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Skill is Nice...
...but sometimes luck is better.
Left home this evening hoping to dodge the rain and get a little fishing in. Still hoping the catch the Sulphur spinner fall. Got to the access point upstream from Lost Guy Corners. It was still thundering out and drizzling when I got suited up but it seemed to be east and heading away from me. I threw my rain jacket over my vest and walked down to where an open hillside overlooks a nice pool at the head of the first rapids. Even from 100 feet away you could see them. Big brownish flies, hovering over the water. I think the rain must have pushed them out of the tree tops. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0007a.jpg I went to the foot of the second rapids and immediately spotted rising fish. Tying on a March Brown dry I cast to the nearest feeding fish. He swiped at it but missed. But a few drifts later he took it. A couple runs around the pool and he was being unhooked. A nice brownie about a foot long. Another cast to another riser brought the same results. A fly came bumbling towards me and I snatched it. A Brown Drake quivered in the palm of my hand, its already insubstantial spinner form slightly crushed and misshapen. As the fish seemed to like the fly I had on I cast to a fish feeding in the riffles. He too took it. Another brown. There being no more risers and the fish not seeming to respond to blind casting I turned and waded on down to the next pool. At its far end I spotted a swirl. Working down to just above and to the right of the fish I let a dozen downstream casts drift over him. When he didn't respond I snuck around him to fish the next run below. As I was preparing to cast he rose again, not 5 minutes after I had walked to within 5 feet of him. He took on the first drift and rocketed out of the water. A brookie of about 8 inches. I turned and headed back to the first run I had fished and saw another fish come up. I worked him for about 10 minutes with no result. Just as I was about to give up on him he took my fly with a healthy splash. He ran down into the tail of the run and then back up. As I brought him closer he made a run around my legs. Unsnapping my net and reaching down I snagged him. Laying him against the the rod he reached from the butt to the "b" of the Diamondback script printed on the black shaft. At home that measured out at a little over 13 inches. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0011a.jpg I fished up through the rapids, taking nothing. When I reached the pool that divides the first and second rapids I noticed another rise. He didn't respond though and I fished up through the pool. An island splits the river there and I went around the left hand side. There were still a few bugs but now that the rain was over most were hovering higher above the water. At the head of the island I cast into a small seam between two rocks and caught the only fish of the day that I didn't see rise first. A hefty brook trout of approximately 10 inches was the prize. I turned and went back around the side of the island I'd missed. No fish but I saw a nice boil at the far end of the pool. 20 or 30 casts fruitlessly went his way when I heard the sound of a fish coming up behind me. A few moments passed and he rose again. He took the Catskill dry on its first pass. It was a twin to the other 13" brown, coming up to exactly the same spot on the rod shaft. The fly I was using was an old fashioned hackled dry. At a time in our sport's history when most flies seem to be made from things like duck butt feathers, brass beads and/or sparkly synthetic rug yarn this thing was a throwback. A tail of moose mane, body of brown dyed hares mask, Cree hackle and wood duck wings, it would have seemed a normal fly to our grandsires. It was pleasantly anachronistic to see it working on the fish tonight. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0017a.jpg Seeing no more feeders I again waded up past the island. At the edge of a small rock I saw a dainty riseform. I floated the fly by the edge of the rock's eddy. On about the fourth pass it disappeared in an unprepossessing splash. A second or two later my leader was straining against the fish as it wallowed 50 feet across the River from me. It turned, ran to midstream and then back, this time under some alders. I jabbed my rod tip down under the water, praying that the fish wouldn't jump under there and tangle me on the overhanging branches. I managed to work him out by sweeping my rod downstream under water and he came out. As he splashed in mid riffle I caught sight of a white edged fin and suddenly I was very excited. He bolted downstream and I followed him like a steelheader churning after a big rainbow. The fish took line freely against the drag of the Battenkill and for once I felt grateful for my over engineered Orvis. The fish was in the pool now and its runs were controllable in the calmer water. I eased it into still water behind the island and slowly brought it towards the net. He saw it and shot off to the side. I quickly turned him though and then he was in the net. Fumbling for my camera I untangled him and held him in my hand. I had fought him longer than I liked so I didn't measure him against the rod. But he was much bigger than the browns from earlier. I'm betting that he was at least 15". The biggest brookie I've caught in maybe 5 years and by far the hardest fighting brook trout I'd ever caught. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0019a.jpg I was shaking as I moved him back and forth in the calm water. After about a minute he thrashed and swam off. It was deep twilight. I fished a little longer but I really was not focused any more on the task. Soon I reeled up and waded back to the car. In the beam of my flashlight huge aquatic moths fluttered over the water's surface, dipping their egg laden abdomens into the river again and again like monstrous caddis. The walk to the car up the gravel path was accompanied by the scream of some small creature probably coming face to face with Mr. Fox or Madame Owl. In the dark I pulled out the camera and looked at the shot of that scarlet and olive fish. What luck. Pure, simple, good... luck. I'll take it. hth g.c. BTW, it appears that the Sulphurs are fading up here in NC Wisconsin. Only saw a couple. But the big #12-14 yellow mayflies I've referred to as Light Cahills (although they probably aren't) were already coming out. About two weeks early. Heck with temps predicted to be in the 80s next week its probably time to start thinking Hex. |
Skill is Nice...
On Thu, 07 Jun 2007 23:38:36 -0500, George Cleveland
wrote: ...but sometimes luck is better. But if you don't have the skill, you don't get the take and you can't bring the fish in to the net. Good going, George. -- r.bc: vixen Minnow goddess, Speaker to squirrels, willow watcher. Almost entirely harmless. Really. http://www.visi.com/~cyli |
Skill is Nice...
"George Cleveland" wrote in message ... http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0019a.jpg Mmm, nice. |
Skill is Nice...
On Jun 7, 11:38?pm, George Cleveland
wrote: ...but sometimes luck is better. Left home this evening hoping to dodge the rain and get a little fishing in. Still hoping the catch the Sulphur spinner fall. Got to the access point upstream from Lost Guy Corners. It was still thundering out and drizzling when I got suited up but it seemed to be east and heading away from me. I threw my rain jacket over my vest and walked down to where an open hillside overlooks a nice pool at the head of the first rapids. Even from 100 feet away you could see them. Big brownish flies, hovering over the water. I think the rain must have pushed them out of the tree tops. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0007a.jpg I went to the foot of the second rapids and immediately spotted rising fish. Tying on a March Brown dry I cast to the nearest feeding fish. He swiped at it but missed. But a few drifts later he took it. A couple runs around the pool and he was being unhooked. A nice brownie about a foot long. Another cast to another riser brought the same results. A fly came bumbling towards me and I snatched it. A Brown Drake quivered in the palm of my hand, its already insubstantial spinner form slightly crushed and misshapen. As the fish seemed to like the fly I had on I cast to a fish feeding in the riffles. He too took it. Another brown. There being no more risers and the fish not seeming to respond to blind casting I turned and waded on down to the next pool. At its far end I spotted a swirl. Working down to just above and to the right of the fish I let a dozen downstream casts drift over him. When he didn't respond I snuck around him to fish the next run below. As I was preparing to cast he rose again, not 5 minutes after I had walked to within 5 feet of him. He took on the first drift and rocketed out of the water. A brookie of about 8 inches. I turned and headed back to the first run I had fished and saw another fish come up. I worked him for about 10 minutes with no result. Just as I was about to give up on him he took my fly with a healthy splash. He ran down into the tail of the run and then back up. As I brought him closer he made a run around my legs. Unsnapping my net and reaching down I snagged him. Laying him against the the rod he reached from the butt to the "b" of the Diamondback script printed on the black shaft. At home that measured out at a little over 13 inches. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0011a.jpg I fished up through the rapids, taking nothing. When I reached the pool that divides the first and second rapids I noticed another rise. He didn't respond though and I fished up through the pool. An island splits the river there and I went around the left hand side. There were still a few bugs but now that the rain was over most were hovering higher above the water. At the head of the island I cast into a small seam between two rocks and caught the only fish of the day that I didn't see rise first. A hefty brook trout of approximately 10 inches was the prize. I turned and went back around the side of the island I'd missed. No fish but I saw a nice boil at the far end of the pool. 20 or 30 casts fruitlessly went his way when I heard the sound of a fish coming up behind me. A few moments passed and he rose again. He took the Catskill dry on its first pass. It was a twin to the other 13" brown, coming up to exactly the same spot on the rod shaft. The fly I was using was an old fashioned hackled dry. At a time in our sport's history when most flies seem to be made from things like duck butt feathers, brass beads and/or sparkly synthetic rug yarn this thing was a throwback. A tail of moose mane, body of brown dyed hares mask, Cree hackle and wood duck wings, it would have seemed a normal fly to our grandsires. It was pleasantly anachronistic to see it working on the fish tonight. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0017a.jpg Seeing no more feeders I again waded up past the island. At the edge of a small rock I saw a dainty riseform. I floated the fly by the edge of the rock's eddy. On about the fourth pass it disappeared in an unprepossessing splash. A second or two later my leader was straining against the fish as it wallowed 50 feet across the River from me. It turned, ran to midstream and then back, this time under some alders. I jabbed my rod tip down under the water, praying that the fish wouldn't jump under there and tangle me on the overhanging branches. I managed to work him out by sweeping my rod downstream under water and he came out. As he splashed in mid riffle I caught sight of a white edged fin and suddenly I was very excited. He bolted downstream and I followed him like a steelheader churning after a big rainbow. The fish took line freely against the drag of the Battenkill and for once I felt grateful for my over engineered Orvis. The fish was in the pool now and its runs were controllable in the calmer water. I eased it into still water behind the island and slowly brought it towards the net. He saw it and shot off to the side. I quickly turned him though and then he was in the net. Fumbling for my camera I untangled him and held him in my hand. I had fought him longer than I liked so I didn't measure him against the rod. But he was much bigger than the browns from earlier. I'm betting that he was at least 15". The biggest brookie I've caught in maybe 5 years and by far the hardest fighting brook trout I'd ever caught. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0019a.jpg I was shaking as I moved him back and forth in the calm water. After about a minute he thrashed and swam off. It was deep twilight. I fished a little longer but I really was not focused any more on the task. Soon I reeled up and waded back to the car. In the beam of my flashlight huge aquatic moths fluttered over the water's surface, dipping their egg laden abdomens into the river again and again like monstrous caddis. The walk to the car up the gravel path was accompanied by the scream of some small creature probably coming face to face with Mr. Fox or Madame Owl. In the dark I pulled out the camera and looked at the shot of that scarlet and olive fish. What luck. Pure, simple, good... luck. I'll take it. hth g.c. BTW, it appears that the Sulphurs are fading up here in NC Wisconsin. Only saw a couple. But the big #12-14 yellow mayflies I've referred to as Light Cahills (although they probably aren't) were already coming out. About two weeks early. Heck with temps predicted to be in the 80s next week its probably time to start thinking Hex. George, Prairie? Joel |
Skill is Nice...
On Sun, 10 Jun 2007 09:33:18 -0700, Joel *DFD*
wrote: On Jun 7, 11:38?pm, George Cleveland wrote: ...but sometimes luck is better. Left home this evening hoping to dodge the rain and get a little fishing in. Still hoping the catch the Sulphur spinner fall. Got to the access point upstream from Lost Guy Corners. It was still thundering out and drizzling when I got suited up but it seemed to be east and heading away from me. I threw my rain jacket over my vest and walked down to where an open hillside overlooks a nice pool at the head of the first rapids. Even from 100 feet away you could see them. Big brownish flies, hovering over the water. I think the rain must have pushed them out of the tree tops. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0007a.jpg I went to the foot of the second rapids and immediately spotted rising fish. Tying on a March Brown dry I cast to the nearest feeding fish. He swiped at it but missed. But a few drifts later he took it. A couple runs around the pool and he was being unhooked. A nice brownie about a foot long. Another cast to another riser brought the same results. A fly came bumbling towards me and I snatched it. A Brown Drake quivered in the palm of my hand, its already insubstantial spinner form slightly crushed and misshapen. As the fish seemed to like the fly I had on I cast to a fish feeding in the riffles. He too took it. Another brown. There being no more risers and the fish not seeming to respond to blind casting I turned and waded on down to the next pool. At its far end I spotted a swirl. Working down to just above and to the right of the fish I let a dozen downstream casts drift over him. When he didn't respond I snuck around him to fish the next run below. As I was preparing to cast he rose again, not 5 minutes after I had walked to within 5 feet of him. He took on the first drift and rocketed out of the water. A brookie of about 8 inches. I turned and headed back to the first run I had fished and saw another fish come up. I worked him for about 10 minutes with no result. Just as I was about to give up on him he took my fly with a healthy splash. He ran down into the tail of the run and then back up. As I brought him closer he made a run around my legs. Unsnapping my net and reaching down I snagged him. Laying him against the the rod he reached from the butt to the "b" of the Diamondback script printed on the black shaft. At home that measured out at a little over 13 inches. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0011a.jpg I fished up through the rapids, taking nothing. When I reached the pool that divides the first and second rapids I noticed another rise. He didn't respond though and I fished up through the pool. An island splits the river there and I went around the left hand side. There were still a few bugs but now that the rain was over most were hovering higher above the water. At the head of the island I cast into a small seam between two rocks and caught the only fish of the day that I didn't see rise first. A hefty brook trout of approximately 10 inches was the prize. I turned and went back around the side of the island I'd missed. No fish but I saw a nice boil at the far end of the pool. 20 or 30 casts fruitlessly went his way when I heard the sound of a fish coming up behind me. A few moments passed and he rose again. He took the Catskill dry on its first pass. It was a twin to the other 13" brown, coming up to exactly the same spot on the rod shaft. The fly I was using was an old fashioned hackled dry. At a time in our sport's history when most flies seem to be made from things like duck butt feathers, brass beads and/or sparkly synthetic rug yarn this thing was a throwback. A tail of moose mane, body of brown dyed hares mask, Cree hackle and wood duck wings, it would have seemed a normal fly to our grandsires. It was pleasantly anachronistic to see it working on the fish tonight. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0017a.jpg Seeing no more feeders I again waded up past the island. At the edge of a small rock I saw a dainty riseform. I floated the fly by the edge of the rock's eddy. On about the fourth pass it disappeared in an unprepossessing splash. A second or two later my leader was straining against the fish as it wallowed 50 feet across the River from me. It turned, ran to midstream and then back, this time under some alders. I jabbed my rod tip down under the water, praying that the fish wouldn't jump under there and tangle me on the overhanging branches. I managed to work him out by sweeping my rod downstream under water and he came out. As he splashed in mid riffle I caught sight of a white edged fin and suddenly I was very excited. He bolted downstream and I followed him like a steelheader churning after a big rainbow. The fish took line freely against the drag of the Battenkill and for once I felt grateful for my over engineered Orvis. The fish was in the pool now and its runs were controllable in the calmer water. I eased it into still water behind the island and slowly brought it towards the net. He saw it and shot off to the side. I quickly turned him though and then he was in the net. Fumbling for my camera I untangled him and held him in my hand. I had fought him longer than I liked so I didn't measure him against the rod. But he was much bigger than the browns from earlier. I'm betting that he was at least 15". The biggest brookie I've caught in maybe 5 years and by far the hardest fighting brook trout I'd ever caught. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0019a.jpg I was shaking as I moved him back and forth in the calm water. After about a minute he thrashed and swam off. It was deep twilight. I fished a little longer but I really was not focused any more on the task. Soon I reeled up and waded back to the car. In the beam of my flashlight huge aquatic moths fluttered over the water's surface, dipping their egg laden abdomens into the river again and again like monstrous caddis. The walk to the car up the gravel path was accompanied by the scream of some small creature probably coming face to face with Mr. Fox or Madame Owl. In the dark I pulled out the camera and looked at the shot of that scarlet and olive fish. What luck. Pure, simple, good... luck. I'll take it. hth g.c. BTW, it appears that the Sulphurs are fading up here in NC Wisconsin. Only saw a couple. But the big #12-14 yellow mayflies I've referred to as Light Cahills (although they probably aren't) were already coming out. About two weeks early. Heck with temps predicted to be in the 80s next week its probably time to start thinking Hex. George, Prairie? Joel Yep. g.c. |
Skill is Nice...
"George Cleveland" wrote in message ... ...but sometimes luck is better. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0019a.jpg Great report, sure enjoy reading your posts. I curious about the black spots on the fish in the link above? I've seen them on shinny ray such as largemouth and perch, however never on trout species. Are they as the following web article suggests? (about the middle of the page, see black spots) http://www.fish.state.pa.us/images/p...fish/worms.htm Thanks, JT |
Skill is Nice...
On Mon, 11 Jun 2007 08:45:50 -0700, "JT"
wrote: "George Cleveland" wrote in message .. . ...but sometimes luck is better. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0019a.jpg Great report, sure enjoy reading your posts. I curious about the black spots on the fish in the link above? I've seen them on shinny ray such as largemouth and perch, however never on trout species. Are they as the following web article suggests? (about the middle of the page, see black spots) http://www.fish.state.pa.us/images/p...fish/worms.htm Thanks, JT Yep. its been a bad year for it. It seems to co-incide with warm warter temps. Everything is about one to twop weeks ahead of schedule up here. Basically the trout fishing is ending except for the late night hexes and early morning tricos. g.c. |
Skill is Nice...
"George Cleveland" wrote in message ... ...but sometimes luck is better. The fly I was using was an old fashioned hackled dry. At a time in our sport's history when most flies seem to be made from things like duck butt feathers, brass beads and/or sparkly synthetic rug yarn this thing was a throwback. A tail of moose mane, body of brown dyed hares mask, Cree hackle and wood duck wings, it would have seemed a normal fly to our grandsires. It was pleasantly anachronistic to see it working on the fish tonight. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2.../IMG_0017a.jpg g.c. Looks about like most of the flies I fish with. I'm in my 51st year of fly fishing and haven't changed what I tie very much. Why mess with success. I do use CDC, sparkle yarn and some of the other new stuff occasionally, but still fish mostly the traditionals with moderate success. Nice report. I never seem to be able to get out as often as I plan - Seem to fish less since retiring 8 years ago. Lost my time management skills, I guess. Gene |
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