![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The Year of the Drakes.........last season, it was decided, over WAY too
much Yuengling, that this year we would aim the clave later. Two reasons prevailed: A hope for lower water and near-sure fishing over the World Famous Green Drake hatch. Both hopes came true, and both added their own set of challenges. First, due to the holiday week, and an assortment of other reasons, the crowd at the Clave was smaller....20 folks in all showed up, about 14 or 15 of them actually ROFF posting regulars. The recent dry weather provided us with a Penn's most of the visitors had never seen, low, clear and full of finicky brown trout. On the latter point, several of the local regulars noted that Penn's has the best population of 16 inch plus browns we can remember in nearly 20 years of fishing it. These are NOT pushover fish, but could be taken during the daytime with a variety of oddball techniques. I used wetflies to imitate the tan caddis, others used smallish sulfur patterns, others still used nymphs. Daylight fishing took patience, however, and was not easy. Now, on to the evening hatches......while the Drake hatch kept building in intensity, sulfurs were also hatching in good numbers, and their spinners fell nearly every night. Also, olives were about, as were some late Grey Foxes and March Browns. One evening, I counted 8 different mayfly species, along with a couple of different caddis, two craneflies and a stonefly about. From my arrival night, on Saturday, through Tuesday night, fish rose consistently for about the last hour of light into the darkness, and one had to guess what they were taking in the stretch one was fishing. If you got it right, you could land a half-dozen fine trout, otherwise, you could fail miserably. I got the chance to do both. On Wednesday afternoon, the decision was made to go to Ingleby, a scenic spot, which mental calculations told me might be near the peak of the Drake hatch. Sure enough the duns were coming off well, and Coffin Flies danced in the air. One could still catch a fish or three pre-darkness, but it almost seemed as if the fish were waiting for something. Right as darkness fell, the air filled with egg-laying female Coffin Flies and the water exploded. One could do a stream census....every fish, of every size came up in the Creek, and you fished into the darkness with imitations of the huge spinners. I only landed a couple of fish that night, but both were decent sized. Thursday's plan, for the Handyman and myself was to fish Ingleby all day. We arrived late, due to oversleeping and such, but arrived at 10 am to a sky already full of dancing Coffin Flies. These were males, but the fish were keying to them touching the surface. I landed 5 fish, lost several more, including a VERY serious fish that broke me off, all on Catskill(Dette) Coffin Flies. Things slowed down in the afternoon, and we were joined in time for hotdogs, chips and beer by Frank, John, and JR. The latter three and I headed on a mini deathmarch downstream to a fine pool, closer to Poe Paddy than Ingleby proper, which I hadn't fished in 7 or 8 years. The choice, to be honest, was Frank's, but proved to be a good one. We staked out the pool around 4 pm or so, and spent the next 4 hours largely fending off invading anglers(eventually 4 persistent souls wedged into/above us). I tried to liven up the proceedings by landing a couple of fish, but nothing massive. Around 8 pm, the sky started to fill with Coffin flies.....and it filled more......and more....By 8:45, the fish were on a full-out blitz, a feeding frenzy. Several fish were landed, including a couple by yours truly, as dark approached rapidly. At that point, an enormous swarm of egglaying females headed upstream for the final drop, and the stretch I thought held 12 or 15 decent trout showed itself to hold at least 40!! I am talking about the area within an easy cast of where I stood, maybe 60 or 70 feet of streambed. I had been trying to target good fish all night, and had landed two of 17 inches or so, but persisted on in the dark. A fresh fly rose a trout with a hearty 'slurp' that had risen no more than 12 feet from my position. A 30 second slugfest put a trout into my net that measured from the the back of the reel to the first guide.....just measured at home with a tape measure and came up with 22 1/4 inches. My battered fly went out again and landed a fish of probably 18 or 19 inches. It was now 9:20, I was near-exhausted, but thrilled. I hope that the choice of this week led all attendees to some different Penn's challenges. My temptation is to avoid running the clave this late in the future, due to the crowd of anglers, and the odd emphasis on the bitter end of the evening/dark for prime angling. Feedback is appreciated, but I am thinking a week or two earlier for 2006. I sincerely appreciate all who showed up. I will single out the following: Handyman Mike for general all-around services and cooking; similar cooking kudos to Frank Reid, his pal John, the boys from Massachusetts; Makela and Dave PA for guiding assistance; Joel for excellence in Rafflemeistering, and finally, Indian Joe for persisting on a bum leg and providing fascinating commentary. Finally, distance kudos to JR(Oregon) and John from California, as well as Petah, who apparently enjoyed the drive down from Ontario so much on Sunday, that he chose to relive it on Tuesday!! Also, concern for Mark from Maryland(geez, do I suck at last names), whose quick departure was due to the sudden illness of his little girl.....I can only hope that she is doing fine. Great Clave, guys!!!! |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thomas Littleton wrote:
Great Clave, guys!!!! yup... as far as next year, my vote is for any period that offers better opportunity for daytime catches... the heavy caddis, march brown, and sulphur hatches i experieced that first year seem to yield more daytime fish. davePA and i had one day when we nailed the browns midday on tan caddis and sulphurs...but it was only that one day. don't know what distinguished it from others. anyway, for me at least, the evening focused frenzy is too fleeting an event to justify the travel and expense. i don't like flyfishing in the dark...appreciating the visual stuff a stream offers is what drives my fishing. also, this year, we finished so late that everyplace except brownies and heartbreakers was closed...and i'm not eating anything offered at those locales no matter how hungry i am. of course, if we could get california john to attend, and if he wouldn't insist on fishing as much so he could cook more, i believe i could survive on his cooking for the week. g in fact, at the moment of this typing i'm eating the leftovers of his jumbalaya i brought home with me. yum... jeff |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jeff Miller" wrote in message in fact, at the moment of this typing i'm eating the leftovers of his jumbalaya i brought home with me. yum... jeff bastid! Tom ......who did just consume a fine meal of delmonico steak, with a fine bottle of Shade Mountain Proprietor's Red wine........I guess I was missed(plus, I returned with half a case of wine). |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Thomas Littleton" wrote in message news:vWnoe.3874$zT2.3291@trndny04... First, due to the holiday week, and an assortment of other reasons, the crowd at the Clave was smaller....20 folks in all showed up, about 14 or 15 of them actually ROFF posting regulars. The recent dry weather provided us with a Penn's most of the visitors had never seen, low, clear and full of finicky brown trout. On the latter point, several of the local regulars noted that Penn's has the best population of 16 inch plus browns we can remember in nearly 20 years of fishing it. These are NOT pushover fish, but could be taken during the daytime with a variety of oddball techniques. I used wetflies to imitate the tan caddis, others used smallish sulfur patterns, others still used nymphs. Daylight fishing took patience, however, and was not easy. Nymphs for me, but just as a note, I think these fish are always there, just the low water concentrated them into the larger holes and runs. Now, on to the evening hatches......while the Drake hatch kept building in intensity, sulfurs were also hatching in good numbers, and their spinners fell nearly every night. Also, olives were about, as were some late Grey Foxes and March Browns. One evening, I counted 8 different mayfly species, along with a couple of different caddis, two craneflies and a stonefly about. From my arrival night, on Saturday, through Tuesday night, fish rose consistently for about the last hour of light into the darkness, and one had to guess what they were taking in the stretch one was fishing. If you got it right, you could land a half-dozen fine trout, otherwise, you could fail miserably. I got the chance to do both. Agreed, the Evening hatches were good the whole time, before I left, but had to pull out when the drake was just getting good. Saw an incredible sulphur hatch my last night, I have to say my trip ended incredibly. Most nights, we got to see all of the fish rise, and it was a matter of having the rigth pattern. A 30 second slugfest put a trout into my net that measured from the the back of the reel to the first guide.....just measured at home with a tape measure and came up with 22 1/4 inches. My battered fly went out again and landed a fish of probably 18 or 19 inches. It was now 9:20, I was near-exhausted, but thrilled. Nice!!.. I hope that the choice of this week led all attendees to some different Penn's challenges. My temptation is to avoid running the clave this late in the future, due to the crowd of anglers, and the odd emphasis on the bitter end of the evening/dark for prime angling. Feedback is appreciated, but I am thinking a week or two earlier for 2006. I like this time of year myself, late May into June, ...if anything only a week earlier, two weeks earlier and you risk cold, rain, etc, etc. Don't forget, we moved it to this time of year because of those things and we lost some Roffers this year because of the bad years previously. If fish are needed during the day, other streams are out there where fish can be had on dries during the day. Elk fishes well during the day, as does BFC, Kettle and others freestoners. We just have to remember to time it all right if we want day time opportunities. I didn't get a chance to stray too far away because I had to maximize fishing time, but given a full week to 10 days, we can easily make trips out. If we're looking for less crowded, and day time only fishing. Lets go for the Grannom/Hendrickson hatch. Fishing is from 10-4 with plenty of time for after hours eating and such. I sincerely appreciate all who showed up. I will single out the following: Handyman Mike for general all-around services and cooking; Here, here...Mike saved me from starvation a couple of times..once again. similar cooking kudos to Frank Reid, Thanks for a bed and breakfast his pal John, The Jambalaya was awesome, thank you!! the boys from Massachusetts; Never did get to drink with you guys, but the fishing was good. That first night in Weikert was pretty cool... Dave PA for guiding assistance; .....Joel for excellence in Rafflemeistering, And for a night's stay in the cabin. Indian Joe for persisting on a bum leg and providing fascinating commentary. You O.K. IJ? I know you had some issues with the ankle before I left, sounds like it got worse.. Great Clave, guys!!!! Cheers to everyone, didn't get to spend as much time as I wished, but it was good... |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Penn's Creek Stream Reports.. | Mike Makela | Fly Fishing | 12 | May 25th, 2005 03:43 AM |
Clavemeister's Penn's Report-Part 3 | Tom Littleton | Fly Fishing | 7 | May 26th, 2004 03:20 AM |
Clavemeister's Penn's Report-Pt.1 | Tom Littleton | Fly Fishing | 3 | May 26th, 2004 02:33 AM |
Clavemeister's Penns Report-Part 2 | Tom Littleton | Fly Fishing | 2 | May 22nd, 2004 10:52 PM |