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TR: Another Maitland story
A short one . . .
Went back to the Maitland. Fished my brown trout weamer all day. Used my new Daiwa Lochmor 14'6" 10 wt. spey rod and my new Airflo Delta multi tip. Got smoked by a steelie about 10 minutes after first line wetting. It ran the full 120' of fly line and about 40' of backing before it jumped and went bye, bye. Burned my fingers twice on the line. Bubba Bait Bucket didn't help by casting over my line and snagging it during the fight -- this was after I yelled a warning that I had a fish on -- a warning that he heard as he looked up and saw me with some severely bent graphite. Wasn't deliberate, I think his one functioning grey cell was occupied with something else. Afterward, he mumbled something that sounded like "Sorry", after asking if it was still on, and then left shortly after. Landed four smallies and lost three others. The smallest was about 16" and 3 lbs. The largest landed bent the 10 wt. to the cork. The largest not landed -- it broke me off -- 10 lb. test. 2X. The wind was brutal -- again! Had my licence checked by a pleasant CO. Had a very nice day. I now know where I'm going smallie fishing this summer. . . . Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
Another Maitland story
"Peter Charles" wrote in message ... A short one . . . ............... Got smoked by a steelie about 10 minutes after first line wetting. It ran the full 120' of fly line and about 40' of backing before it jumped and went bye, bye. Burned my fingers twice on the line. ........... Landed four smallies and lost three others. The smallest was about 16" and 3 lbs. The largest landed bent the 10 wt. to the cork. The largest not landed -- it broke me off -- 10 lb. test. 2X. ................ I now know where I'm going smallie fishing this summer. . . . Holy cow, I suggest you pack a shotgun instead of fly gear. Those sound like monsters!! Nice TR. --riverman |
Another Maitland story
On Sun, 25 Apr 2004 16:44:14 +0100, "riverman"
wrote: ................ I now know where I'm going smallie fishing this summer. . . . Holy cow, I suggest you pack a shotgun instead of fly gear. Those sound like monsters!! Nice TR. --riverman I've never run into smallies like this before -- big ones, yes -- this tough -- no. It's something to realize that you have a 10 wt. 14'6" fast action, spey rod in your hand, designed to subdue 20 lb. Atlantic salmon and that smallie, hunkered down in the current, has the thing bent to the cork. The steelie -- well, it's typical of a streambred fish with enough generations beyond its hatchery days to put the "wild" back in it. There's no comparison between hooking into one of these and a lame, hatchery football. RW likes to talk about faux steelhead -- I don't think any Left coaster, or Idahoan for that matter, would turn his nose up at this fish. I was stunned to see it jump so far downstream and realize that this fish was attached to my line (for a few moments longer). Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
TR: Another Maitland story
Wow! You fished near a "Bubba bait bucket"? You poor, elitist, wretched
soul! Sully Peter Charles wrote: A short one . . . Went back to the Maitland. Fished my brown trout weamer all day. Used my new Daiwa Lochmor 14'6" 10 wt. spey rod and my new Airflo Delta multi tip. Got smoked by a steelie about 10 minutes after first line wetting. It ran the full 120' of fly line and about 40' of backing before it jumped and went bye, bye. Burned my fingers twice on the line. Bubba Bait Bucket didn't help by casting over my line and snagging it during the fight -- this was after I yelled a warning that I had a fish on -- a warning that he heard as he looked up and saw me with some severely bent graphite. Wasn't deliberate, I think his one functioning grey cell was occupied with something else. Afterward, he mumbled something that sounded like "Sorry", after asking if it was still on, and then left shortly after. Landed four smallies and lost three others. The smallest was about 16" and 3 lbs. The largest landed bent the 10 wt. to the cork. The largest not landed -- it broke me off -- 10 lb. test. 2X. The wind was brutal -- again! Had my licence checked by a pleasant CO. Had a very nice day. I now know where I'm going smallie fishing this summer. . . . Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
TR: Another Maitland story
On Sun, 25 Apr 2004 14:51:56 -0500, Sully wrote:
Wow! You fished near a "Bubba bait bucket"? You poor, elitist, wretched soul! Sully You've obviously never fished for steelhead in Ontario or you'd realize how ****ing stupid is that remark.. I only call 'em that when they cast over my line while I'm fighting a fish. What would you have called hiim? Or would you've just blown him away and saved on the verbiage. I don't give a **** what they fish with as long as they do it with a bit of consideration for the rest of us and the resource. "Bubba Bait Bucket" refers to a particluar attitude, not a social class, nor the equipment used. Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
TR: Another Maitland story
On Sun, 25 Apr 2004 19:20:12 -0400, Greg Pavlov
wrote: On Sat, 24 Apr 2004 20:28:39 -0400, Peter Charles wrote: I now know where I'm going smallie fishing this summer. . . . Are you sure that these aren't fish that have run up from the lake to get ready to spawn ? In both the upper and lower Niagara River a good number of very nice-sized smallmouth appear at just about this time of the year to spawn, as far as we can tell, because they're usually gone within 3-4 weeks, not to be seen again until the following year. Either that or a lot of us are really bad at catching the large ones in the river at any other time :-) Well, after I mentioned it, the comments came back, "Ya, the Mailtand has some good sized smallies." The Deputy CO/biologist said it was too early for the spawn. Here's hoping . . . . Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
TR: Another Maitland story
Are you sure that these aren't fish that have run up
from the lake to get ready to spawn ? In both the upper and lower Niagara River a good number of very nice-sized smallmouth appear at just about this time of the year to spawn, as far as we can tell, because they're usually gone within 3-4 weeks, not to be seen again until the following year. Either that or a lot of us are really bad at catching the large ones in the river at any other time :-) Well, after I mentioned it, the comments came back, "Ya, the Mailtand has some good sized smallies." The Deputy CO/biologist said it was too early for the spawn. Here's hoping . . . . Peter Peter, This is not much use to you I know, but when I fished the Maitland in '88-'92 I caught a lot of very nice smallmouth in the summer both on top and with weighted flies. I doubt I ever caught anything that would have put a bend in my rod like the one you suggest but it held a lot of good fish. I think of all the rivers I have ever fished the Maitland must have been one of the richest. There were times I thought there was a crayfish under every rock. I caught my 2nd ever steelie there fishing for smallies and I got the fright of my life when a 9lb hen rainbow leapt out of the water in front of me - the first one was from the Thames on a curly tail jig while fishing for walleye, not exactly my proudest moment but it was the very first fish I ever caught in Canada. I guess the Maitland is not the best river in your area but I have very fond memories of it. Vaughan |
TR: Another Maitland story
On Mon, 26 Apr 2004 09:12:12 +0200, "Vaughan Hurry"
wrote: Peter, This is not much use to you I know, but when I fished the Maitland in '88-'92 I caught a lot of very nice smallmouth in the summer both on top and with weighted flies. I doubt I ever caught anything that would have put a bend in my rod like the one you suggest but it held a lot of good fish. I think of all the rivers I have ever fished the Maitland must have been one of the richest. There were times I thought there was a crayfish under every rock. I caught my 2nd ever steelie there fishing for smallies and I got the fright of my life when a 9lb hen rainbow leapt out of the water in front of me - the first one was from the Thames on a curly tail jig while fishing for walleye, not exactly my proudest moment but it was the very first fish I ever caught in Canada. I guess the Maitland is not the best river in your area but I have very fond memories of it. Vaughan Greg could very well be right that theses fish may return to the lake after spawning. I'm not up on smallie spawning migration habits to know one way or the other. When I went back to the car to eat a sandwich, two float fishermen walked by then stopped to chat. A few minutes later, the Deputy CO/biologist also stopped by and we ended up gabbing about the state of the river and the steelhead fishery. One of the float guys has fished the river for 35 years and we talked a bit about the fishery's history. The CO mentioned that these smallies were not spawning -- too early, but though the thought crossed my mind, I didn't ask him if they were resident or migratory. I'm impressed with the river and despite it being a 2 1/4 hour drive, I think I'll fish it more often. Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
TR: Another Maitland story
On Mon, 26 Apr 2004 06:20:52 -0400, Greg Pavlov
wrote: On Sun, 25 Apr 2004 19:37:30 -0400, Peter Charles wrote: Well, after I mentioned it, the comments came back, "Ya, the Mailtand has some good sized smallies." The Deputy CO/biologist said it was too early for the spawn. It's definitely seems too early (and probably too cold) for them to actually be spawning now. Looking at a few notes I have, mid- May is about the right time in the Niagara. My one problem with believing that the fish you caught are residents is that unless you're exaggerating the size :-) those are at 8 - 10 year old fish, and it's hard to imagine that many surviving that long given the pressure that stretch of river gets. And why wouldn't you have run into a much larger range in sizes ? Ya, that ran through my thoughts too. I did get a bunch of pulls that could've been from smaller fish. These fish were definitely grouped into two pods. The first pod was in the same location as arse-end Charlie that I caught the previous week. This is where I picked up the steelhead too. The other was right in the middle of the main channel, downstream of the bridge. Outside of these two areas, I got nada. Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
Another Maitland story
"Peter Charles" wrote... A short one . . . snip .. . . but a nice one. Thanks. Had my licence checked by a pleasant CO. The pleasantness is usually a reflection of both parties involved. -- TL, Tim ------------------------ http://css.sbcma.com/timj |
TR: Another Maitland story
Peter,
OK, you are right, I blew it. Just a smart ass remark that was off base. Just recently came upon this board. Mea culpa. Sully Peter Charles wrote: On Sun, 25 Apr 2004 14:51:56 -0500, Sully wrote: Wow! You fished near a "Bubba bait bucket"? You poor, elitist, wretched soul! Sully You've obviously never fished for steelhead in Ontario or you'd realize how ****ing stupid is that remark.. I only call 'em that when they cast over my line while I'm fighting a fish. What would you have called hiim? Or would you've just blown him away and saved on the verbiage. I don't give a **** what they fish with as long as they do it with a bit of consideration for the rest of us and the resource. "Bubba Bait Bucket" refers to a particluar attitude, not a social class, nor the equipment used. Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
TR: Another Maitland story
"Sully" wrote in message ... Peter, OK, you are right, I blew it. Just a smart ass remark that was off base. Just recently came upon this board. Mea culpa. Sully Well now, let's not get all carried away and ****. Petah made a strong statement. You, ditto. He covered his ass pretty well. Big deal. Wolfgang who would rather eat olives and drink beer than apologize on roff. |
TR: Another Maitland story
Wolfgang wrote: Wolfgang who would rather eat olives and drink beer than apologize on roff. jeez... olives... i'd rather drink beer and apologize! jeff (kalamataphobe) |
TR: Another Maitland story
"Jeff Miller" wrote in message news:Svsjc.1008$Nb3.387@lakeread06... jeff (kalamataphobe) Y' don't like kalamati? Whaza madda you?? Seafood is a good f'you! --riverman (ever notice how 'kalamataphobia' sounds like what it is...almost?) |
Another Maitland story
Had a similar experience on the same river. I went steelheading early last
season. An hours drive, got on the water at dawn. The water was high and scary fast so I just waded out a little bit and fished the seam about five feet from shore. After maybe ten minutes of dangling a streamer along this seam, I hooked a twenty-one inch smallie. (That's a measured 21", BTW.) She ran me a hundred feet downstream; luckily moving quickly on that river is seldom a problem. Landed her in a backwater, just blown away at her size and strength. Any other river, like the Thames, and I wuddna had a chance, she'd have wrapped me up in forty downed trees. Got her back in the water, she recovered nicely, then I walked back to the car and drove back home. No way was I topping that, and besides by then the spawn slingers were in full force, damn their black hearts. |
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