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That was some sky! |
The skies were ominous when I left Philadelphia for home
after teaching on Tuesday, and the power even went out at home for a couple
hours, but after coming in with some fury, this front just decided to hang
around for a few days, not always doing all that much. There were periods of heavy, localize rain,
including a cell that hit the Saucon Valley just before I fished the area on
Thursday. I had to exchange a pair of
leaking bootfoot waders if I didn’t want to wade the surf this month in
stocking foot waders (not fun, unless you like a lot of sand under your arches
and between your toes and Swiss cheese leaking), so I packed my streamer rod in
case and, in a break in the showers, gave the muddy Saucon a try for the first
time since the winter. Besides one
half-hearted bump while highsticking a bugger through a deep run and one
heart-stopping follow by a pig that didn’t commit, my plan did not really work
out. The creek was muddy not stained, so
I shouldn’t have expect much, but one nice one would have made the
afternoon. At least I will have a new (and
free) pair of waders arriving in the mail by Monday (45 minutes of driving, and
not my size in stock!).
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Just stained, and plenty of survivors in the Park. |
I woke up today, after listening to the ever-changing forecasts last night, and expected more floods, but the gauge at Valley looked great. I was still reluctant to fish the creek, not knowing the extent of the damage from a water line break/chlorine spill and ensuing fish kill last month, but I headed for the lower end of the creek, hoping that fish had fared better there. I was ready to switch to a streamer the minute the creek started to rise, but that never happened while I was there today. Instead, there was just a healthy flow, accompanied by a good stain to cover my approach, pretty much a nymph fisherman’s dream conditions. By sneaking up and fishing broken water and riffles, along with overhangs and roots and other stick-ups, I probably caught 15 fish, from 4 inches on up to 11 or 12 inches. All the fish took a basic Frenchie nymph, and besides chunking a streamer for maybe 20 minutes before I left, I was able to Czech nymph the entire time.
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At least 6 decent fish took a Frenchie, including this little chubby one. |
By using two small tungsten flies, I was able to fish very shallow riffles and runs, where fish were likely waiting for caddis and other nymphs today. I could have taken the dropper tag off because nothing touched my top fly! They did eat the anchor with gusto, though. I started getting brave after landing a good half a dozen fish over 8 inches (and many others on the smaller side) and began tempting fate by dropping the Frenchie in some hairy spots, looking for that one. I never lost the fly, but I never found anything over 12 inches either.
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I didn't need the rain gear, especially black rain gear... |
A couple deep holes were very stained, or at least the
depth compounded the effects of the stain, so I made a note to come back and
throw a streamer in a couple of these spots.
Granted, it was now 1:45 PM, and the sun was peeking out at times, but I
did move a bunch of fish and had a bunch of nippers. Again, no big fish committed, but I did move
two Valley-respectable fish who turned back after a short pursuit. Good signs, at least. Hindsight is, well, hindsight, so I decided
to be content with a day of numbers on Valley, and a day to Czech nymph Valley,
to boot, instead of second-guessing my decision not to throw meat at them. There is more rain on the way, or so the meteorologists say, so now that I
know there are plenty of survivors in the creek, I can always return early next week.
I am surprised by the clarity of Valley and the Wissy after this rain. I drove over Chester and the Brandywine yesterday on the way to my bass lake and I saw chocolate milk! Unfortunately I was told no boats out today as they had opened some gates to relieve pressure on the dam......ugh!
ReplyDeleteRR
Valley seems to come back in minutes at times! But I was surprised when I crossed the Wissy this am. We had road closures on Wednesday and today it looked fishable. Go figure...
DeleteGood to know Valley is still fishable. Thanks for the report.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I hope that upstream of Chesterbrook and downstream in the Park re-populate the affected section over time, Dave.
DeleteThanks for posting such a informative blog.
ReplyDeleteIslamorada Fishing Charters