Sunday, August 24, 2014

Pohick and North Fork Weekend

The Brown water should have been my first clue!
My brother-in-law Henry was visiting with his family and we were determined to fish both Thursday and Friday.  I planned on fishing for bucketmouths on the Pohick Thursday and smallies on Friday.  We staged the jeep at Pohick Regional Park and as we slid the canoe in the upper Pohick it became apparent to me that I had miscalculated and the rain we received Wednesday afternoon had added 6 inches to the flow and clouded up the normally crystal flow.  If the wind had been blowing we might have given up right there and gone for a sail but
with the air still we slid the canoe into the river with the hope that the water would clear downstream.  This didn't seem like a problem as I was planning to begin fishing at about the half way point, but it did turn into an issue as we still had to walk the canoe down much of the river and, as those of you know who have fished the Upper Pohick, those stumps, deadfall and drop-offs are a menace when you cant see them! I won't count our misadventures and twisted limbs, but suffice to say I will NEVER walk down this river again when the water is soupy-tan
I think this is a wild vine-hibiscus
and high.  The fish were also turned off and Henry ended up catching a sunfish and nice catfish in the snake-pool about 60% of the way down.  We did find this gorgeous flower alone in a field of green on the bluff leading to the campsite.  We floated from end of the snake pool to out to Pohick Bay and the water did clear up enough to let Henry stand in the bow and try to try to sight fish but the fish did not cooperate and we were soon in the hydrilla chocked bay heading back to the van.  I have never seen the bay as chocked as it was Thursday and we had a rough time pulling our way through the high weed.  I may hit the Pohick again this summer but I'll make sure that its clear and I have a plan to get out once I hit the bay.

Fortunately Friday was another story...once bitten thrice shy, I began the day checking the river gauges on the Shenandoah, they were a tick high, but stable and in the low range so we headed west to Edinburg in a light rain.  My plan was to fish the North Fork off Palymyra Chirch Road but we decided to stop in Murray's Fly shop and I'm glad we did.  Note: Always take local knowledge and if your in this neighborhood Murray is always happy to give it away free of charge.  Murray suggested that we fish downstream from our planned put-in at the Hollings
standard shenandoah smallmpouth
worth Bridge in Woodstock, he said that if we did, the river wold be a few degrees cooler with the input of both Narrow Passage Creek and Little Stoneyman and this would make a difference.   He also suggested that I swing dumbbell streamers down and across instead of going with my standard hopper-dropper combination.  He said I needed to get deeper than the popper-dropper would allow.  He was right.   We put in as he suggested off East Reservoir road in Woodstock walked down a 100 yards and began to catch fish.
don't discount the river chubs!
Henry was armed with a light spinning rod and beetle-spin and I worked a 6wt and a selection of the Murray recommended flies I bought to thank him for his advice (support your local fly-shop). We fished down about .5 miles (not far) hitting pools, rapids, shady banks and all the likely spot.  Any place with a cobble or rock bottom more than 3 feet deep held smallies as did the deep seams on the sides of outflows from riffles and rapids. We didn't count fish but we caught them steadily and the the majority of them were smallies with only the occasional sunfish and chub. 
long casts needed or you'll be getting wet to reach the bank
We waited expectantly for a large bronzeback to bend our poles but it never happened, but the day was filled with those great moments when your best served to slow down and enjoy the river, the smallmouth and the company.  We had a great time and I'll be back to this put in again.   









Furthest point we reached downstream...it looked great below here
right side of riffle's outflow produced nicely for Henry


Henry on the wiggly suspension bridge upstream of the bridge

Sunday, August 17, 2014

North Fork of the Shenandoah Morning Adventure

Fritz and Jacob heading up from the Van to the put in ...Jacob's getting tall.
Thank goodness fishing is about more than catching, because there wasn't a lot of that Saturday morning on the North Fork of the Shenandoah, but it didn't matter in the least. The weather was crisp and cool in the Shenandoah Valley. The river was spectacular running clear at low pool and compared to the air warm, releasing a white blanket of mist which filled the tree-lined chunnel of the North Fork.  I was chilly when we rigged up so I stepped into my chest waders while Fritz and Jacob elected to wet wade.

a casting lesson...Jacob doesn't need much instruction!
The North Fork off Palmyra Church Road is clear and deceptively deep, beckoning another step as you attempt to cast to the far bank.  All three of us found that one more step....just another 6 inches....dropped off a foot soaking us and protecting the far bank from all but the best crafted casts.   I fished with a stiff 6wt to try to hit that far bank and Jacob and Fritz alternated between a medium spinning rod and Fritz' first fly rod a 9' 5wt which, with its medium flex, lent itself to a graceful casts.  Jacob has a really developed a nice stroke. 

Thankfully we ran into a school of these aggressive little fellas
I really enjoyed listening to the good natured banter as we chased sunfish and ungracefully stepped into deep holes searching for smallmouth.    Jacob and I finally found a bend which produced 7 small smallies in 10 cast and that was the bronzeback action for the day.  Interestingly, we tried all manner of presentations and the only fly to incite a strike was a brown bead-head bugger like the one on this picture.   We fished down to the low water bridge, around the island, along the cow field on the eastern bank and walked back up the muddy jeep trail to end a great morning.  On the way home we drove up Rt 11 to Strasburg soaking in the beauty of the valley and thinking about our trip to the Salmon river next Month....Bill get ready for us.


Friday, August 1, 2014

Long Rodding on the Shenandoah

Earlier in the week James asked me to go fishing on Thursday and I was only too happy to work an early day at the Pentagon and head out to some of my favorite waters.  When presented a ripe peach, always take a bite, never turn it away as you never know when you'll get another.  
James with his first feisty smallie

We met in south parking and slipped out 66 West enroute to the Shenandoah's intersection with Rt 50.  Our plan was to fish a timeslot later than I fished this area last week and see if once the sun fell beneath the tree-lined west bank the east bank fishing would heat up.  We arrived while the sun was still high in the sky with few shaded banks so we drone south along Swift Shoals Road for a mile until we found the shoals that are the road's namesake.  The river is generally deeper south of the Rt 50 bridge, steeply-banked and looks very fishy.   Both sides of Swift Shoals Road is posted so the best way to access this portion of the river is via canoe from the traditional Rt 50 put-in.  I think I'll hit this next time I try this area. 
The smallie action today was subsurface -- note the bugger in mouth
We went back to the normal put-in, suited up and headed to the river.  The river was at an optimal (low) level reading 1.76 at the Millwood Gauge and flowing clear at 80 degrees.  James decided used an LL Bean reel (7 wt line) paired with an 9' Okuma SVR 6 wt.  This combo paired VERY well and the heavy bellied-line shot like a champ as we'd uplined it by one-weight.  I paired my Access 5 wt with 6wt WF line and the tip flex rod loaded earlier and better than with 5wt line. We began by fishing down the west wide of the river and found sunfish on the bank as expected.  
Visit Duber, Kaitlyn and Mark at the Orvis Woodbridge store to learn more about local smallmouth -- tell'em Scott and Matt sent you
The water got too deep after a 100 yards so we turned around.  I tried to cross the river 50 yards upstream of the bridge, Conor may have been able to make it, but unless I went into UDT-mode, I wasn't going to make it -- I ended up swimming back.  James and I practiced tossing mends and long distance roll-casting (hammer that nail) and saw some interesting wildlife as we worked back to the bridge where we crossed to the east bank.  We worked our way downstream (South) and James caught his first smallmouth in downed-tree structure along the bank.
James works the east bank above the bridge
It wasn't a monster, none of them were today, but jumped it for him a couple times.  A fly-fisheman's first smallmouth is a treat and James deservedly had a monster smile on his face.   He'd go on to catch alot more fish today but this first bronzeback was a highlight.  We worked our way down the river for another 200 yards then made our way back to the bridge.  I ended up catching my largest smallie of the day not along the bank where I had planned, but in the center channel by the bridge pilings snapping my popper on a long drift through the swift, center-stream current.
Shenandoah peach -- take a bite
Unfortunately it turned out that the fishing actually slowed as the sun fell.   This perplexed and frustrated me as I had expected the east bank bite to heat up as the sun fell beneath the west side trees.  The last 90-minutes we both ended up catching a fish here and there, but nothing remarkable.  We both ended the day sore (lotsa casting) but happy.   Reminder: Make sure you bite the peach when you can. 

Friday, July 25, 2014

Shenandoah Afternoon

The north and south forks of the Shenandoah join around Strasburg, VA and form the Shenandoah river which flows 55 miles then lends its strength to the mighty Potomac in Harpers Ferry. 
Shenandoah Ford West of Ashby Gap
The North and South Forks themselves are prime smallmouth waters, but today I decided to fish the main branch just north of Rt 50 west of Ashby Gap in the heart of Virginia's Horse Country.  I've been reading about Bill Donovan of OSS fame and it turns out that he had a home just north of here in Berryville, VA and Gen. Patton had a home just east of here in Middleburg.  I left the Pentagon at 1300, braved 66 West, turned north through gorgeous wine-country in Delaplane and then left/west on Rt 50 in The Hamlet of Paris.
1st bronzeback of the day on a green-sparkle bugger
I  was on the water at 1430.  I rigged my 5wt Access with a size 8 blue popper and grabbed a few buggers in case I needed to play under the water. Harry Murray's VA Smallmouth fishing report (a great resource) indicated the bronzebacks were hitting early and late on blue and white poppers so I stepped into the 100m wide Shenandoah with high hopes. 




View from the bottom of the island looking north (oddly) downstream
This is also ground zero for Civil War aficionados and as stepped into he water I remembered that the shallow expanse in front of me was where General Jackson crossed his Brigade in the summer of 1861, boarded a train in DelaPlane and closed with the Gen Pope's union forces at the Battle of First Manassas. the water was clear and at optimal flow, I only found pan fish as I moved down to the island fishing the western bank. 
Looking upstream island on right
I had forgotten how stiff my tip flex 6 wt is and it really needed to have 20 or more feet of line out (for the weight if the line) to begin to load the rod.  For long casts this rod is great, but it lacks finesse for shorter and mid-length casts. I'll try a 6wt line on it next time.  I picked up my first small smallie 1/2 way down the west channel of the island.  The water was cool, clear and beautiful, but for some reason I don't have much luck on this western bank. 


typical small smallie

I rounded the bottom of the island, walked through the shimmering grass and riffles and arrived at the wide section where you can cast 90 degrees into the shaded bank in 3-5 feet of water.  The fish were holding in the shade along the bank and 50% of the casts (watch out for those guardian branches) into the shaded bank with a mend or two produced an aggressive strike.  Every third fish was smallie and hand-size lunker sunfish hit both the popper and black bead-head bugger too. I had sorta forgotten how fun these summer smallies are until a 12" gave me an acrobatic display as I stripped him in.

Musta jumped 4-5 times! I'll take a river smallie any day over a largemouth.  The bite slowed as the afternoon lengthened.  My hot eastern bank was less and less shaded as the sun knelt to cast its last rays into its nooks.  I suspect if I had stayed until the evening this stretch would have been red hot.  See you on the water.
Looking upstream ...eastern bank (on left) was most productive...Mountain in the distance...beautiful          

Popper and dropper -- the most productive tandem of the day
 

Sunday, July 20, 2014

Life is Good -- Fish on

I've been waiting for the fishing on Pohick Creek to heat up like it was last July and August and while its not red hot the largemouth action is certainly heating up.  
Clear but barren on upper Pohick Creek
The Orvis crew had fished the lower portion of creek as it transitioned into Pohick Bay earlier in the week and reported that the bite was on.  Fritz and I slid our canoe into the upper Pohick at 0640 determined to fish downstream quickly until we found bass.  A minnow-fish kill last month has left the upper Pohick pretty barren so we needed to head downstream until the effects of the kill dissipated. 


White flecks are dead minnows (picture taken a month ago)


We found that the creek returned to life in the "lake-pool' section 1/4 mile above the Tamarack Stable camp-site.  Scott will remember right where the snake attacked out canoe. We could see the bass on on the right hand side cut and as our popper offerings only drew panfish attention we switched to dark bead-head, buggers and began to pick up bass. 






Typical Pohick Largemouth
From this point down the fish were on their normal stations and their diversity and abundance was amazing; yellow perch, shad, panfish, catfish, bass and carp....could be that we saw a gar too!  For the last hour of our adventure we took turns paddle-guiding the canoe while one of us stood in the front of the canoe and sight-casted for the bass.  This team fishing is about the most fun ever! 




We didn't end up catching any monsters but hooked into a dozen 11-14" inchers between us.  In several spots (notably on the bluff at the Tamarack camp) the sunfish were so thick the bass didn't have time for their slower takes.  The density of the fish lessened when the creek opened up into the hydrilla-filled bay and we paddled back to the Regional Park to conclude our day.   The park was alive with activity and three horses joined us at the canoe takeout, walked right into the water thighs deep and started splashing around...quite a sight after a great morning fishing.

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Don't disturb yourself by reading this if you aren't getting out to fish enough!

Bright spots in the dappled sunlight
I had asked Bryan whether he wanted to go bassin or stalk mountain brookies, wasted words, as he's a trout addict...I should have known.  Our last trout trip together was a wash-out in central PA and with Catholics around here building arks we decided to head to the headwaters of the upper Rapidan to see if we could climb out of the locally high waters.  
Standard Rapidan Brookie
Bryan had heard me worship the upper Rapidan before but had never been before so I was happy to take him on one of my favorite pilgrimages.    We met in Manassas and worked our way up well-rutted Quaker Run Road until we hit the SNP gate above the Marine Cabins.  

The road is getting worse so if you try this route without a high clearance 4x4 plan on leaving parts of your ride on the road.  The drive up was wet but the river had shrugged off the storms and was running clear at optimum/low pool.  We didn't see anyone else fishing on our way in, always great news.   
On a mossy rock ...careful...slippery when wet









We geared up, Bryan with a trusty 6' rod that his dad may have made and myself with a full flex 3wt 7'6".  We hit the water at 0900 with an overcast sky.  I didn't take the water temp, but it was probably in the low 60's, refreshing to me, but more importantly still cold and oxygenated enough to keep the brookies happy. Bryan and I tried everything that floated and settled on a 14 or 16 adams parachute as the fly of the day.  I worked a dropper for a few stretches, but the action was excitingly on the top water.  
We caught and returned trout in the first 5-minutes and knew it would be a good day. We worked our way up the stream leap-frogging and hitting likely spots.  The action picked up mid-day, say 1000-1300, with hungry brookies eagerly slurp-slapping well crated presentations.   The fish seemed to be concentrated in the deeper runs and tight to the riffles probably taking advantage of the higher oxygen content of both areas.  There was a consistent stonefly hatch on the water through much of the morning and the marine layer over the stream was full of food. 
This is a near trophy on the Upper Rapidan

 We lost each other on the upper half of the Rap as we took different sides of an island and I thought that he was in front of me when I got to the upstream tip of the island.  Turns out that fishing was so good on his side (note to Scot...the left side I usually take) that he was slow and enjoying himself.
Simple glory
  I fished up the Hoover retreat by myself catching my largest trout in the first pool where you can look up and see the top of the Brown House.  I waited for 20 minutes in a fine mist and headed downstream to find Bryan slowed by good fishing even after I had walked through this same water already!  We fought our way out of the stream and walked up the retreat as Bryan had never seen it and on our way out we stopped on the bridge at the Brown house and Bryan pulled a presidential brookie from the hole underneath the bridge.  


Bryan with his trout in the shadow of the Brown House Bridge
The Brown House -- President Hoovers Trout retreat
Rapidan perfection

On the walk back to the jeep I showed Bryan the little mountain spring pool at the intersection and told him to approach it carefully as it holds brookies all year.  I'll be darned as the little brookies were rising to a hatch on the surface of that little pool.  Bryan flicked his dry straight down into the pool and in 2 seconds was rewarded when one of the small broookies slapped his fly on the surface.  Scott and I have always marveled at these trout in their tiny pool and to catch and
Note more mature structure of this more underwater brookie
return one was quite a treat.  We ended the day walking...ok... limping back to the jeep after a long rewarding day on my favorite stream.  We didn't count but probably brought 50 to hand and missed at least twice as many of these aggressive fellas. 

Adams Parachute was the fly of the day
 “In our family, there was no clear line between religion and fly fishing. We lived at the junction of great trout rivers in western Montana, and our father was a Presbyterian minister and a fly fisherman who tied his own flies and taught others. He told us about Christ's disciples being fishermen, and we were left to assume, as my brother and I did, that all first-class fishermen on the Sea of Galilee were fly fishermen and that John, the favorite, was a dry-fly fisherman.”
Norman Maclean, A River Runs Through It and Other Stories

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Chasing Landlocked Salmon & Wild Trout in Northern Maine & New Hampshire

I come from a fly fishing family.  I have buckets of memories of my dad taking me fishing up to his favorite destinations like Dan Hole Pond, Connor Pond, Loon Lake and Duncan Lake. He was always chasing trout... lakers, rainbows and brookies. In 1966, he caught New Hampshire's 2nd largest Lake Trout on record with a 21+ pounder. The fish was bigger than me at the time. We (dad, my brother Marc and I) have caught some nice trout over the years too and this year we got together for a pic with our personal best Brook Trout -- Marc's 3.75, my 3.25 and dad's 5.5 pounder. Marc & I caught ours on Prince Nymphs and dad landed his on a Mickey Finn.         But let's get back to some real fishing.....

Marc and I headed to northern Maine's Rangely Lakes Region with hopes of wild Landlocked Salmon and Brook Trout. Our target was the famous Rapid River, regarded as one of America's top trophy wild brook trout rivers.  Well, we spent two days and never found it! Mainers (aka. Mainiacs) are a strange lot. You would think a renowned trout river would be fairly easy to find for travelers to this upcountry land. But not in Maine. No one could tell us how to get there and all maps were sketchy as unrecorded logging roads complicated all off road exploration. After much reflection, I do not believe the Rapid River exists.

Since we were up there for a few days, we hit the Magalloway River first.  This stretch of water was wide, fairly deep and had a pretty constant current that made me wishing I had my wading staff.
We swung streamers and drifted nymphs through likely holes and caught a few rainbow trout and landlocked salmon (any yellow perch!).





I found one really productive run and caught 4 rainbows and one really feisty landlocked salmon that put on an aerial show of more than 10 acrobatic leaps downstream before I was able to safely land, photograph then release.











Salmon with an attitude!











Before the day was out, we tried one other short stretch of the Magalloway River just below the dam.  This was was fast, really, really fast. I mean ripping fast. We fished pockets along the shoreline, and found some wild brookies.  Now this was some kind of fly fishing.






We also fished the Rangely River before heading out of Maine.  The current in this river was hopping too as Marc went for an impromptu float of about 30 yards downstream.  Thumbs up equipment review for Orvis' Silver Sonic Convertible Waders as his iPhone remained completely dry in the waterproof pocket. The video below shows the river conditions.



 The next day we headed back to New Hampshire with our sites set on the Connecticut River trophy trout section below the First Connecticut Lake.  On our way over I saw a beautiful little river on the side of the road called the Mohawk River and we dropped in to see what it may hold.  The gin clear slow moving water provided a welcome respite from the knee-buckling currents of some of Maine's trout waters. What we discovered was native brookies hungry for dry flies. Yes. In about an hour we landed two dozen 5-7 inch colorful brook trout and could easily have caught dozens more.


 Reluctantly we headed for the Connecticut River, and are we glad we did. We hit the trophy trout section, and again found the river ripping fast, but you could see the pockets where the fish might be holding.  We switched tactics to high stick nymphing and were rewarded with a fishing bonanza that was memorable for both quality and quantity of trout and salmon. Check out the pics and the compilation video below.




Marc with a nice landlocked salmon that was fooled by a copper john nymph.




Scott with a rainbow caught in the fast water below the dam.
Marc landed two aggressive rainbows in this one hole



The best fish of the trip was this 15 inch brook trout caught in the very tail end of a pocket.
Nothing beats the amazing colors of wild brookies.


In only a couple of hours we landed well over a dozen trout and salmon.  We also had a fair number of breakoffs as these fish are smart and made for downstream fast currents that often earned them their freedom... this time.

This is an incredible stretch of water. Even though it's heavily fished, quality fish can be caught with the right techniques and strategies on the river.  I can't wait to revisit here again with my brother or any of my other fishing buddies.


I'm going back to full time employment... ask me in a year if it was the right call.
Tight lines!  ~scott