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About The Waters
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Trunk StreamsStanding on the most southerly and not too lofty Manan Butte one gets a perspective of the trunk stream system of eastern Idaho. Facing east, the South Fork of the Snake River in a verdant fringe is seen flowing almost straight across the plain from its canyon between the Big Hole and Caribou ranges. From its course irrigation canals radiate like branches from the trunk of a tree. On the north horizon one sees Big Bend Ridge through which the Henry's Fork cuts after it gathers its sources in the Island Park area. To the northeast the Henry's Fork, tapped by irrigation canals, turns in slow arcs through the plain to its confluence with the South Fork, almost at ones feet. To the native east Idahoan this is the start of the Snake river. Facing south one sees it flow west around the butte then arc southwesterly into the blue haze of the plain. On it flows through the monotonous flats accepting first the remnants of Willow Creek then those of the Blackfoot River. On through the degraded cottonwood forest above the broad expanse of American Falls Reservoir it courses. Here it pauses and takes in the Portneuf River and numerous spring creeks before plunging more westerly to exit eastern Idaho. For more than a century the trunk streams have supplied life-blood water to agricultural activities, industries, and towns in the Snake River Plain. These activities in turn have had a profound influence on the trunk streams and their trout populations . . .*Publishers Note: The following waters are covered in detail in this book. Space prohibits covering each of them in detail here.
DrainagesTrunk Streams: About The Flies
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*Publishers Note: Snake River Country has 32 pages of flies, including color photos of each, the recipe and additional comments on the insect it imitates and where it is fished and how. Space prohibits covering each of them in detail here. However the following fly is representative of the information given for each of the included flies.
Speckled Biot Spinner![]() Thread: Cream nylon. 6/0 Tail: Four or five still grizzly cock hackle fibers. Abdomen: Light tan goose biot. Thorax: Light tan dubbing. Wings: Pair of gray Hungarian Partridge hackles, tied spent.
Credits: From the Snake River Country, published by Frank Amato Publications. We greatly appreciate use permission.
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