I fished the limestone springs of Pennsylvania's Cumberland Valley for a couple of decades, founded Falling Spring Outfitters, guided, tied and oh yes, fell in love with the Catskill Rivers I can now call home.
My 8040, wounded in battle, but on the mend at the foot of Point Mountain.
Another fresh, cool morning in Crooked Eddy, and good news from Dennis Menscer’s rod shop for my wounded Granger. Dennis is crafting two new tips for my favorite vintage eight foot four weight, and let me know this morning that the cane work was done. Soon the new rod tips will be wrapped and varnished and the 8040 and I will once again stalk the Delaware’s wild trout!
There is something just right about an eight foot rod. It seems to be the perfect foil for this game of trout hunting, regardless of season. When I wander the rivers during winter, there’s an eight footer sharing the walk with me, and come spring its tough to pry one from my hand. It was summer’s low water that caused me to string a four weight line on my Granger, and that great old rod will never see another five weight.
Whether high water or low, eight feet of finely tapered bamboo easily provides the reach we often require on the wide Catskill tailwaters. When the battle with a great fish is close at hand, an eight isn’t ungainly and in its own way like the nine foot rods the graphite crowd prefers; its just the right tool to bring that fish to net!
The aftermath of this weeks storms still finds our rivers running high, the normally gin clear water stained with sediment. The trout get a slight reprieve, though I know many of the guides will be eager to pound the banks with streamers better suited to saltwater gamefish. This tactic doesn’t thrill me in the least. I have landed too many large trout to find their mouths torn from big hooks and rough tactics with heavy rods since this big meat, articulated streamer craze caught hold. Let the high water give the fish a rest!
During my years in the Cumberland Valley I landed many oversize trout on streamers. The size 8 and 10 Shenk Sculpins and White Minnows the Master taught me to tie brought most of them to hand. These flies were fished on relatively light tippets, 4X most often, as the limestone trout were too wary and well fed to fall for heavy handed tactics. My rod of choice: a seven foot one ounce four weight Orvis graphite. All trout were released un-mangled and unharmed.
The most productive big trout streamers I have ever fished: Ed Shenk’s White Minnow and Shenk Sculpin!
Seducing a trout is more about finesse than anything else, and there’s no need to bring a bigger hammer. I would hope those guides that encourage this fad fishing will at least appreciate the resource enough to talk their clients out of the heavy rods and heavy handed tactics.
Had a surprise this morning with some heavy rainfall, enough to push the West Branch back up to floating country and beyond: she’s running 4,550 and still rising! My fishing day seems to have been washed away with my morning coffee. I’m not complaining, as I welcome the rain, even if it comes in bunches.
Buddy Guy is wailing the blues over my shoulder as I put a few flies in a shirt pocket box for next week. Sad to say that our little cool down will be short lived, with a high of 85 for Sunday and near 90 to start the week.
I did get out to fish yesterday, visiting some water I hadn’t seen in a month. I had hoped the cool down and high flows had freshened the water so that some of the stressed trout I had seen that day would be back to a comfortable normal. I found no evidence of that, despite sixty-one degree water after one in the afternoon, failing to so much as move a single fish. I am beginning to accept the fact that I’ll have to wait for fall to enjoy the quality of fishing I had last summer.
The extra water should help the Delaware, particularly with more hot sunny weather on the way. It won’t get to fishable temperatures, but hopefully the increased oxygenation will help relieve the stress on the fish hunkering in place. The water temperature at Lordville dropped steadily during Tuesday’s storm, reaching a welcome sixty-four degrees. The daily peaks have remained just below seventy since then. Yesterday morning’s lovely fifty-five degrees at sunrise didn’t hurt either!
The NYC reservoir page now shows 2.9″ of rainfall for August, 2.8″ more than it showed on August 3rd. I don’t know the origin of their numbers, whether averaged over various gages or measured at some central location, but perhaps the eastern Catskills didn’t get heavier rain than we got here in Hancock as I believed.
A report from my friend Mike in Western Maryland says that hopper season has arrived, as he’s taking a lot of browns, including some good ones, with the Letort Hoppers he’s been tying. I had hoped for a wet year, with good flows and temperatures that would find me floating the Mainstem now and trying my updated hopper pattern along every grassy bank I passed. Then again, wind really makes hopper fishing great, but it isn’t the rower’s nor the fly caster’s friend on the big river.
Daydreams of hopper fishing gets me thinking about the West. I have been telling Mike that we should make a real trip to Montana now that we’re both retired. No guides, no lodges, no set itinerary; and a couple of weeks to fish wherever the best conditions happened to be. I’ve only been out there twice, both times on someone else’s schedule, and though I enjoyed those trips, the fishing wasn’t anywhere near “as advertised”.
I was truly captivated by the beauty of the Henry’s Fork. I had read about that magical fishery since boyhood and desperately wanted to fish it. On my second trip west, Mike and I managed two days on the Railroad Ranch in seventy degree bluebird September weather. Mahogany Duns were hatching during the afternoons, and the wide flats of the ranch were littered with them, but very few trout rose to partake of the feast. Walking a couple of miles of the Ranch, I located two nice pods of feeding rainbows, each with its own pod of fly fishermen. I did find a couple of singles with a little extra effort, landing a pair of bright fifteen inch bows as I stood mesmerized by the landscape. Oh how I want to go back!
The rain and rumbling thunder have departed, and there’s blue sky smiling through the window over my tying desk. Time to see what I can find to do today…
Another summer evening, high water, and a ghost in the fog
I set my unofficial rain gage (okay, my carwash bucket) in my driveway at 11:05 AM yesterday. It had been raining lightly but steadily since five, and I was curious to capture the results of the big event that was on our doorstep. By the time the rain subsided around 4:30 PM, I measured about 3.75 inches of rain water in the bucket. With easily another quarter inch falling in the morning, I deduced that Hancock had received around four inches of rain from the fast moving tropical storm system.
The West Branch Delaware rose quickly and crested at about 1,750 cfs between seven or eight in the evening. The eastern side of the Delaware watershed was in the forecast path for heavier rainfall. The Beaverkill was bubbling along over its cobbles at a little more than 100 cfs yesterday morning, rising dramatically to a crest around 11,700 cfs shortly after 7:30 PM. The river crested roughly seven tenths of a foot above flood stage, measured at 10.0 feet at the Cooks Falls gage. All the rivers are dropping quickly, the Beaverkill running at a flow of 3,540 cfs at 5:45 AM.
Despite noodling around on weather sites this morning, I have not found any tallies for the region, but I expect the central and eastern portions of the Catskills may have received the five inches that was forecast, perhaps a bit more. That’s a substantial amount of rainfall over the course of about twelve hours, but only time will tell if it was enough to resurrect our summer fishing.
We were fortunate here in Hancock, as the heavy rain lasted for about two hours, and it wasn’t the type of monsoon downpour we often see in thunderstorms. I think a great deal of the rain we received had a chance to soak into the ground and do the region a lot of good, as opposed to falling in a quick burst that has little choice than to runoff rapidly and produce extreme flash flooding.
I haven’t looked at the West Branch yet today, but the 886 cfs flow I noted at 6:15 this morning is a very wadeable flow. I expect there is still a fair amount of color in the water now, but it might well be clear by evening.
The cooler weather looks like it will last until the weekend, when daily highs will get back into the eighties. If the overnight lows would get down into the fifties consistently, the receding freestone rivers could get back to fishable temperatures. The Beaverkill dropped from seventy-six degrees to sixty-two along with that rush of runoff, but it started to warm back up by early morning. Eighty degree sunshine will unfortunately get it back into the seventies before long. Where’s that May snowfall when you need it?
The NYC website hasn’t updated the reservoir levels to reflect the storm. It will be interesting to see if the capacities show a significant increase. Inflow from the mainstem rivers spiked from the rain, as did the various tributary streams, exceeding the release flows, so storage certainly increased, though I doubt the city will increase reservoir releases to improve tailwater conditions. That would take a lot more rainfall, a pattern of recurring cooler, wetter weather, and even then we cannot rely upon NYC to give our rivers their fair share.
More days like this……and a lot less like this!
I’m tempted to wipe the dust and cobwebs from my drift boat this morning and drop it in the West Branch, but I expect there will be an increase in traffic that would rob me of the exhilaration a float would provide. The river is still dropping too, and a day of floating could easily become an afternoon of dragging.
There is clear, blue sky outside my window as I write this, and that freshness in the air that rain and wind provides: storm washed. Perhaps I’ll simply enjoy it a bit, tie a few flies, poke around in the yard. I do need an archery backstop, a project I have been daydreaming about for the past two summers.
I was a dedicated bowhunter for more than forty years. My friend John keeps telling me about the whitetail bucks that have been frequenting his property this summer; and the new tree stands he has placed. I keep reminding him of my track record as the unluckiest deer hunter alive. I love the change of pace and the exercise I get from walking the Catskill mountains with my bird gun. I get a lot more out of that than I could sitting in a tree. You do learn a few things after forty years.
Grouse season and bow season both open on October first, and the afternoon fishing can be particularly fine at that time of year. I spent a lot of days last October hunting birds in mid-morning and stalking trout in the afternoons. Can’t say I would mind repeating that pattern.
I awoke to gentle rainfall this morning, hopeful that it will continue throughout the day as promised, and provide real relief to our parched groundwater, rivers and trout. Hancock still lies along the boundary between the bands on the television weather maps: one to two inches of rainfall or three to five inches. Should we be able to avoid torrential downpours, I am praying for at least three inches. We need rain soaking into the ground, not running wily nily over it.
I still long for the wonderful summer fishing of the past, The rain, and the seasonal temperatures forecast for the balance of this week, are a big step toward the realization of my wishes.
I was fortunate to steal a couple of hours Sunday afternoon, as John and I met up again to see if the sulfur hatch might bring a trout or two to the surface once the onslaught of canoes, kayaks and inner tubes subsided. The afternoon and early evening was beautiful, and we both found a fish or two to keep us occupied.
A gorgeous sunlit afternoon, a light bamboo fly rod, and a difficult trout: John watches for the rise as he chooses a fly. A nesting eagle, the lowest of flows, and prodigious daily river traffichave brought a new height of warinessto wild troutthat are more than challenging in a normal year!
We enjoyed the game: fly pattern selection, tippet changes, short takes and refusals. As the afternoon waned I thought I had solved the puzzle, the seven foot bamboo in my hand throbbing with the struggles of a good fish. I slipped a fine, buttery golden brown into my net only to find the fly had pricked the skin of his belly, not his mouth. He had come up and refused the fake, my strike catching him on the way down. Victory this day to the trout, soundly!
The air, the sunshine and warm blustery winds, and most of all the company made it a good time, the kind that neither of us would trade.
It had been more than a month since I had the benefit of some company on the river. My friend John and I enjoyed a morning fishing apart, as dictated by the continuing threat of Coronavirus. Our time was short we knew, for it would not be long before the throngs arrived at this quiet stretch of river and chased us back to hot, dry land. We made the most of the time we had.
John is one of those rare friends who enjoys the day outdoors, whatever comes. If we catch fish he is smiling; the same if we don’t. If the grouse fly or the whitetails pass our stands, he enjoys the time spent whether a shot connects or not; and he finds equal joy and fulfillment from those days when game is scarce. Kindred spirits. I felt it more than twenty years ago when he walked into my fly shop for a chat.
John is beyond “handy” as well. His abilities reach the level of artistic and inspired. Fly tier, artist, and now bamboo rod maker. That last time we met along the river he brought his second rod, an 8 foot four weight built upon a taper devised by another friend, Tom Smithwick, the man I have called the Taper Wizard. Of course John didn’t just build an amazing cane flyrod. He made a beautiful walnut rod tube to complement it. Even before he heard my admiration, he insisted upon making a walnut case for me.
John’s Art: His tie of a full dress Queen of Waters Atlantic Salmon fly with original artwork and framing. It made my office special for twenty years and now adorns my tying room.
As we readied our gear for fishing yesterday morning, he placed the case on my car and stepped away, both of us mindful of our duty to protect our own health and that of our families. The morning light enflamed the figuring in the walnut as I turned the six sided case in my hands, the craftsmanship truly as beautiful as the wood, and the very special Thomas & Thomas fly rod it was destined for. I will cherish the gift as long as I continue.
Circumstances have kept us from spending time upon the rivers we both love this spring. There were float trips envisioned during the peak hatches, and afternoons reveling in the glory of the Green Drake hatch, dreams doused, if not by the threat of the growing public health crisis, then by the vagaries of Mother Nature’s whims. John found a different way to spend precious hours with his friend. I will share in those each time I take that rod case in hand and journey to the river.
Six Sides, Joined as the cane itself by a rod maker’s hands…
There’s rain coming they say. Dare we believe them? Predicting the actions of hurricanes is chancy at best. The Catskills appears somewhere in limbo between the forecasts and models: perhaps one to two inches of rain, perhaps as much as five to eight inches. If I could place my order I would opt for something along the lines of three or four inches, spread out over two to three days and nights. Fill the groundwaters which feed the springs which feed the brooks… and on to the rivers. Fill the reservoirs too, so the releases may give new life to the embattled Mainstem of the Delaware, where this summer has been truly harsh.
If I get my wish, perhaps August will shine as last year, and my friend and I will find good fishing, maybe even take that float trip. And of course there is autumn…
Our weather forecast says to beware this morning, there will be thunderstorms! Rain in the Catskills? Preposterous! Don’t believe it!
I missed a morning’s fishing last week because I was foolish enough to believe such a forecast. Missed the afternoon too, as it would cloud up and tease us from time to time, even adding a roll of thunder or two for effect, but we received no rainfall. Not that I am advocating fishing when thunder calls, for I am not. A flash or a rumble is all that’s required to get me off the water as quickly as possible. I don’t mess with lightning.
Clouds and silence though are another matter, and that was the predominating condition for that day. I’ll be heading out to the river this morning. If Mark Luck intervenes, I could very well be chased off the river by some of those flashes and rumbles, but it won’t rain, at least not appreciably. I was thoroughly wetted one day last week, though a mile down the road from the riverside parking area I drove back into bright, hot sunshine and dry countryside.
I just checked the NYC Reservoir system status and totaled the rainfall for May, June and July at 9.16 inches, nearly three inches below the historic average. That is a 25% deficit, and the effects are compounded by the hotter than normal temperatures that continue unabated. I think back to a couple of glorious days in mid-June, shivering on a 38 degree Sunday morning as John and I both introduced some new bamboo to the river. What I wouldn’t give for August to begin with a week of mornings like that!
Right now I am debating the relative merits of fishing the four weight Cumberland Queen versus the shorter Garrison with the number three line. Minimizing disturbance to the water is paramount! The longer four weight will handle a longer leader, but the three weight certainly isn’t limited to a short one, and will land with more delicacy. Perhaps the pain in my wrist will dictate my choice. A morning’s fishing with the longer rod means fewer casting strokes, less wear and tear. It is nearly August, and that wrist has powered a lot of casts. If the cooler weather and rainfall I pray for arrives, my dry fly season will last into October.
John called last night, talking of grouse and whitetails and the hunting season that arrives as dry fly season wanes. He has been busy at his cabin this summer, setting stands and trimming trails, opening up bits of forest to foster the thickets favored by the grouse we both enjoy. We talked of fishing too of course, thinking ahead to a morning on the river, fishing apart, as we have come to call it in this year of the pandemic.
High summer, always a season when I pause and think of autumn leaves and crisp mornings. Perhaps my shot column will find a bird or two this year! I can picture myself late in winter, tying flies with feathers plucked from that first Catskill bird, feel the take of the trout to that same fly swung through a gentle run as steam rises from the river on another winter’s morn. But wait, no need to rush the season, for we know not how many remain.
Cold water and warm sunshine, a gentle cast and a quiver on the surface of the pool…cherish each moment.
I picked a morning when my eyes were clear, and my fingers relatively pain free, as tying any size 24 dry fly requires good vision and dexterity. Lashing a wisp of Antron to the hook shank demands the most delicate thread control when the flies are this tiny. Magnification makes the wings look more substantial than they are, while in truth only about one third of one strand of the multi-strand yarn is required.
Three on a cork!
If seeing clearly to tie these little darlings seems difficult, imagine trying to follow them fifty feet away, awash in the surface glare amid thousands of seeds and bubbles and (hopefully) the real thing! That is just the beginning of the challenge of fishing the trico hatch.
Light two and three weight rods get the call for this hatch, supple rods that flex gently and freely under load, both to cast the long, light leaders and protect the tiny hooks and the finest of tippets. My 7X fluorocarbon tests at 2.5 pounds, on a good day, and before I tie a knot in it. I don’t have access to a micro scale to test it, but I would expect significantly less than two pounds of strength for fishing, provided I don’t nick it with a bit of rough skin on my fingers while tying that knot.
Of course a size 24 fly doesn’t have a lot of hook gap available to catch a trout’s lip either. I have always tied my tricos on the hook the venerable George Harvey recommended. George was one of the first fly fishers to match this hatch on the Pennsylvania limestoners many decades ago. The Tiemco 500U is an upturned eye dry fly hook with a 2X short shank, that is, the size 22 hook I use has the shank length of a size 24, with the gap of the larger 22. The upturned eye also helps with hooking a fish, as it is completely out of the way of the hook point.
I fished the hatch on Falling Spring almost daily each summer during my fly shop years in Chambersburg. If memory serves the largest trout I ever caught on a trico spinner was a wild rainbow of sixteen or seventeen inches. I would truly enjoy the challenge of landing a twenty inch Catskill brown on one of these miniscule spinners, though the greatest challenge might be finding one taking tricos to fish to. As I wrote the other day, I have not found the clouds of spinners habitual to the species on these rivers. With such tiny mayflies, a significant density of spinners is usually necessary to interest the trout, particularly the larger ones.
Were it not for the public health crisis, I might be tempted to visit the streams around State College, Pennsylvania to refresh my trico fishing skill set. To my knowledge, many of these limestoners still offer a relatively heavy hatch and spinner fall. The key I believe is habitat. The limestone streams tend toward an abundance of the very fine silt tricorythodes inhabits, while our Catskill rivers and their greater fluctuations in flow tend toward coarser silts.
Aquatic weed growth has been on the upswing these past two seasons on the West Branch. Should the weed beds continue to expand and not succumb to high seasonal flows, they could trap more of the finer silts and foster more significant deposits capable of supporting better trico populations. It would be fun to spend mid-mornings on the West, pitting our skills against the fly some have called “the white curse”. Big West Branch browns eat plenty of size 22 and 24 olives, so I have no doubt they would feast upon a heavy trico spinner fall.
Light two and three weight rods, long fine leaders and 7X tippetsare the standard tools of the trade.
A good spinner fall is something every dry fly fisherman should experience. The number of flies can be astounding, and the trout will feed on them with metronomic timing and efficiency. The better the fall, the more trout up and rising, and the harder it is to catch one. It can be hard to ignore a pod of trout rising every few seconds, but picking out a straggler out of the main drift can make your morning. Often the larger trout will position themselves away from the fray, in soft, shallow water where they can lift and take spinners at their leisure. With fewer flies to choose from, a straggler is more likely to be deceived into taking your fly, but only if you fish perfectly!
My best Falling Spring spinner fall trout was a straggler, nosing out from an undercut bank to sip tricos away from the main current. His habit made for a tricky float, but I met the challenge that morning.
I finally got to watch the new movie about an old friend yesterday afternoon. “Live The Stream: The Joe Humphreys Story” followed Joe for four seasons, travelling around Central Pennsylvania and out to Arkansas for his quest for a twenty pound brown trout. The film is marvelously done, and it makes clear the amazing energy Joe retains every day at 91.
He still teaches fly fishing throughout the season, and doesn’t stop for the winter. If he’s not doing classes and seminars at one of the fly fishing shows when the snow flies, he’s out climbing his favorite ridge to his deer stand, or fishing Spring Creek near his Centre County home. Joe Humphreys truly embodies the title of this documentary; he lives the stream every day.
The film brought back a flood of memories for me. It is hard to imagine that it was 29 years ago that I first met Joe at one of his Allenberry Fly Fishing Schools on the Yellow Breeches Creek. “Hump” and Ed Shenk teamed with the late Norm Shires, presenting quality fly fishing schools for Orvis for years. They continued forward when Orvis’ corporate policies changed, focusing their schools at their Manchester, Vermont headquarters. Joe’s on stream Allenberry programs were always head and shoulders above the Vermont based Orvis school, and easily among the best in the country.
L. to R. Much younger versions of Yours Truly, the late Ed Shenk and Joe Humphreys; Allenberry, September 1991
I learned a great deal about fishing and life from Joe and Ed over the years. Both kindly travelled to my fledgling fly shop to give presentations to help me get the business going. Though this was their livelihood, neither charged me a fee for their services.
It was always a lesson when either of these gentlemen fished behind a student, invariably catching several trout where the eager students had taken none. They would pause with each trout and point out the details we all missed: why they cast where they did, how they manipulated their tackle to ensure a natural drift, so that the students learned how and why those trout were caught by the masters.
If you have a streaming device, you can watch the movie for free right now on Tubi, or order a DVD version from Amazon. I highly recommend this beautiful film, as it chronicles an amazing gentleman who has spent his life helping others enjoy the gift of fly fishing. Joe Humphreys is a National treasure.
Those memories of my Cumberland Valley days still haunted me this morning, as I stalked the river with my terrestrial box. I am sure that I caught more dry fly limestone trout on terrestrials than on any mayfly or caddis pattern I owned, and its fun to relive those flies and tactics here, on the rivers of my heart.
My little 7 1/2 foot Garrison 206 got the nod this morning, lined with a three weight double taper. The rod is a modern replica crafted by Jim Downes of Coburn, PA; originals, if they can be found, costing the equivalent of my net worth. Downsie’s Garrison is a gem, equally adept with a three or four weight line, and capable of pinpoint accuracy.
The river had fallen since my last visit, and my beetle would barely drift along the banks and the cover while the main current slowly eroded my slack. I dropped the rod tip a bit quicker than normal in compensation, and the extra float was enough to fool a beautifully colored brown of nineteen inches. He doubled over the Garrison as the golden cane absorbed his struggles all the way to the waiting net.
I was not so lucky with a couple of his brethren. One came ever so slowly for the fly as my arm was rising for the pickup, which took it away from him at the moment of truth. Another popped the fly when it finally exhausted it’s dozen feet of drag-free drift tight to the river bank. I enjoyed the morning immensely, having missed my chance to fish yesterday, foolishly believing the weather forecasts that screamed thunderstorms by ten AM. We got no rain of course; dark clouds, wind and a bit of mist to be sure, but none of the rain we so desperately need.
The crowds of visitors are already massing for their weekend in the Catskills, so I must surrender the rivers to the throng. Baseball returns tonight, or at least a reasonable facsimile, with my home team playing in Boston’s deserted ballpark. I’ve missed it.
I had truly hoped, and even expected, that our run of hot, dry weather would have passed into memory by now. Sadly it has not. Our trout fishing remains restricted to the upper reaches of the tailwaters, and the crowds make those places inhospitable under the best of conditions, and positively scary in this pandemic age.
I stole a pleasant morning yesterday, wading the open water of the lower West Branch alone. The river was cool, the mists blowing here and there in the soft morning breezes. I carried my Dream Catcher four weight, enough rod to provide some reach, while still presenting flies delicately. The plan was to find a few early risers snacking on whatever the drift might carry, but not all plans come to fruition.
The bubble lines at the bottom of the big riffle I prospected seemed barren, for I have no doubt that plenty of trout resided there. None of last night’s spinners, no hapless ants or beetles drifting half sunken among the foam, not a thing in evidence to bring a trout to the surface. I am quite certain the trout were there. I have caught them in every season of the year in that water.
Still it was a beautiful morning, and I was happy as I continued my search. Eventually I spotted a sipping rise far down on the wide expanse of the pool, and made the long, slow, careful walk downstream.
I never did discover what that trout was eating, for my own examinations of the drift turned up nothing but bubbles and bits of weed. I tried every small seasonal pattern I carried: little olives, trico spinners, various ants of both crawling and flying varieties, a tiny thread and CDC nothing sure to interest a trout; all to no avail.
Deep in the game, a second trout rose upstream between us. The olive tied to my tippet at that moment proved perfectly interesting to him, as he took it on the second cast. The foot long wild brown put a nice little bend in my bamboo rod and I was pleased to enjoy his struggles until I could slide my hand down the leader and twist the tiny hook free.
As midday arrived a few more trout began to rise in my vicinity. I suspected there were a few tricos hiding between the bubbles, and a better inspection confirmed my suspicions. It has been years since I seriously fished the trico spinner fall.
During the pleasant years in Chambersburg I would rise early and walk the banks of the Falling Spring each summer morning before opening the fly shop. If the morning was calm and sunny, as most of them were in summer, there would be tricos on the water sometime between seven and eight. Most of the duns hatch at night, though on my earlier visits I would often find a few still taking wing after daylight.
I tied a simple little dun pattern using dun gray thread for the body, hackle tail, two turns of pale dun hackle and a wisp of CDC. My tackle was light, one of two 6′ 6″ rods usually getting the nod: the Orvis 2 weight crafted by Ed Shenk, or the 3 weight Loomis I had built myself when I first fished with Ed on the Letort early in my Cumberland Valley oddysey.
The lightest rods, a small CFO reel and leaders twice the length of the rod finished with 7X tippets were standard equipment for trico fishing, the flies sparsely tied on size 24 hooks! So many mornings over so many years!
A few times each summer I would run into the late Ed Koch and Chambersburg angler John Newcomer along the stream. There was always a cherry greeting from this duo, and we would stand and talk for a few moments before resuming our fishing. One particularly frustrating morning we commiserated on our lack of luck. “Do you know what they’re doing”? asked Ed. I replied that they seemed to hang at the surface without actually taking the fly. “Yes, they’re taking”, he said, “but they’re not closing their mouths!” This wisdom gleaned from fishing as a duo, one watching from upstream while the other fished.
On my Monday day off from the fly shop, I would travel a bit, fishing tricos on Spring Creek, Yellow Creek or the Little Juniata. I still remember hooking a brute of a brown, sight fishing one morning on Spring Creek. He kissed the surface, I tightened, and the tiny hook came instantly free. I cast again and again, and he took twice more, but I couldn’t prick him! Looking at the fly in disbelief I found a perfect little trico spinner on a hook shank. Bend and point had broken off on the first take.
The Falling Spring at Edwards
I was somewhat unprepared for serious trico fishing yesterday. I rarely carry 7X tippet anymore, and the four weight proved to be a bigger gun than required. Fishing size 24 spinners on 6X didn’t bring many trout to hand on Falling Spring, and it brought none to hand on the West Branch Delaware this day. A three weight rod is more than enough stick, and a two is better.
My ace in the hole used to be Ed Shenk’s Double Trico pattern: two spinners tied on a size 18 hook. The spring creek spinner falls were usually heavy, and when trout were feeding studiously on the spinners they encountered masses of them bunched together. The double took them readily! Yesterday’s spinners on the wide waters of the West Branch were sparse, and the double got no interest from the three or four trout that fed upon them.
In truth, the only heavy cloud of spinners I ever saw in the Catskills was nearly twenty years ago on the East Branch, on waters now posted. At first sight I assumed the cloud to be fog, common on summer mornings on these tailwaters. They were tricos though, thousands of them, and the spinners fell heavily for nearly two hours while I waited for the game to begin. Not a single trout rose to the feast. Strange that the only places on these Catskill rivers where I have found fish eating tricos, there were invariably very few in the drift.
The optimist in me wants to tie some fresh patterns, dig out a spool of 7X tippet, and rig a new leader on my two weight rod. Perhaps I should, though I won’t expect to find any sizeable trout sipping those minute spinners. I have caught some good ones here on 22 olives and terrestrials, enough to know that big Catskill trout willingly eat small, though finding fish over ten or twelve inches eating tricos would come as a major surprise.
Still fly fishers are optimists, certain that each new fly will take the trout of a lifetime as we pluck it from the vise!
Summer fishing seems to leave me with a lot of time on my hands. My forays to the rivers are shorter at this season, whether seeking cooler water in early morning, or timing the sun angle on a forested reach of river. Fishing for two or three hours leaves a lot of the day to amuse myself otherwise, a more difficult task in these days of Covid isolation. Fiddling with tackle is one way to kill a little time, and sometimes it can be quite productive!
I had been thinking about the relative usefulness of a longer three weight rod. I fished my D. W. Menscer 6′ 8″ gem the other morning and really enjoyed it. That rod is so versatile, performing admirably at distance, as well as pinpointing casts in tight quarters. The only caveat to the joy and practicality of fishing a short rod on bigger waters is the necessity for more false casts, more strokes, to get the line in the air and extended for longer casts. This extra effort is minimal on small waters, but can become significant when there is a lot of water to be covered. Picture the difference in fishing the shady pockets on a quarter mile of a 20′ wide stream versus that same outing on a good sized river. With my carpal tunnel and arthritis in my casting hand, extra rod work comes at a price: wear and tear and pain.
Browsing used rod lists and corresponding with rodmakers gives me some enjoyment, but there is the practicality issue. A three weight bamboo rod is definitely a specialty rod. Do I need one bad enough to trade another rod I enjoy to acquire a new three?
At one point while pondering this thought, a bolt of lightning hit: what about the Garrison? I have a lovely 7’6″ two piece rod built as a close reproduction of the venerable Garrison 206 from the Coburn, PA bench of rodmaker Jim Downes. That rod is a full working four weight that I fish with a Cortland Sylk WF4F line, and it is extremely accurate. What if…
It only took me a moment to take the rod and an old CFO with a DT3F line out to the yard. That rod casts the three weight line like it was made for it. The Garrison taper responds to a more relaxed casting rhythm thus its slower and gentler on my compromised anatomy too. Voila, a new rod!
I have written before about the rewards to be gained by casting bamboo rods with several different fly lines. Cane seems more adaptable to different weights and tapers of fly lines, and of course every caster is different. Taking some down time to play around with lines and rods can reveal some amazing performance attributes you might never have discovered, even in a favorite rod.
I won’t stop daydreaming about tackle; its a long, hot summer. After two discoveries in my own rod rack though, I’ll be spending more hot afternoons in the yard with a box full of reels!