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Monday, March 25, 2019

Oddities After Dark: Redfin Pickerel at Night

  I made it a priority this year to start night fishing trout rivers regularly very early. I had initially committed myself to starting as soon as nights we consistently above freezing. But with all the amphibian action already, I knew there was a chance I'd get into fish even before that. I've caught trout in March hacking up partly digested salamanders in frogs. I had no reason to wait until it got warmer.

Saturday night, a little cold, the river was a little high and off-color for my tastes, but I was going to night fish. The water was 40 degrees and I thought I might be able to move some big browns.



Before dark I laid into some stocker rainbows. It was good to knock the skunk off before dark. Though I was hopeful, I wasn't certain I'd get on fish. So, though they weren't what I wanted, I wasn't going to be annoyed about them.

After dark, I started with a large, black, unweighted Heifer Groomer. I worked the flats, back eddies, and around wood structure. That failing, I  switched to a mouse. It was quite cold. I was getting ice in the guides. While I walked between spots my fly froze solid. I wasn't hearing anything going on. Even in December I've heard night action here, so I know temperature wasn't the issue. I just don't think the flow was right. I wasn't getting the kind of drifts I wanted. I know when I'm being forced to fish to fast, and I was absolutely not fishing slowly enough on this night. 




I didn't move squat. I fished until 11:00. In between pools I spent a lot of time seeing what I could see in thew shallows. Don't just use your light to see where you're going and choose and tie new flies. You could easily miss noticing the key to the night if you don't occasionally turn your light on. Obviously, don't do it in the spot you intend to fish, but between spots, point your light into the shallows and see what's swimming around. 




What Saturday night lacked in warmth, Sunday night wasn't going to. So I was going out again. But it was very different water and a very different game. Smaller mice, big nymphs, and big wetflies were going to be the name of the game. 




I fished a couple deep pools initially, but most of this stream is pocked water and I had a feeling big trout would slide in and out of the more slow pockets on the sides of the stream to hunt. I worked these pockets carefully with the mouse, slapping it down as though it were jumping from one rock the swimming across to the next. It was challenging work in the dark. And man was it ever dark last night. Though we had a near full moon it was completely cloudy. Add to that steep canyon walls and hemlocks and I was working about as close to blind as was possible for this game. An hour in something slashed at the mouse. I set the hook, and at first though I had missed the fish. I turned on my light though and got was shocked to see a fat, gravid, 10 inch redfin pickerel just barely hooked on my mouse. While I struggled to get out my camera it managed to silently slip away. I was left annoyed that I had managed to miss what was likely a once in a lifetime occurrence. 

I continued downstream, failed to find any more willing fish, and spent a little time catching macroinvertebrates. 



Going back upstream, I nymphed. For an hour and a half, nothing. Then, something. A very small trout, I thought. But it wasn't. It was another gravid American pickerel. Unbelievable. I've never even seen one in this stream, which I've been fishing for years. Pickerel are also pretty much exclusively diurnal feeders. Targeting them at night is essentially pointless. I've caught one chain pickerel at night. And now, on the same night, two redfin pickerel. I doubt I could do so intentionally, honestly. 
I have been less excited had I caught two 18 inch brown trout. 

 E. americanus americanus



Having caught anything at all, and especially something pretty atypical, I am even more inclined to night fish trout streams in the coming weeks. I'll be night fishing a bunch soon anyway, with the river herring knocking at our door. Things are about to blow wide open, and it can't happen soon enough. I'm getting pretty trout-sick. I crave variety. 

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13 comments:

  1. Nice. If I fished a stream at night my rod and line would be in the brush and I would be swimming for shore. Pickerel in your Trout stream?
    Tie, fish, write, conserve and photo on...

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    1. It was the pickerels' stream first, really.

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  2. Another great post. Glad you enjoy the night fishing as well!

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  3. I've caught redfin in the muddy right next to a male brook trout that turned out to be wild. And I've caught chain pickerel in the Hammonasset, Chatfield and Latimer.
    Interestingly, transplanted invasive chains have been blamed for recent extirpation of brook trout from the Lower Tusket R. in Nova Scotia.

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    1. Brook trout and pickerel have had thousands of years to sort out their differences and find their niches. Where they overlap, there's generally fewer of both than there would be were there only char or only esox. In the Lower Tusket, it was a trial by fire and the pickerel won.

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  4. Great post! I have read your blog over the last couple years and this is the first time I have commented. I really appreciate the multi-species fishing stories and especially appreciate your attention to everything else that you encounter on your journey (the reptile and amphibian life especially). Being from Colorado, we have great trout fishing and some underrated warm-water opportunities, but I really enjoy when your get out in the saltwater for species I do not get to see as much. Appreciate the great storytelling and photography.

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  5. That's really cool on the pickerel. That last pic makes it look like it's been eating quite well... or, is this spawning for them - similar to Pike and Musky? I never really investigated that...

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    1. Both of the fish I caught were gravid females. All Esox species, to my knowledge, spawn in early spring.

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  6. Another interesting thing worth noting is the fly you caught the stocked rainbow with. I like it. The colors are very close to the ridiculous fly I made last year that worked so well with fresh stock. Your is however much better. I like the wings. I will copy you and see what happens next week.

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    1. That's not really my fly, and that photo doesn't show hardly any detail of it. It's Domenick Swentosky's Full Pint with yellow ice dubbing instead of the dubbing he uses. His original pattern doesn't include flash, I however like flash in some of mine for a variety of reasons. Though it catches stocker fish plenty well, it isn't ideal, really. The Half Pint would be better. The full pint is a good fly for large wild trout in the winter, spring, and late fall in water where juvenile suckers and tessellated darters are frequent forage because of the mottled wood duck and how much action this feathers have even on a dead drift. It's an articulated fly, not a big one, only about 3 inches.

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