I was sitting on my tailgate peeling off wet waders when a local stopped with his window rolled down and asked "how'd you do?"
"Just got here" I replied.
Seeing that I was clearly removing waders that had very recently been fished in, he gave me a sideways look before moving on. He probably thought I was being an asshole, but I wasn't lying. I'd left my waders on while driving between streams and really had no need for them here. More and more these days I enjoy fishing a small brook trout streams in just my boots and jeans. I don't feel that tromping through the water is in the best interest of the fish, especially between late October and mid March when the next generation of char are still growing in the gravel. But I've also come to relish the challenge of getting into position without getting my feet wet. Wading up the middle of these tiny streams is a short-cut that keeps me from learning important skills, be it casting, stalking techniques, or just the skill of sitting and watching, either unnoticed by my query or just still for long enough that they'd forgotten I was there.
Brook trout get to be their most spectacular in autumn, and that revolves around their spawn. The males are particularly stunning, and to me it has nothing to do with elegance. Late winter, spring, and summer brook trout are elegant. In the fall these char ugly up, especially the males. They turn into little demons with dark bellies and mouths, red fins and lower flanks, big teeth, and bad attitude. I personally find it spectacular when fish ugly-up, regardless of the reason. Most fish ugly-up to spawn, especially the males, and to me that's often when they look really really cool. I was sneaking around this stream where the fish had probably just quit spawning a week or two prior hoping to find some gnarly looking males. It isn't that hard to find those guys, they're trying to bulk back up for winter.
Until next time,
They are really nice this time of year. That stream looks very inviting.
ReplyDeleteI look forward to learning something new every day, and when that knowledge comes from unexpected places, it's even more of a pleasure. Your discussion of trout color/pattern changes and their mouth/tooth size is intriguing proof that Nature has multiple surprising facets, if only we pause to look or listen. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteI am going to take your lead and fish a local small stream without donning waders. Great post.
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