Showing posts with label Rapidan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rapidan. Show all posts

Monday, November 13, 2017

Big Hunting Creek

 The Catoctin Mountains opened in front of me and I couldn't suppress a deep smile as I jeeped north my stomach grumbling me onward to breakfast with Henry at the Kountry Kitchen in Thurmont.


We've caught trout on several presidential waters; the Rapidan and Spruce Creek and wanted to add Big Hunting Creek to our list of POTUS escapes.    It'd been a balmy 47 when I left Virginia and it was 41 when I pulled into Thurmont, a taste of the finger numbing cold to come.  I wasn't finished my first cup of coffee when Henry jostled in for a great breakfast and review of our plans.   Big Hunting Creek is the major watershed in this section of the Catoctin Mtns and draws water from both sides of Hwy 77 as it flows both into and out of Hunting Creek Lake. Above the Lake is Cunningham Falls where our adventure began.
 


After working around some construction we found hwy side access to the section above Cunningham Falls and the fall beauty took our breath away...ok sliding down the water worn rocks of the falls
took our breath away too. 



Armed with a 7' TFO BVK 3wt Henry got the first action of the day with a surface-roll to his top dropper in the plunge pool at the bottom of the cascade of falls but try as we might we couldn't get the trout to hook-up.  Trusting the metal crews in my boots (too much) I scampered up the smooth rocks and found a bathtub sized plunge pool 3/4 of the way to the top and dipped my dual dropper rig into a plate sized back eddy....WHAM, much to my surprise a 9-inch fall speckled brown nailed my offering.   I net netted him and hollered to Henry to check out my net when he scaled the cliff.  With a big smile on my face I sat among the Polar Cave-like boulders and didn't need to leave.







The Big Hunting Creek above Cunningham Falls quickly reaches the saddle in Catoctin ridge and loses the steep gradient which channelizes and gives it its character, we fished it for another 200m and walked back to our vehicles looking forward to checking out another portion before lunch.  We surveyed the feeder trip in the lower left hand corner of the map above and decided our better option was to fish the special regs tailwater section along Hwy 77. 




We noticed the nice flow and pocket water on our drive in and were soon questioning riffles and pools with dropper combos.   We both got a few stikes but Henry was the the only one able to land his quarry. 



With temperature dropping the the wind starting to whip up the river cut we decided to try our luck 15 Miles West at Beaver Creek.  After gas station sandwiches we found our way to Beaver Creek Fly Shop and must have met the owner on a bad day as he didn't seem appreciative of our support your local fly shop ethos and seemed put upon to offer advice...weird.    After I told him I wasn't interested in getting lectured about fall redds he broke out a map and gave us some advice (not sure if it was good or a false flag).

Beaver Creek is a classic spring-fed limestone creek.   I don't have alot of experience on them and in my view they are advanced degree fly fishing.   We tried a bit of everything (scuds, midges, nymphs, streamers) as we hunted likely flows, pools, undercuts, etc. w/o any hookups.    As the our line guides were freezing and the sun was dropping behind the trees to the West we finally found a lovely pool with good sized trout feeding subsurface and occasionally breaking the water.   Battling numb fingers, iced guides and the fading light we couldn't get these trout to come tight and left only when we weren't sure we could find out way back on the trail.


  

Sunday, February 23, 2014

A great hike on Staunton Run

James and I were looking forward to chasing some trout, so after my scout of the Conway found it inaccessible we set our sights on Staunton Run high up in SNP.  We started from NOVA and soon found ourselves at the Graves Mill confluence of Kinsey Run and the Rapidan.
James at Conway River 662/667 Campsite
I still wanted to show James the Conway so we decided to see if the access road was still inaccessible.  Five minutes and one ridge line later we found that what had been snowed in recently was now passable with Clifford in 4-wheel drive.  We took it slowly and after another ridge-line the gurgling Conway emerged on our left.  We passed the Devils Ditch access and made our way up to the campsite at the top of the 662/667 intersection.  We walked down to the river to give James a feel for it.

Clifford has never let me down yet atop the Conway Campsite access trail
Though the day was gorgeous the Conway at this point still drains a large watershed.It was running clear, but fully loaded and fast. It was just fish-able if needed, but not optimal and with that in mind we decided to stay on our original plan and headed back towards Graves Mill and Staunton Run.
          Clifford rolled us slowly back to the Rapidan/Stanton SNP gate above Graves Mill and I was very surprised to see the cul-de-sac filled vehicles.  I surveyed their backseats and to my joy found that they were hikers not fisherman and throughout the day we met
Geared up and ready
pleasant hiker after pleasant hiker, all curious to see us fishing. As we geared-up we had one group of 8 from Fredericksburg snap this pic of us as we prepared to head up the trail.
We walked up the trail with the tempting middle-rapidan on our right for 10-minutes until we hit the spur trail to our left which follows the southerly bank of Staunton Run just south of Fork Mountain into McDaniel Hollow. We began just below the gauge pool, James with a 3wt caddis/ followed by hares-ear nymph and me w a 2wt, parachute adams followed by a small dark green zebra midge.
Middle Rapidan on the walk to Staunton Run

James takes in The Gauge Pool, the first large pool on Staunton Run
 I was sure we'd run into the same action I'd found here recently and was very surprised that we couldn't raise a strike all day. The weather had been consistently nice, the water was 42 degrees (I know...still pretty cold), the stream was nicely loaded and very fish-able.  I wonder if one of those "hikers" might actually have been a fisherman and if we might have been unknowingly fishing behind him for the 3.5 hours we spent on the river.  In any event we had a great time fishing this little run. It definitely holds enough water to fish it in drier times and I was pleased to see a hiking path on the left side of the run which looks like it continued up quite far. 
James had a great presentation in the backside eddy ...but no fish!



The high gradient provides nice plunge pools consistently
The path certainly made the return trip easier but didn't seem to bring in much pressure as I suspect that most fisherman would rather hit the more popular and accessible Rapidan or Conway.  I'll be back on another day.