Seasons | Fly Fishing from Max Rhulen on Vimeo.
Nice new fly fishing film short from Max Rhulen with five minutes of fly fishing a number of rivers in Colorado.
From the filmmaker:
“Seasons is a 5 minute long fly fishing film that takes place in various locations throughout Colorado. It captures most of our fishing trips and adventures from April 2014 to April 2015. We made sure we did several trips during each of the four seasons during the year but due to flooding and weather the winter and spring portions lack content. So, we combined them both with the intro. We fished rivers, lakes and streams such as Williams Fork, Colorado River, South Platte, Upper Bear Creak, Chicago Lakes and many more.
All music was produced by a local guitarist out of Evergreen, Colorado by the name of Tanner Johnson”
To check out more from this filmmaker, please click here.
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More on this fly fishing destination:
Denver is almost the starting point for the world-class fly fishing that Colorado is known for. Running through downtown Denver is the South Platte River – a prized tailwater that serves trout and carp anglers in and near Denver and also provides extraordinary fishing in more mountainous locations southwest of Denver. Access spots such as Deckers and the gorgeous Cheesman Canyon tend to draw many anglers, while there is also highly regarded private water along the South Platte.
Further south, the Arkansas River offers a great deal of public access in diverse settings as well as opportunities for both walk and wade and float trips. And just west of the Arkansas flows the Gunnison River – famed for its gorgeous Gunnison Gorge and for spectacular float trips and salmonfly hatches.
Among many, two other rivers that attract raft and drift boat action are the Colorado and Roaring Fork Rivers. Meeting the Colorado in Glenwood Springs, the Roaring Fork offers easy access in its smaller sections closer to Aspen and opportunities for wading and floating as the river widens through the Roaring Fork Valley. Float trips on the Colorado River take anglers through seemingly endless miles of trophy trout water and through much of the state that is otherwise hard to access by foot.
The Taylor, Frying Pan, and Blue Rivers are tailwaters that offer anglers a unique opportunity to catch exceptionally strong (and often magnificently colorful) trout that reach often unbelievable sizes. Due to the constant supply of food and nutrients by way of mysis shrimp that flow through the spillways of the dams on the rivers, these trout are often both big and beautiful.
Rocky Mountain National Park includes everything from the Big Thompson River to several creeks and lakes in a setting that often promise both great scenery and run-ins with big game animals. And throughout the rest of most of the state, anglers can choose from some of the best rivers on earth, including the Yampa, San Juan, San Miguel, Cimarron, Animas, Rio Grande, Eagle and more. And for something different, lakes, reservoirs, and a range of backcountry waters provide additional opportunities.