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#1
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I was really nervous Thursday and Friday. In fact, I looked at the
weather report every ten minutes and looked out the window twice as often. No matter how often I looked, the news was the same: it was still raining. I've been rained on before while fishing, so it isn't a new experience, just one I would prefer to avoid while tenting. There was nothing to do but pack the car and go. I left work early, four in the afternoon, making sure to buy the silence of my fellow employees with growlers of Iron Hill's Ironbound Pale Ale. The office is minutes from the Turnpike and in short order, I was rolling westward under full steam. That lasted three minutes. I spent the next hour crawling at stall speeds towards the Blue Route. The rain alternated between heavy downpours and Biblical torrents. Finally, the traffic cleared and I resumed my head of steam towards the Letort. The sky remained heavy, but the rain lost strength as I got further west. Just as I crossed the Susquehanna, the only thing left of the rain was a light cloud cover and full humidity. The Susky was in bad shape. It looked like a million cubic feet per second of Quik rushing to the Chesapeake. I rolled into the Carlisle Campground at a quarter to seven. Roger beat me there by a few minutes, and he was already down at the Letort, taking it all in with polarized glasses. Everything was soaked, and after setting up the tent, so were we. Before dinner, we tried fishing the stream right there in the campground. It was high and milky, but we tried anyway. In an hour, I saw one rise and we caught no fish. Dinner was steaks in an old cast iron pan on the fire, and since I forgot paper plates, we ate chunks off a fork in the style called "grip and rip." We drank a bunch of martinis, carefully made to exacting standards and guarded closely against accidental bug drownings. Rog did end up with a moth in his, but that was his third see-through and the bug went down with an olive. Friday night, it got awful drunk out. We woke up late Saturday morning to fantastic weather and slight hangovers. There was a light breeze, sun and a few high small clouds. Breakfast was camp coffee, bacon, bacon and eggs. No paper plates, so we put it all on a bun. Having no idea what we were doing, we decided to hit Cold Spring Anglers in town for some local flies and advice. That was a fantastic shop. They had all sorts of good stuff and the staff was great. They had coffee, and it was a whole lot better than the stuff we had with breakfast. For starters, their coffee didn't have any bugs in it. I got a new fly line, a bunch of flies, a neat nail-knot tool with a demonstration, and I almost got a divorce. The guy started showing me these fantastic Winston and Sage rods, where the ink on the price tag outweighed the rod itself. If I had bought one, I'd have had to use it as a tent pole because I wouldn't be allowed back in the house. Fortunately, Rog saved me. "Step away from the rod!" We asked where to go. They gave us some cherry spots, how to get there and how to get access. Most of the Letort is on private property, I guess, and some people are very picky about who uses the land. Some will let you fish if you ask nicely, and some will shoot at you. I suppose that if I lived on a trout stream with the reputation of the Letort, I might limit access, too. We asked what to use. The guy laughed. "It doesn't matter. They won't take anything, so just throw whatever you want in whatever size you want. Try some terrestrials." As we headed back to camp, we realized that we were in town the same time as a motorcycle show. Hogs, fat boys, soft tails, choppers and trikes rolled, rumbled, howled and were towed all over the place. We saw a fascinating array of people on top of these motorcycles. All sorts of shapes and colors. The one thing we noticed about motorcycle enthusiasts is that they cannot start a motorcycle without ten minutes of throttle work, especially early in the morning or late at night. We loaded our stuff and headed to the first spot on the Letort. The fly shop guys told us to ask permission from a certain place to fish a certain stretch, so we went into the store. I can't imagine her impression: two giant, wild-eyed men, incongruous in the store, asking to fish. She let us, fly-fishing only, catch-and-release only. I hadn't figured on catching enough to eat, anyway. I remember reading Marinaro's In the Ring of the Rise and thinking, how did he get such great pictures of a trout rising to a fly? Such clear water and perfectly placed trout, well lit and camera-friendly. Now I know. The Letort is as clear as a chilled shot of vodka, and instead of the massive canopy of trees and dense brush I'm used to, it has fairly short grasses and reeds. The sun shines down into that river and smiles on its trout. The river was polluted with fish. Holding everywhere on the bottom, we found browns. They all looked to be about ten inchers, plus or minus. Surprisingly, they weren't spooky. I stood on the bank behind a clump of grass, half a rod length from the fish holding on the bottom. Surprisingly, they ignored everything. Wet, dry, top, bottom, big, small, any color, it all just went past the trout. Still, the creek was as beautiful as it was unique, there under the infinitely high skies. My usual fishing finds me under the trees, wading and firmly stuck to the ground. The open sky and the uncluttered stream bank made it feel like I wasn't anchored to the planet, and unless I concentrated on the water, I might float off into space. While working one pod of decidedly uninterested trout, I made several casts beyond the lie, hoping that I'd see sources of drag and better present the fly. One of those casts got a rise. For a second or two, I was hooked into a tiny terror. The trout was small, perhaps six or seven inches, but it thrashed and flipped and splashed enough to throw the hook. That was the extent of my trouty action on that stretch of the Letort. I can't decide whether the fishing was the best I'd ever seen or the worst I'd ever seen. Rog had a rise from a good fish, but it was while he was scoping the creek for another cast, so he wasn't prepared. He probably learned something about fishing out the cast. We'd been taunted enough, and it was time to eat. We put our gear in the truck and went in to thank the lady. I can't imagine we made a better impression than the first time: two giant, wild-eyed men, sunburned, mud-spattered and excited about catching no fish. We thanked her profusely and joined the lines of traffic snaking through town. Lunch was smoked venison sausage, eaten off a fork, with a tepid Hop Devil IPA. Despite the unappetizing description, it was a terrific lunch. Once again packed up, we took off for the Yellow Breeches. From some of the reports we heard, the Breeches was an easier place to fish than the Letort, and we needed an ego booster. We rode through the farm country listening to the blues in the slanting afternoon light. We crossed the Letort at another spot, in a small glen. The creek was braided and very skinny. It looked even more difficult than the first spot we tried. Boiling Springs, Pennsylvania seems to be centered on the Children's Lake. The roads all seem to lead to it. After a few false starts, we got into the parking lot for the catch-and-release area and were amazed at the crowd. We'd had the Letort all to ourselves all afternoon, and now we had to share a stream with what looked like the entire non-motorcycling population of Cumberland County. Still, we came to fish. We hiked down the river, found a likely spot and commenced fishing. The Yellow Breeches is another cold spring-fed stream, but completely different than the Letort in configuration. It looks like a free-stone stream in the classic sense. There was the canopy of trees, muck at the edges, stony riffles and slow pools. It could be a stream anywhere. A few rhododendrons mixed in with the sycamores and hemlocks on the banks. It was also packed with fish. There were rainbows in every riffle and pool, a couple of 18" palominos and a brown or two thrown in for variety. There were no rises, but who could tell with all the fly lines whipping the surface to a froth? We found a mixed bag of fishermen. Some seemed to be playing fish continuously and some seemed to be playing with their fly boxes continuously. We changed flies fairly frequently, trying to pick something these fish had never seen. I went with a bead head dropper and dry at one point, and managed to take a standard-issue stocker rainbow on the dropper. The colors on the fish were excellent, so I snapped a picture and turned it out of the net. It hung in the current below me for a second, then returned to feeding right at my feet. It flailed on its side trying to dislodge nymphs from the streambed a scant four inches from the tip of my boots. Rog found a pool with a few fish and while I played ghillie and cameraman, he took a perfectly-formed six-inch wild brook trout. It was an excellent little fish, full of color and vigor. I can't imagine the torments that little fish's ancestors went through on that river to survive. The logging, the iron mining, the blast furnace on the bank, the over fishing and stocking must have been true tribulations. Surely, that little brookie's lineage has real balls. Enough was, eventually, enough. We unkitted in the still-full parking lot, chatting with a great old guy and his (grand?)son. He had a virtually unlimited collection of fly boxes in his vest, each one completely packed with his own beautifully-tied flies. The boy waded in, and with quick sure casts, hooked into a nice fish in less than three minutes. I liked seeing the confidence and skill on that kid. He'll be one hell of a fisherman some day. A budding Marinaro. Back at camp, while I set up the kitchen and started dinner, Rog made the martinis. There in the dusk, the Harleys roaring around, raucous screeching, country music and cell phones making themselves known, the martini shaker stood out. Rog and I have been making martinis since right after college. The recipe is solid and now has the weight of tradition. It bears recording: Per serving: (5) drops lime juice into a martini glass Fill a martini shaker with ice (2) shots Skyy vodka into the shaker (5) drops dry vermouth into the shaker Shake it until frost forms on the outside of the shaker Decant the martini into the glass Spoon in an odd number of manzanilla olives, draining only slightly If the olives are small, use (5) If the olives are large, use (3) We looked at Cassiopeia and the Ursae, and I toasted: Today we fished: We paid our way and relied on the kindness of strangers, We caught fish and got skunked, We fished private land and public, We fished alone and in a crowd, We fished for stockies and wild fish, And here's to the fish we couldn't catch. To which Rog replied, "It was a good day." Saturday night, inebriation settled its heavy dank blanket all over the campground. Sunday morning, we were up earlier than our neighbors. After the story-book weather Saturday, Sunday looked fantastically fishy. Low clouds crowded the humid air and promised rain softly stroking everything with their clammy fingers. We made breakfast, did our ablutions and packed before the neighbors got up. We had one more piece to fish, in the interests of tradition. Marinaro's Meadow beckoned. After a short drive though town, pointedly ignoring the church bells, the fishing presented itself. We walked down to survey the water, and again found vodka-clear water with reedy banks. We kitted up and walked downstream, staying well away from the stream, so as not to spook fish. At one spot, we found a battered mailbox bearing a tag, "Hagn's Letort Log." We found a business card book with a front piece asking that we put the name, date and put a sample of a fly that caught fish. I don't carry cards – they encourage people to call me. Rog had one and put our names and the date on one. It felt good to be a part of a club universally flailing at a nearly unattainable goal called "Letort Brown." I watched one holding next to a weed stromatolite (well, that's what they LOOK like). It was a small brown, hanging effortlessly in the current. I watched it rise three times to something I couldn't see. It was just like Vince Marinaro said it would be. We fished, slow and carefully, but we only saw fish when they scattered at our coming. I consider myself a patient and enduring fisherman. I will happily make the thousand casts for a steelhead and wait a lifetime for a muskie but these little trout had me exasperated. I smoked a reflective cigarette and considered my imminent defeat. Rog is made of sterner stuff. His will has the strength of Lukens steel plate, the resiliency of a cockroach and all the majesty of a bull elephant. He was stymied, too. By the time we had fished back up to Marinaro's meadow, even he was prepared to concede. We were bested by beautiful little trout with brains like lima beans. In the parking lot, after we took off our waders, we shook hands and promised to do it again, but somewhere with dumber fish. In town, Rog veered off south and I continued to the Turnpike. As I accelerated through the onramp, the rain began in earnest. |
#2
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Nice report Steve i'll have to go to the Letort and catch all those trout you
saw........... Handyman Mike Standing in a river waving a stick |
#3
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Stephen,
Nice TR!!! A mirror to the first 3 or 4 times I attempted the LeTort. I haven't gotten much more successful, but there is something to practice. Nice piece of writing all around!!! Tom |
#4
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Stephen,
Nice TR!!! A mirror to the first 3 or 4 times I attempted the LeTort. I haven't gotten much more successful, but there is something to practice. Nice piece of writing all around!!! Tom |
#5
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uh...you had me until those damnable olives appeared...couldn't go on.
g til then, it was fun. thanks... jeff Stephen L. Cain wrote: I was really nervous Thursday and Friday. In fact, I looked at the weather report every ten minutes and looked out the window twice as often. No matter how often I looked, the news was the same: it was still raining. I've been rained on before while fishing, so it isn't a new experience, just one I would prefer to avoid while tenting. There was nothing to do but pack the car and go. I left work early, four in the afternoon, making sure to buy the silence of my fellow employees with growlers of Iron Hill's Ironbound Pale Ale. The office is minutes from the Turnpike and in short order, I was rolling westward under full steam. That lasted three minutes. I spent the next hour crawling at stall speeds towards the Blue Route. The rain alternated between heavy downpours and Biblical torrents. Finally, the traffic cleared and I resumed my head of steam towards the Letort. The sky remained heavy, but the rain lost strength as I got further west. Just as I crossed the Susquehanna, the only thing left of the rain was a light cloud cover and full humidity. The Susky was in bad shape. It looked like a million cubic feet per second of Quik rushing to the Chesapeake. I rolled into the Carlisle Campground at a quarter to seven. Roger beat me there by a few minutes, and he was already down at the Letort, taking it all in with polarized glasses. Everything was soaked, and after setting up the tent, so were we. Before dinner, we tried fishing the stream right there in the campground. It was high and milky, but we tried anyway. In an hour, I saw one rise and we caught no fish. Dinner was steaks in an old cast iron pan on the fire, and since I forgot paper plates, we ate chunks off a fork in the style called "grip and rip." We drank a bunch of martinis, carefully made to exacting standards and guarded closely against accidental bug drownings. Rog did end up with a moth in his, but that was his third see-through and the bug went down with an olive. Friday night, it got awful drunk out. We woke up late Saturday morning to fantastic weather and slight hangovers. There was a light breeze, sun and a few high small clouds. Breakfast was camp coffee, bacon, bacon and eggs. No paper plates, so we put it all on a bun. Having no idea what we were doing, we decided to hit Cold Spring Anglers in town for some local flies and advice. That was a fantastic shop. They had all sorts of good stuff and the staff was great. They had coffee, and it was a whole lot better than the stuff we had with breakfast. For starters, their coffee didn't have any bugs in it. I got a new fly line, a bunch of flies, a neat nail-knot tool with a demonstration, and I almost got a divorce. The guy started showing me these fantastic Winston and Sage rods, where the ink on the price tag outweighed the rod itself. If I had bought one, I'd have had to use it as a tent pole because I wouldn't be allowed back in the house. Fortunately, Rog saved me. "Step away from the rod!" We asked where to go. They gave us some cherry spots, how to get there and how to get access. Most of the Letort is on private property, I guess, and some people are very picky about who uses the land. Some will let you fish if you ask nicely, and some will shoot at you. I suppose that if I lived on a trout stream with the reputation of the Letort, I might limit access, too. We asked what to use. The guy laughed. "It doesn't matter. They won't take anything, so just throw whatever you want in whatever size you want. Try some terrestrials." As we headed back to camp, we realized that we were in town the same time as a motorcycle show. Hogs, fat boys, soft tails, choppers and trikes rolled, rumbled, howled and were towed all over the place. We saw a fascinating array of people on top of these motorcycles. All sorts of shapes and colors. The one thing we noticed about motorcycle enthusiasts is that they cannot start a motorcycle without ten minutes of throttle work, especially early in the morning or late at night. We loaded our stuff and headed to the first spot on the Letort. The fly shop guys told us to ask permission from a certain place to fish a certain stretch, so we went into the store. I can't imagine her impression: two giant, wild-eyed men, incongruous in the store, asking to fish. She let us, fly-fishing only, catch-and-release only. I hadn't figured on catching enough to eat, anyway. I remember reading Marinaro's In the Ring of the Rise and thinking, how did he get such great pictures of a trout rising to a fly? Such clear water and perfectly placed trout, well lit and camera-friendly. Now I know. The Letort is as clear as a chilled shot of vodka, and instead of the massive canopy of trees and dense brush I'm used to, it has fairly short grasses and reeds. The sun shines down into that river and smiles on its trout. The river was polluted with fish. Holding everywhere on the bottom, we found browns. They all looked to be about ten inchers, plus or minus. Surprisingly, they weren't spooky. I stood on the bank behind a clump of grass, half a rod length from the fish holding on the bottom. Surprisingly, they ignored everything. Wet, dry, top, bottom, big, small, any color, it all just went past the trout. Still, the creek was as beautiful as it was unique, there under the infinitely high skies. My usual fishing finds me under the trees, wading and firmly stuck to the ground. The open sky and the uncluttered stream bank made it feel like I wasn't anchored to the planet, and unless I concentrated on the water, I might float off into space. While working one pod of decidedly uninterested trout, I made several casts beyond the lie, hoping that I'd see sources of drag and better present the fly. One of those casts got a rise. For a second or two, I was hooked into a tiny terror. The trout was small, perhaps six or seven inches, but it thrashed and flipped and splashed enough to throw the hook. That was the extent of my trouty action on that stretch of the Letort. I can't decide whether the fishing was the best I'd ever seen or the worst I'd ever seen. Rog had a rise from a good fish, but it was while he was scoping the creek for another cast, so he wasn't prepared. He probably learned something about fishing out the cast. We'd been taunted enough, and it was time to eat. We put our gear in the truck and went in to thank the lady. I can't imagine we made a better impression than the first time: two giant, wild-eyed men, sunburned, mud-spattered and excited about catching no fish. We thanked her profusely and joined the lines of traffic snaking through town. Lunch was smoked venison sausage, eaten off a fork, with a tepid Hop Devil IPA. Despite the unappetizing description, it was a terrific lunch. Once again packed up, we took off for the Yellow Breeches. From some of the reports we heard, the Breeches was an easier place to fish than the Letort, and we needed an ego booster. We rode through the farm country listening to the blues in the slanting afternoon light. We crossed the Letort at another spot, in a small glen. The creek was braided and very skinny. It looked even more difficult than the first spot we tried. Boiling Springs, Pennsylvania seems to be centered on the Children's Lake. The roads all seem to lead to it. After a few false starts, we got into the parking lot for the catch-and-release area and were amazed at the crowd. We'd had the Letort all to ourselves all afternoon, and now we had to share a stream with what looked like the entire non-motorcycling population of Cumberland County. Still, we came to fish. We hiked down the river, found a likely spot and commenced fishing. The Yellow Breeches is another cold spring-fed stream, but completely different than the Letort in configuration. It looks like a free-stone stream in the classic sense. There was the canopy of trees, muck at the edges, stony riffles and slow pools. It could be a stream anywhere. A few rhododendrons mixed in with the sycamores and hemlocks on the banks. It was also packed with fish. There were rainbows in every riffle and pool, a couple of 18" palominos and a brown or two thrown in for variety. There were no rises, but who could tell with all the fly lines whipping the surface to a froth? We found a mixed bag of fishermen. Some seemed to be playing fish continuously and some seemed to be playing with their fly boxes continuously. We changed flies fairly frequently, trying to pick something these fish had never seen. I went with a bead head dropper and dry at one point, and managed to take a standard-issue stocker rainbow on the dropper. The colors on the fish were excellent, so I snapped a picture and turned it out of the net. It hung in the current below me for a second, then returned to feeding right at my feet. It flailed on its side trying to dislodge nymphs from the streambed a scant four inches from the tip of my boots. Rog found a pool with a few fish and while I played ghillie and cameraman, he took a perfectly-formed six-inch wild brook trout. It was an excellent little fish, full of color and vigor. I can't imagine the torments that little fish's ancestors went through on that river to survive. The logging, the iron mining, the blast furnace on the bank, the over fishing and stocking must have been true tribulations. Surely, that little brookie's lineage has real balls. Enough was, eventually, enough. We unkitted in the still-full parking lot, chatting with a great old guy and his (grand?)son. He had a virtually unlimited collection of fly boxes in his vest, each one completely packed with his own beautifully-tied flies. The boy waded in, and with quick sure casts, hooked into a nice fish in less than three minutes. I liked seeing the confidence and skill on that kid. He'll be one hell of a fisherman some day. A budding Marinaro. Back at camp, while I set up the kitchen and started dinner, Rog made the martinis. There in the dusk, the Harleys roaring around, raucous screeching, country music and cell phones making themselves known, the martini shaker stood out. Rog and I have been making martinis since right after college. The recipe is solid and now has the weight of tradition. It bears recording: Per serving: (5) drops lime juice into a martini glass Fill a martini shaker with ice (2) shots Skyy vodka into the shaker (5) drops dry vermouth into the shaker Shake it until frost forms on the outside of the shaker Decant the martini into the glass Spoon in an odd number of manzanilla olives, draining only slightly If the olives are small, use (5) If the olives are large, use (3) We looked at Cassiopeia and the Ursae, and I toasted: Today we fished: We paid our way and relied on the kindness of strangers, We caught fish and got skunked, We fished private land and public, We fished alone and in a crowd, We fished for stockies and wild fish, And here's to the fish we couldn't catch. To which Rog replied, "It was a good day." Saturday night, inebriation settled its heavy dank blanket all over the campground. Sunday morning, we were up earlier than our neighbors. After the story-book weather Saturday, Sunday looked fantastically fishy. Low clouds crowded the humid air and promised rain softly stroking everything with their clammy fingers. We made breakfast, did our ablutions and packed before the neighbors got up. We had one more piece to fish, in the interests of tradition. Marinaro's Meadow beckoned. After a short drive though town, pointedly ignoring the church bells, the fishing presented itself. We walked down to survey the water, and again found vodka-clear water with reedy banks. We kitted up and walked downstream, staying well away from the stream, so as not to spook fish. At one spot, we found a battered mailbox bearing a tag, "Hagn's Letort Log." We found a business card book with a front piece asking that we put the name, date and put a sample of a fly that caught fish. I don't carry cards – they encourage people to call me. Rog had one and put our names and the date on one. It felt good to be a part of a club universally flailing at a nearly unattainable goal called "Letort Brown." I watched one holding next to a weed stromatolite (well, that's what they LOOK like). It was a small brown, hanging effortlessly in the current. I watched it rise three times to something I couldn't see. It was just like Vince Marinaro said it would be. We fished, slow and carefully, but we only saw fish when they scattered at our coming. I consider myself a patient and enduring fisherman. I will happily make the thousand casts for a steelhead and wait a lifetime for a muskie but these little trout had me exasperated. I smoked a reflective cigarette and considered my imminent defeat. Rog is made of sterner stuff. His will has the strength of Lukens steel plate, the resiliency of a cockroach and all the majesty of a bull elephant. He was stymied, too. By the time we had fished back up to Marinaro's meadow, even he was prepared to concede. We were bested by beautiful little trout with brains like lima beans. In the parking lot, after we took off our waders, we shook hands and promised to do it again, but somewhere with dumber fish. In town, Rog veered off south and I continued to the Turnpike. As I accelerated through the onramp, the rain began in earnest. |
#6
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uh...you had me until those damnable olives appeared...couldn't go on.
g til then, it was fun. thanks... jeff Stephen L. Cain wrote: I was really nervous Thursday and Friday. In fact, I looked at the weather report every ten minutes and looked out the window twice as often. No matter how often I looked, the news was the same: it was still raining. I've been rained on before while fishing, so it isn't a new experience, just one I would prefer to avoid while tenting. There was nothing to do but pack the car and go. I left work early, four in the afternoon, making sure to buy the silence of my fellow employees with growlers of Iron Hill's Ironbound Pale Ale. The office is minutes from the Turnpike and in short order, I was rolling westward under full steam. That lasted three minutes. I spent the next hour crawling at stall speeds towards the Blue Route. The rain alternated between heavy downpours and Biblical torrents. Finally, the traffic cleared and I resumed my head of steam towards the Letort. The sky remained heavy, but the rain lost strength as I got further west. Just as I crossed the Susquehanna, the only thing left of the rain was a light cloud cover and full humidity. The Susky was in bad shape. It looked like a million cubic feet per second of Quik rushing to the Chesapeake. I rolled into the Carlisle Campground at a quarter to seven. Roger beat me there by a few minutes, and he was already down at the Letort, taking it all in with polarized glasses. Everything was soaked, and after setting up the tent, so were we. Before dinner, we tried fishing the stream right there in the campground. It was high and milky, but we tried anyway. In an hour, I saw one rise and we caught no fish. Dinner was steaks in an old cast iron pan on the fire, and since I forgot paper plates, we ate chunks off a fork in the style called "grip and rip." We drank a bunch of martinis, carefully made to exacting standards and guarded closely against accidental bug drownings. Rog did end up with a moth in his, but that was his third see-through and the bug went down with an olive. Friday night, it got awful drunk out. We woke up late Saturday morning to fantastic weather and slight hangovers. There was a light breeze, sun and a few high small clouds. Breakfast was camp coffee, bacon, bacon and eggs. No paper plates, so we put it all on a bun. Having no idea what we were doing, we decided to hit Cold Spring Anglers in town for some local flies and advice. That was a fantastic shop. They had all sorts of good stuff and the staff was great. They had coffee, and it was a whole lot better than the stuff we had with breakfast. For starters, their coffee didn't have any bugs in it. I got a new fly line, a bunch of flies, a neat nail-knot tool with a demonstration, and I almost got a divorce. The guy started showing me these fantastic Winston and Sage rods, where the ink on the price tag outweighed the rod itself. If I had bought one, I'd have had to use it as a tent pole because I wouldn't be allowed back in the house. Fortunately, Rog saved me. "Step away from the rod!" We asked where to go. They gave us some cherry spots, how to get there and how to get access. Most of the Letort is on private property, I guess, and some people are very picky about who uses the land. Some will let you fish if you ask nicely, and some will shoot at you. I suppose that if I lived on a trout stream with the reputation of the Letort, I might limit access, too. We asked what to use. The guy laughed. "It doesn't matter. They won't take anything, so just throw whatever you want in whatever size you want. Try some terrestrials." As we headed back to camp, we realized that we were in town the same time as a motorcycle show. Hogs, fat boys, soft tails, choppers and trikes rolled, rumbled, howled and were towed all over the place. We saw a fascinating array of people on top of these motorcycles. All sorts of shapes and colors. The one thing we noticed about motorcycle enthusiasts is that they cannot start a motorcycle without ten minutes of throttle work, especially early in the morning or late at night. We loaded our stuff and headed to the first spot on the Letort. The fly shop guys told us to ask permission from a certain place to fish a certain stretch, so we went into the store. I can't imagine her impression: two giant, wild-eyed men, incongruous in the store, asking to fish. She let us, fly-fishing only, catch-and-release only. I hadn't figured on catching enough to eat, anyway. I remember reading Marinaro's In the Ring of the Rise and thinking, how did he get such great pictures of a trout rising to a fly? Such clear water and perfectly placed trout, well lit and camera-friendly. Now I know. The Letort is as clear as a chilled shot of vodka, and instead of the massive canopy of trees and dense brush I'm used to, it has fairly short grasses and reeds. The sun shines down into that river and smiles on its trout. The river was polluted with fish. Holding everywhere on the bottom, we found browns. They all looked to be about ten inchers, plus or minus. Surprisingly, they weren't spooky. I stood on the bank behind a clump of grass, half a rod length from the fish holding on the bottom. Surprisingly, they ignored everything. Wet, dry, top, bottom, big, small, any color, it all just went past the trout. Still, the creek was as beautiful as it was unique, there under the infinitely high skies. My usual fishing finds me under the trees, wading and firmly stuck to the ground. The open sky and the uncluttered stream bank made it feel like I wasn't anchored to the planet, and unless I concentrated on the water, I might float off into space. While working one pod of decidedly uninterested trout, I made several casts beyond the lie, hoping that I'd see sources of drag and better present the fly. One of those casts got a rise. For a second or two, I was hooked into a tiny terror. The trout was small, perhaps six or seven inches, but it thrashed and flipped and splashed enough to throw the hook. That was the extent of my trouty action on that stretch of the Letort. I can't decide whether the fishing was the best I'd ever seen or the worst I'd ever seen. Rog had a rise from a good fish, but it was while he was scoping the creek for another cast, so he wasn't prepared. He probably learned something about fishing out the cast. We'd been taunted enough, and it was time to eat. We put our gear in the truck and went in to thank the lady. I can't imagine we made a better impression than the first time: two giant, wild-eyed men, sunburned, mud-spattered and excited about catching no fish. We thanked her profusely and joined the lines of traffic snaking through town. Lunch was smoked venison sausage, eaten off a fork, with a tepid Hop Devil IPA. Despite the unappetizing description, it was a terrific lunch. Once again packed up, we took off for the Yellow Breeches. From some of the reports we heard, the Breeches was an easier place to fish than the Letort, and we needed an ego booster. We rode through the farm country listening to the blues in the slanting afternoon light. We crossed the Letort at another spot, in a small glen. The creek was braided and very skinny. It looked even more difficult than the first spot we tried. Boiling Springs, Pennsylvania seems to be centered on the Children's Lake. The roads all seem to lead to it. After a few false starts, we got into the parking lot for the catch-and-release area and were amazed at the crowd. We'd had the Letort all to ourselves all afternoon, and now we had to share a stream with what looked like the entire non-motorcycling population of Cumberland County. Still, we came to fish. We hiked down the river, found a likely spot and commenced fishing. The Yellow Breeches is another cold spring-fed stream, but completely different than the Letort in configuration. It looks like a free-stone stream in the classic sense. There was the canopy of trees, muck at the edges, stony riffles and slow pools. It could be a stream anywhere. A few rhododendrons mixed in with the sycamores and hemlocks on the banks. It was also packed with fish. There were rainbows in every riffle and pool, a couple of 18" palominos and a brown or two thrown in for variety. There were no rises, but who could tell with all the fly lines whipping the surface to a froth? We found a mixed bag of fishermen. Some seemed to be playing fish continuously and some seemed to be playing with their fly boxes continuously. We changed flies fairly frequently, trying to pick something these fish had never seen. I went with a bead head dropper and dry at one point, and managed to take a standard-issue stocker rainbow on the dropper. The colors on the fish were excellent, so I snapped a picture and turned it out of the net. It hung in the current below me for a second, then returned to feeding right at my feet. It flailed on its side trying to dislodge nymphs from the streambed a scant four inches from the tip of my boots. Rog found a pool with a few fish and while I played ghillie and cameraman, he took a perfectly-formed six-inch wild brook trout. It was an excellent little fish, full of color and vigor. I can't imagine the torments that little fish's ancestors went through on that river to survive. The logging, the iron mining, the blast furnace on the bank, the over fishing and stocking must have been true tribulations. Surely, that little brookie's lineage has real balls. Enough was, eventually, enough. We unkitted in the still-full parking lot, chatting with a great old guy and his (grand?)son. He had a virtually unlimited collection of fly boxes in his vest, each one completely packed with his own beautifully-tied flies. The boy waded in, and with quick sure casts, hooked into a nice fish in less than three minutes. I liked seeing the confidence and skill on that kid. He'll be one hell of a fisherman some day. A budding Marinaro. Back at camp, while I set up the kitchen and started dinner, Rog made the martinis. There in the dusk, the Harleys roaring around, raucous screeching, country music and cell phones making themselves known, the martini shaker stood out. Rog and I have been making martinis since right after college. The recipe is solid and now has the weight of tradition. It bears recording: Per serving: (5) drops lime juice into a martini glass Fill a martini shaker with ice (2) shots Skyy vodka into the shaker (5) drops dry vermouth into the shaker Shake it until frost forms on the outside of the shaker Decant the martini into the glass Spoon in an odd number of manzanilla olives, draining only slightly If the olives are small, use (5) If the olives are large, use (3) We looked at Cassiopeia and the Ursae, and I toasted: Today we fished: We paid our way and relied on the kindness of strangers, We caught fish and got skunked, We fished private land and public, We fished alone and in a crowd, We fished for stockies and wild fish, And here's to the fish we couldn't catch. To which Rog replied, "It was a good day." Saturday night, inebriation settled its heavy dank blanket all over the campground. Sunday morning, we were up earlier than our neighbors. After the story-book weather Saturday, Sunday looked fantastically fishy. Low clouds crowded the humid air and promised rain softly stroking everything with their clammy fingers. We made breakfast, did our ablutions and packed before the neighbors got up. We had one more piece to fish, in the interests of tradition. Marinaro's Meadow beckoned. After a short drive though town, pointedly ignoring the church bells, the fishing presented itself. We walked down to survey the water, and again found vodka-clear water with reedy banks. We kitted up and walked downstream, staying well away from the stream, so as not to spook fish. At one spot, we found a battered mailbox bearing a tag, "Hagn's Letort Log." We found a business card book with a front piece asking that we put the name, date and put a sample of a fly that caught fish. I don't carry cards – they encourage people to call me. Rog had one and put our names and the date on one. It felt good to be a part of a club universally flailing at a nearly unattainable goal called "Letort Brown." I watched one holding next to a weed stromatolite (well, that's what they LOOK like). It was a small brown, hanging effortlessly in the current. I watched it rise three times to something I couldn't see. It was just like Vince Marinaro said it would be. We fished, slow and carefully, but we only saw fish when they scattered at our coming. I consider myself a patient and enduring fisherman. I will happily make the thousand casts for a steelhead and wait a lifetime for a muskie but these little trout had me exasperated. I smoked a reflective cigarette and considered my imminent defeat. Rog is made of sterner stuff. His will has the strength of Lukens steel plate, the resiliency of a cockroach and all the majesty of a bull elephant. He was stymied, too. By the time we had fished back up to Marinaro's meadow, even he was prepared to concede. We were bested by beautiful little trout with brains like lima beans. In the parking lot, after we took off our waders, we shook hands and promised to do it again, but somewhere with dumber fish. In town, Rog veered off south and I continued to the Turnpike. As I accelerated through the onramp, the rain began in earnest. |
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![]() "Stephen L. Cain" wrote in message om... I was really nervous Thursday and Friday.... Most excellent prose. Deserves a wider audience. Thank you. Wolfgang |
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![]() "Stephen L. Cain" wrote in message om... I was really nervous Thursday and Friday.... Most excellent prose. Deserves a wider audience. Thank you. Wolfgang |
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wulf - went to b&n today...bought jim harrison's "true north". it's set
in the u.p. p.14 mentions ontonagon. thanks again.... jeff Wolfgang wrote: "Stephen L. Cain" wrote in message om... I was really nervous Thursday and Friday.... Most excellent prose. Deserves a wider audience. Thank you. Wolfgang |
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wulf - went to b&n today...bought jim harrison's "true north". it's set
in the u.p. p.14 mentions ontonagon. thanks again.... jeff Wolfgang wrote: "Stephen L. Cain" wrote in message om... I was really nervous Thursday and Friday.... Most excellent prose. Deserves a wider audience. Thank you. Wolfgang |
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