It's this shoulder season that drives me nuts, as it's mostly a string of really mediocre days, often in uncomfortable weather as I'm not yet used to the cold after a summer and early fall of wet wading and kayaking in just shorts and a t-shirt, with the odd stupidly good day mixed in every once in a while. The days are short, the weather is inconsistent, and the fish are in transition. I'd like November a lot more if I hunted, frankly. Though I'm fishing a lot and rarely skunking, it's a tough month to cobble together a report that I think is actually worth reading. But I've found something recently that should have been obvious.
If you aren't totally over fishing for stocked trout, and honestly I'm pretty close to being sick of doing it during the day, hatchery rainbows, whether stocked this fall or holdovers from last year, might well be the most consistently obliging fish in CT in November. I've been catching copious amounts of them fully accidentally lately while targeting other fish.
This is how it has been: Fallfish? Nope, have an ugly rainbow. Big wild brown trout? Here's some rainbows. Smallmouth? How about a bunch of rainbows instead?
So... no, I'm probably not going to go target these crazy little buggers this month even though they seem pretty exceptionally active and easy. At least not during the day. And it doesn't seem to matter as they keep finding me anyway. Don't take this the wrong way, I'm not a fan of stocked rainbow trout. Catching a broodstock or big holdover at night or on a dry is cool but I'd sincerely rather catch a 12 inch fallfish than a 16 inch stocker rainbow. Don't let my distaste for them take anything away from you though, if you enjoy catching stocked rainbows, enjoy! They're fun and they're great practice, and some aren't all that ugly. Go out and catch some this month because everybody is hunting and most of the TMA's aren't getting fished that hard. Streamers from 1" to 3" in olive, white, yellow, or orange in various permutations will work, eggs will work, beadhead softhackles fished deep and slow with the strip-tease method will work. Enjoy.
Until next time.
Fish for the love of fish.
Fish for the love of places fish live.
Fish for you.
Thank you to my Patrons; Erin, David, john, Elizabeth, Chris, Brandon, and Christopher, for supporting this blog on Patreon.
Does a 24" Harold on the Housey count, one cast to the opposite side three incredible leaps and the ability to swim up the rapid at will ?
ReplyDeleteCount for what? Being awesome and a heck of a lot of fun? I'll take a fish that does that any time, any place, hatchery or wild.
DeleteAgreed! November is brutal haha
ReplyDeleteThe lakes can't freeze fast enough!
DeleteYEP, I'll take a Rainbow lunker, especially in streams that only hod small Bass and chubs.
ReplyDeleteTie, fish, write, conserve and photo on...
Well... to quote this very same post, "Catching a broodstock or big holdover at night or on a dry is cool but I'd sincerely rather catch a 12 inch fallfish than a 16 inch stocker rainbow."
DeleteOne day last year on a famous PA limestoner I caught a 20 inch wild or multi-year holdover rainbow. But the fish I was most excited about that day was actually a fallfish substantially smaller than that.
I am conflicted in November, as you know Rowan. The woods and mountains call to me, but more and more I have learned the therapy of short trip to a local stream for my “ outdoor fix” 😉
ReplyDeleteDecisions, decisions!
DeleteA good problem to have.