I headed down to Central Pennsylvania at the end of April to fish the Team USA regional. I was super excited because I had not touched a fly rod since last October, and Central PA is becoming one of my favorite places to fish. Obviously, I was feeling a bit rusty and knowing most other competitors fish year round, I headed down with Stackmend teammate and fellow Vermonter Matt Stedina very early three days ahead of the comp the get some practice in. The Comp was slated to be on Big Fishing Creek, Spring Creek, KIshaloquoas Creek (probably not spelled correctly) and Little Pine Lake. We had only fished Spring Creek so we wanted to learn these other rivers as well. Arriving we found the rivers to be fairly high with about 6-18" of visibility. Apparently fishing had been as good as it gets the previous weeks due to some warm weather, but things had cooled and levels had come up and fishing was a challenge. We managed to fish all of the rivers and get into fish on each one. Here is a terrible pic of a nice brown I caught in about 6" of water right on the bank on the inside bend on Big Fishing Creek. We also had a practice day on the lake. We easily got into the stocked rainbows and were able to make a game plan for all of the venues. The night before the event Kish Creek was dropped due to high flows, and a second session on the lake was added. Session 1 I drew Little Pine Lake to start the comp. Weather forecast was calling for 40 MPH winds. Due to the forecast I changed my leader set up on my lake rod so instead of running a longer thinner leader off my fly line and fishing three flies I used a tapered fluorocarbon leader to a tippet ring and fished only two flies. In practice fish were cruising and eating just under the surface. I began with a midge tip line with is basically a floating line with a 7' intermediate tip to sink just below the surface This way I would be able to turn over the flies easier in the wind and have fewer tangles. I was pumped to be in the boat with World Team Angler Pat Weiss and we both agreed on where to start. First cast I landed a rainbow and was off to a good start. The wind started kicking up and our drogue was not working properly meaning we were drifting too fast and had to spend a lot of time rowing and adjusting the drogue. I landed 3 more fish in the next hour all within our first few casts. Pat had caught one to two less than me at this point. We struggled with the wind and drogue through the middle of the session and got off the fish. I think I lost one that ran directly at me and jumped three times. I could not strip fast enough to keep tension on the fish, I also got broke off by a fish on the take and thats about it. I was having trouble managing my leader when we moved because the wind was blowing so hard and when I would start the drift often had to fix tangles. This definitely cost me a few fish. 2/3 of the way through the three hour session we decided to move down the lake where we had seen another boat catch a few fish. Finally we got into more fish. I managed four more and Pat and I ended up with 8 fish each. I ended up with a disappointing 3rd place in the session, while Pat in the opposite group got a 2 with his 8 fish. The winner in my group got 9 and I lost a tie breaker with another angler who also caught 8. I was certainly hoping for better to start the comp. Session 2 The afternoon session was on Big Fishing Creek. I had a decent practice on this river catching fish in slow flats and heavy pockets, so was confident heading into the session, but fishing had still been slow considering the overall fish numbers. Big Fishing Creek in this stretch was about 30-50' wide with tree lined banks hanging over the river and heavy pocket water separated by bouldery flats. The beats were long, maybe 400 yards. This was much longer than I could cover in a 2 hour session so I walked my beat and made a game plan. The bottom of my beat began at the tailout of a long flat where it then dumped into another riffle in the beat below me. There were a few features here at the tailout but just above was the flattest slowest part of the beat. There were no fish rising that I could see but the wind was also still gusting about 40 MPH up the river. The middle of the beat was still fairly flat but had more boulders, logs and holding water that got better as you moved up until coming to a beautiful pool, though it was moving fast on the surface, before heading into some heavy pocket water. I decided with 2 hours I would skip the bottom 50 yards of my beat and start on the flat where the current was slightly faster and there were more features. I worked my way in with a double nymph set up on my tight line rig, though I knew I would have to make some adjustments in my presentation because of the insane wind. I also rigged up a dry dropper rod. About 15 minutes into the session I cast up stream toward a nice deeper hole on the bank with some mountain laurel hanging over the water. A few feet after my flies attained depth I set into a fish. It immediately took off ripping drag and testing my 6x tippet. Using side pressure and keeping the fish above me I landed a fat 42 CM wild brown pictured below in fairly quick order. You can see the opposite bank in the pic with the mountain laurel over the stream where the brown was hooked as well as the off colored water. I was pretty happy to get that big fish on the board because in the case of a tie, you'll probably win it and possibly get enough fish points to finish above another angler who caught less but smaller fish. The big brown came on a hares ear variant with a cdc soft hackle that had worked for me in practice and would pay off during the rest of the session. Slowly moving up the flat there was a nice depression with a log on one side of it. I fished it pretty hard from below and didn't touch a fish before positioning myself next to it to get a different angle on the drift. I rolled my point fly along the gravel bottom and when the fly got next to me I began slowly jigging it up and down in the slow river flow. A fish ate about 6' below me as I jigged the fly. As soon as the fish ate I immediately got downstream of the fish in a hurry and knew I had another pretty good fish on the line. I worked hard to keep that fish out of the log on the bank and got another good brown in the net, 38 CM. Continuing up river I hit some really good water with nothing to show for it and no eats. I cycled through flies but kept coming back to my fly from practice. I had no idea how other competitors were doing but was worried my 2 fish were not enough half way through the session. Finally I got another smaller brown out of a fairly shallow riffle/ pocket area maybe 1:15 minutes into the session. I got to the nice pool mentioned above and was shocked I couldn't pull a fish. The entire time I was dealing with difficult drifts and maybe one out of 3 was ineffective because of the wind, but the last hour I really began to struggle with the crazy winds. In fact, my teammate had a near death experience when a 3' pine he was standing under broke and fell directly where he was standing. He literally had to dive out of the way to save his life. Thankfully he was aware of his surroundings. Meanwhile I was trying to keep my rod low to the water and fish a very heavy anchor nymph but honestly it was tough. I tried my dry dropper rig but the wind was blowing the dry right off the water, when it actually hit the water! At this point I moved into the heavy pocket water stretch with 30 minutes left. Knowing the water I caught my fish in was much slower I contemplated heading to the bottom of my beat, but as I walked upstream a fish ate my fly as it dragged behind me. This has also happened in practice in heavy pocket water so I made sure to drag my flies around as I moved and it worked. I got below the fish and just as I was reaching to net it it came off. I was pissed and threw my net in the water like Andre Aggasi. This was enough to make me stay where I was and I threw on a soft hackle and began swinging my flies through the pockets hoping to pick another fish up, but also it was near impossible to get a good drift with the wind in this section of the river anyway. The session came to a close and I landed three fish off four bites. Practice had paid off for me in the tough conditions and and I was happy to find I ended up with second in the session. I just wonder if I could have gotten another fish or two had I gone down to the bottom of my beat instead of staying in the pocket water. I controlled another competitor on this beat right after and they managed a single fish in their session, again in the slower water so probably I should have headed back down. After day 1 I sat in 8th place and knew if I had a good day I could finish very well. Session 3 Session 3 was on Upper Spring Creek. It had fished decent the day before and better than during our practice session. I was controlling first and the fishing was slow for most anglers. I was fishing beat 6 which I had controlled Pat Weiss on two years prior, so was familiar with the water though I'd never fished it and the water was so much higher I barely recognized it. My beat had managed 6 fish 45 minutes before. The beat was short and a mix of pockets and riffles with a deeper pool and run at the bottom which was 3-5' deep. The beat was separated by a massive log jam and above that was flat water. I had brought a second rod for dry dropper or dry flies incase any fish were rising on the flat. Starting at the very bottom of the beat I cast far upstream into the run and floated my sighter on the water as my flies sank to the bottom. Shortly my sighter darted upstream and I set the hook. Things felt strange like there was a fish but it was stuck on the bottom, soon it came to the surface and jumped a few times. The first jump looked like the fly was in its mouth but the second it was clearly now fowl hooked. I had trouble netting the fish which was a theme on this session, and it got below me and sideways in the current and broke off my flies. I re rigged the same way and began fishing upstream. in the same manner. Soon I had three fish scored, and I had moved into middle of the pool. I was rolling my flies right along the bottom and I could feel the fish just pick up the fly off the bottom. The takes were really subtle but I was able to detect and feel them, which is what I love about my tight line rod. I caught 5 fish out of the bottom 20 yards of the beat and was off to a good start. I began working the pockets and riffles and picked up fish here and there. I managed to catch one fish I had missed by coming back to it 5 minutes later and fishing a different angle, this time I hooked it almost at my feet. I then had some nice tiny pockets on the banks that were maybe 6-8" deep, 10-14" long, and had a stick or two to hide a trout. I began just pitching my flies into the tiny pockets like a bass fisherman fishing largemouth in the weeds. This was productive and I'd drop that fly in the water and could watch the trout come from under the stick they were under and eat the fly immediately. I landed 2 this way and lost one, including scoring my largest fish of the session. I tried this elsewhere on the beat but there were not any areas that had the exact features on the bank that the trout preferred. I was having a good time fishing this way and was sure the previous angler had not put a fly in front of those bank fish. I kept working up through the beat and soon had 11 fish scored and one that was a millimeter too short. Most of the fish in the upper part of the beat came from 2' of water or less and were pretty close to me. I was fishing well and had only missed one and lost one fish, though for some reason I continued to have quite the adventure netting the fish. It seemed like everyone I caught I had trouble netting but it all worked out. I got to the log jam with maybe 15 minutes left and got into the flat water. I was looking for rises but didn't see any. The water clarity was poor and I could not tell how deep the water was on the flat. I contemplated using my dry dropper fly rod but I had no idea how deep I needed be with the dropper because of the poor clarity and the fish had been sitting on the bottom all morning. Contemplating what to do, and remembering when I controlled Pat two years earlier he had gone back down to the beginning instead of fishing the flat, I decided to make my way back down and fish back through with different flies where I started and landed 5 fish. I got there with maybe 10 minutes left and didn't touch another fish. I don't think this was the right decision in the end and probably could have put a few in the net on the flat with the dry dropper. Overall I was happy and I ended up with second in the session, and I barely beat the guy on beat 6 which won 3 out of 4 sessions. Session 4 Heading into the last session I knew If I won it I would be near the podium. It was on Little Pine Lake again and the morning session had beat up on the fish pretty good. Everyone knew where to fish and what to throw at this point so it would come down to who fishes and adjusts best. I was not going to be happy without a win here. The strong wind out of the north the day before had clearly blew the food to the south end of the lake, because thats where everyone caught fish in the morning. There was a metal tube about 2' in diameter that stretched across the entire lake. The fish were near the tube where the food must have collected. We rowed down to the south end of the lake a long way from the boat launch and got into position. With about a minute before the session started I had my flies out my rod tip and dangling in the air. I reached back to adjust the drogue and I must have dropped my rod hand because as I was looking backwards suddenly a fish bit my fly and then fell off. I figured we were definitely in the right spot. This is where things went sideways, very badly and very fast. On my third cast, my spool fell of my reel and sank to the bottom of the lake. I had to pull off all the fly line and nearly all of my backing to get it up off the bottom and back in the boat. Looking at the giant mess of backing in the boat I was worried it would take forever to get it sorted out and untangled. I worked through the huge mess slowly and finally was almost to my fly line when my boat partner, who was in charge of the score sheets and trays all weekend says,"dude I just realized I forgot the score sheets in my truck." With no way to measure or score a fish, we were forced to row upwind all the way back to the other end of the lake. I was watching my session and comp go down in flames, and none of it had to do with fishing poorly. I began to get sour and think about all the time and money I spent only for it to be worthless. In all I lost the first 45 min of my session. Putting the negative thoughts aside and also not showing I was real upset because I know my boat partner felt bad, I just had to do what I could and see if I could salvage some kind of result. I was fishing a floating line and kept adjusting my flies and set up. My boat partner was fishing dry dropper. He landed the first fish and I had a bump while pulling flies. Soon I had a fish eat on the hang and quickly netted him. It was pretty wild, but he had eaten two of my flies. I did another drift pulling flies and my boat partner kept missing fish on the dry dropper. I switched over to dry dropper for one drift but didn't touch a fish and switched back to pulling flies but lengthened my leader and distance between flies. I soon was into fish about every other drift and had 4 fish, and lost one near the net. I was pretty pissed to lose the fish because I rarely lose a fish on the lake and I can't even think of a time in competition I have lost a fish right near the boat. During this time, I noticed My boat partner seemed to be getting more eats on the dry dropper but was missing most of them, lost a few and had landed maybe two fish. I thought about switching over but could not tell if it was the way the fish were eating or something he was doing wrong. Since I was putting more fish in the net I decided to keep pulling flies even though I had less eats. My fifth fish was the big ugly palomino pictured above. I had seen the fish circling my flies on the previous drift, and got him to eat maybe 10 minutes later in the same spot. It was the first palomino Ive caught. Things slowed down and I noticed another boat catch a few fish toward the west side of the lake so we moved over there with maybe 10 minutes left. It paid off and both myself and boat partner caught a fish near the end of the session. I ended with 6 fish for 4th in the session. I was really disappointed with my result and the time I lost but was happy with the fact that I was able to beat a few people and almost pass more. The winner had 10 fish followed by 8's and a 7. Of course people commented that the first hour was when they caught the most fish. I know I could have won that session or at least managed better than a 4. Overall it was a pretty bad way to end the comp, knowing I could have done better through no fault of my own. I learned I need to keep track of the score sheets and trays even if I'm not the one who is responsible for them. In the end I ended up with a solid 7th place, and won my group. I improved my overall points from 54 to 59 so it was worth while and should keep me near the top 5 in the overall national rankings. Had I not had the poor fortune on the lake I think I could have been around 5-3rd place but I'll never know. Once again I learned some things, had a great time, and became a better angler and competitor. Thanks to my teammates, Roe Bear, Michael Yelton, and Matt Stedina for the good times and help, the organizers of the event, especially Ben Trew, and the rest of the competitors. Congrats to Pat Weiss, Ben Trew, and Ken Crane on their medals.
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Finally I was able to get out in VT and thankfully hook some nice fish! Andy has been out much more than I and has been getting into fish fairly regularly since opening day. A new baby boy, a Fly fishing comp in Pennsylvania, a now finished balcony off the front of my house, and wrapping up my sugaring season has kept me off the water until yesterday, albeit I was out for a very short time.
I stopped at the lower end of a midsize tributary during yesterdays rain with the intention of fishing a riffle and pool that I found seems to always hold nice fish early season. I had about a half hour to fish. Knowing the water temps were still cold, but not having time to take a temp, I fished nymphs right off the bat with a big attractor fly on point and a #16 hares ear variation on the tag. Stopping above the pool and fishing a nice pocket in a fast riffle I hooked and lost a fish on my very first cast. I ended up catching one wild rainbow a few casts later and then moved to the next pocket and was surprised to land a 7" Wild Brook Trout and losing one more just after the hook set. Now in a few minutes on my first day out I was 2/3 of the way to getting the VT trifecta! Knowing I usually get more browns in this area than anything, I was pretty sure I'd be able to get one. I moved down to the pool below and was surprised I didn't touch a fish here. I'm sure there were fish but I was not getting down deep enough with a relatively short tippet, pushy flows and no time to adjust. I then moved back up to the first pocket I fished and lost a 12-14" brown. This pocket was a little tough to land fish in with very fast currents on one side and a small log on the other. I found it hard to keep the fish out of the log and out of the fast water from the position I was in directly below the pocket. It was now time to leave and I had landed 2 and lost 3 fish all in these two pockets. I was determined to get a brown in the net so I headed to the pool above the riffle. I was rewarded with a nice 15" brown from deep in the pool and I had my trifecta in 30 minutes! So the real question is, what did I learn? The biggest thing was that the fish had moved out of their wintering lies into the more food rich riffles and were feeding readily. That's a good sign and both as an indicator that bugs are on the move and getting ready to hatch, and river temps have risen enough for a trout to hold in faster water thanks to a higher metabolic rate. Both of these clues indicate the fishing should be heating up out there. Now, it is still early May and we have some cold nights ahead so your best bet is to fish midday, but you should be covering all the water. I caught or hooked most of the fish on the bigger nymph but the brook trout ate the size 16, so don't get caught up in throwing just the junk flies and larger patterns. Andy was out two days ago and got into some small wild fish in very clear water conditions. He said he also saw multiple large trophy fish move out of their wintering holes and into the riffles, backing up my observations from yesterday. Keep an eye out for bugs out there. Soon, if not already in some places, we will have a lot of bugs out and fish eating them both below and on the surface. Its not too soon to be thinking dry flies and both myself and clients have caught fish on dries earlier than this. That said, fishing subsurface will definitely put more fish in the net. River flows are perfect on the smaller sized streams, still a bit pushy on the mid sized streams, and a bit high on our big rivers. Everything is fishable though, and the big rivers are ready for float trips. I'll have some more info soon, as I get more time on more streams in the next week. Happy New Year. I am happy to have turned the page on 2018 and am looking forward to 2019. Glad to finally get a minute to sit down and get some computer work done. This year has been super crazy with 2 kids and another on the way as well as some challenging times with moving, selling a house, renovating a new one and running two businesses. Things have finally settled now and I am looking forward to another great guiding season starting around the end of April or beginning of May, as soon as my maple sugaring season wraps up.
I try to throw a lot into my reports that can make you a better fisherman or woman beyond just the basics of fishing has been good or bad and they are eating ______ bugs. Hopefully I'll have enough time to get you all plenty of insight into tactics and situations I encounter on the river. Part of the reason I re cap my tournament events is so you can get an insight into how I am thinking and how I figured out a specific scenario in a comp that may help you if encounter a similar situation on the water. If there is anything else you'd like me to cover or have any questions feel free to reach out. I don't usually get too much into my thoughts on gear, or specific fly patterns or fly tying so if you all want more of that let me know as well. I'm looking forward to the opening of trout season. Last year I spent a lot of time on new water or new stretches of small and mid sized tributaries and found some great places that hold large early season wild rainbows and browns. I am also looking forward to getting back on the drift boat with you all soon. Lets hope 2019 isn't so hot and dry and we have good flows and water temps most of the season. I am starting the get the itch to get out and fish but we have a long ways to go. If any of you are looking to get out, the southern part of the state or western Mass have some good winter fishing options, if I happen to get a chance Ill head down that way soon. I competed in the Fly Fishing Team USA Regional Comp over in Lake Placid, NY, a week and a half ago. To say fishing over there was difficult was an understatement. Despite the tough conditions I had a great time fishing with my Stackmend Teammates Jesse Haller and Matt Stedina and we managed a gold medal as a team. Matt took 2nd overall and I managed 6th while Jesse got 12th. We all caught the same amount of fish throughout the comp however. A staggering 3 fish each! The comp venues were the Ausable River, Lake Colby North and South, and a bank session on Whey Pond. Going into this comp ranked 4th in Fly Fishing Team USA standings, I was hoping to continue that momentum, luckily after two bad sessions to start the comp, I was able to stay focused salvage a good result by winning the last two sessions.
The Adirondacks had a terribly tough summer just as we did over here in Northern VT. I found our rivers fared much better than the famed Ausable did in NY. The reason being the rivers over here in VT have a mush larger population of wild fish that have adapted to survive in our tough climate. The Ausable River is mostly a stocked fishery and so few of those fish made it through the low hot water conditions in July and August. We all met up on thursday afternoon and fished the Ausable. Three of us managed a grand total of 5 fish for the day. The water was very high in practice, but we learned a few flies that the fish seemed to prefer so we had a place to start come comp time. On Friday, we rented a john boat and the three of us spent a nice cool but sunny day on Mirror lake in downtown lake placid. Fishing on the lake was not easy either and we managed 4 fish boated. Again however, we were able to get enough info to come up with a place to start when on the lakes during the comp. Session 1: Whey Pond My first session was a bank session of Whey Pond. I'd never fished a bank session before and learned some valuable things for the next time I fish one. The area of whey pond we fished was a sandy silty bottom where we could wade out about 25 yards into the water. There was a weed bed about 20 feet from where we could wade to and then a drop off. I started with a fast intermediate line so I could cover multiple depths, but also had a rod rigged up with a dry dropper on my 5 wt and a 200 grain depth charge line that is about 30' of type 5 line and the rest floats. Starting with the intermediate I immediately began having problems with my line sinking and tangling under water. I was unable to cast well because of it and tried coiling the line in my hand as I stripped but that made a mess. I then lost my flies to a fish or weed, I am not sure, but re rigged and then had the biggest mess of running line ever. I had to abandon this rod and wasted a lot of time. The moral of the story is I need a stripping basket, badly. This spot on the bank session I started with ended up catching the few fish that were caught in most of the session so it turns out I missed my opportunity right off the bat. The rest of the session I tried some different lines, and tactics but did not get anything to eat. I ended with 0 fish along with 3 others. Two anglers caught fish and both were from where I started. I can't say I would have caught a fish, but had I been better prepared with a basket I would have not have wasted so much time and been able to use the tactics I felt most confident in. Over all a good learning experience. Session 2: Lake Colby North In the afternoon we drove to Lake Colby for 2- 2 hour sessions. Meeting the previous group on the way there we saw a lot of down faces. The lake had fished very poorly and only a few fish were caught. Most people blanked one or both of the sessions. I knew I was in for a grind. I was in the boat with Ciprian Rafan from the Canadian National Team. We started in a place I had caught fish in Nationals a few years ago. I was on a type 3 and Ciprian was constantly changing lines. I decided since he was changing lines so much I'd just not waste time changing unless he got into a fish. If he got a fish I'd copy him. Neither of us touched anything for most of the session. Finally at the end of the session we drifted into closer to shore in a weedy bay. We debated moving out but I felt that at least we could fish some kind of structure instead of open water. I missed a trout on a small soft hackle PT nymph at the boat on the hang and had one other eat right at the end. Ciprian lost one after about 3 seconds but we saw it was a trout. At the end of the session neither of us caught a fish and the entire group blanked. No fish for anyone!. Session 3: Lake Colby South The third session is where things turned around for me. I knew I needed to stay focused and that one single fish would likely give me a 1 or 2 in the session. This comp was organized a bit differently due to logistics so I had three sessions in one day, and lake Colby back to back with a 15 minute break in-between. Everyone in the group got back to shore after the beat down we took on the North side of the Lake. We all compared tactics that didn't work. No one had tried dry dropper. I had never fished this section of lake before but chose to drift along the shoreline using a dry dropper for the first half of the session. If I had no fish to show for it I'd change tactics. We were suspended in fairly deep water and I had two flies below my dry fly about 4' and 9' deep. I had one good take after about 20 minutes and while I was completely focused and ready to set the hook, there was nothing home. I had another small twitch later on and set again to nothing. After the hour was up we needed to move and I needed to change tactics. We went to the far end of the lake and drifted along a point. I set up my fast intermediate line knowing it was getting dark and thinking maybe the fish would be near the surface. Soon I had a quick bump but nothing was home on the strip set. I kept fishing the flies and the fish took again after about 8 strips. I came tight to in and began roping him in. At one point he swam toward me and I feared he was gone but I was able to keep the 33 cm rainbow on the line and get it into the net. That fish was all it took to win the session. Glade also caught one but I had him beat on fish points. The fish took a small brown bugger like fly I had invented that previous night that Matt named the Finless Brown. Session 4: Ausable River I had the last session in the afternoon on the Ausable River. I was excited for the opportunity to fish a difficult river, and ended up putting up a good performance. The previous day had put up very low numbers between 0 and 3 fish in each beat. My beat had taken 3 fish in the first session, 1 in the second and 0 that morning in the third session. Only three fish were caught in all 6 beats in the morning session. I watched the competitor fishing my beat in the morning and he fished it well but came up empty handed. My teammate had caught one fish and won his session in the morning. He gave me an awesome pump up speech that went something like "dude I don't know how the F**k you are going to catch a fish in the last session. I had about a 60% chance of blanking in the morning, you have like a 99% chance of blanking the last session". We laughed and I said I'm going to start by catching one fish and after I get one I'll go back and get another that's how. All of the beats were long, nearly 300 yards, and had good pocket water throughout. I began on the bottom of my beat which was shallow pocket water. I threw a dry fly in these pockets to start the session hoping to get one of the few small brookies in the river to eat a dry but came up with nothing. I then grabbed my H3 3 wt and began nymphing up the beat. I fished 6x and natural flies. I picked everything apart on the river. Knowing I'd only need one or two fish to win the session I wanted to get every possible fish that would eat a fly so I didn't just hit the best water first incase I spooked a fish I didn't see. I knew I'd only get one chance at the few fish anyway so whether I got a fish early or late it did not matter. I tried to fish far away from myself and upstream. I changed flies based on depth of the river and but only fished a few patterns. About an hour in on a flat glide about 3-4' deep I hooked the first brown. It was straight upstream of me and pretty far away. I roped it in, measured it and headed back to get another. I continued to work up stream fishing everything very meticulously. Roughly an hour later I hooked my second and last brown of the session in a similar flat glide of about 3'deep. The fish was upstream and at about a 45 degree angle to my right. Both takes were very subtle. I Knew that that fish would probably win me the session and I was right. In the end only one other fish was caught in the remaining 5 beats. I think the key to my success on the river was focus. It would have been easy to get down on the previous results, the poor fishing, the cold wet weather or just lose that laser focus after all the fish less casts, but I felt like it was an opportunity knowing that if I fished well I should be able to win the session and have a respectable overall finish. In the end, the team achieved our goal and won the gold medal. While I had hoped for a top 3 individual finish, the 6th place was enough to keep me ranked 4th overall in the team USA standings. It was a fun event and I felt like the teamwork between Jesse, Matt and I was key to our team medal. Congrats to the winners, and thanks again to Ken, Leonard, Richard for all the organization and volunteers that made the event possible. We had a good amount of trips out in the past three weeks. Fishing had been continuing to be mid summer conditions with some pretty good dry fly fishing to be had. The fish had been becoming very picky, and had been either refusing last millisecond or taking very quick. I had clients hooking less fish than usual because of that. On top of that if you missed a fish it was not coming back and if you made a poor cast it was down for a while. This made it a challenge for novice and even intermediate anglers. I did have the pleasure of guiding Jan from Florida and his friend. Jan is probably the most accomplished angler I've guided, owning double digit world records for salt water fly fishing. He had literally fished every amazing destination you've ever heard of in every corner of the world. He is pictured above with the nice male rainbow. We threw everything at this fish and it finally fell for a female flying ant. There was a hatch earlier in the afternoon, and the fish were not eating the ant pattern, but after about 10 fly changes at this particular fish, I went back to the ant and he ate first cast.
Mid summer conditions are thankfully a thing of the past, now that we have had a real weather pattern change. River temps have dropped into the 50's and low 60's in the afternoon on a warmer day. I've still been assessing the status of our wild trout on our mid and large rivers after what was the hottest summer on record. I can say, that these wild fish have really adapted to warm water temps that generally are lethal to trout and have learned where to go to survive. Some rivers or stretches seem to have weathered the summer just fine, while others maybe not as well. I got out on the lower end of one of our big rivers and got some wild rainbows. I was concerned that there would be none left down that low. I definitely don't think all of the fish made through the summer it but thankfully some did in our warmest biggest rivers. I also don't think the fish have spread back out completely from their summer thermal refuges they migrate to, though I'm sure they will continue to do so. I'd say cover some water when you are out to find the fish and please take care to handle them respectfully. Productive trout flies will begin getting smaller as most of the big bugs are finishing up their hatches, though you'll be able to get fish to eat bigger flies throughout the fall. I like to fish a larger 14 or 16 and then a size 18-20 mayfly nymph like a PT or red copper john. If you see fish rising on a slow flat or pool then throw a small size 18-20 BWO emerger. That is usually my first choice in this situation. The ISO hatch is about done, and unfortunately we didn't get to fish my favorite hatch of the year thanks to the hot water, but you'll still get fish to eat a size 14-16 ISO nymph either dead drifted or swung and stripped back to you. As we get cooler weather and water temps, cold fronts will have an increasingly negative impact on the fishing. I've found over the years that the day after a front moves through leaving a sunny, cold, windy day with the wind coming from the north or northwest, the fishing can be very slow. I fished those exact conditions Saturday and things were definitely slow. Andy ran a trip that morning as well and the clients had a slow day as I did. We got fish to eat but most fish were not interested. The good news is that after things calm down, think sunday and today, the fishing is generally pretty good. Mornings, especially early mornings, have also been slower since it cooled down and as the water warms up so has the fishing. Just keep this stuff in mind when you are heading out to the river. Lake run salmon will be starting the show up especially with any good pushes of rain. Along with those salmon will be a few browns and steelhead. It looks like we have another good shot of rain coming tomorrow so the lake tribs will likely get some big fresh lake fish. I like traditional streamers for those salmon like a black ghost. The longer they are in the river the less likely they will be to grab a streamer so nymphing will be more productive. I like mayfly and and caddisfly nymphs from size 14 to 18. Please let me know if you want to get out after some big lake fish! Happy Labor Day. I don't know why half of the pics uploaded sideways, and I don't know how to change it. I wish things were a little cooler so that we had more trout stream options for the holiday. We've been confined to the coolest few rivers and streams in the area, though I did get into a few more areas in the last few days thanks to a couple cooler days and nights, and though the remainder of the weekend will be very warm and keep most things above 70, we are now in September and it will be cooling off.
Trips for myself and guide Andy have been pretty good in the last few weeks for both trout and bass. We've had a lot of kids out which has been a blast. The dry fly fishing has been good with more fish being taken on dries then on nymphs, though we have had a couple trips that have been a bit slower. I had a mornning trip recently where the clients didn't want to get up early as I suggested and fishing was good from about 8-9 and then shut down completely. Most evening trips have been good. The big downside has been the fishing pressure has been higher that we are accustomed to, though not terrible, thanks to the few options around. I did get up north with a father and son on a wild trout steam and we landed a brookie, brown and rainbow up there. Most all fish were on dries, and things were spooky unless it was a faster riffle. I had scouted that area the day before and got fish on nymphs and not dries, so goes to show you that you need to be ready for everything. I also got out on a mid sized river real quick today to assess how the fish fared through the summer. The water was 67 degrees when I fished though I'd say it definitely over 70 by afternoon and will stay there. It got pretty warm throughout the summer, and I only got one wild rainbow. I was with my dad and dog and we really fished very fast just to see what was around, but in the spring in the same place fishing properly, I could catch 20-30 fish of all three species here, so I'm concerned there was a fish kill here but maybe they migrated to cooler areas and springs and haven't spread back out. Either way when it cools off I don't think Ill be guiding here. I'll be trying to scout more areas once we cool back down to asses how more of the fish fared, but I'm thinking ill be guiding higher in the watersheds than usual. Fish have been taking a wide variety of food off of the surface, in order of productivity its been size 12-18 caddis, size 12-18 mayfly emergers size 16-20, mayflies size 14-18, followed by stoneflies and terrestrials. I've seen a good amount of mayflies, sulphurs, light cahills, blue wing olives, and small baetis out there, caddis of all sizes, large golden stones, small brown stones, and a good number of lime sallies. Iso's will be hatching now on the bigger rivers but we will probably miss this fantastic hatch thanks to water temps. This swimming mayfly crawls onto rocks and hatches like a stonefly into a grayish size 12-16 dun. As I mentioned earlier there have been an increased number of fishermen on the few waters cool enough. Its still not like fishing in more popular destinations where there are people everywhere, but for VT we have seen more people than we are accustomed to. My guide Andy had a terrible experience with a fellow fly fisherman who broke just about every rule of etiquette we go by on the water. Unfortunately this guy was not new to fly fishing and really was just being a dink. Andy had selected a place to bring his father and son clients where there were no other cars or fishermen and as they began walking down this guy pulled up and asked if he was going to fish. Andy tells him yes and that his two clients were going to work up stream about 400 yards. The guys says mind if I hole hop with you guys and Andy says it would be appreciated if he gave them space to to learn to fish. He replies Im going to hole hop anyway, however instead he high holes them and begins fishing about 20 yards away. After a bit he comes down and begins talking to Andy while he is trying to give instruction and stands right next to him for a while and would not leave depsite being asked more than once to give them some space so he could work with his clients. To make matters worse, Andy got hooked in the nose by the son while tying on a fly for the father and the guy is still there right next to him! Luckily the client was a dentist and worked out the hook. Once the hook was out the guy who wouldn't leave asks what Andy tied on his clients lines, and then tells him that the flies are too big and will never work and then heads off upstream. Andy has much more patience than I. I'd have gotten pretty angry with the guy, if not before getting my nose pierced then after. As for the trip, the guys found some solitude and had way over 25 eats on the dry fly after that guy had already fished the water, so I'd say he had the right flies on! My apologies for the lack of pics on this report. I accidentally deleted pics before I uploaded them to the computer.
We just had another record breaking day of heat yesterday with highs reaching well into the mid 90's. My hope is that we have turned the corner and will at least get back to normal August weather. As we move deeper into August the nights lengthen and we start to get cool nights, something that we have not had much of. Cool nights really help our water temps. We have had a bit more precipitation lately but in this immediate area we still have not gotten a whole lot. Other areas have received much more rain then right around here. The rivers have come up a couple times, though not very much and dropped right back down. The next week looks wet, which is great. The temps in most rivers are still too high for trout but there are options on the upper reaches of a lot of streams. We could see the more options open up with the rains and cooler weather soon, which would be great. I have been doing some trips on the lower big rivers and they are low making for easy wading. We are getting a lot of big fall fish and bass mixed in. These trips really keep the rod bent and are great for kids and adults learning to fly fish. We are using both trout tactics and bass tactics, from floating big dries, to nymphing under an indicator, to pulling streamers and poppers. I've got a trout trip this afternoon and will be focused on dry fly fishing most likely, but we will see what happens. Ill be wearing camo to blend in and I've instructed my client to do the same. We will be fishing upstream and will move slow and stealthy to keep the trout from spooking. Lastly, please be considerate of trout in any thermal refuge areas. Its really best to lay off these trout until the water cools. They are really just trying to survive and as they are forced to stay congregated in a small area for longer and longer times the amount of available food is small when there are a lot of hungry trout in one spot. I just called the fish and wildlife a few weeks ago after hearing reports that people were roping in fish after fish, most of them trophies, in a well known thermal refuge. I urged the state to take action to protect these fish as it doesn't take long to reduce the resource, especially if people are taking out the large breeder wild trout. I didn't get too far with the state as they said they couldn't actually close the stretch of river, but were going to send biologists and game wardens down. I really can't understand how closing 100 yards of a river could not be done. They do it in other states. Our wild trout are always on the verge of life and death between tough winters, hot dry summers, predators, and water quality issues, they really should be protected when they are at their most vulnerable. I am counting down the days until we get to september, but we will make the most of August in the mean time. If we get a cool down, which happens a lot in August, we could have some good trout fishing in small windows. I Just got back from a vacation in Wyoming and Idaho with my family. Things unfortunately continue to be hot and dry here really putting stress on the local trout in the North East, and even making the bass fishing a bit tough. I'm hoping we have a weather pattern change soon. This coming weeks looks warm but thankfully wet. Our river levels are LOW right now. I've got a trip tomorrow for bass and fall fish, but haven't been doing many trips lately because of the conditions. Part of the reason we headed out on our trip to Jackson Hole, was to fish in the Team USA Regional Comp over in Idaho. which was the last three days of my vacation. It was also pretty warm out there with seemingly everywhere around the country seeing above average temps. Water temps were fishable in most places, though warmer than normal out there. I got a little fishing in with the family prior to the comp and the highlight was definitely a nice 17" brown from the green river with my three year old in the backpack. I didn't have my net so there was no pic but it was a good memory. On to the comp. I made the 1:15 minute drive from Jackson Hole, WY over to Ashton, ID to meet my teammates and do a little practice fishing. We fished the lower fall river which was a wide and flat riffle and got a bunch of fish on dries and some on nymphs, though most were small. Soon the sun was extremely hot so we spent the rest of the day looking at the comp water and tying flies for the next day. That evening was the draw, and competitor meeting where I drew a terribly difficult group, and knew I'd really have my work cut out for me. Session 1: Ashton Reservoir My first session was on Ashton Reservoir, a small impoundment on the famous Henry's Fork of the Snake River. I was hoping I would not have the lake first since I had zero intel, but didn't get that lucky. Going in blind, we motored about a half mile down the river until we hit the lake area we would be fishing. There were fish rising here and there, and the water coming out of the henry's fork was pretty cool so I made a guess that the fish were not too deep. I was in a boat with Ryan Wilbur, a great dude from CA. Thanks Ryan for letting me use your floatant! I started with a fast intermediate, and he started with a slow intermediate line. Our first drift resulted in only some big chub looking fish so we moved to the other side of the lake where the other two boats were. Things were slow, ryan pulled a rainbow, his only fish of the session, and I had an eat at the boat. I saw other boats catch a few fish so I needed to change tactics. Fish were still rising so I went to a slow clear intermediate line to fish just under the surface and hooked a fish but lost it on my first cast. This reinforced that I had made the correct decision, how ever another 1/2 hour of fishing and I had no fish in the boat. Again it as time to change, and I knew this session was going to be bad for me but hoped I could salvage something. I went to a dry dropper with a big buoyant dry fly and a chrominid 4' down and a leech pattern 9-10' down. Right off the bat I had an eat and broke off the fish on the hook set. I was now getting pretty frustrated. I quickly re-rigged with the same program and before long my dropper twitched and I set into a rainbow. The next half hour I landed 6 fish and missed a couple more takes. All of the fish came on my bottom leech pattern and were very subtle takes. It just took me too long to figure out what the fish were doing, and more importantly, what level the most fish were feeding at. I was not deep enough and instead of moving down in depth in my search for fish I went up. That cost me too much time and I couldn't make up the distance on the better competitors in my group. I ended up with a 4 on the session and was pretty bummed as I was hoping for a 1 or 2 on the lake, knowing I had some really incredible anglers to compete with and the rest of the on the rivers. Session 2: Upper Fall River That afternoon was a 2 hour session on the Upper fall river. Mostly faster pocket water, it was right in my wheelhouse as far as rivers go, and I fished pretty well. The picture here is my beat, except for the bottom 1/3 of the pic. You'll see some large boulders mid stream and a lot of structure on the edges. Access was from the left side of the pic. As we walked across the bridge and had our first look at the water I was bummed to see that the entire left side of the river was brown and the river was high. There must have been a release of an irrigation channel or something just upstream because the right side of the river was clear. Unfortunately the water was too high to cross. I began on the bottom of my beat in the dirty water. I had on a heavy PT nymph with a caddis dropper that was mid weight. Immediately I landed a rainbow on the bank. I then climbed onto some large mid stream boulders and fished some slack water mid stream about 15 feet behind a boulder. I landed about 8 fish in that small and dirty slack water mostly white fish, and lost a few others. It was tough since the water was high and it was the end of my beat. Everytime I hooked a fish I had to slide down the rocks, and try to keep the fish from spilling over the fast water and out of my beat. A few big white fish made it down over the rapid and came off but most I was able to control to the net. I then began to work upstream picking apart all of the features. As you can see the left side of the pic has a lot of boulders. I picked up fish all along the edge and into the middle as far as I could wade, at most 1/3 of the way across. As time went on the water was clearing and dropping allowing me to work out a little farther and fish more water toward the middle of the river. The fish were really on the feed and it seemed they were everywhere, form the bank, to pockets, and mid stream riffles. I picked them up both on the dead drift and jigging my flies in the slack pockets behind boulders. I lost a lot of fish in the session unfortunately, a few doubles that I only landed one, and a fair amount of trout that got below me in the fast water. A lot of fish were turning down stream and smashing my nymphs as they swam rapidly down river, so when I set the hook, many times were already down below me in the fast water and some came off. It was a pretty intense session as I swam three times, tore a 3" hole in my waders and scored 33 fish. I probably caught another 20 that were too small to score. When it was over I tied Michael Bradely with 33 fish, but he got me on fish points, so I ended up with the 2 instead of the 1 for the session. I was happy with my performance but needed to have lost less fish to win. I also made a mistake in my last two minutes. I had just scored a 39 CM rainbow that took me down the river. Knowing I had only a couple minutes, I waded back into where I had already fished, and though I caught two more in the last two minutes they were both too small to score. I was hooking fish everywhere and had already caught probably 7 or 8 in that area. I should have run upstream and fished a new pocket with my last minute and I'm sure I would have been able to get another scoreable fish for the session win, I never made it to the top of my beat. Session 3: Warm River The warm river had put up some incredible numbers the previous day, so I was expecting to catch around 30 fish in my three hour session. The warm was a very clear and cold spring creek that ran through a canyon. The water was full of rapids, woody debris and logs, and most places in my beat were fairly deep. Some of my intel form teammates was that the fish were feeding in areas where the sun hit the water. Unfortunately, there was no sun that morning in the canyon. I began in the bottom of my beat, but knew there was a decent pool at the top that had been pretty good the day before. My plan was to quickly fish up to the pool, and then head back down and fish my beat a little more thoroughly and end again at the pool. The bottom of the run was a deep swift run with some boulders, logs and a few edges that were a little shallower and slower, where I expected to hit fish, on the opposite bank. I soon found that the fish seemed to really be off. I only missed a single fish on the first 2/3 of my beat. I then caught a short fish and then scored a brook trout on the near bank in what I would call B or C water. I only had one fish and it was about 40 minutes in. I was surprised I was not catching more, but I knew it was the temperature of the water and was not too nervous. I was hoping the other beats were fishing the same. I assumed that once things warmed a little and bugs started popping, trout would respond. I got up to the top pool, which turned out to be more of a fast deep run into a flat tailout and then into a shallow flat and down into another deeper slower bank on the far side of the river. I landed a few fish out of the pool but still not as many as I hoped. I then moved up and got decent brookie in some shallow water near some logs above the pool. I then moved back down and got into some more browns and rainbows in the pool and then the deeper bank below the pool. I had around 8 fish and decided to go back down the the bottom of the beat. I began working the beat a little more thoroughly and picked up fish here and there along the edges and in slower water behind logs and under logs. it was very challenging since the fish were not actively in feeding lies and I had to get the fly deep and very near structure. I lost a LOT of flies this session. Soon I was back up to the top of my beat and was picking up fish here and there in the pool, mostly in the deep tailout where the current was not so strong and my flies were able to get down at their level. Finally I decided to put my heavy nymph on the tag and my smaller nymph on the point to get the smaller bug down to the fish since they clearly did not want to move much for the flies. I picked up some more fish this way including some white fish, right up until the session was over. I ended up with 18 fish scored and probably another 6 or 8 that were too small. I ended up with a 3 on this session, which I was ok with all things and incredible anglers considered. I felt I fished my beat well and couldn't have really gotten many more fish given the conditions. I lost maybe one fish and missed only one or two so I didn't leave many fish on the table. Session 4: Lower Fall River The lower fall river I knew would be a little difficult. One because it was the last session of the comp, so the fish had been worked pretty hard. I knew that I wouldn't win the session because the beat above me had a deep hole that held a lot of fish and won every session. This was my worst session overall and I made a few big mistakes. The river was a flat and wide riffle with few features. I had a couple rocks at the bottom of my beat and one near the top. It was a long beat and impossible to cover everything in 2 hours, especially since fish could be everywhere. I started with a dry and two droppers to cover a lot of water. I quickly abandoned this as I was getting no interest. I grabbed my nymph stick, my new Orvis H3 10.5' 3 WT. I had some mid thigh deep water near the bottom that I worked pretty thoroughly. I may have spent too much time here as I fished it from both sides and spent a lot of time here. I did get one fish on the swing and 2 more dead drifted but it was slow. I also had two fish break my 7x on the hook set. My fault for setting too hard with small tippet I think that most other competitors had fished this hard. I should have taken this into account. I then moved to the far bank which had a tiny bit of shade. The water was shallower than it looked. only about 6-8" deep but the river bottom was dark and it was out of the sun. There were a couple of boulders as well. I fished a single fly on 7x and began getting into fish. A few short fish later, I landed a one big enough and made the 100 yard run across the river. It was time consuming and tiring going across and back. I learned a few lessons here. One, I need a very accurate way to measure my fish quickly because I ended up running 3 fish all the way back that were about 1/4 to 1/8 of an inch too short. This cost me a lot of time and energy. I also learned that when you have to run far with a fish I need to unhook the fish first. I didn't do this and once got the line wrapped around my foot so bad I couldn't keep walking and had to try to get my foot freed in the fast water, I also broke off flies twice while running with the hook in the fish or the net, so that cost me more time to re rig after measuring the fish. The proper way to do it is to cast my flies down stream and let them hang in the current below me while I run the fish over. I did this on my last trip across and actually caught another fish but it was too small. Overall I think I scored three fish from the shallow shady water and ran three more back. Had I not wasted this time I would have been able to get more fish scored. With only a few minutes left, I had worked over all the shady areas and went over to the rock at the top of my beat. On my first cast I landed a whitefish and by the time it was scored the session was over. I only scored 8 fish for the session and ended with a 4 losing the 3 by two fish. I should have done better had I managed my time more efficiently and fished it better. I really should have spent more time at that upper rock. The beat above me had that deep hole I mentioned earlier. All of the fish caught there were released not too far from the rock at the top of my beat. I bet that a lot of fish filtered down to that rock and I could have pulled many more whitefish here, but I only had time for the 1 cast. In the end I ended up with a mediocre 12th place. While I fished fairly well and caught 65 fish for the comp, which was the 6th most of anyone in the comp, it was not enough to keep up with Michael Bradley and Jack Arnot in my group, who took 1st and 3rd respectively. I feel like I easily left 2 placing points on the table which would have brought me up to 8th place. I did learn some important lessons and am excited for the next comp. After 2 comps I am ranked 4th in the overall team USA standings, but there are a lot more to go and some great anglers who have only fished one or no comps yet. Congrats to the winners and thanks to all that organized the event as well as my teammates. Sorry its been a while since I updated the report. Things have been crazy for me here between selling my house and moving out, on top of guiding and managing trips for my guide Andy. I just haven't had an hour to write up a report and get pics uploaded from my camera, cell phone, and pics sent to me from clients phones and cams.
The big news is the Heat Wave on the way for the holiday week. We are talking some seriously hot weather for at least a week and truthfully has me a little worried about the welfare of our trout. Thankfully we got a good soaking rain that cooled the rivers off and raised the levels going into the warms stretch. I was on the water early this morning with a client on a mid sized stream and it was up and bit and a little off color to start. Water temp as 58 to begin the day, water was warming, dropping and clearing as we fished and about 62 when we got off. The fish were not crazy active but we pick away at them and landed a fair amount. My angler got the grand slam landing wild Brookie, rainbow and brown on this stretch of river. This will be a distant memory by the evening unfortunately. I really hope that we get some thunderstorms next week as eel to help cool and elevate the riversl. These long stretches of warm low water are what really stress the trout. Though we got rain its not going to stop most rivers from warming much above 70 degrees for the weekend and unless you get out Friday morning like I am with a client, or know a river or stream that stays cool all summer long, your best bet is to lay off the trout on our freestone streams. Its a good weekend to take a road trip to a regional tailwater either to the north or to the south. We know a handful of streams and rivers that stay cool all summer so there are some options if you'd like to get out next week with us. For trout, you could also hit a pond for the hex hatch which is peaking right now, as long as it has some depth where the fish can get to cool water. The trout pond we have a camp on has a great hex hatch and even during the warmest years the water is cold 2-4' below the surface this time of year. I'd also recommend throwing top water for Largemouth bass on lakes and ponds as this warm weather may drive the smallmouth down deep, or fishing the lower stretches of the big rivers for smallmouth. Speaking of Bass, last weekend was the Annual Ditch Pickle Classic fly fishing tournament for bass on Lake Champlain. We had a great time, drank a lot of beers, but came up just a bit short of our goal of winning the comp. There were about 130 anglers this year and e ended up in Third. Its our third year in a row on the podium but have yet to take the top spot. Really this was our year to win it, and had the fish on to do so but three good ones swam away before the got to the net. We are looking forward to next years tourney. Congrats to the winners and my teammate Mike Woulf on his 5th place individual, his best individual finish thus far. We fished mostly for small mouth and found most fish near drops offs in 3-7 feet of water using intermediate lines. Things were inconsistent to say the least as different rain storms and fronts moved though. We would have long stretches of nothing and then hit 3 or 4 fish quickly. Our cut off to get our score cards in is 11 on sunday and as luck would have it we started to get into bass at about 10:58. I landed a decent one then and then mike lost a real good one at the boat. Suddenly there were nice bass chasing our flies almost every cast and we had to leave. That was pretty exciting but kind of a bummer, cause we could have improved our score for sure. We have some openings next week as well as the week after. Ill be in Idaho and Wyoming on vacation next week and flshing in a Fly Fishing Team USA Regional in Idaho July 12-14, but Andy will be available to guide the next two weeks so feel free to get in touch with me to schedule a trout or bass trip on the fly. I hope everyone has been out enjoying the weather and getting in on the great fishing the past week has had to offer. Between myself and two Guides Andy and Evan, there have been trips out almost everyday and am booked through fathers day weekend, though Evan has an opening next Thursday. Conditions are great right now on the big rivers but getting low and spooky on the mid sized streams. We really could use the rain as we are well below seasonal averages and do not want to be in a drought going into the heat of the summer. I did have one slower day guiding on Monday morning after the front came though and cooled things way off. We caught 4 or 5 fish, and missed at least as many, but in runs I'd expect 3 fish in we would get 1. Just about every other outing has resulted in good numbers and fairly easy fishing. That should continue this weekend into the beginning of next week at least. River temps on the big rivers this afternoon were a perfect 60 degrees, but be ready to take temps again next week. Hopefully your thermometers got wet at the end of last week when it got hot.
While we have gotten some nice fish, as is usual this time of year the smaller fish really start to show up. For instance you could fish through a stretch of river that is known to have wild trout in May and maybe hook a few nice fish and a few mid sized fish and then go hit that same stretch today and catch three time as many fish with a lot of them being 5-10". It seems to be like this every year. This was the case wednesday night on a smaller river, and while we managed 4 nice fish, we caught as many or more fish under 7'. Things were spooky as I mentioned earlier, and if you fished a run or pool second it was tough to get eats, usually I can pick up pretty good numbers of fish after its been fished but I only managed to lose one and miss a couple. Fish have been spread out between deep pools, rapids, and skinny riffles, and near any structure both on the big and smaller rivers. We have gotten a lot of fish out of skinny and fast water recently. One tactic that worked for me the other night while nymphing some marginal water was to downsize my tippet to 7x and fish a single fly. The section of small stream I fished was a fast riffle that was about 6" deep and no real structure but for the slight outside bend that had about 12" of depth in about an 18" wide slot along a rock wall. Going with one fly and presenting my nymph upstream of me, I was able to get a precise cast into the slot and took three wild rainbows of 12", 11", and 6" out of that slot. Had I been fishing two flies my accuracy would have been diminished and the two flies may have been in different current speeds resulting in an unnatural drift that may not have been eaten, especially if both flies were weighted. We have also had some good opportunities on dry flies. A few trips out have landed good numbers of fish on mainly caddis imitations. Both in pocket water during the day and flatter water in the evening. On top of dry fly fishing, swinging wet flies is very productive right now at all times of the day. Generally I like a soft hackle mayfly imitation and a caddis pupa imitation like a lafontaine's sparkle pupa. Last friday I saw the first two golden stonefly shucks to add to the potpourri of what is hatching right now. You can read the list in my last report. The past weekend I got down to the Catskills with fellow Guide Andy and we met up with our long time high school friend Adam for the weekend floating the Delaware River system. This was a last minute trip planned a week ago. I was supposed to be fishing in the US National Fly Fishing Championships in Bend, OR that weekend but because of a variety of problems and events over the past few months I had to drop out. While we had a great trip, we didn't love it down there. We stayed a great cabin on the East Branch of the Delaware, with riverside access, and had we stayed and fished from camp probably would have caught more fish than floating. Ill preface this story with the fact that I have fished just about every western state, eastern state, Alaska, Canada etc and not had anywhere near the issues I had on the Delaware. The big problem was the absolutely insane number of fishermen and drift boats on those rivers, and the fact that many, though not all, said fishermen were assholes. In fact we were swore at by fishermen, had a boulder sized rock thrown from the bushes at us by other fishermen, and to top it off some piece of crap stole the pin from my trailer hitch and my trailer came off the while towing the drift boat. Luckily I had a backup trailer hitch so grabbed that pin and kept going and the trailer didn't do any damage to my truck or get damaged itself. I guess its too close to NYC or something but 75% of anglers wouldn't say hi or clearly acted pissed you were there. There were times we could see 7 drift boats in sight while floating and places there were 20 or 30 anglers wading. Being that the wading anglers have the right of way we were constantly maneuvering around behind them and most every good piece of water we didn't fish because its bad etiquette to fish a wading anglers water. Well, a lesson learned, as I said our cabin was great and Ryan Fifield of Fifield Outfitters was a big help. If I go back it will not be on a weekend, and if the flows are low like they were I will just wade fish. There are some big fish in those rivers for sure so I'll be back again. |
AuthorBen Wilcox Owner/Guide Maple Country Anglers Archives
September 2023
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