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Happy mitch and rightfully so! |
I believe Eric has not been out fishing since April, and one of those trips was with me on Opening Day for like 90 minutes! With this weather, he has been doing the work of two men at his job, and he’s been coaching soccer, basically being Super Dad. We were both without power this week following the severe storms and knew the heat was continuing, so we had to stay open to either Saturday or Sunday, but we were fishing regardless of what day it had to be. With the brief cold front on Friday and the forecasted heat for Saturday, we were both hoping that today would be the day we hit the water. The moderate heat on Friday and the rain would make flows better and water temperatures more advantageous. Neither one of us shy away from early starts, so we would fish from 5 to 10 AM if we had to, like it was August or September. As luck would have it, power was restored Friday afternoon, so we confirmed for this morning. A mitch picked me up in a minivan (what’s with me and fishing buddies rocking late-model minivans as fishing vehicles, I wonder?) at 4:30 AM, and we made the drive to our little slice of wild trout heaven with our wet wading gear, a few rods, and some high hopes.
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Early start, and chublife in the slower structure. |
High hopes can only carry you so far, and it was a slow start until we found the pattern. With the stained water, we were planning for streamer bites or at least the ability to approach some favorite holes without spooking big mama or papa. The spring spots were not fishing well. I even scored a double chub, which is a sign that the temps are getting higher. Had I been fishing a sabiki rig, I may have had live bait for days. Anyway, I suggested that we target summer water and skip the spots we’d like trout to be because they weren’t there. Once we headed straight for the heads of riffles, we started catching trout. My first few were on a squirmy because it had to be done. We needed to find a fish to confirm that they were there, and conditions were squirmy conditions if they weren’t streamer conditions. We actually ended the morning fishing with a single natural bug and even a couple jigged streamer eats, but this was after committing to the heads of riffles and plunges—again, like it was August or September. Out of curiosity more than concern, I dropped a thermometer at 10 AM, and it was 60 F, so fish were more than fine, but the active ones, the ones that were going to eat today, were in the summer spots or hiding close to dark cover riding out this heat wave.
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Fish were caught as the pattern was recognized. |
As the first photo with Eric attests, we found some bigger fish as we pushed further into the better cover, the places these fish retreat to as summer sets in. This year, we missed the bonanza that happens when they spread out throughout the system for a couple months. We mostly missed the hatches too, although midges and small gray caddis were plentiful at times despite seeing only a couple risers at dawn, which could have been chublife based on where we were on the creek. Pattern established, we were content with landing a couple small to average wild fish at each likely spot, but we were secretly hoping to find some of the better ones we know are here. It took a while, but by 8:30 AM or so, Eric’s day had been made. He stuck a solid 14-inch fish in a riffle. The fish was holding in the foam line in all of 10 inches of water and gave him a good tussle in the prime water temps. No jumps, but she did a lot of dogging. We were taking turns at each spot, so I was right there with him. I dropped my rod on the bank and gave Eric the full photoshoot. I even cropped, edited, and sent him the shots right after the quick release, knowing he’d want to enjoy these and share the minute he got home.
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I finally found a decent one among the numbers of willing smalls. |
I landed a couple over 8 inches but had yet to get my own solid small stream fish. As luck would have it, I was up to bat when we hit another prime location. I was fishing a single, olive, thread frenchie by now, a bit heavy on purpose since the sun was getting higher and the fish a little deeper. I love fishing a single bug when I can because it is so easy to change bugs frequently, especially for small adjustments in weight. Sure, I can get a 2 mm beaded perdigon down almost anywhere, and I can lead heavier bugs through skinnier water, and I did both today, but it takes more work and concentration than a bug change. With a bigger single bug, I was able to get down right at the head of this prime spot, right at the drop-off point of the riffle where it plunged into over 3 feet of water and a root ball, and I was rewarded with my own solid fish. Eric’s was bigger by a couple inches, and fatter, but they were from the same year class, the fish we know are here from past experience but could not find earlier in the morning. I took a few shots and let this one go too. He was not selfish or smiley-guy-with-trout photo worthy, but he was solid and a real lift to our spirits.
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Bonus shots and small stream success. |
We pushed on for a couple more holes. The next primo hole that is almost a carbon copy of the one where I finally found a decent fish gave us nothing. Eric even put on a bugger and let it hang under there, but nothing wanted to play. We had one more great spot on deck before bushwhacking would offer diminishing returns in this heat. This last hole is where we found a true 19-inch wild brown a few years ago. It has cover and depth and shade and excellent flows, and it held a chub and an 8-inch brown. The party was obviously over today, although we did have a little more action on the return walk, just cherry picking spots. As I write this, it’s been cloudy and a bit rainy all morning, so Sunday may not have been bad, after all! What do they say about hindsight? Either way, Eric and I had a good day on the water, and for him it was needed and earned. Me, I fish quite a bit, even years when I don’t fish as much as I have in the recent past. Actually, I have no reason not to fish today, besides the fact that I don’t love this heat, and I really hate the humidity. SEPA is looking at possible temperatures in the triple digits for multiple days this week, so I hope the first day of summer is not the last day of trout fishing until the fall. Perhaps it’s time to dig out the fluking gear until the river flows drop enough for some summer bass fishing? Dig deep into my wallet for another Susquehanna trip? Glenn has offered some dates. Maybe I will just chill and read a book or buy another fly-tying vise? Carp? It must be mulberry season soon.