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#11
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Hello Larry,
"JR" wrote I can't think of any part of the U.S. I've fished a lot where Sept/Oct *wasn't* my favorite time of the year. I haven't lived in the D.C, area since the late 60's .... but, way back then the Fall was extra extra special in Virginia and surrounding states ...I assume it still is ... Rove or not G Is Rove a local fly fisherman or are you an asshole? I guess that they are not mutually exclusive... |
#12
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![]() "Larry L" wrote in message ... I think of my fishing as divided into three seasons. The first starts on New Years Day on my local rivers. For a month or two they will provide reasonable flows and decent fishing. This is 90% nymph fishing, not my favorite style, but it's still nice to get out in Winter and enjoy trout fishing. Season #2 starts in late May and goes until early August. This is the classic season of the fly angler. It provides naive fish, and big, famous, bugs. One of the biggest problems with second season fishing is that so many places are fishing so well, and there are too many choices. Where to go? Every angler has a few spots dear to his heart in June and July, mine are the Firehole and the Henry's Fork. As August rolls around I roll back home to be with my bride for a few weeks. I seldom fish in August and the break always makes me hungry for my third season of the year. That Third Season starts immediately after Labor Day. This is often the most difficult, and therefore, rewarding fishing of the year. On the waters I prefer, it is marked by always picky fish made extra tough and hyper wary by months of heavy angling pressure. And, they will be feeding on some of the years most interesting hatches. Tuesday morning I leave for Montahoming for the 2007 Third Season. From then until mid-October will find me fishing tricos, callibaetis, caddis, Mahogany Duns, at least two species of baetis and midges plus terrestrials. Many days will have multiple, overlapping, hatches and provide the kind of mentally challenging fishing that demands close observation, precise patterns and perfect presentation. This is the type of fly fishing I've grown to find most rewarding. Especially when different baetis species varying from #18s to #24s are on the same water at the same time as emerging midges, it is possible to find different fish within casting distance each totally locked on to a different stage of only one of the bugs. Each will refuse to even look at a pattern one of the other fish eats with relish. Each angler has his own type of favorite fishing, and that is as it should be. Most, quite naturally, seem to prefer the times and places where trout come with ease, and in great numbers. During Third Season on one of my beloved spring creeks , if you get things right you can catch "enough" trout and some large ones, but not one, not a single one, will be easy. For me, that is what makes it so wonderful. .................................................. .................................................. ROFFians, The rancid posts so common here often cast doubts, but, I still assume that some of you are here because trout, fly fishing, and those very special places we go to fish, have their hooks sunk deeply into your souls. PLEASE get out there this Fall and enjoy a day or two of "the quiet sport." To my mind, it should be called "the healing sport" as it seldom fails to improve my mental health. Cast a tiny midge pupa or a big streamer, it's your choice, but find a fish and cast. You deserve it, you need it, so go. ( ah, but, maybe you should go alone, or go with someone you won't begrudge a beer, "Internet fishing gangs" seem way over rated g.) As for me, I'm heading East to get to some of the West's most lovely fishing holes. .............. gone fishin' One of the very few things that restores peace in my soul is being alone in the middle of a river just after the sun has come up. Most times it doesn't even matter if I catch a fish, the therapy of the river is often enough to make it all worthwhile. Thank you, Larry, for reminding us what this sport is all about. Jeremy Moe |
#13
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jeff wrote:
JR wrote: I can't think of any part of the U.S. I've fished a lot where Sept/Oct *wasn't* my favorite time of the year. yup... in nc, from the offshore deep blue sal****er to the salt marshes to the brackish estuaries to the eastern nc freshwater rivers to the lakes to the mountain streams, it's the same here. but...i'll be interested in your take on the potomac river. g Well, in DC, the best you can say is that SeptOct sucks less than other times of the year, but, yeah, the principle is pretty much of a muchness... Some waters open all year for trout in VA, if I read the regs right, so all is not lost. ![]() - JR |
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