Sunday, January 11, 2026

January 11, 2026 – New Year, Same M*Fers - Eric and I on the Board for 2026 with Some Quality Small Stream Trouts – SEPA

An early start, but not as Eric would have liked ;)

Experiencing the below-average cold since November, it took some degree of faith to imagine getting on the board this early in January.  This morning was the conclusion (maybe crescendo) of a three-day span approaching or breaking 50 F, so it actually could have happened earlier had I the time off earlier in the previous week.  But it happened, and I am grateful and now more hopeful for the rest of the winter.  Eric and I could not have asked for much more: the aforementioned three days of mild weather, rain the day before, no wind until the next front came through about noon.  Minus all but a smattering of midges in terms of bug life, it was damn near perfect on paper, and the morning ended up fulfilling all the potential promise and more.  Always overeager after a long absence from the game, Eric convinced me to pick him up at 7 AM.  He probably would have preferred 6 AM, so we were fishing at sunrise, but I reigned him in a bit.  Three days of milder temperatures was not going to undo totally a few weeks of frigid evenings on a mostly-freestone crick.  I understood his enthusiasm and was looking forward to a fishing day with a mitch, but I definitely wanted to optimize our window: early enough to beat the next weather change, but late enough that it was more than casting practice for two hours before fish warmed up.  As expected, we had a slower start even at the 8 AM start time, but Eric did get an average fish to eat before 9 AM, and I had one fish nip but not connect on a bugger in the first hour, so not completely dead.

A good one for Eric as good things starting happening.

We both began fishing jigged buggers because of the perceived stain in the low morning light, but with the presence of some midges hatching and the increased daylight revealing better than expected visibility, I actually took a couple minutes to rerig with small nymphs when we got to our first confidence hole.  I was up for this hole, but I gave a mitch the go ahead.  While I was rigging up a perdigon and a small midge dropper, Eric quickly picked up two more fish from the same hole on the bugger—making me doubt my decision, of course!  I left the nymphs on, however, and finally landed a rather decent fish on the perdigon after getting popped one other time in the next hole.  Proving to myself that fish would hit nymphs and/or were aware of the sparse hatch, I quickly retied with 4x and my original choice of jigged bugger.  I am no dummy!  It was the right call because Eric’s next at bat scored a beauty of a wild brown.  It was probably 14 inches but also a fully mature, colored-up, post-spawn male with some war wounds—just a great fish and a day maker on this crick.

I started pulling my weight and Eric continued to catch exceptionally pretty trouts.

I got first shot at the next honey hole, which did not disappoint.  Just as my jigged bugger left the head riffle and plunged into the deep hole, it was met on the fall by our second good fish of the morning.  We made a few additional casts, but we decided to rest both of these holes after causing a ruckus and chose to keep moving.  Fish we active, and in the winter (plus with an approaching front), we did not know when our luck would run out.  The window is sometimes short, but luckily it had not closed on us just yet.  Eric landed another beautiful fish at our next stop.  This one had a unique pattern for this crick, a real sparsely spotted, deep hued fish, more like the so-called Loch Leven browns.  The next two holes that usually produce for us this time of year did not.  The weather was changing.  Even though we were well protected at the time, we could hear the wind already messing with the tops of trees.  We both figured we had better return to the two deep holes that produced the better fish before our window closed for the day.  As we headed back downstream, a dude out working on his truck asked if we had permission to fish here.  We do, and Eric dropped the name of the landowner.  Dude was cool with that, but we both had a sense we might see the landowner today.  Honestly, we were both glad that dude asked because he probably deters trespassers with his vigilance.  For years, we have seen no one back here, but in recent years we started noticing bobbers and flies in trees despite obvious posted signs.  It was also probably a good thing if we encountered the landowner today—Eric last spoke to him a couple years ago, so it was not a bad time for a check-in with him.

My best fish of the morning.

The return trip to the hole where I got my good fish was more than fruitful.  I may have landed a fish as solid as Eric’s if not our best fish of the morning.  They were both from the same year class, male, mature, post-spawn fish, still toothy and colored-up.  A good day had just become an exceptional one, especially for January.  As Eric readied to fish his honey hole again, hoping to repeat my good fortune, we heard the ATV engine in the woods.  Sure enough, a quad was coming down the trail towards us.  It was the landowner’s son.  We knew he hunted the land quite a bit, but we had never met him since we tend to avoid interfering with hunting season back here.  In fact, we were fishing today, a Sunday, because Sunday hunting was closed again.  The son was cool and knew Eric’s family name, as they both grew up here.  It was actually better that we met the young son and not the father because Eric was able to exchange numbers, offering to text the son when we were going to fish and also report any trespassers.  It was dude working on the truck who called in the landowner’s son, so that idea was well-received.  I guess we are part of the “if you see something say something” team now?  Someday this will all be townhouses or worse, but for the time being, we have the next generation’s contact information, and he loves the outdoors.  A good end to a good day.

Winter small stream sneaking at its best.