Esox lucius |
Wading semi-recklessly up the creek bed, I saw two more pike, both of which I spooked, and also one bowfin which I literally stepped on. Obviously he made himself scarce after that. I turned back around eventually and found three more pike along the same edge of the creek channel just after a hard turn. The were on the inside of the bend, not the outside, which didn't surprise me. More fish sit on the inside of a bend than the average trout angler would lead you to believe, even a bend that is merely a subsurface structure with more than a foot of water over what would otherwise be its banks. None of these three pike were having any of my nonsense, which surprised me as I had changed to a small fly to target bowfin and can usually expect a reaction strike from any Esox I dangle a fly in front of long enough. A fourth fish, further down the channel and in the middle, was an easy sell. I got him to hand and had him grasped behind the gill plates. I noticed how lightly he was hooked and decided not to try to hold him tight when it fell out. I wasn't in the mood to try to hold a slippery, toothy, angry pike, and try to pull my camera out of my pack in waste deep water... I'm never in the mood to do that.
Another 30 yards down the flat I spotted what looked like a decent sized bowfin cruising. I made a number of presentations to this fish but it just would not eat. Eventually a second much smaller bowfin joined it, and it ate first try. I railed that fish with everything the 5wt could muster and managed a decent hook set. I was then in for a bit of a shock, as I got that fish near and it started jumping I realized that it wasn't exactly a small bowfin. It wasn't large either, but next to the other one it had looked to me like it would be the smallest bowfin I'd caught. Well, the other one must have been an absolute monster. And indeed I'd come to learn that there are some proper monster bowfin here the next day.
Amia calva |
From there I didn't really see much else, so I turned back up. Where the three pike had been previously on the inside of the bend there was one more, which obliged in eating my sparkle bugger... and was the same fish I'd caught earlier. The first one. He was unmistakable, had the same hook mark in the same spot on his maxillary. As soon as I knew it was the same fish, I just tried to shake him off. Pike aren't warmwater fish, really. They can handle more than trout can. But with water temperatures in the 70's I didn't want to over-stress these fish. I poked the fly out with my rod tip (barbless hooks are great for an awful lot of reasons).
I decided to let the fish be in this spot and headed over to the other side of the watershed, to a more rocky river, and looked for bowfin and bass there. I wasn't finding much but rock bass initially. Then I saw one of the few slowly dying sea lampreys that were around come up to the surface and start coming downstream towards me. Like Pacific salmon, sea lampreys slowly decay alive after they spawn, which provides a tremendous amount nutrients that the rivers need. It isn't uncommon to see dying lamprey doing strange things as they loose their senses and get disoriented as their brains begin to deteriorate. But this one didn't look in that bad a shape and was being really twitchy. Sure enough, there was a healthy sized bowfin right on it's tail. I waited for it to lose interest in the lamprey and dropped my fly in front of it. The fish took interest immediately, just glaring at the fly. I gave it a hard short strip to make it jump onto the next rock, and the bowfin darted after it, dorsal undulating intensely. I gave the fly another short jump and it nosed right up to it. One more twitch and the fish inhaled it violently, kicking up a cloud of silt. I gave it a few hard hooksets and then proceeded to put as much heat on it as I could with the 5wt as it thrashed violently at the surface. Oh yeah, I won again. Two bowfin and two pike on the 5 in one afternoon. Awesome.
I decided to let the fish be in this spot and headed over to the other side of the watershed, to a more rocky river, and looked for bowfin and bass there. I wasn't finding much but rock bass initially. Then I saw one of the few slowly dying sea lampreys that were around come up to the surface and start coming downstream towards me. Like Pacific salmon, sea lampreys slowly decay alive after they spawn, which provides a tremendous amount nutrients that the rivers need. It isn't uncommon to see dying lamprey doing strange things as they loose their senses and get disoriented as their brains begin to deteriorate. But this one didn't look in that bad a shape and was being really twitchy. Sure enough, there was a healthy sized bowfin right on it's tail. I waited for it to lose interest in the lamprey and dropped my fly in front of it. The fish took interest immediately, just glaring at the fly. I gave it a hard short strip to make it jump onto the next rock, and the bowfin darted after it, dorsal undulating intensely. I gave the fly another short jump and it nosed right up to it. One more twitch and the fish inhaled it violently, kicking up a cloud of silt. I gave it a few hard hooksets and then proceeded to put as much heat on it as I could with the 5wt as it thrashed violently at the surface. Oh yeah, I won again. Two bowfin and two pike on the 5 in one afternoon. Awesome.
And now I'm realizing that there is far too much content from the last three days to cram into one post. And I'm planning on doing much of the same type of fishing over the next few days, though some in different locales. So I'll give each day its due. That'll be good, I can have a bit of a backlog of written posts to let out over the next couple weeks. That's important because I'll be in Maine for a while seeking strange saltwater fish and very rare salmonids. I won't have the time to sit down and write up posts, much less the internet to upload photos. I'll post when I'm in cell service. If you suddenly don't hear from me for a spell towards the end of that trip, assume that Noah and I broke down somewhere 35 miles down a logging road and are just subsistence living in the north woods.
If you enjoy what I'm doing here, please share and comment. It is increasingly difficult to maintain this blog under dwindling readership. What best keeps me going so is knowing that I am engaging people and getting them interested in different aspects of fly fishing, the natural world, and art. Follow, like on Facebook, share wherever, comment wherever. Also, consider supporting me on Patreon (link at the top of the bar to the right of your screen, on web version). Every little bit is appreciated! Thank you to my Patrons; Erin, David, john, and Christopher, for supporting this blog.
That was great Rowan. Sometimes we have to endure pain to get to the fish and as you always prove, it's worth it. I love Pike as did my grandfather. If you do get stuck down a hidden Maine road, I hope it's near a good fishing spot.
ReplyDeleteTie, fish, write, conserve and photo on...
One is never more than a couple miles from good fishing in Maine.
DeleteAWESOME! Love seeing other species outside of trout on the fly rod. Wire leader suggestion heading your way through social media.
ReplyDeleteThank you.
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