Anyway, I've taken the easy route the last few times out for trout: nearby water, mostly stocked rainbows. It has been a good few days for steak and eggs. Steak being streamers, and eggs being...
eggs.
In the case of the primarily wild trout holding water around here, it is a little early for an egg. My evidence of that is that this...
...the only wild fish I've caught on an egg in the last seven days despite fishing eggs for hours in the right water. That, and I have yet to see browns and brookies on redds. Soon though, the first two weeks of November are prime time for redd watching.
So, if the wild and holdover browns and brookies aren't yet spawning, why would I choose to fish eggs right now, aside from the fact that stocked rainbows are dumb. Actually, that's why. Some of the state's stocked rainbows are so dumb that they try to spawn shortly after they are stocked in the fall. I very often see them attempting to spawn, though they don't seem to be very successful redd builders, and I can't count the umber of fall stocked bows I've caught in CT that have dumped eggs or milt while being handled. So, with some eggs ending up in the drift from these dumb stocker rainbows, egg patterns become an even better method to dupe said dumb stocker rainbows. It's almost too easy.
If, that is, you know how to high stick.
Nice catches, dumb or not. It's a great time of the year to be on streams, just before all the leaves clog up the flows.
ReplyDeleteTie, fish, write, conserve and photo on...
Thank you.
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