 |
A peek of blaze orange and some other colors. |
After Eric and I fished for 6 hours and, according to his onX
maps, covered just over 4 miles of woods and water, he went out with the shotgun
at dusk and got himself a doe. He is
mostly an archer, and the Silver Fox pointed out that it was a gut shot based
on the grainy photo, but I still think I am the mitch today! I was home taking a nap while he was walking back
into the woods, probably running on water, deer jerky, and the rush of a good day
of fishing (not to discount an outdoors hall pass from his lovely wife). It was a good day for both of us. We got a significant-enough amount of rain in
the evening after a couple light rain days in a row, so the crick was in its
banks but full and stained. By the time
we walked into the first spot and were fishing by 7:50 AM or so, I would
estimate that we had about 12 inches of visibility. Probably a streamer day, I thought. That did play out as expected, but I did get
one decent one on a pink worm and Eric fooled a few with the egg. We were both fishing small Eric-tied buggers
on the mono rig, and at times I wish I had chosen to streamer fish the
traditional way. I even had the other
rod in the ‘Ru this morning. However,
the mono rig is versatile. Even though
the fish rarely hit a dead drifted bugger and wanted it moving on the swing, it
was warm enough to fish without gloves and not only strip but also strip set
with the 15 lb. butt section of the green mono.
Plenty of fish were caught, and a few of them were small stream beauties
over 12 inches long, which was a nice change for me from earlier in the week.
 |
One of Eric's better ones. |
Some dudes bowhunt this land, so we had a little blaze orange
with us and were hoping any fellas in the tree stands were also sporting some. We saw no hunters, but we did see a lot of
dead animals. We saw a drowned raccoon near
the first hole, a big dead turkey vulture or raptor, and the carcass of a buck
who probably met his demise last year. The
decay did not seem to affect the wild trout, who ate well. They had the typically slow and nippy
tendencies of winter fish, especially as the day wore on, but they were slowly chasing and nipping at meat, as I noted above.
Once we dialed in the pattern and the water type that held feeding fish,
we proceeded with confidence. That
confidence also helped us both stay patient and stick a couple of better fish
in deeper holes that did not fit the pattern.
I mentioned the egg and the worm because we were trying to work as a
team and offer a couple options. In a
few cases, I moved a nicer one with a bugger, and then Eric got him to eat an
egg—or vice versa. We did not even discuss
this, but we fish well together and make good complementary choices naturally. I believe that we both consider our fish on
this creek our fish. What I mean is that
if we were alone, we might have had a chance at all of them but working as a
team we share in the success, keep each other honest, and even offer a little
coaching when needed.
 |
Doubles, eggs, buggers, even the san juan worm. |
Fishing was good for the first 90 minutes or so, and then
we wasted a little time with two deep holes that have winter all over
them. My gut was telling me that before
the huge warm-up the day before, these seemingly money holes were probably fringed
in ice at best, covered in a thin layer at worst. They were also much dirtier than the moderate
riffles where active fish seemed to be set up and looking for a meal. We may have squandered some prime time fishing
this deeper water, but we retooled and made the most of the pattern we
established early. We fished until about
2 PM before turning back, but things got more challenging after 12 PM. We had way more short hits—that could mean
fish are getting pecky or that we had been out and fishing hard for a while and
were experiencing diminishing returns. Changing
weather was a factor, as well, with winds picking up and a dry chill returning
to the air. I think it was a little of all
of the above because I definitely missed two fish after lunch that I should
have had. Contrary to conventional wisdom
about winter fishing, I have fished the winters for so long that I am never
surprised when wild brown trout act the way they would in any other
season. Sun gets high, midday
approaches, and they shut off for good long while. Remember that when someone tells you to sleep
in and fish from 10 AM to 2 PM in the winter like a mitch!
 |
My best, one of Eric's best. |

Eric wanted to be back in the woods with a shotgun by 3 PM,
and fishing had slowed considerably, so we made an aerobic trek back to the
parking spots around 2 PM. We were
satisfied with the morning’s proceedings, and even if he didn’t have plans to
hunt, we may have come up dry until 3:30 or 4 PM when the magic hour begins (sometimes). Even with the year of the drought nearly behind
us, I still clocked 65 trips in 2024. I
will take it. It was a challenging
year. Not only were flows at record lows,
but the striper run that I thought would keep me busy into the third week of
December fizzled after the first week of the month, and then there was a premature cold snap
to end the season. I go back to work on Thursday
and Friday, but I definitely made the most of my winter vacation despite being
sick for a week too. More rain on
Wednesday night, so never say never for a first fish of 2025 on January 1. The new license and trout stamp are ready to go if I get the opportunity.
 |
Afternoon bonus shot. Happy New Year, mitches! |