"The Crazy Shrimp" |
The Crazy Shrimp is a brooky trout fly I created the other night using pink floss, copper wire, flashabou, and a blend of possum and UV ice dub in shrimp pink and yellow. It looks like a freshwater shrimp, cress bug, sow bug, scud, or any number of things. It has huge appeal for brook trout when fished like a wet fly or stripped downstream like a streamer, and of course it would take fish dead drifted as well. Yesterday it took some very nice brookies, and today I wanted to see how it would work on a classic freestone.
I chose a stream I haven't fished in a couple of months. It has some big wild brookies in its many runs and pools. It is certainly the prettiest stretch of water in the area, particularly in the spring with all the fresh green in the deep ravine and moss on the waterfall rocks, but also with the winter's first snows.
In the pool above a native brooky took the Crazy Shrimp. It was on and off in a second.
While I was sitting in the spot from which I took the picture bellow something very interesting happened. I caught one brooky out of the tail of this pool then began casting towards the head, where the biggest fish usually sits. I got a take, but the brooky came off right as I got him to me. To my surprise, he stayed a few feet bellow where he came free and began feeding again! I cast to him a few more times and he bit the fly, but only very gently. Then I watched his buddy swim down to join him. I put the fly in front of them and the newer one nailed it. If you don't move abruptly, you can catch brook trout three feet away from you!
There was one pool that seemed to be the sweat spot. I hooked five different fish there and landed four of them. This struck me as odd, and naturally so.... I have never caught fish out of that pool before regardless of how good it looked! Perhaps the new tree that fell in it provided enough cover for the char to move in. The best of the day was one of the fish out of this pool, a healthy male who apparently shares my lack of fashion sense... he looks like he forgot to put on his spawning dress!
The streams are treating me well despite how dry this summer was.
The streams are treating me well despite how dry this summer was.
Rowan, thanks for sharing your most recent outing. Beautiful Brook Trout and I am always interested in seeing new patterns that folks are tying at the bench. That looks like a sweet pattern.
ReplyDeleteThank you,
DeleteI think it'll catch me some nice fish!
I am always amazed at how many brookies you catch in those small streams. They are so colorful. That shrimp tie is great!
ReplyDeleteTie, fish, write and photo on...
Thanks,
DeleteIt's easy if you now what you're doing. A ten fish day is average if not low!
Don't worry about a perceived lack of fashion sense. Whoever painted that house on the hill such a depressing shade of blackish brown is the one with a problem ! I'm always amazed at these tiny streams that hold a viable fish population. Thanks for the look-see.
ReplyDelete- G.
I like that house.
DeleteAre you going to try a scallop pattern next?!
ReplyDeleteNah that would be crazy! How about a blue crab pattern?
DeleteVery interesting, nice shrimp lure. Fish on!
ReplyDeleteThanks you.
DeleteYou wouldn't think a shrimp or scud would work in a small mountain stream....