Sunday, November 9, 2025

November 9, 2025 - I Get the Sense They Are Way More into Each Other than Me for the Time Being – NEPA

Big native....

Even though I was not fishing in very spawny water, I saw a redd this morning.  Like last weekend, I get the sense that the wild browns are currently just not that into me.  I scroll through the blog and see many successful early November trips over the years, but this year seems like it’s going to be different.  If that’s what it’s got to be, I am okay with it.  I hope they make a lot of babies, a lot, like mad YOY, yo!  I am sure with the drought conditions there was a good deal of predation and even stress from warm water this summer and fall. We may need a good spawn in order to correct.  The fallguys, however, they are living their best lives.  I must have caught ten of them in the places where trout should be.  Heck, I got three of them swinging a streamer, and more than once I had a perfect drift on a bouncy, trouty seam, and got clobbered by what I thought HAD to be a trout this time.  Nope.  Fallguy.  There were size 20 blue winged olives hatching sporadically, and at least the fallfish were on them.  Only one riser, but many of the fallfish took a small BWO nymph on the dropper tag—up off the bottom and actively feeding.  With the conditions this year, I did not expect a lot of rainbows to make it this far into the season, but of course the only trout I messed with was a rather solid rainbow.  She too was up off the bottom and took the size 18 dropper tag bug.  I did not even spook a brown trout this morning.

Did I mention it was gorgeous early this morning?

It was a beautiful morning too.  Rather mild, no wind, gorgeous.  That is until a front arrived about 11 AM and eventually chased me off.  Not before I got soaked to the bloomers, of course.  I guess I was hoping the clouds might really get the BWOs going or at least make the browns less wary and more willing to chase a bugger.  The rain came in waves and at times it looked like it might clear.  I was hearing Carl from Caddyshack telling me, “I'd keep playing…  I don't think the heavy stuff's gonna come down for quite a while...."  We all remember how the Bishop’s round ended.  I did catch a couple more fallguys in the torrential downpour, so I’ve got that going for me, which is nice.  I only saw one other fisherman way upstream, also standing out in the rain, maybe hoping for the same rainy spark to ignite something.

A healthy survivor also noticed the BWOs (while the browns were just chasing tail).

Besides the inconvenience of getting more rain and sooner than expected, I was just glad to be out there.  We finally got my wife a car on Saturday, so I am back in the old, old ‘Ru.  Meet the new ‘Ru, same as the old ‘Ru?  I briefly drove this one as my fishing vehicle before inheriting the Outback when my old man passed.  My wife had been driving it, so it was her turn for something new(er).  We actually found a 2024 Nissan with less than 7000 miles on it, so patience and a few bus rides to the regional rail station paid off.  The car still has half of its original factory warranty on it, and is certified pre-owned, so we did a lot better than I expected based on the total loss pay out we received.  She was not happy that she had to get the new “freedom” PA license plate, but otherwise she was very pleased with her new ride.  I tried to help by telling her that someone in the PA legislature wants us to become “front-platers,” so she avoided that one, at least.  The thing is, she’s originally a North Jersey girl, so born and raised a front-plater.  As for me, I had time yesterday to set up the little all-wheel drive Impreza, which fits my 10-foot rods and all my gear (just not raingear today) so if the fish were ready today, I was ready, no excuses.  They were not ready to eat, more like ready for love.  Hey, fallfish are natives, at least, and because I actually had polarized glasses with me this week, I saw a couple of them eat in the low, clear water.  It’s the little things sometimes….

Low water woes and another decent fallguy.


Sunday, November 2, 2025

November 2, 2025 – A Tough One a Couple Days Too Long After Some Rain – Northampton County

One trout landed...

I still don’t have a vehicle, but my wife was kind enough to give me our one car to do a little therapeutic fishing this morning.  I was hopeful that the rain late in the week did some good, until I saw how brief the spikes on the gages were.  Saturday was still blowing after the front, but today’s wind was manageable.  It was cold, however.  With the extra hour of sleep due to clocks falling back, I was up and out bright and early.  I was streamside at sunrise, and it was only a few clicks above freezing, maybe 36F to start.  I did not drive that far from home, and planned to explore a section of creek that gets pounded as of late, so I wanted to be the first mitch out there.  With the water low and only slightly colored, it was not a bad plan in theory, but brown trout are dicks.  These fish in this here crick are no exception, but often times the holdover rainbows don’t get the memo and can keep it interesting.  Not today.  I did not catch YOY or suckers or chubs, which means the conditions had all the finned species feeling off.  I did not see ducks until 9 AM, and I spooked bedding deer twice at a time of day when I’d expect them to be moving around pre-rut—I did see two large bucks who were not happy with my bushwhacking!  I too was off my game.

A bluebird fall morning, chilly too.  Low water woes continue.

I resumed my second campaign on the war on leaves on Saturday, so I was feeling the effects of allergies from all the dust I kicked up with mower and blower. I also forgot to pack polarized sunglasses this morning—I have everything I need in my mobile fishing vehicle (RIP) typically. I remembered a buff and a couple other essentials, but did not remember one of the most essential fishing tools, especially in low, clear water when stealth and vision are necessary for success. I also rigged up with a fresh micro-mono rig last night, and I must of have been half blind from the allergens because I had technical issues (spool tangles) about an hour into my fishing. I had to unwind line and rerig, thankfully before I hooked and landed my one and only fish. I also tied on some potentially effective bugs last night in the garage, and those knots must of have been shite as well because I broke off my first fish with a gentle hookset. Things were just off, but I did connect with a solid holdover rainbow that was in nearly perfect shape when I had to rise to the occasion for a second (and final) time. Had I missed, it truly would have been a missed opportunity. Besides the first fish that I broke off with a normal hookset and bad knots, this bow was the only other taker in 5 hours of fishing! Tough day, but it was good to be outside on an autumn morning, alone on a pressured old favorite. I will get my act together again soon, I hope, at least in time for striped bass.  It is almost time to quit the trouts already!  I saw my first redd this morning....

Bonus shot.  A pretty holdover, anyway ;)



Monday, October 20, 2025

October 20, 2025 - Making Lemonade on So Many Levels - Berks County

Not too shabby, all things considered.

October has been interesting.  My son was in the emergency room for a couple days—out in Central PA, not anywhere near home—so I had just attended Family Weekend, then drove back out to the hospital the following week, and then he came home for fall break.  It was good to see him, of course, under any circumstances, but he is an 18-year-old with a lot of friends, so we barely got to hang out over fall break before I had to drive him back again.  I actually drove him back to school with two new college friends that live in the area, and that was fun, but on the solo drive back home, I was rear-ended about 90 minutes from home.  There were three other cars involved, a chain reaction caused by a young dude in a pickup truck who hit me.  No one was hurt, including the driver at fault, but the ‘Ru is a goner, a total loss.  Not that I want a car payment again, but at least I am physically fine and no one else was in the car with me. 

Low, clear, windy, and leafy = fall.

The accident was out in Berks County on a rural state road, and I had to drive out there today, clean out the car, and release the vehicle so that dude’s insurance company could pick it up.  The accident happened last Tuesday night, so by Friday they had accepted fault and given me a rental (a BWM X1, so really roughing it; I almost felt like I should tuck in my shirt and temporarily install a stocker locker with some Yeti stickers).  I had to bail on my camping trip with the boys at Poe Valley, which sucked, but not as bad as the fishing they experienced, apparently.  I also had to delay my start date at a new job by a day, but they were cool with everything, which is a good sign about the culture there.  I was not surprised, but I was grateful.  I had completed my responsibilities at the tow yard by 10 AM, and the small SUV fit my 10-foot rod, so what’s a guy to do with a day off work for which he will likely get reimbursed in the settlement?

A few average fish along with the dinks and chub life.

I stopped by the “world famous” Tully early in my drive back, but I am not a fan, nor a fan of chasing fresh stockers when there are other wild fish to chase before the spawn.  It’s the Tully, so of course there were some dudes out, even on a Monday—I still don’t know why this stocked fishery is a destination crick in SEPA, but I am glad it draws fishermen away from other creeks I do like to fish.  I was curious if the rain overnight had impacted the creeks in the region at all.  I was hoping for more rain, but the forecast had been changed half a dozen times.  The Tully looked on the low side of normal, but it’s a tailwater, so a release may have happened recently too.  At any rate, I convinced myself that rain had happened, and I would fish another much smaller creek that has a lot more natural reproduction.

A pretty autumn day.
Upon arrival, I accepted that the creek I chose was low, clear, and a recent victim of “leaf hatches,” which the drizzle and impending wind would certainly make worse today.  Nevertheless, I decided I was fishing it.  As I was suiting up at the BWM and feeling self-conscious about it, another fly guy arrived, but we discussed our intentions.  After trying two or three honey holes en route, I gave him and myself some space.  As a result of the longer walk, I got to explore more of the creek than I normally would, and I may have even seen a bit of water I had never seen, let alone fished, before.  The fishing itself was just meh with the challenging conditions.  I spooked some hiding fish and/or drove a few from the tailout into the heads of runs despite being stealthy as possible.  Riffles and deep holes, just like my last outing.  Deep holes meant a lot of chubs in a freestoner that gets warm each summer, and I even caught minnows.  Once in a while, though, I encountered a wild trout suspended up and looking for emerging bugs in the swirling and drowned leaf litter.  The best fish came from the head of a pool in a riffle not 8 inches deep, and I missed a few other short, sharp hits in this type of cover.

Chublife represent....

I was tossing a caddis larva anchor fly with a soft hackle/tag fly on the dropper.  While the minnows loved this size 18 emerger-looking presentation, so did half a dozen wild trout.  I caught fallfish, creek chubs, minnows, a small smallmouth bass, YOY, two year old dinks, and at least a couple decent small stream browns.  Drizzle had given way to cold front winds up to 30 MPH, so the low water was only the beginning of the day’s challenges.  Half a dozen trout, midday in wind and sun, especially in low water?  I was making lemonade.  And instead of being anxious about starting a new job in the morning, I got plenty of fresh air and exercise to help me sleep like a young mitch all night.  The accident stuff has not been resolved.  The pay out will determine next steps, of course, but I think the plan is to let my wife buy something new.  She is driving an Impreza that was mine briefly and did the job.  It is all-wheel drive, a hatchback, even fits a 10’ one-piece surf rod inside.  I do recall seeing 40 MPG on the display during a few trips to Central PA, which does not hurt either.  The Ru is dead, long live the Ru!?!?

Leaf hatch with little brownie.



Thursday, October 9, 2025

October 9, 2025 – Small Stream Sneaking in the Skinny Water and Finding Some Success – NEPA

Early success (but not too early).

It became very clear that the little bit of rain that happened this week had not made any difference on my chosen crick this morning.  I arrived about 8 AM after letting it warm up some following the coldest night since June, so there was enough daylight to dispel any hope that a little stain or a boost in flow was present to help the cause.  I like challenges, and I like to be proficient in less-than-perfect conditions, so instead of heading to a bigger creek, I accepted the challenge.  I know this stream intimately, too, so I knew where to fish and how I might have to fish it in order to make lemonade.  By 2:30 PM, I had landed about a dozen trouts, a few of them very decent for a small freestone crick, so I was glad I stayed.  With one exception, a couple of young bulls tossing spinning rods and high-holing me, I had the crick to myself, so I took advantage of that situation.  I was covering water fast because I was skipping yards of boney, clear water and targeting higher percentage spots, so I actually covered a few miles of water, making two or three short drives and many long walks over exposed rocks.  I ended near the lower stretches, hoping to intercept some big, seasonal interlopers or lovelorn wanderers looking for a place to settle next month, but I only found a couple holdover bows down there.  Still, it was worth all the steps and drives.  I have never seen this creek so low, and that is information.  I made mental notes of the spots within the spots, less obvious cover, deep depressions, things I would not see in normal flows.  That is invaluable time on the water, and the fishing was solid, all things considered. 

Caught some fishes despite the low water.

Deep plunges were the first order of business, but because the leaf cover is still significant enough to offer low light until 9 or 10 AM, I did pay a little attention to deeper holes.  Fish can only do three things, or a combination of those three things, in water this low: hide under cover like rocks and ledges and wood, go deep out of diving range of birds of prey, or tuck up under the white water (or whitish water today).  I found my first fish and a second much better fish tight to a plunge.  Another good fish shot out from under a boulder to eat.  As the day got brighter, I could see fish in the deep holes and, with stealth, was able to target a couple.  At times they were with big suckers, a behavior I see in winter from time to time and during sucker spawn in early spring, and that resulted in me tagging a 20+ inch white sucker that provided the best 15 second fight on a 3 wt. in fly fishing!  There were some dinks and average small stream fish along the way, and even three rainbows, including one solid one in good shape.  I was fishing 5X with a 16 frenchie on the anchor and a smaller dropper, like a midge or riffle nymph.  With some small BWO’s around, the mayfly nymphs seemed to get more love than any caddis larva imitations, despite cased caddis regularly finding their way onto the hook of my anchor fly.

Boney enough to sight-fish a river monster ;)

My first stop was the longest, both timewise and walking-wise, and it produced the three or four good browns you see in the photos.  The second stop was short, involved me targeting a nice wild male and tangling with a relative of Karen the white sucker.  The college boys in sneakers and spinning rods that I let high hole me without comment were also a feature of stop number two.  My third stop was after 12:45 PM, so well past primetime, but also a hail mary.  I know from experience—and lost access to a stretch now posted—that big fish move through seasonally for the spawn.  They often stayed through the winter, as well, resulting in some solid pre- and post-spawn browns.  The creek is changing rapidly, and I have not intercepted this seasonal movement in a few years now, but with the high sun and low water, I was hoping at least to see a couple.  Here I caught a two-year old wild brown and two rainbows.  One bow was skinny like she’d just barely made it from the spring stocking and had washed down, but the other bow was far healthier.  It looked like a multiyear holdover, and my first impression said male.  Looking at the anal fin, that first impression may not have been wrong.  I am not saying wild, by any means, I am just saying that the Comish stocks females and mutant triploids.  This one may have been a wanderer or a club stocker, something different.  It was not a wild brown, but it was a fun fight and a nice surprise.

A couple more nicer fish.

Thursday, yo!  The reason I had so much water to myself—besides the windy, cold front conditions—was that I was out on a weekday.  I am using up PTO because I start a new job later this month.  Back to my roots.  For those who have read the blog for years, for some of you 10 years at the end of this year, you know I used to have time off for 100+ days of fishing.  I am not promising that with this new job, but I am saying that I will have more than double the days off in 2026, something like 41 paid days off.  I can’t wait.  Even with having to earn that time at a new job, I will still have an extended Thanksgiving and two weeks off for the holidays, a spring break.  I will continue to be a weekend warrior for the time being, but I do have a camping fishing weekend next week with Josh, Brian, Larry and Josh’s brother in law.  Rain would help, but today’s success proved a theory I have held about the fall for some time: low water or not, the better fish have to eat if they want to make babies in November.  Let’s hope I am proven right again on Penns next weekend!

A good long day and the first cold morning in months.


Sunday, October 5, 2025

October 5, 2025 – Shook the Cobwebs Off the Nymphing Gear – Lehigh River

One good fish.

I have been watching the gages on the river for a couple of weeks now.  The water temperature coming out of the reservoir has actually been hurting the cause, even though there appeared to be some fishing releases in September.  Cool nights and cool tributaries are likely to cool things down after the dam, but the Lehigh is a lot of effort just to take a stream temperature at a couple of my spots.  Flows were the best in the region due to the releases, however, so it was torturing me with its 250-300 CFS when the other NEPA cricks are historically low.  When I saw that water temps were finally and consistently below 66 every day for a few days, and hovering around 250 CFS at White Haven, I sucked it up and did the scouting mission.  There are worse places to be than on the river in October even if fishing ended up being meh.  I arrived late for me, like 10 minutes after sunrise, and was surprised to see two obvious fishing vehicles.  At least the decals and stocker lockers take the guess work out.  It would be worse to see an SUV or pickup truck and wonder, right?  I decided to take a longer walk, knowing I could run into someone in one of my go-to spots when water is wadable.   Sure enough, there was a dude down there, and one in between too.  Instead of turning back, I decided to try and get access to another riffle I have always wanted to fish.  I found a few places to make a cast or two while standing on the bank and attempting to avoid the overhanging trees, but my hopes of locating a crossing point were thwarted.

There are worse places to be on an October morning.

I had a couple snags and zero hits, so I bushwhacked out of there, hoping dude upstream of me had experienced a slow morning himself and had given up the spot.  Luckily, he was gone, and I finally found a couple wild browns tight to pockets in whitewater.  The sun was up by this time, so I was not hopeful that fish were still out in the open eating, but I did fool one rainbow out on the flat.  The rest of the fish, all wild browns, ate heavy but small bugs (added some tungsten beads in some cases to get down to them) on the edges of heavier water.  Caddis were around, so a green larva on the dropper tag was the fly all five fish wanted.  You can probably see from the pic of the 12-incher below just how close to the whitewater they were sitting.   

Close to the O2 but actively eating, at least.

That is a sign that water temperatures are still keeping them close to oxygen-rich water when active, but also a sign they are feeding, not just hunkered in the deep holes riding out this summer that won’t quit.  Speaking of quitting and summer, I quit before noon because the heat came back quickly.  It was 45 F to start, but it had risen 30 degrees by late morning.  With the nice weather, the lot was also full of hikers and bikers.  It was good to get the kinks out, but the fall fishing is barely kicking into gear in NEPA.  I guess the Commish stocked last week too, but maybe not with the low water.  If we just get a little rain, there might be some more options later this month!

Bonus shot of the one good fish.


Sunday, September 21, 2025

September 7 and 19-21, 2025 – Just Some Early- and Mid-September Scouting Missions – SEPA & Central PA

Barely a 1/4" of rain, but something.

I have been fishing, though not a lot.  Conditions for trout anywhere in NEPA or SEPA are terrible.  I like to leave them alone in low water because life is hard enough with death from above and all the competition in the deeper holding water.  Water temps are also borderline still.  Evidence of that were the sunfish I caught one evening on a Lehigh Valley limestoner.  It rained about a quarter of an inch, which was more than we had had in weeks, and the air temperatures were cooler, so I snuck out one Sunday afternoon before dark.  I ran into at least three guys on this popular crick, but I had a couple of spots in mind that required a little bushwhacking in the late summer growth.  All I had to show for sweating it out and picking hundreds of hitchhikers off my waders and clothing was a couple redbreasts.  Trout were pecking, even the YOY, it seems.  I had a handful of hits on a single small bug, but I must have just hit them on their locked jaws for a second.  YOY are big enough to peck this time of year, too, so it may have been hungry but not that hungry youngsters.  It was good to get out and see the creek full of water, however briefly.  It had me hankering for fall.

How contraband, human and otherwise, gets in.

Flash forward to September 19th.  I headed west to see the boy for parents’ weekend at the college.  He joined a fishing club, and they have a meet-up next weekend at the advisor’s cottage on lower Penns Creek.  If you know lower Penns, then you know this is a boss hookup!  You can float it, even run a boat up from the river in the spring high water, without getting harassed, but bank access can be tricky with houses lining many of the prime spots.  I hung out and met his friends and friends’ parents most of the time, ate a lot, and did NOT go day drinking, which was certainly on the menu at this notorious party school for smart (and/or wealthy) kids.  It was a throwback to when I went to college long ago, an age I thought had been legislated and enforced out of existence, but not in Lewisburg, PA!  Instead of drinking or attending the football game, my son and I tried to catch a couple fish on Saturday night.  He was tired, having slept little on Friday night, so after hitting a thrift store and eating late lunch down in Selinsgrove, I let him sleep in my hotel room for at least 90 minutes.  We did scope out some access points on Penns for the future, but my gut said spring fishing spots.  The creek was full of dying weeds and flowing backwards at this time of year.  When we did stop to fish after his late afternoon nap, it was more of a rundown of what I had brought him from home for future fishing trips.  We reviewed knots, went through the lures I was leaving with him, and made a few casts from a public boat ramp and access right at the junction pool of the North and West branches.

One very small LMB
There were plenty of bass boats taking out at that hour and some late season water-skiers and pleasure boaters.  The boy caught tiny largemouth, likely from the West Branch before we ran out of daylight.  With a dam or two in this area, the river is more like a lake, so a largemouth was not a surprise.  The lack of even panfish, however, was.  He was throwing a spinner.  Everything eats a spinner!  I was going for broke with a big old swimbait, but nothing took notice.  It was still good to spend some time solo with the boy, and it was a really nice night.  We ended up having dinner about 8 PM and then I dropped him back off at the college.  We decided that it was not worth coming back in the morning since he had work to do and we were both done with the organized parent events.  I needed the 11 AM check out on Sunday morning because I slept past 9:30 AM.  Saturday was leg day, as Bucknell’s campus is all hills, so I guess I was tired.  It was early enough that I decided to keep scouting out Penns for future visits, so I did not head for home before finding a couple access points upstream of the town of Penns Creek.  Water was low and clear, so much so that a couple I spoke to told me a kayak livery in the area would not rent them a kayak.  

A lovely night on the WB.  Should have fished the other side of the point!

I wet waded away from a young Amish family having a post-church visit to the river to skip stones, and the water was as warm as the late morning air.  I have a camping/fishing trip with Josh, Brian, and Larry in mid-October, so I am praying for cool nights and rain, definitely rain.  We will be up in the limestone influenced trout environs, of course, but it must feel pretty summery up there too.  I found two slightly deeper holes (where I could see to the bottom in three feet of water) and made a few casts, first with a Rapala CD5 and then a Crippled Killer topwater.  I had given the boy all the finesse soft plastics!  I even had to gnaw off line with my teeth in order to change lures because I left the nippers with him too!  Scouting mission, not fishing mission, I reminded myself.  Well, in the 45 minutes I spent in the water, I caught an uber dink on the Rapala and had a couple toddlers blow up on the topwater.  I landed one of them.  I also spent a lot of time picking off dead vegetation, one sign the fall is here.  Besides that, I spooked some fry from the shallows, saw a bald eagle find fishing success, and even had flock of turkeys cross in front of me on the drive out, so there was life despite the low water conditions.  It was good to be in the woods, and better days are coming.  Hopefully, the boy can get me access to a sweet stretch of lower Penns because my blind guiding is not going to get it done....

Lower Penns is bony right now.



Sunday, August 31, 2025

August 31, 2025 – I’ll Show You Mine If You Show Me Yours? – Delaware River

Larry hooked up to a good one.

I made Larry hobble along with me down the riprap early this morning on a mission to find some good smallmouth bass at one of my hot spots.  It’s not an easy beat.  It is nearly impossible to wade, even in low water, and there is little to no room for a backcast.  I guess it’s really a spot I located while looking through a gear not a fly rod lens.  I have fished it effectively with a fly rod as recently as last summer, but I have also fished it with a spinning rod or a “sin stick” with the boy a few times.  It is definitely easier to fish deep, moving water with a spinning rod, especially when the fish won’t come off the bottom to eat.  As tough as it can be, and fishing overall was tough today with fish pretty much having lockjaw after 9 AM, Larry got a beautiful fish to eat topwater at sunrise.  I was there to document it all, which was nice.  Unlike when I was with Brian this spring at his spot and miffed on an early pair of good fish, Larry hooked, fought, and landed a good one minutes after we started fishing.  I managed a couple of decent fish and a small, a theme for the rest of the day, at this first spot, but the bite shut off quickly.  Larry texted me on the way up when he noticed a release from the Lehigh River was spiking the Delaware downstream.  As a result, the water was dirtier and rising below the junction, which added to the challenge.  We found cleaner water after fishing a couple of Larry’s spots above the Lehigh, but we were never fortunate enough to stumble into a period of active fish.  By noon, we had worked hard enough for some more dinkers, and the Labor Day weekend inner tube hatch had begun in full force, so we called it good.

Larry made the small window count.  More shots from spot one.

I got to fish with Larry and on a weekend, which was a win and probably the only way to fish together until my PTO resets (amazing what a college tour season will do to ones time off balances).  And I got to see a couple spots on the river that I have not visited since I shad fished as a young man.  To end the trip, we ended up fishing a fantastic looking stretch of river, one of Larry’s spots, so we gave each other a short tour this morning.  Larry knows I don’t love being a weekend warrior anymore than him, but one of us is not retired.  We did what we could do to avoid the rush by meeting at 6:30 AM.  Had we known the bite was going to die so early, we may have met even earlier.  Eventually, we both knew is was not likely to happen today, but it was just too nice to quit fishing.  Enough little fish cooperated to elevate this enterprise above casting practice.  I got fish on a bugger, the balanced leech, and even a couple on a friend of Larry’s custom Do Nothing pattern.  After Larry landed the best fish of the trip, he let me hold one of his ties, a foam gurgler that is more of a waker.  All the fish that ate it today, including Larry's 16+ incher at the first stop, ate it floating along looking tasty and doing nothing, as its name implies.

Low and clear above the Lehigh, but a gorgeous day to be out there wading and casting.

Tubing operations have expanded upstream of their historical reach.  And encampments for the unhoused have expanded as well.   Neither can detract from the natural beauty of the mighty Delaware, however.  As mediocre as fishing was this morning, there was no rush to leave it, and I took a lot of photos of big sky and big water, along with documenting the tubes and the fish and the angler.  It was chilly to start and breezy enough all morning to keep Larry and I in waders.  It reminded me how much I like wet wading and how I will miss it as the season turns, but it also felt trouty out there.  All we need is some rain in the forecast to get me chomping at the bit again.  Larry is at least 15 years my senior, but you wouldn’t know it.  I hope I can continue to fish as hard when I reach 70.  River fishing is hard work, so the rewards are somehow sweeter.  But even if the fish don’t fully cooperate, there are worse places to be than with good company on the river that hooked me on bass fishing many years ago.

Several dinks and prepping for the noon tube hatch.