And one of the fish I saw swirl by the bank today would have given this girl a run for her money....
Also, I'm getting excited for the high water BIG wild Brown Trout action that comes with November and December. Again, this fishing is iffy, and I'm going to have to put a lot of hours in to pull of the kind of brilliance I did last year. That was a early winter to behold on my home water, with some of the best fish living in it making an appearance. Mainly Grandfather, the big 21 incher that I landed on Christmas Eve Day. The name of the game is not big streamers, as one would think, but heavily weighted stoneflies and worm patterns. Avoid San Juan Worms and go for the bigger pink latex patterns and my Lytle's Worm Fly.
Of course, this type of cold weather fishing is excruciatingly unforgiving. This year I need to do it without waders. This is tolerable, I stay out of the water most winters anyway. The ones when I didn't I of course fell in.
Either way I need to purchase a new pair of waders for fishing such chilly waters as the Farmington.
I've been wildly obsessing of the area in the White Mountains I fished this spring. I'd like to do that trip again this spring, but focus entirely on fishing. It should make it a little less strenuous then the mineral collecting/getting lost/ carrying tons of gear and lumps of crystal studded granite that was done in June. Google Maps has been keeping me busily attentive for months, examining every little blue line and deep highland pond. Curious, does anyone know if the ponds in the Whites hold natives?
What do you think, Dad?
Carp: I miss them. As much as I love the winter trout fishing serenity and can't wait to try a bit of ice fishing again, all the suggestions on youtube are carping videos. In The Riffle tying videos, the occasional Field and Stream "Hook Shots" featuring the species, and Carl and Alex Fishing (they have some good stuff, I recommend giving their channel a look see). I'll be dreaming of the warm morning when I will wade in and cast to a twenty pound tailing fish, to hear that real sing again.