Winter is long in most of the West. Many fisherman have gone months without handling a fly rod and have either went into full hibernation or have been busy tying flies for the upcoming spring. Late January and early February the temps start to rise and nymphing can be good, especially with the ever deadly San Jaun worm. It works but it also gets old quick. Fortunately the skwala hatch is just around the corner. In limited spots across the West a medium sized stonefly called the Skwala (skwala americana) begins its emergence onto river banks, logs and other structure around the river. Emerging from their shucks they begin to crawl around and eventually search for a mate. After mating the females return to the water to lay their eggs and the lifecycle continues its cycle.
That’s a highly simplified version but the key here is that the trout start looking up in a big way. Being able to toss a size 10 foam body dry fly in the middle of a snowstorm to a 20″ brown will absolutely change your perspective on spring fishing. But that doesn’t mean the hatch is easy to hit perfectly. Fishing a day here or there means you might not even get a glimpse of the potential and could very well think the hatch sucks and why would a guy waste his time throwing a dry when nothing eats it? Given spring in Montana weather and water temps can drastically change as well as river flows. The hatch can pop one day and be dead the next even without a significant weather/temp change. It can be good in one five mile stretch one day and in an entirely different area the next. Often a few bugs show up around mid-February and can last well into April. Finding the right window on the right stretch is the tough part. But when you hit it right it’s absolutely amazing. Big fish and even bigger eats.
After a few years of talking about making a film to show the highlights of the hatch we finally decided to go for it. That was 2015 and with no funding and no real plan we filmed 4 days that spring. That year gave us just a taste of what was to come as only one of those days really worked as far as getting any good shots on camera. We then filmed 11 days in 2016 knowing that we needed more good footage to really capture the eats we had hoped to show. Filming fishing is always a tough gig. You can almost count on the fishing to be worse the second the camera comes out, it’s just how it is. Throw in missing shots, having the exposure or focus wrong or just not being in the right place at the right time and you’re lucky if you log 5-10 really great shots in a day. We now had filmed enough eats but the bug footage was lacking. Actually capturing the bugs hatching had been tough and we decided we needed one more year to round out the footage and add a few more good fish to the mix. After three years and over 20 days spent filming we called it complete and got to editing. A few long weeks in the edit bay left us with a rough cut and another week of polishing saw the film finished and complete. Three years and lots of work, money invested, long days and even longer nights and we are proud to present the trailer for SKWALHALLA. The full film will be available for purchase on Vimeo On Demand on February 1st and is now available for Pre-Order at this link > https://vimeo.com/ondemand/skwalhalla Enjoy the teaser!
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-Written by Zack Boughton