Thanks Jereme. That is a tall compliment after your truly monster striper photos.
Finally got a few of these Sandy River photos down to an allowable size. One pic shows the 9-11 pound female chromer that I had to land and photo alone. I have not yet seen an Oregon (spey) steelhead guide ever use or even carry a landing net. They mostly regard beaching a steelhead like they do netting them - bad form. So the aim is to identify the optimal calm water nearby, get her there, get her head pointed away from deep water, get on her side with her head out of the water, “tail” her, unhook and release. Oh, and photo her too. All with an 11 to 15 foot rod in hand that goes, well, wherever you can secure or pitch it in the landing chaos. Yep. Can be done.
But my most interesting photos were of
some Sandy River Oregon shore seasonal stone art that had all
happened in only the 3 weeks since the high waters abated. All these
many dozens of stone “totems” were built by one senior Boomer
Oregon woman, seriously new age and promoting harmony with home
made signs posted along the park path. These ad hoc stone figures can show up
anywhere from the US Pacific Northwest and north into Canada (Inuk
Shuk?) - Native American and First Nation origins. Always four
stones. One pic shows my Meiser 13 foot 9 inch rod there for size
perspective. Also took some pics from the park above where the stone
artist was walking her palate, picking out stones. Serious chrome
karma.
Yes, way more totem than chrome pics.