multiple flasher baited with worms. In the shallower sections of 

 the lake, fishing for bass, perch, and other spiny ray fish is good. 

 Several small lakes near Pend Oreille also provide fine sport on 

 warm-water species. 



June 7. Priest Lake, 50 miles northwest of Pend Oreille. 



Priest Lake is considered by many Idaho fishermen to be one 

 of the best cutthroat lakes in the state. Good fly fishing, here. 

 Plenty of bluebacks and Dolly Varden trout. 



June 75. The White fish-Flathead Lake section 

 of Montana, 250 miles by highway from Priest. 



Send your family to near-by Glacier National Park while you 

 work over an assortment of trout in Whitefish Lake. The Dolly 

 Varden will go to 15 pounds and the lake trout up to 35, 

 although the average will be considerably less. Cutthroat and 

 rainbow will run to 5 pounds. Flathead Lake yields about the 

 same variety of fish, with the addition of largemouth bass, crap- 

 pies, and other pan fish. 



A week later your family will return from Glacier to tell you 

 what great fishing you could have had there. 



July i. The Madison, Gallatin and Jefferson 

 Rivers. Take-off town, Bozeman, Monta?ia. 



All three streams yield rainbow and Loch Leven (brown) 

 trout. Wet flies, streamers, and a spinner-fly combination seem 

 best for the bigger fish. You could spend three weeks here and 

 at nearby Yellowstone Park, but the calendar is calling you 

 125 miles south to a jewel of consistency. 



July 20. Henry's Lake. 



Folks say that Henry's Lake produces average catches run- 

 ning better than 2 pounds. They may be rainbow, eastern brook, 

 or native cutthroat. Fishing is from boats, either with a fly or 

 casting rod with some form of wobbler. A few miles south lies 



188 



