Number 3: A February/March/April native will show any...ANY...summer run in Western Washington a thing or two, or ten, about how to ruin gear and leave a weak-kneed simpering child on the bank of the river...
Number 2: After accepting number 1, it's a much bigger challenge to be successful in the winter...after all the fish I've caught in my life, the quality of a bad_@ss winter run is worth four or five good summer runs. BTW, I appreciate a bad-ass summer run as much as anyone, but it's just not the same...
Number 3: Now, #'s 1 & 2 have made the winter runs tougher to catch, and made the appreciation of them bigger. Here's the other good reason; I can get out of bed at 6am and be at the river before light, fish until dark, and be home by 6pm. To do that in the summer (which I do way too much) you have to get up at 3:30 am, and if you're as hardcore as me, you don't get home until 10 pm. Winter time makes for much shorter days!!
Outside of the top three reasons, there's really only one that matters...
If you are on one of many streams in Western Washington from Feb. 1 until closing, whether that be Feb. 28 or April 30, or anywhere in between, youre next cast could be a 30 pounder.
That's right...THIRTY POUNDS...or at least twenty...sorry, ain't gonna happen for any Western Washington summer runs...
Fish on...
Todd.
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Team Flying Super Ditch Pickle