'Return of the Jedis suggests mastery of our craft and after months chasin different species we each found delicate fly fishing skills are perishable...so Padwan learners we are and were ...thanks for asking.
Fritz, Henry and I do dedicate ourselves to getting out more often to keep skills fresh. This was our third adventure to Little Juniata and Spruce Creek about a dozen miles WNW from Huntingdon, PA.
This trip was planned for last year but got virus'd. Our trucks met at the Penn State public access lot on Spruce Creek and we geared-up as dark clouds bore down and pea-sized rain pelted us ...no worries, waders and gore-tex make fast moving storms no more than an inconvenience and Spruce was running low and looked like it could use a drink.
For anyone who cares about such things Spruce Creek is a semi-famous brown trout stream that's questioned presidents' and angler luminaries' skills in its storied past. The majority of Spruce is off limits to the public, but fortunately there's a beautiful stretch kept up by Penn State upstream of its confluence with the Little Juniata in the hamlet of (you guessed it) Spruce Creek. Fritz and Hen drifted nymphs in the rain, but I can report I fooled a nice 9" brown with dry on a special fly rod that came to me by way of Bill Pfeiffer.
She was treat of a catch on his rod and a great memory. With no trout rising and slow action in the rain we left at 1300 and hit
Spruce Creek Outfitters to support our local fly shop. We each left with a pocket full of flies and a tantalizing report, that Green Drakes had appeared recently in the evening! Armed with excitement and a few green drake spinners in our vests, we visited familiar waters at the quarry pool.
The river was low but quickly added 80% cfs (recall that rain) which brought it up 4 inches and with it a bit of bank debris and bugs, bugs and more bugs! The frothy surface layer was silly with insect activity in the current seems.
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these appeared late afternoon |
Soon Yellow Sulphur mayflies were rising through the water/emerging and browns livened up ascending through the water like breaching submarines. Excited by the inevitability of the spinner fall we waited as the sun dipped over a ridge and the bridge swallows swooped and darted feasting on the fat bellied sulphurs. Henry and Fritz put away their ESN rigs and with standard 5wts we brought a few to hand, but unfortunately the excitement of the hatch did not bring all the fish to hand we had expected. Perhaps we needed to stay later?
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our imitation |
As we were about to leave the river we took one last look at the river and saw a mature brown rising 5 feet from the step-in 2 feet off the bank. Feeling thwarted thus far we threw in a size 16 sulphur dry which was inhaled by the brown to end the day!
We found our way back to Huntingdon's lone modern hotel, A Fairlfield Inn and Suites, bedded down and the next morning, loaded with coffee and Gatorade, made our way to a riffle-pool-riffle section downstream of the Spruce Creek confluence, (join us next year to find out where :-) where we had an amazing day.
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sulphur nymph was a producer
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We found we could pick up sporadic browns nymphing seams, but had better fortune targeting individual rising trout in deep cuts under overhanging tree boughs.
Instream positioning was key to successful, often sidearm, casts looking to get 3-6 feet of dragless drift to the rising trout. If you could solve the stream-positioning/casting/ drift riddle the browns played their part and we each all caught our share throughout the afternoon.
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Hen w a fat brown ...that log structure provided a natural buffet line for feeding browns |
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Browns-on ...Fritz and Hen double-up |
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Fritz has enough of the world to himself |
Comradery was great throughout, but the catching improved on a steep curve from arrival at Spruce Day until we were forced to quit squinting in the ghostly light of the harvest moon.
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Fishing beneath the harvest moon |
The best hours of the day were clearly 1900-2115 and the river explored with activity from 2040-2105 as yellow-sulphur and green drake spinners fell to the water fueling a burst of activity. We surely annoyed a nearby campground with exclamations of, "Fish on" or Hens', 'Fritz get down here its crazy/it's amazing mate!" Cause when you fish with brothers like these you always want to put your mate on the best bite 🐟🎣💪
This'll be an annual trip so let me know if you want in next May.
Fish on friends.
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Hen w a colorfully spotted Brown |
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Fritz: Large brown on is watched by Hen |
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