Autumn On The EB

Autumn On The EB

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Happy New Year And Things I'd Like To See In 2021

 The enormous increase in the number of anglers in recent years has made it necessary that all true sportsmen should consider the interests of others as well as their own.  On a good sized stream one may fish after several fly-fishers without much diminution of sport.  I have waited half an hour after nine had passed and had a very fair day". Theodore Gordon, circa 1900


I won't complain too much about 2020 except for a few minor issues.

The summer long drought was a killer on the freestones from mid June onward and by Labor day we were getting a little tired of tailwaters and their crowds and prayed for early autumn rains which we got in the nick of time.  It appears that the DFW didn't spread out the fall stocking on the Millers because it appeared that all the trout that I heard of being caught were caught in one place.  

The EB recovered nicely from the dry spell and fished well right up to Thanksgiving.



The EB and the Millers can easily make through the summer with one rainy day a week. A flow of 200 to 300 cfs will work on the Millers and about the same for the EB.  I will also fish the WB of the Westfield and the Ware well into July if the flows are good.  (We have a lot of good freestones around here!!)

The All Around Rod

It's not a Euro-nymphing rod, that's for sure!  It's almost hard to believe the many tales of these rods breaking. Maybe the design limits of graphite don't extend to the 11 foot, 3wt range in a reliable way.  (I must say that I like casting a fly line and not a 20+ foot leader and I want one rod that will do it all AND I don't want to be saddled with a rod/fly setup that will only work with sufficient current.)  On intimate streams like the Swift, with enough overhead foliage to cause concern, I will work a 7 to 7.5 foot bamboo rod and I can make it do anything. It's perfect for that river.  For the Millers and the EB an 8 foot to 9 foot graphite rod that is fairly fast in the tip will get the job done on those rivers regardless of the type of fly that you have on.

I once read about this flyfisher who sold off most of his rods except for two. Someone asked him if he had found himself in a situation where he could of used one of those rods that he sold. "No, I just take one of the two rods I have left and MAKE IT WORK".  I love comments like that.  I guess it's called "mastering your Tools". Remember, it's not the fly rod that will make you a better fly fisher.  It's YOU!!!!

Happy New Year,

Ken

P.S.
Thanks for all of the pageviews that this blog has.  We are well over 2 million.  And thanks for the comments that you write in.  Our comments are not the namby pamby variety but have some real meat on them.













Sunday, December 27, 2020

Just What We Need, Another Midge Pattern

 

"Think of trout as predators (that’ll can be hard at first)" - Comment left on another blog (Of course they're predators! What the hell do you think they are, vegetarians???)

Battleship Midge 


I woke up Saturday morning around 4:30 am from a dream about midges or more accurately from a dream about small flies.  The stage was the Bubbler Arm and the Y Pool of the Swift. It is a winter day but the mid day air temperature would kiss the 40 degree mark and trout would be dimpling the surface. My fly selection is a mix of surface flies and emergers mimicking generic midges, black fly larvae and Winter Caddis all in the size 20 to 26 range. This is basically the only time and method that I use to fish this section of the Swift unless the salmon have come over the spillway.


There is surface pattern that I like under these conditions. The Battleship Midge (my creation) floats like a skittering midge or Winter Caddis and the CDC wing catches the wind and gives it natural movement.

Hook - curved scud style from 22 to 24

Body - black 12/0 thread

Wing - Dun colored CDC tied in like a tail and then cut about half a fly length

Hackle - Dun or black size 20 dry fly hackle. Clip the bottom of the hackle

                                                                             Olive And Starling Emerger


Hook - size 20 to 24

Body - fine olive floss or 12/0 olive thread (brown thread of floss works too)

Hackle - Black Starling


Fish this on a down and across swing




Good Old Pinheads

This is my favorite black fly larvae pattern. These guys love fast riffle water and there are spots on the bubbler which is perfect for them.  Another good spot is the Pipe outflow.  In fact, the total length of the outflow from the hatchery to the river has MILLIONS of them and they are constantly being flushed into the Swift.  Size 18 through 24 on a standard dry fly hook works for me.



Don't forget your 2021 license

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Have A Merry Christmas!!!

Fishing with a fly seems to have gone in the opposite direction: It has become a needlessly complex and expensive pastime where anglers choose from hundreds of fly lines, high-tech rods, and trout reels with drags that can stop a truck. We all know that palming the rim of a reel with a simple click drag can stop any trout or salmon, but the industry has become dependent on building insecurity in the minds of their customers — if we aren’t outfitted with the latest gear and au courant signature fly, can we really be enjoying ourselves?"-Yvon Chouinard



I guess Yvon is trying to tell us that we have too much STUFF and he is right.  In my early fly fishing years (50 years ago) bamboo still ruled the roost with many of  the "good" fly fishers and these guys would fish these same bamboo rods year after year and would not think of tossing one and getting a new one.  It may be the relationship one can develop with a natural substance as opposed to something plastic.   Now, does that say that you can't appreciate graphite? No it doesn't if the amount of "classic" graphite that I've seen on the rivers is any indication.  It seems like every month I see someone with an Orvis Trident, a model that's decades old but a model that Orvis hit a home run with.  It's a great rod and I can see why someone would never give it up.

So just remember, this years new model may not make you a better fly fisher.  Only you can do that.

Still Fishing?

You better be!! You still have about 240 hours to squeeze out of that 2020 license so get at it.  Much of the snow that buried the Swift Valley will melt this week  BUT then freeze up to create slippery goings at the access points. A wading staff and studs will fix that.  Scuds have been the fly of choice on the Swift.  It's the same thing every winter.  BTW, I'm still guiding right through the winter!!

Have a Merry Christmas

Remember, it's not what you get but what you give that counts.  May you and those close to you have a merry and safe Christmas!


Ken


 

Saturday, December 19, 2020

A Streamer Question

 "There will be days when the fishing is better than one's most optimistic forecast, others when it is far worse.  Either is a gain over just staying home" - Roderick Haig Brown



I really don't care for streamer fishing when I'm out after trout.  I like flies that imitate insects when I'm on the stream.  Insects dictate when I'm going to be on the river whether it's on a freestone like the Millers or an environmentally controlled river like the Swift or the Farmy.  I do fish streamers when I fish for critters that get their calories from baitfish and that would be stripers, bluefish and all of those southern saltwater species I love to fish for.  Do I ever fish a streamer when going after trout?  Yes, and here's how.



I was fishing the Ware River a few Aprils ago during a high water event with a downpour to boot.  I'm swinging a marabou streamer in the classic way but  felt something was amiss. "Minnows don't move that fast in the current" I thought. They're not going to act like they are going to be swept away in the current. My mind began to wander to times spent on the Swift where little brookies just seemed to hang in pods around me regardless of the current. They didn't swim away. I once saw a 4lb brown grab a stationary brook trout that was holding in the current a few feet from me. In short, baitfish don't get swept away too often so why swing them?

I attached a split shot 8 inches above the streamer and High Sticked my way upstream working every likely spot slowly on a short line.  In short, I fished that streamer like a nymph, caught trout, and have been doing it ever since when I get the urge for a streamer.

I like marabou as the main material in a streamer. Most fixed wing classics are junk except for Carrie Steven's original Grey Ghost which was built right!!!  I don't like articulated steamers. I like to imitate insects and fool trout with them.  That's why we call it Fly Fishing!!

The Storm 

The Swift River valley ended up with 10-12 inches of snow and it's safe to say that the paths along the river are all packed down by now.  Including today you have 13 days left on that 2020 license.  Don't forget the new one!!!

Book me 


Ken




Wednesday, December 16, 2020

Seasonal Thoughts And A Good Fly

 

"Even on the best day of fishing I ever had, I still did more casting than catching and there  have been plenty of days when I did nothing but  casting". John Gierach


The great Nick Lyons, who probably had his publishing hand in more American fly fishing literature than anyone, said this about winter fly fishing (and I paraphrase): "they say there is good midge fishing when the fields are frozen and the trees are barren but I'm not really a part of it.  I need an offseason".

I can understand that point of view although I can't say that I adhere to it.  My fishing log has me out on the Swift at least 2 days a week from January through March and most of that time is spent guiding, field testing new patterns (most suck), or working out new theories (ditto for them). 

I'm out there because I love the look and feel of moving water at any time of year. I don't really like chipping ice out of my guides and would rather be working out a 25 foot cast to a rising brown on a balmy June morning instead. Winter fly fishing is a diversion because we are lucky enough to be living near a tailwater and that's all we have.  I think it's safe to say that my fly fishing season is a season of following aquatic insects that are in-season and not throwing glittery attractors that represent nothing in the river. (When I fish a streamer it's usually high sticking like a nymph and not swung in the traditional way.)  


So, tonight we are expecting 12 to 18 inches of snow in the Swift watershed tonight. If you like winter flyfishing then you will get your wish.  Me, I'm starting to dream of Hendricksons!!


My Favorite Caddis

The photo above shows a handful of the DMS Caddis.  It proved its worth on freestones last season like the Millers, the Ware and the EB, especially the EB. Buggy hares mask, a turn or two of partridge, a bit of peacock and a size 14 hook just can't be beat. What I like about this pattern is that you really represent most caddis just by changing the size.  I guess it's my quest to carry one fly pattern!!

Ken



Saturday, December 12, 2020

Crazy Bows And Winter Midges

 I do have some 71/2 foot 4 and 5 weight rods - plus a couple of 7 foot 9 inchers. I use them a lot on small mountain streams and medium sized creeks and love them dearly, but I think anything shorter and lighter than that is too specialized to be very useful. If you're spooking fish with an 8 foot, 5 weight rod, the answer probably isn't a 7 foot 3 weight. The answer is a longer leader and a better cast. - John Gierach 


There is a spot at the Swift River's Bubbler Arm that has taken my attention over the last two weeks. This spot,  from sunup to about 9am, is devoid of fish but then becomes crowded with rainbows.  Where did they come from?  My guess is that they are hanging out at the Y Pool and then when the air/water temperatures reach a certain level they go upstream to eat small nymphs such as black fly larvae.

I've had some good mornings working an olive Serendipity #22 and Pinheads of the same size range and have taken a bow or two in the 20 inch range and a bunch in the 14 inch range. 

I get there and wait for the fish to show up and in a way it's like a tiny version of steelhead fishing.  The Y Pool is the ocean or lake and the Bubbler is my steelie river. I have actually seen them charging out of the Y Pool and heading "upstream". This show doesn't last long and is usually over by noon with the bows dropping back to the lake (Y Pool).


Winter Midges

After the bows have backed down you might see some tiny airborne critters flying around. We lump the whole group into "Midges" although they are not just midges but tiny mayflies and caddis (the Winter Caddis of the Swift and Farmie come to mind.)  There seem to be more of these insects on days where the air temperature jumps past 40 degrees although I've seen them on the coldest of days.

What to use

Pinheads, thread flies, peacock bodied gnats, DHE dries (real small without the deerhair) and winter caddis of course.

Dealing With Winter

I'm not going to tell you how to dress.  You are all adults and I will assume that you've been in New England, or a similar place, for some time.  I've been fishing through the winter for decades now and I don't find it that cold and maybe it's because I call off the pursuit when the air temperature sinks below 10 F. I will tell the newbies to winter flyfishing this: you don't know cold until you pull the flaps back on your tent and find 4 inches of fresh snow. That's COLD!  You also don't know cold until you find yourself on a tree stand in the pre-dawn hours during the November deer season.  That's COLD! Ditto for coastal duck hunting too!!

I don't use hand warmers or toe warmers or any other kind of chemical assistance. A good stocking hat, a long sleeve tee shirt, a good turtleneck shirt, a good fleece zippered jacket, fingerless wool gloves and a lightweight waterproof shell does it for me.



Now, let's talk about something better like grilling on a warm summer day.  It beats grillin' and chillin'.  Yes, I'm still firing the grill but that will diie down shortly.


Ken


 







Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Brookie Wrap Up



My own fly boxes always were, and still are, a perpetual mess, with pigtails of leader attached to the eyes of hooks; mashed and unraveled flies that should be thrown away but may still be good enough to fish in a pinch; odds and ends that I picked up on trips and didn't fish but that still looked promising; dry flies with droppers still attached; flies put away in the wrong boxes where I'll never find them again; experiments that didn't pan out or at least haven't panned out yet; flies that were given to me by friends and helpful strangers that I'll never fish but somehow can't discard, and so on.  As lean and efficient as I aspire to be as a fisherman I'm often short on the flies that I use and well stocked on the ones I don't (come to think of it why am I carrying flies that I don't use?) - John Gierach  


It was a good brook trout season on the Swift.  It's not to mean that you can't find the BT's roaming around the spawning beds right now but it is safe to say that the dance is over for the season.  Here is my assessment for this Fall: the brook trout count seemed to be the same as last year but the fish seemed bigger.  Another surprise was the number of big, BIG browns that charged upstream this late October. We are very lucky to have this accidental resource at our disposal.  

Y Pool

Now, just because the number of adult brook trout have dwindled post spawn doesn't mean you can wade where you want.  Yes, it's a broken record but walk on the moss and leaf litter or you will crush the eggs.


Disappearing Rainbows

I've heard a lot of talk over the last two seasons on how the Swift rainbows like to pull a disappearing act after stocking.  I really can't say that I believe it because the river appears to be bursting with them.  Now, I don't fish the super popular spots much (last week was only my 2nd trip above RT 9 since mid May) and that may be the reason I'm seeing and catching more bows.  They may not be so easily spooked by me if I'm the only fly fisher there. 

Pinheads and Swift Serendipities in sizes 20 and 24 have been doing well in the skinny water sections above and below Rt 9. I would suggest a tiny micro shot about 10 inches above the fly and just bounce it up and across the stream.  So far I haven't needed anything smaller( but I probably will!).


I tweaked my Swift Serendipity from a red body/thorax to an olive body/thorax.  A big difference!!!


Guiding in December

I always find it funny when some guide or fly fisher feels compelled tell you how to dress for Winter fishing.  You should know how by now.  Dress warm!!!! It also pays to take a break and get out of the water to walk around a bit.  It warms you up.  If you are interested in working some small winter flies then book a trip!


Ken



Saturday, December 5, 2020

My Winter Bag

 With regard to small flies on larger tippet, I've fished size 22 zebra midges on 3X tippet on the Canyon section of the Henry's Fork and have caught many large and well educated trout. So yes, I agree and can attest to this working. I've found that when I see a fish refuse a fly its more than likely fly choice or micro-drag and not tippet size...Yellowstone Bound September 22, 2016


Wednesday, December 2, 2020

Emerging Caddis and Some Good Ideas

If you think that this is all too much to deal with then forget about the essence of this pastime (fooling trout with imitation insects) and just keep tossing your rainbow warriors, chartreuse mops and the rest of the junk flies.  But remember, it's not how many fish that you catch but how you catch them."  



The great fly fishing writer, Bob Wyatt, is a hero of mine. The author of What Trout Want- The Educated Trout And Other Myths-  basically ties all of his dries as an emerging insect and that is tying a dry fly that has half of its body above the surface and half below and that is because that is how most aquatic insects present themselves to a trout. He has no use for the high riding traditional dry, riding daintily on its hackle tips.  He has even taken on the venerable Elk Hair Caddis and so will I.

Hook - size 14 to 16 scud hook

body - olive colored Coats & Clark thread for the rear Start half way through the hook bend and advance forward. 

Thorax - brown or olive hares mask

Wing - Fine deer hair.  I don't use elk on this pattern.

The heaviest part of this fly is at the hook bend which will make the hook bend drop below the surface. The wing will keep the front above the surface just like a natural insect. In fact, I may abandon the time honored Comparadun for Wyatts DHE  Emerger!


A Good Idea

 

I mentioned this product a few years ago as a remedy for a wader leak.  I used it and it worked. Others used it and it worked for them.  Back then you could only buy it online but now everyone from CVS to Wal Mart carries it.  Most wader leaks occur in the neoprene booty and this stuff works on that material better than anything else.  


I also mentioned that I got nothing for this endorsement.  I still don't!



Another Good Idea - Dry Fly Floatant

There are many dry fly floatants out there and the best of them all include Silica Gel and/or Fumed Silica. Silica Gel is not a gel per say, but a rock like substance that is used to absorb moisture. (buy a pair of shoes or a piece of luggage and you'll find the free little pack of it)  Fumed Silica is a powder that has the density of a light fog!  Most floatants are either ALL gel or a combination of gel and fumed powder. Gel rocks are added to the fumed silica to actually move this substance around when you shake the container to cover the fly and remove moisture.



One product doesn't add Silica Gel and is just the fumed silica and it is, in my opinion, a mess.  I won't mention the products name but just say that it could be called Amphibians Ass.  

Without the gel the fumed stuff doesn't cover the fly. That's why it comes with an applicator brush to dab it all over the fly, yourself and the water.  One online comment said that you don't want to use this stuff in a Montana wind!!

The product to the left is a 5 lb. jar of Silica gel purchased at Michael's Crafts. It cost me $15 and it is a 100 year supply. I offload it to a small jar that formally held a similar product. The gel by itself works very well but if you want to add some fumed silica to the mix that's all the better. (Note: please don't try to make a case for liquids or gooey  gel.  I really hate that stuff!!) And don't think you are making a difference by dabbing fumed silica on CERTAIN AREAS OF THE FLY and not other parts to aid in presentation.  Get Real!


The rivers have been blown out for the season EXCEPT for the Swift and it has been fishing well.  Winter on the Swift is REALLY the time for small flies and I've got to fill some holes in my fly boxes.


Yes, I'm still guiding!!!!  Contact Me!!!


Ken











Saturday, November 28, 2020

Some Winter Flies And Fishing Through The " Dark Season"

 "It was big for a mayfly-almost an inch from nose to tail-with a smokey olive body, tall grey wings, head and tail elevated in an oddly regal posture as if the bug was proud of itself for being so handsome. Trout love mayflies because they're loaded with protein and easy to catch.  Fishermen love them because they're pretty in an overbuilt, Victorian way, and we like the big ones because they're so easy to see on the water." -John Gierach



The "Dark Season" starts when we turn the clocks back which brings the curtain down on Evening Fishing (my favorite) with a thud!! Now, some of you actually like winter flyfishing and may actually prefer it over a Hendrickson hatch on a balmy April afternoon or a dense caddis hatch on a June evening or those beautiful BWO on a damp, cool September morning. If any of the above describes you then read no further. Just tie up some rainbow warriors and try to piss off some trout and know full well that fly fishing centers on BUGS and not what attractor fly we toss.


Do I give up winter flyfishing?  No, but my choices about where to go (the freestones can have a foot of ice on them) and what to use are limited. I fish flies that imitate insects and not costume jewelry and insects are less concentrated in the winter.  Those are the reasons I'm found on the Swift, usually above Route 9 with its moderate tailwater environment.  Yes, the flies are small so you need small offerings. and my offerings (mostly) are soft hackles in the 18 to 20 range and my favorite materials are olive or black thread or floss and starling hackles.  This fly represents a lot of what's hatching in the winter.
                                                                                PINHEADS

I've used this fly for about the better part of 20 years and it was developed for the Fall and Winter. Along with the Hot Spot it finds itself on the end of my tippet more often than not. The Pinhead LOOKS like a midge style insect and 20 to 24 works just fine.



Hot Spots


It was almost 15 seasons ago when I found myself on Christmas Eve morning (7am) at the Y Pool.  All the Holiday obligations were done so why not. I threw on a Hot Spot that always did well below the gauge and  had an early Christmas present.  It seems all the fish wanted it.



I hope everyone had a good Thanksgiving and are avoiding crowds.  We want you around for Christmas.


Ken



Wednesday, November 25, 2020

HAPPY THANKSGIVING

 "I've fished a lot of places and met a lot of people, but there are only a handful of streams that I know inside and out and an equally small number of people whom I consider to be close friends. But a few of each is enough when you're loyal as a dog to all of them". John Gierach

 



It has been a very good Autumn on the fishing front and it should be after the drought stricken summer that we had.  The EB and the Swift have been excellent with fish spread out everywhere and most of the water being underfished and that's even the Swift.  As I've been saying for years - spread out - and you will have a different experience.

A Good Fly
My top fly this Autumn, outside of the trusted Partridge and Orange, has been the Possum Nymph and why not.  It has slayed them on the EB and has had good days on the Swift. It is as generic as you get with just the right amount  of mascara to make it a bit different. Someone commented on this blog that spawning fish don't eat.  Well, they eat possum nymphs as well as soft hackles (among other things).

The Brookies

 

As Swift regular Phil predicted last week the Brook Trout spawning season may be closing down at least below Route 9.  They are still there but not in the numbers of just a week or so ago.  I didn't break my Swift PR of 17 inches but caught enough around 12 inches and beyond to keep me from crying.  Catching a 4lb brown while targeting brookies didn't hurt either.



Even little brook trout can make a day, especially when it's your first trout on a fly!!!!


Book Me

The Swift produces right through December and it gives you a chance to wring out those last few hours on your 2000 license. Email me and we will set up a date and catch some trout.

Have a Happy Thanksgiving and stay safe!!


Ken

Friday, November 20, 2020

Walk On The Green, Not On The Redds


I got a water bed and my husband stocked it with trout - Joan Rivers




It's that time of year again - the brook trout are on the beds in clear view and we still have a mindless angler or three wading right through the redds. The Swift is not the best  brookie river in central New England because we stock the hell out of it or even because we practice catch and release. It's because of the environment that the Swift has what the brookies find perfect for spawning.  So why ruin it by stomping through it?

Stay on the Green

Walk on the weeds or on leaf litter or on sandy bottoms.  Trout don't spawn in those areas.  Stay off the clean gravel or you will be scrambling brookie eggs and then complaining that there are not as many brookies as before.

This Weekend

We had our little introduction to winter over the last two days but this weekend will be mild and dry.  All the rivers are in good shape and the Swift and EB should provide some season ending dry fly action.  Don't miss it.


Ken




Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Caddis Fly Musings

"If  the Mayflies are the aristocracy of the fly-fishers insects, then the Caddisflies are the working class.  The drab, earthy Trichoptera  cannot compete with the colorful Ephemeroptera for sheer majesty, but when it comes to satisfying the appetites of hungry trout it is the caddis that bears most of the load". - Thomas Ames, Jr.

caddis emerger

Let's face it, the caddis fly is the Rodney Dangerfield of trout insects. It gets no respect! That honor goes to mayflies and if you don't believe me just consider this: Flyfishers will swoon at the sight of a Hendrickson or a Quill Gordon or a BWO or a sulphur but when we see a caddis we say "there's a caddis" and not much else. Also consider that we seem to fish these flies as if they were a species of Mayfly which they are not.  Let's look at their behavior and techniques needed to imitate them.

1. First, let's get rid of a certain myth. The great Gary LaFontaine floated the idea that caddis create (or store) gasses under their shucks to rise quickly to the surface. This idea caught on and was pretty much universally accepted EXCEPT for the great Bob Wyatt, the author of What Trout Want, The Educated Trout and other Myths. He searched the planet for gas storing caddisflies. He found none.  He interviewed entomologists in the USA and in Europe.  No dice on gas filled caddis. Maybe LaFontaine discovered a new species was the only response. So, how does the caddis rise to the surface so quickly. Most possible answer = Caddis use their legs to kick to the surface and their legs are longer and stronger than a mayfly. That is why soft hackles work so well especially using the Leisenring  Lift.
But why do the LaFontaine sparkle patterns work so well?  Can you say ATTRACTOR PATTERN?  Nothing in our underwater insect world is that shiny.

The Mystery Hatch

It's the first week of May on either the Millers or the Ware. The flows are perfect and the air temperature is in the 60's. You have been there for two days and every time that you walk by the riverside bushes blizzards of caddis explode into the air BUT you have seen few rising fish and very few caddis riding the surface of the river.  What's going on? Where did those bush dwelling caddis come from?  Well, they did not rise to the surface like a mayfly does but crawled on the stream bottom to the shore where it hatched and then hit the bushes. A main player in New England is the Glossosomatidae family of caddis and I think it's the number one caddis species as far as numbers are concerned. They love fertile freestones but find tailwaters a bit too cool and infertile for them.  

How to fish this hatch

Fish the edges of the river when you see caddis buzzing around the bushes. Use a drab soft hackle or a possum nymph when you do this.  Now, this fly lays it's eggs by diving to the stream bottom and attaching the eggs to stones.  Use the same flies with a Leisenring Lift to mimic that behavior.

What About Dries?

No self respecting trout will refuse a well placed appropriate dry fly but most of my dry fly fishing with a caddis pattern is done in fast, choppy water.  That's because elk and deer hair float forever in choppy water and choppy water is where the trout live in freestone streams. I don't seem to do well with caddis dries in slow moving water. 

Book Me - Been fishing the same old spots on the Swift and the EB? Book me to fish new areas.

More Later!!

Ken







Sunday, November 15, 2020

Nothing Is New

 "Nobody goes there anymore, it's too crowded! - Yogi Berra


Sometimes you think that you have discovered something that is brand new only to find that you have been beaten to the finish line by someone else.  Here's the story: I go through a lot of tying thread, most of it in the construction of fly bodies and most of that in making soft hackles but also in the tying of some pedestrian patterns such as WB's, streamers and such.  In short, bodies take up a lot of thread that is probably best used in other applications.  So, one day I'm in the local Walmart and I end up walking into the sewing aisle and there it is - a huge display of polyester thread in EVERY shade of the color spectrum (well, almost). The diameter appeared to be about 3/0 which is just right for thread bodies on wet flies in the size 10 through 16 which is the bulk of my wet fly tying.  So, I bought a few spools (300 yards for $2.50 each) and tied up some flies.  The trout loved them and that was the only test I needed.

Here's the rest of the story. I am reading the latest newsletter from the Western Ma Flyfishers when I see that local fish hawk Dan Trela has been using this thread for years which I would consider a good seal of approval.

The thread is made by Coates & Clark.  Try it out!!

At least I was the first to use Flex Seal on leaky waders.( I think)

This may be one of the best fly fishing Autumns in recent memory.  Get out there and fish!!!!!

Ken








Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Rating The Rivers (Or Sort Of) And Seasonal Stuff

  "No fly rod at any price is going to magically transform you into a Lefty Kreh or a Joan Wulff any more than a Stradivarius is going to turn your middle school violin student into Itzhak Perlman. And make no mistake: Itzhak Perlman could pick up a yard sale fiddle and extract soulful Tchaikovsky from it". - George Roberts, Tail Fly Fishing Magazine


It really isn't fair to rate rivers after the worst drought in recent memory but I will, kind of! The Swift wins because it is the Swift and being a tailwater with a mandatory release really helps. In fact, 125cfs for most of August and September was too high of a release. It did fish well all Summer and into the Fall and grew thousands of brook trout AND BIG BROWNS.  It may be safe to say that this river may be the BEST brown trout river in southern New England because where else can you fish over 3 or 4 browns where the smallest is 5 lbs?  And this condition occurred naturally, no genetic slight of hand by DFW folks.


The EB, The Millers and the Ware

All fished well during the Spring especially the the EB and the Ware but by mid June the tap went dry. The browns will survive these conditions and evenings are made for this but when water gets too low it just isn't fun to fish for them.  That's where the Swift comes in!!

The EB has been the best of the freestone rivers this Fall with trout all over the C&R section and the angling should hold up as long as the water temperature stays at least in the mid 40's. That may last through the end of the month this year.

Seasonal Stuff (Micro Eggs)

100% of the egg patterns that I toss are tossed in November and they are all on the Swift. Yesterday I took 4 bows and 5 brookies on micro eggs (size 14, 16 and 18) in 3 hours. If you think that the sizes are too small remember that brookie eggs are small, usually the size of a pea or smaller. I fish them 6 to 8 inches below a micro shot without an indicator. Orange is the standard color of choice ,but I had some good hits with eggs that were a light pink, sort of a cotton candy color. 

The Quote At The Top

The wisdom at the top of the page is worth it's weight in stripers! George is a casting instructor (a good one) that is now the Managing Editor for Tail Fly Fishing Magazine, the voice of saltwater fly fishing (another good one). I met George on the Swift a few years ago and he is what he appears to be - no nonsense, straight to the point but very friendly, something that works with being a casting instructor.  The magazine is first class.  In fact it's above first class. It's a private luxury jet to fly fishing destinations!!!  No, I get nothing for this plug and don't want anything.  Just get a copy and read it online or in print..  You'll like it!!!

Book Me

Ken




Sunday, November 8, 2020

November Dries On The EB And The Swift

 On the Firehole I caught thirty-six inches worth of trout - in six installments - Arnold Gingrich





It's been a very good Autumn so far.  We have had just enough rain to keep the rivers at a fishable level with the EB and the Swift leading the way and dry flies have produced great results.  Many times Fall rains blow out rivers which ends the dry fly season. But this year the flows have been perfect, the temperatures have been perfect and the trout have been "looking up".

There was a late October day on the EB when a brownish/grey caddis began to hatch and that made my client change from a weighted possum nymph to a caddis dry.  He took 10 additional fish.  Another client threw an elk hair caddis into the skinniest water that he could find and took fish.  On that occasion there was no real surface activity BUT the flows were low and trout could see anything on the surface.  The fly of choice is something buoyant and something that can take a beating and that is a simple deer hair caddis. Sometimes I'll darken the wing with a sharpee but most of the time I leave it natural. It represents a caddis, of course, and a stonefly too. Might as well throw in a terrestrial insect into the mix also.

The brookies on the Swift love them too.

An EB Auction??

It appears that a public auction of Chesterfield town land is scheduled for November 15th and it appears that one of the parcels on the block includes river frontage on the EB.  It looks like the land from the first turnoff to below the spot that I call the swimming hole is the spot. Now, who would want to build there? Nobody I would guest because it isn't buildable as I see it.  I know that the town has spent a lot of effort "fixing" the dirt road (River Rd) this past month.  Is something in the wind that could limit our access to this river?.  If you know anything let me know.

Fishing has been great!  BOOK ME

Ken




Tuesday, November 3, 2020

Into November

 "The Difference between Flyfishers and Worm Dunkers is the quality of their excuses" - Anonymous



Don't be frightened of November because it's not that bad. Yes, we may get some snow flurries but we will still have some balmy days in the forecast.  For instance, the average high temperature for Nov. 15 (middle of the month) is 47 degrees in Belchertown, the home of the Swift. That is a very comfortable temperature.  In fact, the water temperature is warmer now than on all rivers in central Ma during the early Spring. It's supposed to hit the low 60's for the rest of the week!!!


The flows are fine.

EB - 245 (perfect), Millers - 114 (perfect but few fish)

Swift - 44 perfect! The brookies are on their beds!  Watch where you walk. Ware - 96 (and they said it was stocked!)


Top Nymph This Fall (So Far)

Yes, I'm still fishing soft hackles and doing well with them over the past month but I've resurrected the possum nymph to do some heavy lifting on the EB and the Swift.  It is as generic as you can get except for a little "secret sauce" the seems to make a big difference. I've drifted them with a tiny split shot about 10 inches above the fly and even worked them under an indicator (yes, that's right) while fishing some deep runs.  Trout like them!!!!

Even Micro Buggers have done well in the size 12 range. Mine are tied with peacock herl instead of bulky chenille.  The peacock adds just the right amount of subtle glimmer and that makes it work.  We hooked and lost 4 big browns last week on this neat little nymph/streamer.  How big were the browns? All were at least 5 pounds.

Book A Trip

We have weeks of good flyfishing left and we don't have to be there super early to beat the crowds or the Summer heat. Fishing in November is like fishing in April. Mid day temperatures are good and we will have more insect activity.  Book a Trip!!!


Ken



Saturday, October 31, 2020

Spreading Out

 "I look into my fly box and think of all the elements I should consider in choosing the perfect fly: water temperature, what stage the bugs are in, what the fish are eating right now. then I remember what a guide told me: "Ninety percent of what a trout eats is brown and fuzzy and about 5/8 of an inch long" - Allison Moir


There are two places on the Swift that attract anglers like bees to honey - The Y Pool area and the Pipe/Tree Pool. Many only fish these areas month to month and year to year and stay away from other spots.  But the other spots are  where I fish and these are the spots with unmolested fish and BIG fish to boot.  Plus you get to fish, for the most time in solitude, which is something many of us want.

I think there are some similarities  between golf and flyfishing here.  There are some golfers who visit an 18 hole course but have their minds set on say, the 5th hole, and not much else.  Why?  Well, the 5th hole is PERFECT for them. Just the right length and layout to play to their skills. They have hit great shots here but have exploded on the 6th hole.  If allowed they might want to tee of 18 times here on the 5th and forget the rest of the course. 

That's much like fishing the same old, same old, on the same river every time.  How about fishing a NEW spot on the river? If you are good at what you do you will catch trout there too. I think that we get so accustomed to a spot we find it difficult to fish a new spot.

I've seen big browns all over the river below Route 9.  Go get them and don't forget the brookies.


My Fall Flies

The Partridge and Orange is one of course. My Scud made with possum has always worked during the cold months as have Hot Spots and Swift Serendipities. Tiny flies and tiny temperatures seem to match at times. The sun will rise earlier on November 1st (Sunday) which is good for us.  The days of the evening rise are gone until late April.  We will still have good times.

Ken