SPRING CREEK
PA has been getting quite a lot of rain this summer. Many rivers have blown out severely for extended periods, and Spring Creek is one of them. Two weeks ago it wasn't simply high, it was flooded. By the time we got there it was still way higher than normal but had dropped and cleared and was very fishable. The trico hatch wasn't going to result in good fishing, unfortunately, and nymphing and streamer fishing were going to be the most productive games. You can probably already guess which of those I was going to be doing the most of.
After stopping in at TCO to get my license and a few flies we met Mike's friend Paolo who had already been fishing the river for a while. The bite hadn't been strong. I pretty quickly tied on a back woolly bugger, and though I got a take on it fairly quickly I didn't like how much water I covered without takes. There are a lot of fish in Spring Creek, they are just everywhere, so if you aren't getting takes it probably isn't because you aren't fishing over trout. Change what you are doing. I tied on a heavier, bigger complex twist bugger in olive, orange, and rust, and quickly got more chases and grabs. These fish moved quick and there was often little to be done about hooking most of them, they were just swiping at the fly. I just had to wait until one took more aggressively. And, eventually, one did. Unfortunately it wasn't the 16-17 inch bridge dweller.
I caught a couple more fish, tiny ones, on a stimulator, but that was it for the first evening in Pennsylvania. We quit before dark because there wasn't really a late hatch to worry about and we wanted to eat, get to our Airbnb, and be on the water fairly early the next morning.
Thursday morning dawned clear and cool. We finished breakfast right around sunrise and made our way towards Bellefonte. Though the water was high for this trip it wasn't like it had been in February, which was to my liking because we would get to fish water that was barely fishable that last trip. The section we fished both Thursday and Friday morning would have been next to impossible to wade in late February.
If fishing big streamers is your thing Spring Creek need not be high one your list of places to visit. For most of it's length you'd be best off leaving any fly over four inches in the car. Your best productivity for both larger fish and large numbers of fish will be on 2-3 inch sculpin and juvi brown trout imitations. That is what the carnivorous trout in Spring Creek are eating, not 7 inch fallfish or brookies. For this stretch of water, which harbors bigger browns than much of the river, I fished two patterns primarily, both articulated flies intended to imitate young brown trout. They worked, many trout committed to eating them and quite a few came to hand.
I fished the fly casting across stream and retrieving with short strips. I cast at shadow lines, seems, bank structure, overhanging brush, cut banks... everything had fish and no one way was best, really.
After a while activity seemed to die down significantly, so we left for Penns Creek. That will be the topic of the next post. While we were away, the flow continued to drop and the water continued to clear on Spring Creek. There was some hope that we'd get a good spinner fall on Friday morning. Unfortunately, it didn't materialize. The streamer bite had gotten worse in correspondence with the improving water clarity, and I got nowhere near as many takes. But I did get a few.
The last Spring Creek fish of the trip for me, though not even quite an average size fish or particularly colorful, was very satisfying. I caught it fishing a scud at in the fast water at the head of a pool. Fishing scuds and cressbugs is synonymous with nymphing PA limestoners. It isn't really something that we get to do here and CT, and it can be a little tricky. It was fun to catch just one doing that on this trip.
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Thanks for joining the adventure, and tight lines.
One of these days we will hit it just right. Can't wait to read about Penns.
ReplyDeleteIt'll be great when that does happen, but it is great to know that we can still catch fish in heavily pressured water in less than optimal conditions!
DeleteThat was a good fishing. Spring Creek is a real adventure. Wish I could have been there.
ReplyDeleteTie, fish, write, conserve and photo on...
Spring Creek is an exceptional trout stream, just loaded with wild browns, but the amount of pressure and some urban setting makes keeps it feeling pretty accesable. Much more so than Penns and some other area rivers that really are wild.
DeleteUgh, had a post, and it seems to have been "eaten" by the PC. I didnt know there was a FB page - is that for the blog or personal?
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised you dont have some decent scud water in CT... Then again, the swift tailwater is the best up here, and it's, well, unique... and it's the only place I fish scuds here... so, I take it back - I'd never thought of it as unique until now! ha!
I have both a personal and blog FB page.
DeleteWe have some scuds in CT rivers, a few of them, but nowhere is it the staple it is in places like Spring Creek, the Letort, Falling Spring Branch.
I do indeed enjoy what you do with this blog, RM. I check out this site frequently to read about your adventures, including this one to the spring creeks of PA. I don't really have a bucket list, but I do want to fish them before I can't wade around anymore. Well done catching trout in those beautiful waters. I believe you could catch fish anywhere you set a mind to fishing. Keep up the good work.
ReplyDeleteThank you!
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