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| Lars with a buck and neoprene. |
Thanks to my
accomplished and admirably bearded "guide" Larry, I was able to catch my first
American shad in decades. He and another
friendly regular out there got into double digits and landed a couple bigger roe,
but I actually got into a few bucks myself, not just one. I did not know until after I hooked my first
fish that Larry had felt low level anxiety about his mission. The river is dropping daily without
significant rain, so the fish start acting differently and get more
challenging. I fished for shad a long
time with my father, but I bet it had been close to 25 or 30 years since I
targeted these early spring visitors. In
other words, I was not a sure thing to catch, even though I am still a multi-species
angler and no stranger to the spinning rod or the Delaware River. Larry had no need to worry either way, but I totally
get it. It is a muscle that needs exercise,
and every “guide” feels an obligation to his “sport.” I think if I went out of few more times, the
touch it takes would come back to me. I
lost more darts than usual trying to figure stuff out, but I spent a lot of
time observing Larry and his buddy Dave, so I learned some things for next time. One such thing I remembered while standing
waist deep in the river on a 28-degree morning was why I always had a pair of
neoprene waders in the garage until recently.
I didn’t replace the last pair I owned because I don’t stand still much
when I fish with a fly rod or while plugging the ocean beaches, and I don’t
hunt for waterfowl. It was cold out
there, yo! I didn’t even have the
forethought to wear my fleece wading pants.
In my defense, this has been a rollercoaster of a spring, so who could
have known what to expect weather-wise.

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| A cold start. Today's solid roe. I caught enough that it wasn't an accident ;) |
When I fished with
my dad, roe shad used to get into the 8-pound range, but they have been getting
smaller over time according to my sharpie companions for the morning. That said, they still pull, and the current of
the Big D, however diminishing with the falling flows of a dry spring, certainly
helps even a 3 or 4 lb. female give an angler quite the tussle—at least from my
point of view watching Larry and Dave land a few! It was a cool experience that I may do again
or may expose my son to if I can figure out some spots later in May. When I was in college, my father used to pick
me up around Mother’s Day weekend to drive me home, but we had some spots in
NEPA where the fish were still doing their thing. I will be getting my son home from college
that same weekend, so who knows. Larry
and I quit a little before noon after a longer lull between pods of fish moving
through, but like civilized gentlemen we had an upscale-priced (like most
things in Bucks County river towns these days) breakfast together before
parting ways. He paid, so I owe him one
when we camp out in NCPA next month. We
may have to sneak away from (albeit competent) camp chef Josh’s delicious cuisine
and have a warm diner meal out there, especially if fishing is challenging, as it's been on previous camping trips.
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| That's what up, yo! First fish of round two. |
I had the day
off, so I was not going home after brunch.
I thought of heading up to NEPA to intercept some early spring hatches,
but I took the scenic route up the river instead. It was a nostalgia tour seeing boat ramps and
access points I used to visit with the old man.
We had a square-backed Grumman canoe that covered some miles in its
day. I had a shad fisherman’s eye
scanning access spots old and new, as well.
In fact, one of the places Larry and I bass fished together last summer looked promising and had a lone angler making long casts, presumably with a
dart. I settled on a creek technically
still in SEPA for my next stop, but it has some of the characteristics of the
bigger NEPA freestoners. No big mayflies
present when I stopped, but grannom caddis had been hatching based on what was
in all the riparian trees and bushes. I
watched for risers for a few minutes, and while I saw a smattering of adult
caddis flitting about the water, even in clear low flows, no trouts were
actively taking bugs on the surface. I
left the dry fly rod in the ‘Ru for the time being, and targeted pockets, runs,
and plunges with the nymph rig. At my
first hole, I stuck a small stream pig on the 16 blowtorch I tied on the
dropper tag. It was a gorgeous wild
brown! I was hoping bugs were emerging and
fish taking emergers if not the adults, but that did not really play out
either.
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| Dry fly bow, at least. |
That said, I
did catch another nice brown that was probably 14 inches and a handful of rainbows
before I turned around and worked my way back to the ‘Ru. On the walk back I saw three fish rise to
adult caddis, so when I got back to the parking spot, I had a snack, refilled
my water bottle, and grabbed my dry fly rod.
I worked some of the same water that I had now rested for 90 minutes or
more with a dry and a dry/dropper. I got
one additional rainbow on the caddis dry fly and missed another fish of unknown
origin on the dry before I chose to turn back again. I swung a small bugger on
the return trip and got two short bumps that did not connect. The light was lower as dinner time approached
in a deep valley, but the creek was still low and clear, so I did not expect
even that much. The one fish, my first
fish, made this a worthwhile stop, of course.
I had notched my second high teens wild fish of the week, so no
complaints about my decision to curtail my travel further north. I have the Mayfly Project on Saturday, but
maybe Sunday or Monday will continue my April success. I have yet to fish locally for stockers, so I
may do that at the very least. The water
is low enough and the bugs are prevalent enough in the City to warrant a visit
with a dry fly, or at least a dry dropper.
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| Bonus shots from a long successful day. |