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#1
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Old friend Flyfish had been taunting me with taking his matched pair of Water
Skeeter pontoon boats on a float trip, so even though the weather forecast was not encouraging, the choice between working on the yard this weekend or joining Dave on a smallmouth float on the Androscoggin took little effort to make. As soon as I could pry myself out of the office I was off and running north to Mechanics Fall, Maine, meeting Dave with enough time to enjoy T3 on his big screen/multichannel sound system (Ahhnold didn't leave any special effects money on the table, that's for sure). Saturday morning in a steady drizzle we dropped my truck at the take out and settled in at a carry-in boat launch on the Androscoggin River just southeast of Peru, constructing a pair of pontoon boatletts as we got increasingly "damp". It's a nightmare of "Tab A into Slot B" proportions, but after only a couple of errant moves we got the two critters together and launched around 11AM. The boats proved incredibly stable, capable and comfortable, if not particularly speedy. We'd be in them for almost 9 hours but I felt just fine afterwards. The weather continued to spit on and off all day, but between waders and rain jackets we were no wetter than we were when we started ;-) With all the oars, pontoons, seat, etc, there are all kinds of things to eff up your casting, but eventually I got the drill sorted out and was able to let fly at pretty much any distance I needed... ....Which wasn't a whole lot: my second cast brought a nice smallie to the long-handled net that Dave had thoughtfully included on his list of "gotta haves". From there we had a blast drifting along within a short cast of the river bank, picking up smallie after smallie by casting right to the bank and then slowly stripping the fly back. Both of us were fishing various Clousers that Dave (the perfect host) had tied up, chartreuse/white, white/brown, white/black, chartreuse/yellow. They all worked - these fish were stationed in thin water at bankside and were looking to hammer anything in their sight - and holy smoke could they pull out line! I was fishing my rehabilitated 9/5 Winston and frequently had the rod bent well into the grip, trying not to lose advantage to a fat Greenie. The largest we caught was 19 inches, with a massive girth. I got one and Dave might have got one. Most of what we caught were between 16 and 18 inches - all of them well fed. Many threw in two or three jumps, and we long-line released a bunch on top of what we netted and released. For sure we both realized this river has much larger fish than these - I can't even imagine what a solid two foot smallmouth much look like but no doubt it's impressive ;-) Dave pried himself from a spot where he'd been hitting fish after fish, and we took a break for lunch on huge smooth rock from where I'd hammered up five nice fish on the same chartreuse/yellow Clouser. After lunch we sized up where we were and what time it was, and we realized we were running late and better get moving again. In between all the fat smallmouth, we were blessed by the frequent appearance of sizable chubs. Dave proclaimed himself ChubMaster for all the HUGE chub/fallfish/shiners/whatever_these_scaly_things_might_be (we're talking 14 inch monsters, all colored up for God only knows what sordid things chubs do among themselves). They were hitting his fly deep, middle, and on top - those chubs really wanted Dave's fly in the worst way ;-) As the afternoon turned to evening we discovered our take out at Canton Point was about two miles too far downstream. Unfortunately there wasn't any better place to take out - the river bank upstream was almost vertical and at least a 15 foot drop to the water, and we had these 70 pound beasts to haul out. Those last couple of miles were exclusively Chub Water, so we rowed along for the last hour, putting along at about 2 mph (these things are not anything like gliding along in a canoe - every foot of progress is earned) but we hauled out of the water just before dark. I gotta say, I had a blast. I've never fished a *river* with that high a population of large smallmouth, and being river fish these guys fought hard. Dave did a great job of picking the drift, outfitting his small boats, plus he ties a mean Clouser ;-) Knowing Dave he's geared up and waiting for folks to visit and take him fishing. If you have the chance, do it - you'll have a day to remember for sure... /daytripper (still can't believe smallies get that big!) |
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On Mon, 24 May 2004, daytripper wrote:
The largest we caught was 19 inches The great daytripper making specific reference to size in a trip report. What has this world come to? Mu .... hmmmmm, 19" and fat .... should be pushing 4+ lbs at least . nice one |
#3
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On Mon, 24 May 2004 00:33:38 -0400, Mu Young Lee wrote:
On Mon, 24 May 2004, daytripper wrote: The largest we caught was 19 inches The great daytripper making specific reference to size in a trip report. What has this world come to? "...dogs and cats, living together! Mass hysteria!" ... hmmmmm, 19" and fat .... should be pushing 4+ lbs at least . nice one I have no idea on the weight but they were as fat as they could be and still put up a great fight. Not quite footballs with fins but damned close. Dave took film cough pictures so it'll be awhile afore y'all see dem beauties... If we can find an earlier take out I'm definitely gonna do that float again! /daytripper |
#4
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daytripper wrote in
: On Mon, 24 May 2004 00:33:38 -0400, Mu Young Lee wrote: On Mon, 24 May 2004, daytripper wrote: The largest we caught was 19 inches The great daytripper making specific reference to size in a trip report. What has this world come to? "...dogs and cats, living together! Mass hysteria!" ... hmmmmm, 19" and fat .... should be pushing 4+ lbs at least . nice one I have no idea on the weight but they were as fat as they could be and still put up a great fight. Not quite footballs with fins but damned close. Dave took film cough pictures so it'll be awhile afore y'all see dem beauties... If we can find an earlier take out I'm definitely gonna do that float again! /daytripper My film camera is waterproof, I didn't notice your digital anywhere in sight.... Flyfish |
#5
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![]() "Flyfish" wrote My film camera is waterproof, I didn't notice your digital anywhere in sight.... Flyfish who loves ya, davey! and the difference in the real world...still better, unless you got a few thousand to spend... yfitons wayno (fyia, barnard) |
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On Mon, 24 May 2004 17:21:57 -0500, Flyfish wrote:
daytripper wrote in : On Mon, 24 May 2004 00:33:38 -0400, Mu Young Lee wrote: On Mon, 24 May 2004, daytripper wrote: The largest we caught was 19 inches The great daytripper making specific reference to size in a trip report. What has this world come to? "...dogs and cats, living together! Mass hysteria!" ... hmmmmm, 19" and fat .... should be pushing 4+ lbs at least . nice one I have no idea on the weight but they were as fat as they could be and still put up a great fight. Not quite footballs with fins but damned close. Dave took film cough pictures so it'll be awhile afore y'all see dem beauties... If we can find an earlier take out I'm definitely gonna do that float again! /daytripper My film camera is waterproof, I didn't notice your digital anywhere in sight.... Easiest answer: you were the designated photographer ;-) /daytripper (You could have caught more chubs instead of shooting pics :-P |
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daytripper wrote in
: Easiest answer: you were the designated photographer ;-) Twit! Flyfish |
#8
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#9
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![]() daytripper wrote: Old friend Flyfish had been taunting me with taking his matched pair of Water Skeeter pontoon boats on a float trip, so even though the weather forecast was not encouraging, the choice between working on the yard this weekend or joining Dave on a smallmouth float on the Androscoggin took little effort to make. Sounds like the trip was a blast! Big river Smallmouths are tons of fun. It's been too many years since I've tussled with one. Willi |
#10
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Nice TR Tripper, it was a pleasure. I hope you were not too sore the next
day after the 2 miles of paddling hell at the end. I was surprised that I wasn't sore in a host more places than I was. Great fun, nice trip, big fish, good company. We had so much fishing to do that I never did pop open that bottle of wine I brought along for our shore lunch, we just wolfed down a sandwich and kept on fishing. I had one fish that I lost at the net that I think would have gone well over 20", I was thinking between 22-24". I just grinned and cast out again. And yeah I was the chub master, catching a bunch of 1 -1.5 lb chubs that fought pretty well on their own. Tripper did a good job of analyzing the deficiencies of the pontoons and some corrective action will be in place before the next outing. And Trip enjoy the bottle of bug repellent! (it's a virgin bottle) :-) We never did get around to needing any as the weather kept the black flies and mosquitos down all day. Frank, you know the spot, cu in a couple weeks :-) Flyfish |
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