Friday, April 29, 2016

Deep Thoughts #2 - An Ode to my Fisherman’s Metabolism

Something for the half-bath.
Not to get gross, but I was inspired this evening to sing the praises of my fisherman-friendly metabolism.  When I exited from the half bath (fittingly enough a room we call the fisherman’s bathroom, mostly because of the décor) post-dinner this evening I was ribbed by my wife and son for my regularity.  For a fisherman, however, this is an ability I hold most dear.  Honestly, I can get up at 2 AM (or 7 or 5 or midnight) to drive to the beach (or stream or river or lake), perhaps drink a glass of water while making coffee, sit in the powder room, drink the coffee, load up the car, sit in the powder room, and go fishing.  When I am up, I am up, and in most cases I can even forego the coffee if necessary.  No stops on the ride to my destination required.  No squatting in the sand dunes or hunting dark streets for a contractor’s near-pristine Johnny on the Spot (aka  Baño Portátil).  I am blessed with a fisherman’s digestive system, and I want to celebrate that for a moment.

On the spot and on the job, day or night.
Not all anglers are so lucky.  I have waited for my father in the dark while he availed himself of the Mr. Bob (who, luckily, was on the job at 4 AM) on the front lawn of a beach-block home under renovation.  As my dad and I stand waiting, outboard idling, dock lines in hand, the question posed to Kenny every morning for a week in Canada during our yearly trips is, “Well?” to which the answer is not always a thumbs up, if you catch my drift.  Speaking of drifts, I have watched Ward’s brother talk his body into not having to go while 5 miles at sea with nothing but a bucket and the warm ocean between him and relief.  “Not Now!!”  he commands his own body as he paces the deck of the 28 foot center console, chain smoking.  Still on the subject of drifting, one of my housemates on LBI used to relish his bucket-sit at sea.  But the thing is that the boat and the dumped contents of said bucket often sailed at nearly the same speed for a time.  Not a pretty sight afterwards—and before is not much better.  Who wants to see a grown man sitting on a 5 gallon bucket with a roll of TP in his hand waving to other boats full of inshore fluke fishermen?  Franks and beans, Ted, franks and beans.  In addition to knowing every facility between Lawrenceville and, say, the Pequest, my boy Dolf was a dune sitter, often with Wawa napkins or what was presumed to be a bait rag until otherwise enlisted.  He seemed to delight in his al fresco excursions with no concerns for biting insects or amorous foxes or nesting plovers (nor the ensuing fines for violating their sanctuary in such a manner).  I often assisted by landing the bass that hit his bait while he was indisposed (or let the Baitrunner sing, all the while telling him he had a fish on and to hurry up!).

I'm like a bird....
I am not particularly religious, but I am grateful to whomever gave me this expeditious gift.  My wife says I am like a bird (I poop right away): Soon as I put my fork down, then it’s time for a sit down.  The lyrics fit quite nicely with the 20-aught’s hit “I’m Like a Bird” by then-young Nelly Furtado, and my wife is quite fond of singing this tune to me.  Despite my father’s documented trials in this arena, perhaps the gift is hereditary, as I do have two parents.  I will never know, however, for this is not a subject one should discuss with one’s mom and, hereto, I have not.  Wherever this gift came from, whether nature or nuture, I may never know, but I am thankful that this morning ritual, nay, necessity is not a source of stress or discomfort or impromptu exits en route to my fishing destinations.  For those who share my gift, Cheers!  For those who do not, don’t hate me because I am hyper-regular.  Tight lines and, well, never mind…

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

April 27, 2016 – Camera Shy Trout on a Muddy Wissahickon

A lot of these guys, probably 15, and this one didn't mind having his picture taken.




















I took a walk down the street and fished for about 3 hours today with decent results.  It was slow but steady.  Fish were not active at all, but they would take a half-hearted swipe at a caddis larvae or a midge.  Even the sunnies just pecked at it.  I tried waking them up with a streamer when I arrived, and I only managed one fish, and a little one at that.  I took a couple pictures of the first rainbow and first brown, but I didn’t realize the lens was fogged.  After that it was just a friggin’ joke trying to capture one on camera.  After about 3 more mishaps, I had to laugh, and I quit trying.  I think my buddy Tom jinxed me talking about how he couldn’t get fish to cooperate for the camera last night (thanks Tom!).

He had no problem staying still....
I was using barbless and no net, so there’s that, but I brought plenty to hand that still dropped into the water as the camera fired or wiggled free before I could even snap a shot.   I took pictures of a bass and a sunny just before I left, so I would have fish pictures in the post.  I thought with the stained water from yesterday and last night’s rains, the fish might be moving around and feeding, but they are sluggish on this stretch and have been since opening day.  Perhaps they were coming off so easily because they were sluggish and my hookset became sluggish to match their enthusiasm.

A little chocolaty and getting warm.




















Once I resigned myself to nymphing, I got a few fish to bite.  I got 7 trout on the caddis or the zebra midge.  I also had a little fun with the sunnies while swinging a wet fly.  One decent trout took the swinging pheasant tail soft hackle while I was on the phone with my boss!  Classic.  At least it wasn’t FaceTime.  That fish got away before a picture of course… Trust me, you've seen them—they are stocked bows and browns that haven’t been taken home and eaten yet.  Despite the problems with photos, it was a decent stolen trip on a Wednesday morning. 

Monday, April 25, 2016

April 25, 2016 – Picking Pockets on the Pennypack

Low water, but the pockets did produce.
I gave the Wissahickon a rest this morning, and fished the Penny in the ‘burbs.  It was already very warm when I arrived at 9:30 AM.  The water is low and clear, so I could see plenty of fish from a high vantage point.  Caddis and midges were active, but I only saw sunfish rising in a flat pool.  I was rigged up with a caddis larvae and a size 20 prince dropper from the other day, so I decided to tight line some pocket water instead of culling through sunnies for the odd trout on the surface.  I probably made the right call in this high sun and low water (at least until this evening).

Best of the morning, a real bulldog.




















I love this kind of fishing because it reminds me of small stream fishing on mountain freestoners (only 18 minutes from home!).  Fish grow tough living in pocket water, and they fight hard.  The big rainbow above felt like a snag for a solid ten seconds because he had his nose up to the plunging whitewater and wouldn’t budge.  Even the smaller fish wouldn’t quit, so I was glad I had a net.

Size 20 prince dropper scored about three.




















I got a couple rainbows on the small dropper, so they were probably tuned into the constant parade of midges, but by adding a split shot and rolling the cased caddis on the bottom, I also pulled up a couple decent brown trout too.

Barbless caddis came out while in the net = easy release of decent brownie




















I only spent about 90 minutes on the water before I decided to quit (partially prompted by a mugging from 3 young bulls who hadn’t learned about giving other fishermen space or that most fisherman work upstream—not to mention it being too hot).  

Never gave up: better that rock get splashed than me...
Before I had company, I was able to pick my way up the riffle and back twice and pull 5 decent fish out of a pressured stretch.

My last fish of the morning grabbed the caddis larvae at the base of a big boulder and then ran down to the tail-out before taking a nice leap.  It was a good time finding fish where they should be, even if someone put them there on purpose.  

Sunday, April 24, 2016

April 24, 2016 – Even a Blind Brownie Finds a Midge…

Had to work for them, but I did bring 6 to the net.




















I was up at 4:30 AM and couldn’t get back to sleep, so I finally just got out of bed, suited up, and took a short drive to the Wissy on this cold Sunday morning.  After a bit of rain yesterday, it got breezy and chilly overnight.  It was not below freezing when I arrived, but it was only 36 degrees at 6:30 AM.  Besides one or two risers, it was quiet for the first 45 minutes, but the last hour before I quit on a high note definitely had its moments.  Fish were picky, but I did manage 4 rainbows on a size 18 prince nymph dropped under a size 16 caddis larvae.  Two browns, including the fish with one eye pictured below took the caddis, for an even half-dozen in a couple hours of fishing.  

One-eyed brownie.
The eye was healed shut, so this was a genetic mutation or an injury in the hatchery, not foul play or angler malfeasance.  He swam away fine to fight again.  Despite being cold, it was still a nice morning.  I saw some deer crossing the creek, and a barred owl was actively hooting somewhere high in trees.  It was tough going to land 6 fish in 2 hours but, then again, I was only 3 minutes from my house.  I was home having coffee at 9:30 AM, which is nice.

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

April 20, 2016 – Not Just another Morning on the Wissy

A solid brownie chewing on my weenie on this momentous day....




















What do Luther Vandross, Joey Lawrence, Crispin Glover, Ryan O’Neil, Andy (Gollum) Serkis, George Takei, Joan Miro, Hitler, and yours truly have in common?  Well, we were all born today.  Flies are getting smaller, streams are getting swifter, drives are getting longer, or maybe it’s just my eyes, my muscles, and my stamina.  I am doing alright, though.  I am 47 and fishing like I was 25.  I did work most of the day today, but I had to sneak down to the creek for a couple hours on my birthday.  

I forgot they stocked on April 19 until I saw all the fishermen!  The new stocking didn’t make fishing any easier, though, as a lot of guys got the skunk that I spoke too.  With water this low, and midges and other sporadic hatches going on, it is a fly fisherman’s game.  I got 7 or 8 and just as many sunnies on an array of flies, from the green weenie, to the white scud, to the zebra midge, to a midge-sized pheasant tail.  I don’t think I caught more than one fish on any of them, either.

The only one I could find fishing...
With the exception of one rainbow who buried the indicator in a fast run, fish were very inactive, but they would mouth a tiny fly if I got it down to them.  The brown at the top of this post was the best of the morning, a good 14 inches.  The rest were average rainbows between 10 and 12 inches.  I hope we get some rain soon, as the creek is low, muddy, silted-up, and getting warmer every day.  The stretch in the city is faring betting so far, but that is pretty low too. Regardless, I am glad that this old man could sneak a couple hours in so close to home on a perfect spring day.  Jazz great and legendary vibraphonist Lionel Hampton would be proud.

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

April 19, 2016 – Wissahickon Creek before Work

A warm, sunny morning on the Wissy.




















Without some rain soon, the Wissy is going to be too warm in no time.  I took a temp reading today of 61 degrees, and overnight air temps are barely dropping below 55 degrees.  Bass, carp, sunfish, rock bass, and trout were all active today, although there were no hatches like last week after the showers and clouds.  I brought the fly rod down to the creek for a little more than two hours, and I had some success on both the caddis larvae and the size 20 pheasant tail dropper.  With high sun (I was fishing from 10 to noon-ish) the fish were not feeding aggressively, but that gave me a chance to dredge up some finicky, pressured fish before I headed in to work.

All rainbows on caddis larvae or small dropper.
I targeted a few deep, braided holes, and they all held at least a couple fish.  I also had a few bonus fish that came from isolated runs and pockets as I walked to the next spot. No other anglers were out, just dog walkers and joggers, but I am sure the fish got hammered over the beautiful weekend, especially since it was stocked on April 12.  I ended up getting 8 trout and dropping a couple others who probably took the very small pt.  I also landed a few bass and other panfish.  None of the trout was very big or very small, just average.  I caught no browns today either.  It was the browns who were on the olives and midges and the odd caddis last week, so maybe they are feeding early and late.  The creek gets one more stocking, but there are plenty left in there.  I just hope it rains, so I have a chance at them in May and beyond.

A couple were spread out in small runs and pockets in between desintantions.

Saturday, April 16, 2016

April 16, 2016 – NEPA Opening Day – And Then There Were Two (One and a Half?)

Joe bundled up on a beautiful stretch.  He got one good one today, at least.




















Well, we kept a tradition alive, a couple of us anyway.  My dad and a cast of characters have been heading up to Monroe County for Opening Day for a long, long time.  Kenny had to bail when he realized he had a class on Saturday, Ward bailed mid-week due to the girls’ soccer schedule, my brother Steve just had another baby last week, so he was not even in the picture this year, and Eric bailed at 8:30 PM on Friday night, probably because he didn’t ask his wife until 8 PM.  That left the old man and me, which was fine with both of us, actually.  We have fished so long together that we have become the perfect fishing partners, and we’ve logged so much father/son time thanks to fishing that we don’t have to make it too “special.”  We ride up together, ride home together, sure, but we really just fish and do our own things when we arrive at the creek.  Even on a 17 foot boat together, we are so focused on fishing that lunch at the bar, or bullshitting, or anything not fishing related is rarely on the menu.

It was a chilly week and a chilly morning.  I took a water temp reading around 9 AM, and it was just 47 in a sunny shallow spot.  We were fishing sections of creek that don’t get stocked or only get fingerlings every couple of years. Although as the fish below illustrates, they dump them in when they have extras from downriver, it seems.  We drove past parking lots that looked like mall parking lots or concerts.  One such lot actually had guys in safety vests waving cars in to park (probably a kiddie derby), but where we were we only saw a handful of fly fishermen all morning.  That was sort of my plan…

One of my one and a half...




















So we could fish together, I was throwing the spinning rod and plugs.  I missed a fish on the second cast, and turned one other in the first hour.  The fish were not chasing, really.  It’s a bit early for running and gunning with Rapalas and spinners when the night time temps still drop below freezing.  My dad was battling a virus or something for a week or more, so he was half the man he usually is.  He finally quit after I saw him sitting down for the second time.  He readily took the car keys and headed back to the parking lot to chill out by 9:30 AM, I bet.  Before he quit, I hooked a good fish in a fast, deep run and it popped off the minute it turned into the fast water below me.  He landed a good 13 inch holdover rainbow that accounted for itself well.

I took a walk and ran into a few more guys fishing.  As the sun got higher and it warmed up, I finally managed one oddly colored brown on a CD 5. I actually thought it was a tiger when I saw him fighting in the water.  I was back at the car by noon-ish after a nice long walk on a beautiful spring day.  Dad was relaxing in the car after a short walk and some small talk with the small group of anglers who had the same idea as me to beat the crowds today.  I guess it was better than sitting in a hole all morning with the PowerBait Guild, but I would have like the old man to feel better and for us both to catch more fish.  And as nice as it was today, the crowds at the crowded spots probably did well!  I have caught a lot of trout this winter and early spring, and will probably catch a lot more before I start chasing stripers and other species, so I was good with my one and half fish, one and a half men, and just keeping the tradition alive one more year.

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

April 12, 2016 – A Quick Valley Creek Trip before Work

A few took a liking to a caddis larva including one good one that slipped the barbless hook before his close up.




















I worked on some paperwork at home today until around 10 AM, and then I checked the radar on the weather website.  I thought maybe I would toss the spinning rod for a bit this morning, but the gages looked fine for fly fishing too.  It rained pretty heavily for a couple hours, but it looked like mostly short, heavy bursts, so I decided to head west and hope I drove out of the storms.  I brought a rain jacket, but I didn’t end up needing it by the time I arrived at the creek around 10:45 AM.

Slowly getting green (and easier to hide).




















Valley was a tad muddy, but it was definitely fishable.  Fish had no problem finding a red zebra midge in size 18, and they also weren’t secure enough with the stained water to chase a streamer.  In fact, they were probably ready for dries by the time I left, as the creek was clearing up quickly, and bug life was active.  I saw midges and olives hatching, and fish were on the baetis nymph or the zebra midge dropper quickly, like they were chasing the emergers (and hungry). 

A colorful one on the red zebra midge




















I have had a hunch that caddis will be early this year (everything else is), and I think I saw one today that I swatted to the water instead of gently catching.  At any rate, fish didn’t pass up a caddis larva today either.  I think I brought 2 to hand on the midge, and 2 on the caddis, 1 or 2 on the baetis, and I dropped a couple others here and there using barbless and no net. 

The best fish of the day came on my first or second cast, and he got away, of course.  I casted into a tight spot with a down tree, overhanging limbs from another tree on the other side, and branches all over the bottom.  The fish grabbed the dropper and headed for the bottom, hanging himself around some sunken branches.  I kept steady pressure and could feel him thumping.  Sometimes they will free themselves if you just keep pressure and sometimes they won’t. Today, he popped off sending my painstakingly tied first rig into a tree above me.  It was so bad that I just starting cutting off flies and tippet…  Despite that frustrating start, five or six wild trout, 30 minutes from home, and in a short window on a weekday is nice work if you can get it.

Monday, April 11, 2016

April 11, 2016 – A Short, Decent Morning Trip on the Wissahickon Creek

One of 6 or 7 this morning.  They were active chasing emergers after the rain.




















I decided at about 8:30 this morning that I wanted to fish the Wissahickon in Philly to see if it was fishing better than near my house.  I was coffee-ed up, suited up, and fishing one of my favorite stretches by 9:15 AM, and I had 6 or 7 trout before I quit at noon, mostly rainbows but a couple browns.  This was much better results, especially this far out from the first stocking, than the results in Montgomery County, so I was pleased that I took the chance.  Because of the light rain, midges and olives were hatching pretty well, better than I have witnessed on the creek in years.  The fish weren’t hitting the dries, but they were keyed in on the emergers and making splashy takes all over one particular hole.

Pulled a couple out of some deep seams with a 18 zebra midge.




















It took a bit of fooling around to get a productive fly in front of them.  I was hoping I could have some dry fly action on the Wissy, which is a rare treat, but I ended up getting 2 fish on a red zebra midge dropper, 2 on a black zebra midge in a deep seam, and two or three of the risers took a soft hackle in the film.  Nothing took my BWO on the surface, and I didn’t see a real one taken off the top either.  They will figure it out soon, though, I am sure!

Nothing on the dry fly, but a few hit a soft hackle in the film, which was fun.




















Heavier rain is forecasted for tonight, so I am not sure if I will get out tomorrow morning or not.  If I do, I may pack the spinning rod too.  I am heading to the NEPA opener on Saturday with my dad and probably Kenny, and I will at least start out with the spinning gear even if I switch to the fly rod later in the morning when it thins out.  I guess it wouldn’t hurt to re-sharpen my hookset skills in the rain tomorrow.