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Saturday, October 13, 2018

The Char of Fall

Autumn has many perks. Not being forced to sweat like a dog every day  spent outside is one. This summer was brutal. Hot and wet. It didn't rank anywhere near my best year for cloud photography, but we've had eight tornadoes in the state this year. That's tied with 1973 for the most in one year here. After a turbulent and wet spring full of severe weather, summer burst forth in late June with seemingly unending heat, but has since less than quietly dispersed. The last of the hot weather left its mark with two (likely final) tornadoes in New Canaan an Mansfield. Frustratingly, I got to see exactly none of them. Anyway, it was a rough summer. Mediocre fishing, mediocre storm photography for me, high water levels and temperatures, and just so... much... sweat. I'm glad that fall is here and I do not in the least bit mind that it is still very very wet. The stream flows are the best I've seen them since I started this blog! Seriously! I took advantage of that this week to get some time in with my favorite local salmonid. 



The streams I was fishing can be really tricky this time of year in large part because the are home for copious amounts of small dace and shiners. These little fish drown dry flies quickly and constantly nip subsurface presentations. It can be hard to get through them to get at the resident brook trout and occasional brown trout. This time it took me a little while to find the pattern. An Ausable Bomber did the job. The rises were very subtle, the fly just disappeared every time a char took. I caught numerous colorful brookies, all starting to get into spawning dress but not quite at their peak yet. Just like the foliage.





On the second stream the bomber just wasn't doing it, the dace were drowning it too quickly. I opted to imitate those dace. The initial tactic is one oft used in Maine in the fall: the streamer is cast upstream and retrieved straight down at a blistering pace.


This failed to get any attention at all, but instead of changing flies I changed presentation. A single shot was placed immediately ahead of the little bucktail streamer, and instead of retrieving the fly I performed a delicate dance deeper in the water column. The fish demonstrated their approval with strong grabs.


 I came to an almost unavoidable realization on both of these streams, neither of which I had fished since spring. They had undergone some serious rearrangement from the constant high water. There were pools that I'd fished for more than seven years that were simply gone completely, replaced by shallow riffles. Whole new runs had formed. Massive boulders had moved many yards. These were like whole new streams that I have to re-learn. I welcome that challenge, and it is one of the things that allows this small stream fishing to remain interesting.

12 comments:

  1. Rowan I love that first stream. Some of my best days have been on it, Dec 26th one year gave me a special fish.
    That dace imitation was a good choice.

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    1. That's the first place we ever fished together too! It does tend to really show off come winter. That's when it's most impressive residents come out to play.

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  2. Yes, it was a hot and wet year. Our lakes, streams and rivers are still very high.
    I love how you adapt to the current situation with flies and technique to bring them to hand. I need to do that more often. Thanks for reminding me of that.
    Tie, fish, write, conserve and photo on...

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    1. If it's not working, change something. Always.

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  3. That little bucktail is reminiscent of Art Flick's pattern "black nose dace" except for the tail. Why the bling? A detractor in my view.

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    1. Shiners aren't called shiners because they don't shine.

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  4. As I mentioned to you I was lucky enough to observe one of those tornadoes from a safe location.
    It was amazing to see the circulation forming.
    You were the first person I thought of when it passed over. :-)
    Love that dace pattern.
    Gonna use that on my nearby brookie lake next year.
    John

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  5. I like your streamer - cool fly! Even more, I like the fish - gorgeous brookies!

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