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Friday, May 27, 2011
Fishing in the Rain...
This spring has been a very cool wet one for us here in the northeast. Great for the trout, not so great for those of us that chase them with a fly rod. I am not adverse to fishing in the rain, but all this rain has kept our streams at or near flood stage for long periods of time. When water levels and clarity drop down to fishable levels its time to drop what your doing and head to the water regardless what the weather is. In between all of this rain we have had some breaks with a beautiful day or two but usually the rivers are blown out or running with the consistency of chocolate milk. I have been glued to the computer, studying water stream gauges on my local waters and dashing out when there looks like there is an opportunity to fish. On days when the streams are just not an option I've been able to slip my kayak into a local pond and chase warm-water species.
This Monday there looked like there was going to be a opportunity to hit the trout streams. Water levels were dropping to fishable levels and hopefully there would be enough clarity to fish. After work I slipped out for a few hours and was not disappointed. There were plenty of fish in the margins and the softer water along the banks. The low light and off colored water made some of the stream's larger browns a little more approachable but landing these fish in high water was next to impossible. Once they headed off down stream chasing them was not an option, so your only option was to snub up on the reel and bid them farewell.
The positive side to this spring's tough conditions will be that there should be plenty of water and fishable temperatures well into June. It was also good to see that the bugs don't seem to have any issues with the high flows. Our sulfurs are coming off like crazy and are getting a break from the fish as they ride rapids unmolested, at least on the surface. So there was no delicate presentation of light colored mayflies to these fish. It was big heavy nymphs, the kind that will put your eye out with an errant cast.
Longing for soft warm evenings presenting delicate dry flies to rising fish...
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