fish's "strike zone". In a typical situation, the angler casts
down and across stream; the current immediately sweeps the offering
across the stream, eventually depositing it directly below the angler.
Strikes usually come as the lure passes across stream or immediately
after the drift stops. Unfortunately, this presentation usually moves
your lure so rapidly steelhead have little time to see the offering. In
addition, the jerky presentation of bottom bouncing is completely
unnatural. In low clear water, bottom bouncing will spook fish that
could have been taken with a small float, light line and a tiny lure.
Detecting Strikes
Veteran steelheaders know the one skill
that separates the top rods from the wannabes is the ability to feel the
subtle pick-up of a steelhead. Learning the elusive difference between a
pick-up and a rock is vital, but difficult. With floats the angler
immediately sees that a fish is mouthing their bait. Even a novice will
be able to detect most pick-ups.

Big fish come to
properly presented lures and baits.
PHOTO CREDIT: DAVID
VEDDER
Strikes are signaled in one of two ways.
The most obvious strike indicator is the sudden sinking of the float. If
you have properly adjusted the distance from your float to the lure,
only a fish can cause it to sink. STRIKE!!!
Sometimes a steelhead will pick up the
bait and drift downstream with it. This may not cause your float to
sink, but it will make it pop up and float unnaturally high. Any time
you see the float come up or begin moving upstream or sideways, that's a
fish. STRIKE!!!
Occasionally, you will see your float go
under and pop back up before your brain tells your hand to strike. No
problem. If you miss a strike, take note of where your float was when it
went under. The float tells you exactly where the fish was when it
struck. Another cast placed twenty feet upstream and directly in line
with the last strike will often get you an instant rematch. The float's
natural presentation will not usually spook a fish. Many times you can
get a second strike. This time pay attention!
Depth Control
The first step in steelheading with a
float is to adjust for proper depth. Your goal is to place your bait or
lure about one foot above the bottom. If your float continually drags
under or tips downstream as it drifts through the run, you are dragging
bottom. Shorten the distance between float and lure until you can make
the drift without touching bottom.
Your float should drift at the same speed
as the current. When your float is upstream from you, it should sit
straight up and down in the water. As your float passes in front of you,
begin free spooling line while gently thumbing the spool to maintain
just enough tension to tilt the top of the float slightly back upstream.

Retard the drift so the bait or lure
arrives before the float.
Ninety-nine percent of the time steelhead
will hold on or very near the bottom. When that is the case, you want
your gear to be within a few inches of the rocks. Occasionally steelies
will stack in deep runs and will stratify well above the bottom. It may
take some trial and error to find the depth they prefer, but when you
do, a float will let you put your offering right in front of their
noses.
Downtime
It's axiomatic that you can't catch fish
when your line is not in the water. It is also a fact that steelheading
with conventional tackle involves tons of lost tackle and big doses of
time spent re-rigging. Old-timers always tell beginning steelheaders,
"If you ain't losing tackle, you ain't fishing right." That
may be so, but only if you're a bottom bouncer. Float anglers seldom
lose tackle.
My favorite stream has a very fishy
boulder garden that almost always holds steelhead. Before I learned to
fish with floats, I usually planned to fish the "Garden" until
I took a fish or until I lost five leaders. My quota of lost leaders
almost always came before I hooked a fish. Now I fish the
"Garden" confident that I will not lose any tackle. I often
take steelhead in this prime water which most steelheaders ignore.
Float fishing isn't the answer to all the
steelheader's dreams. The weather will still be miserable, the fish will
still be scarce, and, as often as not, they will ignore everything you
offer them. But if you give floats a serious try, you will find some of
your dreams coming true. You will be able to effectively fish water you
had to pass up with other methods. You will fish your bait or lure with
a very natural presentation. You will miss very few bites, and you will
spend a lot less time retying gear. Isn't that a lot like what you have
been dreaming of?
The History of
Float Fishing
The English are credited with developing
sports fishing as we know it. Fly fishing was a popular form of the
Englishman's sport but, so too, was bait fishing. Isaac Walton in his
book The Complete Angler discusses several methods of preparing baits of
insects, fishes and pastes designed to draw the fish with their enticing
smell. Often, these baits were suspended by a float of quill or cork.
On rivers, bladders, bottles and bundles
of straw were used to transport the bait downstream. Some enterprising
anglers used geese for floats. They tied their baited fishing line to
the goose's leg. The goose was then chased across the waterway causing
the bait to be trolled.
There were no steelheaders in old
England, but there were many extraordinarily dedicated river anglers.
William Scrope who fished salmon in Scotland during the late 1800's
offered this advice to river anglers:
"Should you be of delicate
temperament, and be wading in the month of February when it may chance
to freeze very hard, pull down your stockings and examine your legs.
Should they be, black or even purple, it might, perhaps, be as well to
get on dry land; but if they are only rubicund, you may continue to
enjoy the water."
Had Scrope lived in modern times, no
doubt he would have been a steelheader.
In his book The Master and His Fish,
Roderick Haig-Brown tells us, "In British Columbia many fishermen
use bobbers, adjusting them so that the lead weights bump along the
rocks or gravel of the bottom while the lighter bait or lure sweeps
along just above. With this rigging, it is possible to cast upstream and
get a long reasonably safe drift down past the fisherman." Those
observations are from 1971. From that day to this, little has changed in
the art of float fishing. Perhaps, because the system has neared
perfection?
Float Fishing
Tackle
The float fishing steelheader has an
arsenal very different from other steelheaders. Float rods are between
ten and fourteen feet long. Reels are usually center-pin knuckle
busters, but a large minority of float fishing steelheaders use level
wind reels. Terminal gear consists of a float held above a series of
small split shot, or a slinky, with a swivel and leader below.
The most important part of the float
fisherman's arsenal is the rod. Long rods are essential. A rod ten feet
long or longer is necessary to cast terminal gear as much as ten feet in
length. Another reason for long rods is the need to keep your line off
the water to assure a solid hook set. This chore is easy with a long
rod, impossible with a short one.
For weight, most float anglers use split
shot. Weights are placed at four to eight inch intervals beginning about
sixteen inches above the bait or lure. Some steelheaders use slinkys
tied in-line or simply slip a section of hollow core lead on the line
above the swivel. Weight should be adjusted to allow only a small
portion of the float to poke above the water. This makes a very
sensitive float.
Most tackle shops carry floats, but often
the floats available are designed for panfish or walleye. To find
appropriate floats for steelheading, you may have to order from the
manufacturer. In Canada, where float fishing for steelhead was
perfected, anglers use a simple foam tube called a "dink"
float. These are versatile and inexpensive. In the US balsa floats are
popular in the mid-west and are rapidly catching on in the West.
Terminal Gear
In British Columbia where
almost everyone fishes with a float, most steelheaders use salmon eggs,
Gooey Bobs or rubber worms under their floats. In the Great Lakes area,
spawn sacks are the float fishers favorite. Here in the Northwest the
small percentage of steelheaders who use floats prefer Marabou jigs.
Which is best under a float? Whatever bait or lure you have confidence
in. The truth is, any steelhead bait or lure can be fished well under a
float. Buoyant lures such as Cheaters will tend to float too high unless
a small split shot is placed within a few inches of the lure. All other
baits and lures should be rigged the same way under a float as you are
used to doing now.
Float
Manufacturers
- Mr. Ed's Floats, (Dink floats) 4001
S.E,. Crown Rd, Camas, WA 98607
- Class Tackle,(Balsa Floats) 5719
Corporation Circle, Unit 1, Fort Meyers, FL 33905 800/869-9941
- Float Fishing Specialist, (Distance
Casters and Others) 5604 Wood Valley Drive, Haslett, MI 48840,
517/339-8971
- Thill (Complete Selection of Balsa
Floats) PO Box C., Brainerd, MN 56401, 218/829-1714
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