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Worth all the bowflex-ing. |
Bonus Father’s
Day session? My college-bound son had to
work all day today, so I got the go ahead to have at the trouts on a solo
mission. I left early this morning
intent on fishing the Brodhead, but I knew the section I really wanted to fish
was pretty damn high, plus I don’t like to beat a dead horse when it comes to
creeks and, especially, certain beats of creeks. The water I could have fished on the Brodhead gave up good wild
trout the last time I visited, so it goes against my nature to hit repeat. The gameday weather helped me make my decision. I experienced heavy rain showers twice on the
drive before sunrise (I fished through a few other downpours throughout the morning) so
I decided to take a chance on another smaller creek that might actually benefit
from some additional water at this time of year. Most fly fishermen are mitches, so I knew I
would not encounter any crowds on a cool, rainy day. It took a prolonged break in the rain after
lunch for me to see another angler. I
had the first beat of this baby Brodhead all to myself, but no one else would have
fought me for it. It was a dinkfest of
small wild browns on small bugs, and then a couple of stockers on a jigged streamer,
including a chunky stocked brook trout, when I tried to change it up to change my mediocre fortunes.
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Spot one was mostly wild browns, at least, albeit smalls. |
I drove further
upstream twice hoping that some factor—rain coloring the creek, bugs hatching,
warmer temperatures—might spark something.
It was more of the same. I didn’t even take my camera out for a fish pic
at my second stop. Same fish, different
stretch of water. Despite all the rainy conditions,
the previous week had been dry and hot, so the creek was low and rather clear. Without the low light, it may have been even
more challenging. In fact, even the bows
started acting tentatively during a late morning lull, like the low pressure had
them feeling off their games. The locals
are even more in tune with the conditions, so the browns were especially pecky late
morning after a good start—many little guys were one-and-done short hits or
came off after a single leap. I stuck
one good fish that I turned with a hookset, and it looked like a brown, so that
kept hope alive, I guess, as I moved one last time around 11 AM. Even though it was cool, I was swampy as hell
in raingear and waders all morning.
During this next drive, it did not rain at all, so I decided I was going
in shirt sleeves regardless of what happened after this lull. It was a good call. I was at my most comfortable and most effective
at this third stop. That is, if I don’t dwell
upon my slide down a steep, muddy embankment where I lost my sunglasses. I actually had to sit for a minute and assess
whether or not I had hurt myself or damaged my gear. Thankfully, I am no worse for the wear on
Monday evening as I write this. Just the
typical 56-year-old body aches after 10 hours of fishing and landing 725
rainbows with insufficient hydration. Those
Suncloud amber lenses either landed in the creek or got buried in leaf litter, in
the low light lost forever. Cheaper than a broken rib copay?
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Spot two as the rain continued. Insert fish from above minus the brookie. |
As I drove past
the spot where I was going to park in order to loop around, I swore I saw two
dudes dressed for fishing and walking towards the same access. When I arrived and started my own walk, they
were nowhere in sight, so I thought maybe I had imagined it. Nope.
After a ridiculous rainbow session—like 7 fish in 7 casts—I saw a fly
guy up on the bank. We chatted a bit, and
I was not seeing things: his son was fishing somewhere upstream. He said he was going back upstream to find
his son, so I said I would put some space between us and take a long walk
downstream. Besides the aforementioned
fall, on land not in the water, I might gratefully add, it was the right call
for me. I found more bows than I care to
mention, although a few of them have me wondering if some natural reproduction
is taking place here. I have thought
this a few times over the years, but I always convince myself that they are
from a Trout in the Classroom project (which my tertiary research has failed to
confirm). They are not only really pretty,
some of them, but also shaped right with all their fins, even full dorsal fins. That would explain a lot. I know the high water this year and cooler
temperatures are good for the stockies and kept the truck chasers away. Maybe in years when conditions are too
advantageous, a few of them spawn in the fall.
I have caught large males in this watershed too. Who knows?
There are so many sources of stocking these days, illegal and legal and
in the gray. Is there "gray" stocking over wild trout?
 |
More pristine bows. Finally some browns to be proud of and a hole that finally paid dividends. |
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Some of these bows, yo. |
All that
speculation aside, there is still no doubt when a wild brown eats the fly. I managed a few small wild fish at this third
stop as I waded through a dozen more rainbows, but I finally hooked an unmistakable
pig about an hour into fishing. I assumed
from the moment I found it some time ago that this hole held a big brown. I caught a stud male rainbow here a few years
ago that had me fooled and excited for a minute before I saw silver. But until today, my hunch about a stud wild
brown remained a hunch. At this final
stop, I had started throwing a big pheasant tail jig, like a size 10. There were some small caddis active, so I had
a size 16 blowtorch on the dropper tag just in case, but most of the fish were
eating this big bug. It can act as a
stonefly in a freestoner like this, and it can even double as a big isonychia,
so I put it on for a reason. The
rainbows loved it, of course, but at the sweet spot—the spot within the spot—this
beauty brown ate it too. I knew from the
first head shakes that it was good fish, when it refused to move and dug for
bottom and the undercut across the creek, that it was a good brown. I was not wrong. I had to slow down and let him fight. Only once or twice did I have to chance of losing
him by changing the angle of my pressure to coax him away from places where he
might get free. Otherwise, I was set on
landing this fish and not making any funny moves that might blow it. He did not cooperate with me fully, so I did
have to make some risky moves to avoid him taking control of the
situation. It all ended well with a net
shot and a couple wet-hand-with-fish shots.
That was easier said than done with the girth of this fish. Finding a place for a selfish in all the knotweed would probably have been tougher. I
should have quit after the release, but I fished another 45 minutes for more
rainbows and a few more wild browns (maybe a wild rainbow or two). A long, swampy, but ultimately successful day. Not the most fatherly of Father’s Days, but
it was my day spent the way I wanted, so not the worst father’s day either. Sort of like sending mom to the spa on Mother’s
Day, yeah? |
Bonus shot. I think I needed a bigger hand. |
Very nice job there SDF! Hard to believe the number of trout whether stocked or stream bred live n that crick!
ReplyDeleteAs for the twice posted "Spot within a spot" thing reminds me of an old BASS author who coined "Pattern within a pattern. :)
Saturday starts a family week in South Nags Head with no less than 6 googans in tow. This year I bring the rig board and tell them learn to tie rigs or buy them at the tackle shop. Of course I'll be in trouble for my abruptness. :)
Scheduled another crab pot charter for the grandkids. Found a guy who takes charters pulling some pots and we get the crabs. Did it last year and the kids loved it. Not cheap, but he does nice job with the 4 and 5 year olds. He also does shrimp charters but not sure June is the month there. If any of your mitches are interested in something like that, I gotta guy, and could pass on the info.
RR
Have a blast, RR! I like the idea of running a rigging school before lending out any equipment or taking anyone fishing. You are on vacation after that class....
DeleteLike Sunday church for you!
ReplyDeleteMy old man shot archery every Sunday of my childhood, so I had a good role model in that respect ;)
Delete