Salmo trutta
01-29-2008, 01:20 PM
The water levels were very low and clear, probably perfect. I made a trip in the afternoon with the whole family and our bikes to help us get to the top of the outflow quicker. I even had Ryan in a tow behind trailer thing that held three rods, tackle and food for the day. It was just a little tuff jumping the logs on the trail but I think he enjoyed it.
Back to the fishing. The last couple of weekends have been pretty good with good numbers of small smallmouth and at least one decent fish around 12-14" on jigs. A few weeks ago I saw a guy fishing a small FinS minnow with no weight and letting it drift in the current, inside the "chute" of the outflow. he was hooking up consistantly just under the surface while dead drifting.
So on Saturday I tried casting a small floating rapala and let it swing in the current. The fish smacked it almost every cast while it was on the surface or just underneath. Not reeling in, just letting it dead drift. Gabe's friend caught quite a few doing this too. If this rain doesn't ruin the river, I'll try a fly rod or even a spey rod doing the same thing with some sort of a minnow imitation on a floating line. Most fish were around 6 inches or so but there was a lot of them.
Top water in January. Not bad uh? Pretty soon the stonefly hatch should kick in on the lower portions well below the outflow. We just need a warming trend and a stone fly imitation nymph that somehow stays in the surface film. The fish won't touch an adult and won't touch a nymph that sinks below the surface for some reason. This is from past years experience anyway.
Sorry not a true fly fishing report but a fishing report that could be useful for fly fishermen.
I also fished Great Seneca Creek for about an hour with the 3wt and nymphs. Managed one decent size rainbow in the fast water. Just because it's winter doesn't mean the fish are off the feed.
Back to the fishing. The last couple of weekends have been pretty good with good numbers of small smallmouth and at least one decent fish around 12-14" on jigs. A few weeks ago I saw a guy fishing a small FinS minnow with no weight and letting it drift in the current, inside the "chute" of the outflow. he was hooking up consistantly just under the surface while dead drifting.
So on Saturday I tried casting a small floating rapala and let it swing in the current. The fish smacked it almost every cast while it was on the surface or just underneath. Not reeling in, just letting it dead drift. Gabe's friend caught quite a few doing this too. If this rain doesn't ruin the river, I'll try a fly rod or even a spey rod doing the same thing with some sort of a minnow imitation on a floating line. Most fish were around 6 inches or so but there was a lot of them.
Top water in January. Not bad uh? Pretty soon the stonefly hatch should kick in on the lower portions well below the outflow. We just need a warming trend and a stone fly imitation nymph that somehow stays in the surface film. The fish won't touch an adult and won't touch a nymph that sinks below the surface for some reason. This is from past years experience anyway.
Sorry not a true fly fishing report but a fishing report that could be useful for fly fishermen.
I also fished Great Seneca Creek for about an hour with the 3wt and nymphs. Managed one decent size rainbow in the fast water. Just because it's winter doesn't mean the fish are off the feed.