Thursday, May 28, 2015

Nothing this good comes easily

Knee busting, boulder strewn mountain stream-beds remind me that the best things in life don't generally come easily.  This was certainly true yesterday as Bryan and I rock-scrambled from fall, to run, to plunge pool on another Shenandoah thin blue line. Motrin and memories were our reward.

This mature Brookie actually had teeth!
At one point I climbed a boulder and found Bryan sitting on a moss covered slab admiring the river as it glided waterslide-like over a worn rock into an emerald-blue pool where trout finned on the cobble bottom.  He glanced at me at me and said that he'd seen pictures like this in trout magazines.  We agreed that the we didn't need to travel out west to find perfect trout waters -- they're right here in Virginia nestled in the mountains and hollows of our mountains.

Bryan enjoys a perfect moment
The overcast sky and light wind made for a great May day on and in the water.   When we began the air temp was 68 and the water temp was 64.   The water was running at ideal pool and clear as crystal.   
Fish on!
 There were significant hatchs today and the surface of the stream and the marine layer was alive with activity.   It was hard to determine what the trout were eating, but we're talking May brook trout so the better question might is, "what aren't eating?"
Bryan's Pocket Water Rod did the job
 Our 50ish brookies today were caught exclusively on dries; Mr. Rapidan's, parachute adams, yellow humpys and yellow wulffs all produced well. Get out on the stream -- there's no time like tomorrow.
House size boulder guards a deep pool
This brookie took a #14 parachute adams

on a soft moss bed
Bryan plies the pocket water
SNP Treasure

A rock scramble to the next pool
This brookie has a beautiful mature shape

“Once there were brook trout in the streams in the mountains. You could see them standing in the amber current where the white edges of their fins wimpled softly in the flow. They smelled of moss in your hand. Polished and muscular and torsional. On their backs were vermiculate patterns that were maps of the world in its becoming. Maps and mazes. Of a thing which could not be put back. Not be made right again. In the deep glens where they lived all things were older than man and they hummed of mystery.”Cormac McCarthy

Friday, May 8, 2015

Hazel Char

Gotta figure out how to turn off that flash -- the day begins on Hazel River
I fished Hazerl this winter with John Caldwell but we didn't catch anything (too cold)... today would be a better day as she flowed at full but fishable pool the temp was 68 and the water was 51.
There's beauty all around in the Hazel Hollow
1st jewel of the day -- this one was plump no need to walk far into the park -- start fishing as soon as you enter SNP as these are the best pools
They hit the dropper exclusively at first then about 50/50 w the dry
Just what Harry Murray designed his Mr. Rapidan for -- it floats so high and that yella parachute is easy to easy on the froth
perfection -- Fritz, Scott, James, Bryan, Gary wish you could here
Some pools were shear perfection -- two trout from this pool, one from the lower left pool, one from the top of the pool
some other fisherman must have built this mini-cairn on the near rock
Mr Rapidan at work on the Hazel
I never thought of it before but Mr. Rapidan mimicks this yellow-jacket too
Hey there big Fella thanks for playing!
Big Fella from previous picture ripped apart my Mr Rapidan -- I've brought him home for repair!
there less water in the Hazel than the Rapidan so you have to look for pools....and oh there are pools
The chunky trophy in the next photo came from the riffle at 1100...scared me straight when he hit
Some great sized char in these little pools
Parachute Adams completes the day for me on my last cast -- thanks for looking

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Shadtastic


Fish on ~ Letting the rod do the work above the Rt 1 Bridge
James and I were determined to beat the locals to the spot Saturday morning and it turns out we beat three local meat eaters (mom and daughters) by 30 minutes by arriving at the downstream tip of Riverside Island at 0550.  
Dawn breaks over Falmouth Heights
The air was heavy with fish, the ospreys were circling and we rigged up asw sun rose over Falmouth Heights.  It took a few minutes to study the flow but after we did we could clearly see (what we soon learned were) Shad rising right in front of us.  Seriously at our feet.
James with one of many -- many --many smiles today

As James and I admired our first fish my golden retriever was dangling a rods length from our admiration session and another shad yanked my rod. I took a spill on a hidden rock and got soaked so we didn't stay too long but while we were there it was SO GOOD.

Conehead Golden Retriever turns the trick
James and I had numerous doubles and these poor man's tarpon lived up to their nickname taking deep powerful runs and fin walking through the fast current.

Working the cold run
I've hit the shad run before with a spinning rod but never with a long rod and the 4 wt mid-flex Clearwater I had with me was perfect for these 12-17 inch torpedoes.  The rod bent and pulsed taking the measure of the fish and I frequently just put the butt in my hip and enjoyed the run.  Even more gratifying the shad seemed to love a version of the Mossy Creeks' Golden Retriever I tied for smallmouth season last year.  Great all-around fly.  Amazing.

James' Fenwick 5wt takes the measure of a shad
James' glass Fenwick also enjoyed a workout its classic brown-wrap glass tip dancing in the morning chill.  We left after 2 hours and went to Amy's Cafe for a warm-up breakfast and were home by 0945...great morning.

Amazing Mica-colors with pink and blue hues

The fish is thatta --> way
Love these no-catch rubber nets
Silvery scales ..these fish were very fresh

When I'm there, I'm there

Mr Rapidan does the trick