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Landscape Pictures of Rivers, Page 46



The appeal of trout fishing is tied to the landscapes in which they live. They need the kind of clean, cold water found mostly in pristine rivers in pristine places that lend themselves to landscape photography. I've begun to take that hobby seriously too, although the best times of day for pictures conflict with the best times for fishing!

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 From the Chatanika River in Alaska.
StateAlaska
Date TakenMay 28, 2011
Date AddedMay 31, 2011
AuthorTroutnut
CameraCanon PowerShot D10
Slow backwater From the Kenai River in Alaska.
Slow backwater
StateAlaska
LocationKenai River
Date TakenSep 3, 2014
Date AddedDec 19, 2014
AuthorTroutnut
 From the Mystery Creek # 23 in New York.
Date TakenSep 6, 2006
Date AddedOct 3, 2006
AuthorTroutnut
Recent forest service work has stabilized the alder-lined banks of this small trout stream and opened it up to sunlight, which helps increase its productivity. From Mystery Creek # 56 in Wisconsin.
Recent forest service work has stabilized the alder-lined banks of this small trout stream and opened it up to sunlight, which helps increase its productivity.
Date TakenMay 28, 2005
Date AddedFeb 8, 2006
AuthorTroutnut
These bear tracks made ma a little bit more alert than I was before.  They're not same-hour fresh, but they're also not especially old, and who knows how far that bear moved?  I never did see it, but who knows if it saw me? From Fish Creek in Alaska.
These bear tracks made ma a little bit more alert than I was before. They're not same-hour fresh, but they're also not especially old, and who knows how far that bear moved? I never did see it, but who knows if it saw me?
StateAlaska
LocationFish Creek
Date TakenSep 5, 2007
Date AddedMay 1, 2011
AuthorTroutnut
CameraPENTAX Optio WPi
 From the West Branch of the Delaware River in New York.
Date TakenJun 1, 2007
Date AddedJun 5, 2007
AuthorTroutnut
CameraPENTAX Optio WPi
The Yukon River Bridge.  It doesn't look as intimidating from this angle as from up above when you see that it's "paved" with wood, although I trust that was a wise engineering decision given all the truck traffic and extreme weather conditions. From the Yukon River in Alaska.
The Yukon River Bridge. It doesn't look as intimidating from this angle as from up above when you see that it's "paved" with wood, although I trust that was a wise engineering decision given all the truck traffic and extreme weather conditions.
StateAlaska
LocationYukon River
Date TakenSep 2, 2007
Date AddedMay 1, 2011
AuthorTroutnut
I missed one strike in this pool after taking the picture. It was a good fish that first showed itself with a telltale bulge and eddies below my fly, the sign of a nice trout refusing without quite breaking the surface. Five or ten drifts later it took convincingly, but I missed the hookset. That was the story that day -- missed hooksets. I didn't stay to fish this pool very long, because I tried to cross to fish it from the side that's on the right in the picture, obviously the best angle, and I found that what looked like an easy crossing near the tail was a swift, bouldery flat of very deceptive depth in the clear water. I found myself half-way across, past what had originally looked like the deepest water, only to find that the water that looked easiest was even swifter and deeper. I thought surely I was in for a swim, but somehow I made it back to the near bank dry and jumped in the car to head for less treacherous wading. From the Beaverkill River in New York.
I missed one strike in this pool after taking the picture. It was a good fish that first showed itself with a telltale bulge and eddies below my fly, the sign of a nice trout refusing without quite breaking the surface. Five or ten drifts later it took convincingly, but I missed the hookset. That was the story that day -- missed hooksets. I didn't stay to fish this pool very long, because I tried to cross to fish it from the side that's on the right in the picture, obviously the best angle, and I found that what looked like an easy crossing near the tail was a swift, bouldery flat of very deceptive depth in the clear water. I found myself half-way across, past what had originally looked like the deepest water, only to find that the water that looked easiest was even swifter and deeper. I thought surely I was in for a swim, but somehow I made it back to the near bank dry and jumped in the car to head for less treacherous wading.
Date TakenSep 2, 2004
Date AddedJan 25, 2006
AuthorTroutnut
Interesting vegetation grows around this shallow, remote spring pond at the headwaters of an obscure trout stream. From Mystery Creek # 56 in Wisconsin.
Interesting vegetation grows around this shallow, remote spring pond at the headwaters of an obscure trout stream.
Date TakenMay 28, 2005
Date AddedFeb 8, 2006
AuthorTroutnut
 From the Sagavanirktok River in Alaska.
StateAlaska
Date TakenSep 4, 2007
Date AddedMay 1, 2011
AuthorTroutnut
CameraPENTAX Optio WPi
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