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ABOUT US ACTIVITIES FEATURES Other Links Virginia Stream Restoration Guide
| 2008 FISHING REPORTS Jackson River,
Natural Well, 29 Dec 2008 (Mon) —
Bob Jenkins Fished
in afternoon, 1400–1700 h; clear day, air up to 61 F; river quite low, 99
cfs, as in previous several weeks, cold, 45 F. Fished entirely with one
Isonychia nymph on 5x, landing a 5” Brown, losing a ~10” trout, and
having a somewhat larger trout show to or take the nymph, all in the same
run-pool just above pine tree row. Only four rises seen in three
hours, as far downstream as the copse of Sycamores on the east side, in the
flat water just above the first riffle that’s above the bridge. Few midges
and one tiny baetid dun seen. Little River,
Tazewell Co, 15 Nov 2008 (Sat) —
Bob Jenkins (report written 5 Feb 09) Weather
forecast was air in low 40s, showers, rain, snow, and windy, but I was
returning from a fishes conservation meeting in Chattanooga, and from
getting study specimens of small suckers at a NC hatchery, both the previous
day, and still thought I’d give Little River a go as I’d pass “near”
it on return to Salem. I questioned fishing as I don't well handle
sub-50 air temperatures, and a bit of frostbite remained in some fingers
from night-fishing 10 days earlier in TN. After driving for nearly an hour
northeast from I-81 at Abingdon, I got a room in the Super 8 Motel in
Claypool Hill, at the north foot of the north ridge of the Little River
valley. The day dawned raining but seemed tapering during breakfast, so I
hit the stream and fished for ~6 hr. Coldness held off, air reaching ~55 F,
and the sun peeked a few times. River was clear, low-normal, and trout were
in some runs, not just the always-populated pools. I
aimed to catch one trout in each of the nine or so major pools in the leased
section, but ended by not fishing the upper pool and the lower two pools,
and had no touch in the mostly shallow pool just below a mid-lease island.
Landed 5 Rainbows, 15”, 16.5”, 18”, 22”, and 28”, all on nymphs or
pupae, 5x or 6x tippet. The 16.5” fish was dieing, bleeding strongly at
the hook imbedded in the “tongue” (likely the anterior section of the
ventral aorta), so I killed and took it home. Its gut included two one-inch
long, heavy-shelled, elongate, sharp-pointed snails (pleurocerids?) and a
small crayfish. Very
few midges and caddisflies were aflight. Surface feeding was rare, the main
exception being frequent wavelets and “toilet-flushes” at a spot tight
to the rocky far bank of the bend of the pool, just below where the road
starts to ascend the hill leading to the lower section of the lease. The
fish probably was midging but I couldn’t see a fly aloft near its spot,
which was almost fully guarded by overhanging tree branches (which hold a
fly or two of mine). I dropped the first or second side-arm cast of a #14
olive Nitro Caddis Pupa just above the spot, the leader tightened slightly,
the 28” fish was on, and disappointingly was landed in fairly short order
with little commotion. The husky fish’s low vigor was perhaps effected by
cold water (temperature taken, forgotten). However, the 16.5” fish taken
in a shallow run made a much spirited scrap including wrapping the leader
around a boulder.
Jackson River,
vic. Natural Well, 6-7 Nov 2008 (Thu-Fri)
— Bob Jenkins 6
Nov – Water clear, 15 C, 59 F, 100 cfs. Fished during 12:00-5:00, mainly
in runs and flats. Landed a dink and an 8" Rainbow, same for two
Browns, on #12 soft hackle. Not a good catch... 7
Nov -- Another bluebird day, sky all clear. Water 59 F (15 C); air up
to lower or mid-70s; flow 100 cfs. But river had turned slight-plus turbid,
visibility only 2-3 ft. This may have something to do with brief, big drop
in discharge yesterday, perhaps with stirring the lake bottom near the
release tower? Fished
~5.5 hr between 10:00-4:00. Still 4 redds present at same place as
yesterday; all 4 seemed vacant (I'm unsure owing to turbidity and glare);
yesterday's active redd had been enlarged when I first saw it this a.m.,
hence night-nest-building and spawning in progress. The redd is huge, ~10 ft
long by 3.5 ft wide; more than 1 trout made it? Mighta been the ~22"
fish I saw yesterday, or a larger female. Fished
Andrij’s tan-black grizzly marabou, redneck, gold bead streamer; excellent
durabilty -- used same fly all 5.5 hours. This is my first day of
exclusively fishing a streamer. Small
dipteran adults were rare. Again, as during last Fri afternoon in upper
River’s Edge reach, and yesterday, small dark caddis (several collected by
hand) flitting in shoreline bushes and higher above river, and occasional
emergers flew off mainly in morning and late afternoon. Fishing
began decent. About 50 m below the redds, a 13" Brown was landed;
pretty fish, lots of golden; melanism about jaws; many red spots. Genital
papilla was slightly extended from vent; fish looked spent, and slt squeeze
of belly exuded no milt. Next
I walked much upstream; fished the streamer across and down; I casted and
fished good, all habitats, but didn't go deep (maybe part of the problem in
deeper water). Lost 2 ~10" fish; landed an 8" Brown, had
some ticks, and an interesting boil. results bascially sucked.
That is, until I got ~¼ the way down Beetletree Lane, where I noted the
only rising I saw all day, all rising in a small area, 3-4 fish. At the 1st
rise, I cast the streamer to it, intending to land the fly a few feet above
the rise-ring, but it landed in center of the ring, and the fish nailed it
immediately – a fine-looking, strong, 14" Rainbow. No take from the
other risers, and proceeding down BTL, no take along the distance fished,
i.e., most of its length. I quit at 4:00 -- was getting tired, hungry,
thirsty, and often somewhat sloppy casting. I believe the fish are there,
all along BTL, but fishing didn’t reveal them. Most of its main channel
remains several feet deep (up to ~6 ft in runs and glides), and it remains
much weeded (Potamogeton, Elodea). Rod
Salyers, S Fk Holston guide (who does 2-day drifts on the Jackson), said a
client in his boat landed a 29" Rainbow in the pool at upper end of BTL.
He didn't say when. Jackson River,
vic. Smith Bridge, 31 Oct 2008 (Fri) — Bob
Jenkins with John Feldenzer
Water clear, 54 F, ~100 cfs. Fished ~2 hr from John’s house up into tail
of long pool. Landed one each 11” and 12” Rainbows, on Isonychia nymph
and green soft hackle respectively. John landed 7 Rainbows from dink size to
one of 12”, all on #16 parachute. He saw no rising, and only rising I saw
was ~3 fish in pool tail. Small gray caddisflies occasionally emerged in
evening. Roanoke River,
Green Hill Park DHS, 16 Oct 2008 (Thu)
— Bob Jenkins
My last fishing in the Salem area DHSs was in early May. This fall these two
DHSs were stocked nine days before my present outing, at least mostly with
Rainbows (some very large) and a few Brookies, but apparently no Browns.
River very low, 33 cfs; water 65 F at GHP in late morning, 67.4 F in e.
Salem in late afternoon; air 70s F; breezy. In late morning through mid
afternoon, I landed two Rainbows, 12”, 13”, on an olive Nitro Caddis,
and a black Nitro; fish had little spunk when hooked. Saw a few other,
smaller trout. No hatch; very few rises. Jackson River,
vic. Natural Well and Indian Draft, 11-13 Oct 2008
(Sat–Mon) —
Bob Jenkins, with Andrij Horodysky and Jack Musick
Three days with angling colleagues of Va. Inst. Mar. Sci., on beautiful
Jackson River during bluebird days, with leaf colors heightening through the
sojourn. We bunked in a motel near Hot Springs, had three-hour dinners at
fine restaurants, and Andrij tied Nitros in the motel and at riverside.
Afternoon temperatures were in mid 70s to low 80s F; nights cool. Flow 198
cfs; water 15.0-15.5 C (~59 F). River was quite turbid at Natural Well,
decreasing downstream to somewhat (still significant) turbid at Indian
Draft. The river had the same degree of turbidity four weekends
earlier. Turbidity much disaffects trout seeing flies, and anglers seeing
the bottom to avoid fall-in. An angler told that the suspended solids
are due to reservoir water being drawn at the base of the release tower,
sucking silt off the bottom. Could the Corps of Engineers instead do
this bottom-sucking, silt release in Dec-Jan, or not at all? But then
would the silt have adverse affect on trout redds? Paul Bugas, VDGIF, told
that the lake is 23 feet low, and that the turbidity comes from suspended
material at or near the release portals. He noted that this is a Corps gig
and little or nothing can be done about it until the surface cools and top
water is released. Didymo not seen during inspection of rocks at Natural
Well and below.
Again, no fly hatch and almost no rising occurred. Dancing Paraleptophlebia
spinners seemed to excite nothing. Through the three days Andrij landed ~30
trout and Jack got ~15; each netted a 13” Brown, the largest of the trip.
The pendulum of fishing success swung on Bob. After an early Jul day of
landing 32 trout, and next in late Aug netting an 18” Brown (and
catching several trout in a Sep outing), he landed only three trout over the
three days, his all-time low for the Jackson—Rainbows of 7 and 10”, and
a 4” Brown which “broke-in” his new split-cane rod… Especially
successful flies were a root beer Nitro Caddis Pupa.
Bob’s best catch was a huge adult Pycnopsyche caddisfly,
essentially the color of tannish pumpkin. He spotted it on his SUV, thought
it to be a colorful leaf, and his eyes bulged when caddisfly finally was
perceived. Now the fly is in a jar of alcohol.
This year we’ve caught relatively more small Browns, 4-8”, than one and
two years ago. But in all these years, 10-14” Browns in the upper
tailwater generally have been slender and somewhat big-headed. The
18” Brown landed in Aug had a moderate build. It has been heard that
20” and (much) larger Browns in the Jackson are robust. Paul Bugas stated
that all Browns sampled this year by the VDGIF were “fat and happy; no
snaky fish”. Jackson River,
vic. Natural Well and Indian Draft, 11-12 Sep 2008
(Sat–Sun) —
Bob Jenkins, with Bob Schultz
Bluebird days, mid-70s F. Driving N on Rt 220 in Craig County, I saw my 1st
ever wild bear, for only a few sec; it lumbered from a roadside ditch onto a
vegetated slope. Almost all riverside, late-summer flowers were gone, the
most “colorful” being goldenrod, now dirty yellowish. River discharge
still 298 cfs. Turbidity moderate, probably owing to outtake through dam
coming from bottom or near-bottom depth of reservoir, sedimented silt being
sucked into the mixing tower.
Surprisingly, on both days there was an almost complete absence of rising.
Witt's reach was virtually dead-looking. Andrij will be glad to know that
the most frequent risers were a few dinks on Sun evening that apparently
were eating, the hatch sparse or modest, Caenis (nymphs, emergers,
and/or duns -- who knows?; could hardly see the tiny duns flying by, looking
like small snowflakes). On Smith River at least in the 1980s tiny baetids
would carpet the stream in warm clear autumn days, but surprisingly on
the Jackson I haven’t seen a good baetid hatch in any weather or season.
On the Jackson at Indian Draft in a slow shallow margin I lifted ~6 rocks
and found 3 large caddis cases (round, elongate, bits of stone and twigs,
twigs parallel to longitudinal axis of case), each case stuck to a
different rock; 1 case empty (pupa had flown the coop), and 2 with very big
juicy pupa, ~1” long. Probably Pycnopsyche, although I haven’t
keyed it and may not have time to do so tomorrow, hence not next week
postsurgery on retina. The pupae may be that stage of the large creamy and
pale orange, adult caddisflies Andrij and I saw in mid-Oct in ’06. Pupa
had abdomen dirty cream (and black line of short hairs along midside of
posterior 3-4 segments), thorax pale tannish orange, wingpads pale tan, legs
tannish pale orange or yellowish.
We caught all wild trout, up to 13-14". Fishing the water, not rises,
Bob Schultz pounded them up both days with mainly an Adams; on Sat he landed
a Brown of 3”, 3 of 4”, 3 of 10”, and 1 of 11”, and of Rainbows, 1
of 9”, 1 of 10”, 2 of 11”, and 1 of 12”. On Sat I landed
single Browns of 4, 5, 9, 11, and 12”, and a 10” and 13” Rainbow,
mostly on terrestrials, this being my longest day ever of fishing dry, all
day, although in evening my best fish of the day was on a Coachman Wulff I
found in a box when searching for a fly I could easily see on the water.
Sunday included my hammering a riffle with nymphs, taking mostly Rainbows up
to 12” (no further records taken).
The water by the small group of trees at the cabin was the best producer, of
all or almost all Browns. Probable largest fish of the weekend was
broken-off there. Shallows from just above cabin to Lone Rock, nada, same as
in my last visit. I caught 2-3 fish above Lone Rock; fished only somewhat
above the rock, up to where I caught the 18" Brown on 26 Aug (which
fish didn't show on Sat).
Brown Trout dinks had numerous orange spots, but few such spots (relative to
fish size) in 10-13” fish.
I left my 2nd (last) Splitwing Beetle in a bush near the 18" Brown
spot, and at Witt's I put 4 Ripcord Caddis into cross-stream bushes and
herbs, got only one of them back—a new PR, probably due to poor
depth/distance perception...
All in all, a fine two days on the river. Bob Schultz quite liked it. And it
was good to fish with someone, which I hadn't been doing. Bob has as angler-flytier
friend, Jeff Skeate, in ne. Iowa, who when asked if he fishes nymphs,
replied: "I'd rather eat glass"...
Jackson
Stand Facing the River is
the title of the Introduction in Paul Schullery’s excellent new book, If
Fish Could Scream. An Angler’s Search for the Future of Fly Fishing). I
just had to face the Jackson again—this
week, as my last outing was on 4 Jul; lately having just “retired,” my
research was losing efficiency; and I “had to” test some new flies
designed by Andrij Horodysky of Virginia Institute of Marine Science. After
that last
25 Aug in Intervale (lower
tailwater). The immediate
26 Aug in Natural Well
area (upper tailwater). Fished two reaches for 9¾ hr within 0900–1915
hr. Standing before the river, how stunning it was. Mountains framing
the upper tailwater corridor, fields green from recent rains, and diverse
late-summer riparian flowers in riotous profusion: deep purple Ironweed;
large Yellow Daisies, Goldenrod, and another yellow-flowered species;
crimson Cardinal Flowers enticing hummingbirds; white-headed Queen Anne’s
Lace; and a pale lavender-flowered herb.
River flowing 292 cfs, 14.8-15.1 C (60-ish F), as in much of the
summer. The previous day’s late afternoon storm had the river
slightly turbid in morning, but cleared in afternoon. Cool day, 70s F;
mostly cloudy; extended rain predicted to start in late afternoon or
evening. Hatches: Paraleptophlebia spinners in late morning to early afternoon, in few small areas of river margin. A group of Caenis briefly seen, near bank. Midges occasional. Fewer than 5 olive-like mayflies lofted offriver. Ant fall significant but not carpeting (whereas in late Aug 2006 ants carpeted some of the upper river during at least three evenings, and most or all fish were up; maybe still to happen this year).
Successful flies, but shunned by many risers, most of which sipped
tiny ants, were a #16 Parachute Ant, #12 rootbeer Creek Grubb, #14 black
Caswell’s Panfish Spider, and most fish
took Andrij’s just-designed #16 black Splitwing Beetle. Subsurface fishing
used 5x tippet, topside with 6x. Two breakoffs, both apparently good
fish, appallingly happened at the 5x-6x knot (once with Orvis Tippet Knot,
once Blood Knot). I thought, screw 6x, and fished a beetle on the
remaining 5x; it helped check a big Brown from reaching a log.
Only 3 Rainbows of 10-11” were landed during 0900–1630
in one reach. I don’t know why in fast water I had only 2 takes on a
tandem-fished burnt orange Creek Grubb and, on point, a rootbeer Andrij’s
Nitro Caddis Pupa.
Moving somewhat downstream to fish during 1700–1915
hr, many more fish were rising than had been above. Landed 7 more —1
Rainbow of 11”, and 6 Browns, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11”, and … (see below).
At a small copse of Sycamores, rising was only occasional, quite
disparate from the locked-on(?), anting risers in midriver and along the
opposite side — a setup
for throwing a beetle. Casting under or just out from the canopy, 4 of the
smaller Browns were landed on the beetle, and 3 other takes were on the same
fly, the fly being lost on the first breakoff.Then another of the smaller
Browns there took the Spider. Action was essentially nonstop. Most or all
takes were by Browns, an unusual concentration of the species for the
Jackson.
Working upstream met many refusals of various flies, and took an
11” Rainbow on the ant, the fly lost on the second breakoff. Getting
chilled and rain imminent, I was about to return to the SUV. But a spot by a
bankside log looked good, like so many targets in the reach, and I judged a
cast especially right-on, the drift dragless, and after about two feet the
second Splitwing Beetle disappeared in a small ripple. Tightening, the fish
was on, felt sizeable, and bull-dogged a goodly spell. It appeared to be 15–16” out
in the river but extended 2” past the 16” hoop of the net (whose lucky
charm is an embedded Grateful Dead button). The fish had moderate body
build, ample mouth, very golden, no red spots. 18” !!! —
my best wild Brown (since an 18-incher on Smith R in 1976 that fell to an
Isonychia nymph). Glowing with its capture and release, I essentially quit
then. Rain began as I started driving home (and next day back to studying
new species of redhorse suckers in my Roanoke College lab).
Jackson
River, upper tailwater, 2-3 June 2008 (Mon-Tue) — Bob Jenkins The
upper river and riparian corridor looked terrific, the river clear, flow
normal at 278 cfs. Mon evening bright sky, pretty clouds, air warm to cool,
water 62.5 F; night down to 57 F. Tue first light 0500 hr, sun up at 0600,
air rose to ~80 F, cooling in afternoon overcast and rain to ~70 F, water 62
F. Didymo almost imperceptable at
Natural Well; very sparse in Cabin reach, occasionally a small gob driifting;
substrate in many stony areas covered with “rich-looking” brown organic
floc.
On Mon I fished Natural Well during 1900-2100 hr, during all of which
mayflies, seemingly mostly Cream Cahills, emerged at low to moderate rate
and trout rose at about the same pace; several mayfly spinners were aflight.
In early and mid dusk a few, small to large species of caddisflies
became moderately frequent, some probably emerging and some surely
ovipositing. Whereas in mid dusk emergence of mayfly duns seemed to taper,
slash and jump rising probably to caddis became more common. Not having
caught a bug, I don’t know the identify of the caddisflies but it’s
quite probable they were some of the same species reported below. Overall
many trout showed by rising, hence lots of targets were presented. But
catching trout was not easy, partly as fish in different current paths
apparently favored, or fell for different flies from those taken by nearby
fish, and some flies were shuned. Landed 2 Rainbows, 11-12”, 1 Brown,
8”; lost 2 fish including the largest.
Mon night after consuming a Hardees big burger and fries in
Covington, it was ~2230 hr and I noticed some stores with outside night
lights on, so from walls and windows I collected and preserved in ethanol
profuse aquatic insects for about one hr (after telling clerks what I was up
to and why, to avoid visitation by cops. Owing to the late hour, the NBA
game being essentially over, and thinking to hit the river in early morning,
for the first time I decided to forego paying for a motel room and tried to
sleep by the cabin in my SUV.
On Tue I awoke several times including at first light and attendant
bird calls, and slipped into the river at 0600 hr, a first by hours for me
on the Jackson. Surprisingly, mayflies were hatching, trout were rising, and
the first cast resulted in a brief hookup! Through 0730, 2 Browns 8” and
12.5” and 1 small Rainbow were landed; again the largest fish was lost.
Bushes were net-whacked for trout bugs, these preserved in ethanol, and
breakfast was found at The Bait Place.
Rerigged and heading upriver for 20 sec, it dawned that my keys, both
sets, one key turned in the ignition, had just been locked in the SUV…
Luckily I found a stout steel rod to pry and slightly hold open the top of
the driver’s door, and an inserted stick tripped the lock! I didn’t want
to face this at end of fishing, and didn’t want it on my mind while
fishing, nor did I favor a dead battery.
During 1100-1500 hr I fished intermittently upstream from the cabin.
Aquatic insects — the obvious ones being mayfly duns (mostly cahills) and
caddisflies — were sparse and rising was occasional. During 1330-1430 rain
twice drove me to an old shed, and the third rain drove me out for good;
rain jacket was back in the SUV. Flies and rising had tapered to nearly nil
during rain (unlike the situation other anglers concurrently had at Natural
Well). I had landed 4 more browns of 7-10” and 1 small Rainbow, a poor
score. Maybe in anticipation of easy catching, I wasn’t fishing well.
Instead of concentrating on one
rising fish at a time, to peg its unseen lie and play the fly-changing game,
I threw to several risers in turn during brief periods.
Both days the largest fish were lost, both probably 14-15”; no
break-offs. All fish both days were wild; the 11” and 12.5” fish were
strong, each making two good runs — gotta love the CFO for its outrunning
purr. The ratio of 6 Browns to 2 Rainbows landed on Tue is my first
mainly-Browns catch for a day on the Jackson, reflecting fishing mostly slow
currents. All trout were taken on mayfly imitations — dry flies or
emergers, the latter including #14 and 16 Parasail Emerger and Sulphur half
nymph, half adult; 5x or 6x tippet.
Insects from cabin area, upper
tailwater, 3 Jun; studied microscopically 20 Jun 2008: Nymphs from boots — Baetid, tiny, 1. , 2 spp, 1 each. Ephemerella prob. dorothea, 1. Eurylophella (s.s.), 6. Adults netted from bank flora (chromatic coloration partly dissipated with examined microscopically) — Maccaffertium, 2 pale subimago, 1 male imago, dorsally banded, sterna cream. Stenacron, 2 subimago, pale (was cream or yellowish). Ephemerellid, 1 med-sm (9 mm; fly size 14-16) female imago, body tubby, mostly dark brown; ventral abdomen reddish brown; legs all pale, pale + dusky mottled, or all dusky; tails gray. Leptophlebiid, prob. Paraleptophlebia, 1 female subimago, body (9 mm; fly size 14-16) gracile, med brown; legs pale; tails pale and with fine black intersegmental marks. Caddisflies, at least 5 spp; sm to med; abdomens blackish, tan, or green. Cranefly, 3 sm adult. Chironomid, 1. Adults collected from night-lighted windows in Covington — many, mostly caddisflies and mayflies, but the big, tedious job of sorting and identifying them is unfinished.
During prepping and co-teaching a course for 3.5 wk in May, hence not
following troutstream insect hatches, I vowed to amply fish in June, but
studies of suckers interceded, so this outing marked a long month between
visits to the Jackson.
River was clear, level moderate, bankful at 281 cfs on Thu, rising
slightly on Fri; water 59-60 F; Didymo present in trace amount. No major hatch was detected. On Fri an Isonychia dun emerged, so too a sulphur, and a few other mayflies including a few tiny baetids and three cream-appearing duns, probably cahills. Small craneflies were usually aflight just above the water, some ovipositing. In late Fri morning a troop of very small mayflies, probably Paraleptophlebia, flight-danced along shore. Midges were sparsely were about. Rising was frequent Thu evening, and only occasional all day Fri but usually timed close enough to effect many rising-fish target/s. Rises in morning were often splashy or jumps, indicating emerging caddis pupae (pharate adults; pupal shucks were found), and most caddis seemed to fly off-river.
Thursday had nice weather at dusk. After sleeping not well in the
SUV, upon wading in on Friday, early daylight began with a brief rain;
morning was mostly cloudy; rain in early afternoon, and thereafter the sky
was almost always heavily overcast and the river much fogged. Eyestrain
developed by continually trying to watch a strike indicator, and it was
nearly impossible to follow a dry fly during dusk. Fog on a river can be
pleasant, but… Thursday’s
fishing started very late owing to emails with colleagues concerning a study
of certain minnows, other fussing, packing, and the 1.5-hr drive. I
slipped into the river with little less than 1 hr left of fishable daylight
and no notable insect hatch, although fish were rising moderately often.
I had 4 takes on a dry fly: one maybe a “short rise” (splashy turnoff at
last instant); one fish pricked, not hooked; one lost after being on-line
for a good while; and a strong 13” Brown landed. The latter 3 fish
took by a “confident” rise, as if the fish “thought” my fly was
something on which it’d been feeding. This was a breif but fine start of
the foray, as the fish at the site are much pressured by flyfishers, many of
them caught and released at least once. I had fished entirely with a dry #16
grizzly Fore-and-Aft, the body of black tying thread. This fly design has a
long history but seems rarely used today; the Renegade pattern is a
wider-bodied (peacock herl) example.
Fore-and-Afts are often considered to imitate “nothing and everything”;
to trout they might resemble two butt-conjoined midges!
I’ll tye more of these, especially with cream hackle (visibility to
angler) and the body separately cream, yellow, or light orange, to simulate
sulphur and cahill mayflies. Friday
I fished most of the day, about equally in pools, runs, and riffles, totaling ~11 hr from midway within break-of-dawn to late dusk,
discounting driving around, eating, sheltering during rain, and chatting
with landowners. This was my best day ever of catching wild trout, totaling
32. Landed were 29 Rainbows of 8-13”, and 3 Browns of 10, 11, and
14”. None were gill-hooked; no bleeders; only 1 fish brokeoff (at the fly
knot — no tippet left trailing from the fish); and all fish were released
and swam away strongly. By the 18th fish landed, I thought the
nearly non-stop landing of fish and having many other takes was getting
boring. I wondered what the 20th fish be — a 13” Rainbow,
very nice; and the 21st — the largest Brown, from a pool
tailout. All
but one of the first fish 25 fish took my mostly brown Isonychia nymph (gen
3) fished below a dun soft-hackle with a bright green body. By the 10th
fish the Iso had become so bedraggled that dubbing extended past the marabou
tail; ribbing was gone. Right after the 25th fish I left the rig
in a tree. Rerigging with a green Nitro Caddis above a fresh Iso, fish 26-29
were caught, until a midriver snag entangled the rig. Wanting to score at
least 30 fish for the day, I bent on a bright green, gold beadhead
Cazzie’s Creek Grub caddis larva, and that succeeded, with 1 fish landed
of 4 briefly hooked. For those 30 fish, the brief exception to fishing
sunken flies was in early afternoon, with the previous evening’s
Fore-and-Aft; four risers refused it from the surface; one of them grabbed
it sunken. All fish were strong, fought proportionate to their size;
usually good zzz-ing of the reel. Tippet
for subsurface flies was 5x, for dry flies 6x. Wanting
to fish dry in evening, I headed upriver to the site of the previous evening
and its pressured fish. Time had grown short, into late dusk (or so I
preceived under a leaden sky and fog), by delightful chat with a landowner
and a fellow who regular fishes the reach but whom I hadn’t met. The
Fore-and Aft took, a 13” Rainbow; the next fish broke it off. Lastly, a
formerly untried prototype I tyed ~20 yr ago, of an upside-down, dry
subimago (dun) mayfly, in cream cahill colors, took an 11” Rainbow. USD
flies have the hook ride above-surface and partly shrouded by feather barbs.
I and many other but surely not all anglers believe the hook-in-water of
normal dryfly design can be a turnoff to “educated” trout.
Whatever, that made 32 trout for the day, and 1 breeding male Common Shiner,
Luxilus cornutus, the only one
I’ve caught up there. All this from at most ~½ mile of water — a fine
day. I apologize for assidously counting fish, and plan to not do so in at least most future outings. Comparative data are useful to have, but counting distracts from fishing. Upper Jackson River (Poor Farm), June 7, 2008 - Devon J. Munro
Fished the upper Jackson, hiking down from the Poor Farm area today.
Fished for about 3 hours from about 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Not great hours
and it was bright sun and 95 degrees, so there was zero action on top.
Very little luck until we tried a large black stonefly nymph in the pools.
That brought out some larger 14 inch rainbows, about five in quick
succession. A couple had the slender build and bright colors of
holdover fish. We also hooked about the same number of small redeyes
at the tail end of the pools, so apparently the sun had driven the trout
deep into the head of the pools.
The big highlight of
the day though was spotting a bald eagle taking off about 30 yards away from
me over a bend pool well into the special regulation area, more exciting
than the fish to be sure.
Big Stony Creek (Montgomery Co.), 5/31-2008 - Devon J. Munro
Fished two hours before
dark. Water was average level and clear. Caught two small browns
(8-10") on a size 12 green stimulator with some flashing. Tied
on a pheasant tail dropper, no luck. Tied on a peacock prince, caught
one rainbow same size, looked like a stocked fish. Lost the prince
somehow and switched to a copper john. Caught one brown, small. 30
minutes before dark, green caddisflies started hatching. Tied on a
green beadhead worm, caught a decent 11-12" stocked rainbow. Then
went up to fish a little bend pool where I'd seen a spin caster earlier.
Threw in the worm and on the first cast, something large hit it.
Ran up and down the pool several times, I was excited. After about a
half a minute, the hook came out and I never got a chance to see him.
Felt like a big brown, just another fish story now.
The Cranberry River (WV), 5-24 and 5-25-2008 - Devon J. Munro Fished the upper section on 5-24, biked in from the upstream Cranberry Glades entrance, down the trail about 5 miles. I parked about a mile into the special regulation area and hiked another mile downstream to fish back up. Water levels were up due to recent rains, but very clear, just about perfect depth and plenty of water. Tried numerous combinations of dry flies without great success for the first hour. Tied on a Green Drake, even though it is still early in the season, just to see if they might be interested and to provide a decent surface fly for a prince nymph dropper. Caught two small brook trout on the drake over about a half hour, nothing on the dropper. So I switched to a size 12 green stimulator, and a pheasant tail dropper with some flashing. That was the combo of the day. Began to get numerous strikes on both flies, and stuck with it throughout the day. Caught about 6 brooks (including one measured at 11"), 3 small browns, and about twenty rainbows (largest around 14", most over 10"). In one slow moving tail section of a nice pool, I brought in six rainbows on the pheasant tail over the course of twenty minutes. The rainbows were a mix of stocked fish and skinnier, more colorful wild fish. Such a beautiful river, no people fishing that stretch except me. Biked out that afternoon and drove back to Camp Splinter (well downstream). Much larger river downstream, obviously - about three times the volume. Fished the large pool just upstream from the camp and on my first cast of the evening, around 8 p.m., hooked a true 18.5" fat brown on the same green stimulator. (A seven minute fight and thank goodness, I had a witness.) No more strikes on that fly over the next 15 minutes. Spotted some sulphurs in the air but did not have a match. Spotted some other flies, including something close enough to a size 14 light Cahill that I brought up some strikes. Caught three more rainbows before dark, missed several more strikes. 5-25 Began fishing around 8:00 a.m.just upstream of Camp Splinter, working upstream. Sun hit the water quickly, and it was so bright that I did not get any action on top or on a dropper, no matter what I tried for two hours. Took someone else's advice to switch to streamers, and caught several in two deep pools that way stripping one olive, one black wooly bugger. In that sun the fish needed a little action to get excited I suppose. Otherwise no bites and quit around 1 p.m.
Roanoke River, Green Hill Park, 5-15-2008 - Dick Taylor Decided to try my hand at dry fly fishing today and looks like I picked the right day. Not really any hatches coming off except for a very occasional bug. Messed up a number of times when I saw them coming and pulled too quick before they ate it. Hard to let them make that turn after all that nymph touch fishing all these years. Started off by the picnic area and caught the first two down by the rope swing. Moved back up and caught the next three straight out from the parking lot. First was a rainbow and the next four were browns. Finished up below the steel plant and caught a rainbow on the black woolly bugger when the dry stopped working. Lost two that were hooked for a little bit including about a three pound brown almost at the net. Of all things the danged knot pulled loose from the fly. Reckon I didn't cinch it up tight enough. At least that's my story and I'm sticking to it!!! Tried a dry I tied with a yellow dubbing body, 5-6 dark elk tip hairs for a tail and a shell back of elk hair tied in at the rear and again just behind the hook eye with the ends of the deer hair tied back as a wing and trimmed a little above the hook eye. Also, added a little beard of duck flank feather. Will try and send you a photo of it sometime. According to the "I cannot tell a lie measuring net" the biggest was a 15" rainbow with the browns and one other rainbow in the 12" to 13" size. Didn't have to touch a one for release and four of them lost the fly in the net before I even touched it. Fished from about 11:00am to 3:00 pm with a couple of half hour breaks. Water was pretty clear and starting to get a little low again. Dick Click here to view pictures.
Little
River, Tazewell Co, 7-8 May 2008 (Wed-Thu) —
Bob Jenkins The
river was in fine shape, water level normal or very slightly lower, slightly
turbid, visibility to ~4 ft; the last heavy rain in the upper Fished
7.5 hr during 1130-2030 (to mid-dusk) on sunny Wed, and for 8.5 hr within
0900-1530 hr on cloudy Thu. I shortened Thu’s fishing owing to rain (and
insufficient raingear) and, for a change, to make the 2.5-hr return drive to On
Wed I landed only 2 Rainbows, 18 and 23”, and lost another, and had few other
takes. As usual I attempted to first sight-find trout, then cast, as I prefer
the hunting aspect of the game. I spent the first ~3 hr fishing the upper 3
pools of the Riverbound lease, and didn’t fish the lower 3 pools. During this
period I fished a grizzly marabou, gold-bead, redneck streamer, and mainly
agitated numerous trout; many simply swam away when the streamer neared them;
the landed 18” fish was the only streamer-taker, striking unseen from a deep
pool. Reaching the 4th downstream pool, viewing it carefully, and spying 2 large
trout, I switched to a #14 green-body soft hackle, caught 1 of them, and spooked
others. Returning to upstream pools, it seemed that earlier exposure of sighted
fish to my presence had them on heightened alert, and they relatively quickly
moved off-lie or refused to take. Thus it was not a notably good day of
catching, but I learned, and decided to get a room in the Super 8 Motel just
across the ridge and to fish on Thu. Thu
morning I embarked with great anticipation, but when first walking upstream
along the top pool and trying to cross a wet-mud, cow-hoof-pocked gully, I
tripped and fell forward smack into its bottom. Luckily mainly only my
wader got plastered by mud, detritus, and a bit of cow dung, as I landed on my
forearms. Just the wader, sleeves, and reel needed a rinse, and my head a
straightening… On
Thu many more fish than usual were in runs above the main pools, apparently
feeding. From mostly the lower 3 pools and their runs (2 of the mid-lease pools
and runs not fished), I netted 8 Rainbows, all very deep-bodied, robust (length
in inches as judged by landing-net dimensions): 1 each of 15, 16, 17, 19, 20; 2
of 23-24; and 1 of 26”, on green, rootbeer, and black Nitro Caddis pupae or a
rootbeer Creek Grubb caddis larva. Five trout of ~15-20” were lost (only 1
breakoff, at the fly knot), and several other takes were detected, some not by
movement of my small strike indicator, instead by seeing the fish making jaw-
and head-yawing movements apparently to “spit” the fly. Most takes were by
fish firstly sighted in feeding position. The best fighter was the 19”
Rainbow, which jumped clear twice and made 4 runs, sawing the flyline up and
down the pool. The
26” fish was “luckily” landed. It was the largest clearly sighted fish of
the 2 days, and was hanging just below the surface by the far bank of the 3rd
lower pool (in which Jack Musick took 3 trout on 4 casts in late Apr). Its spot
was an eddy immediately downstream of an old debranched tree trunk that laid
mostly on the bank slope and extended about 10 ft into the pool at a depth of
1-3 ft. Watching the fish from behind a tree and thinking there’s little or no
chance to land the fish if it dives below the tree trunk, I gave it a (planned)
shot anyway, partly as I was fishing 4x tippet and knew I could lean into it. As
usual with a fish high in the water column, the first cast might be the sole one
to draw a take. And it was spot-on, the fish immediately bit the point fly (rootbeer
Nitro), and concurrrently I tightened as it began to jump — clear over the
tree trunk and into open water!!! It’s likely that tightening at the take
helped aim the leap trajectory over the trunk. Subsequent play mainly involved
holding and horsing-in the fish for ~10 min, as it went back-and-forth,
in-and-out. These Riverbound Rainbows seem to have an advantage conferred by the
deep body (and angles of fins?); they can hardly be moved sideways by a 5- or
6-wt rod (perhaps similar reason why members of the sunfish family fight
relatively strongly). One
of the most interesting aspects of the two days concerns caddisflies. Arriving
Thu late morning, riparian grasses, bushes, and trees had abundant resting
caddis, and shaking a branch caused a “bush hatch”. In late afternoon the
landowner told of a major caddis hatch two days prior. When asked if fish were
rising big-time, he said he hadn’t looked. Certainly little rising occurred
during my fishing of late morning to early evening. Fishing in early evening, an
upstream dense migration of fluttering caddis occurred for at least half an hr.
This may have been dispersal, not a mating flight, as I’ve broadly read that
caddis mate on land (which I’ve seen happen). At the start of the next
half-hr, looking down a long slow pool, I thought drizzling had begun, but
quickly noted that surface dimpling throughout the pool was caused by
ovipositing caddis. Surface activity of trout increased only very slightly,
indicating the flies were releasing eggs by dipping the end of the abdomen atop
the water, and/or that a relatively quite small number of caddis were emerging.
By mid-dusk all was quiet, hardly a fly aflight. Next day streamside vegetation
again had a concentration of caddis, and rising was still infrequent. Collecting
insects on Wed, I caught many adult caddis including 4 species, the by far most
common being moderately large, gray-winged, and gray-bodied. Unfortunately I
didn’t closely examine them in the field; as they were preserved in ethanol
(which dissolves coloration), I can’t say whether all the larger specimens
were gray-bodied. At riverside I opened a 3 caddis cases that were closed, hence
the medium or medium-large occupant was pupating; of abdominal color, 1 pupa was
green, 1 tan, and 1 gray. So little I know about Yellow
Sally stoneflies were occasionally seen flying over banks and shallows. Several
tiny and small-medium (2 species), blackish stonefly adults were
sweep-netted along shore. A few March Brown duns emerged in evening. Very few
midges were caught while sweep-netting adult caddisflies. Judging by inspection
of the underside of riffle stones, major hatches of mayflies and caddisflies are
ahead.
Roanoke River, Green Hill
Park, 3-5 May 2008 (Sat-Mon)
-
Bob Jenkins During
the three days of fishing and much of the four previous days the river dropped
and cleared from heavy rain on 28 Apr, the river having been in the upper 2800
cfs range, now down to a normal 150 cfs and only very slightly turbid,
essentially clear for Roanoke River. Preceding the rain, water temperature had
been at least as high as 69 F in late afternoon; on 4 and 5 May it was 66 and 64
in late afternoon. On
3-5 Apr I observed aquatic insects and fished up to nearly darkness, for 1.5 hr,
2.5 hr, and 4.0 hr, in the reach encompassing Picnic Pool and upstream into the
first pool just above Take-A-Number Pool. Of emerging insects, each day I saw
very few March Brown/Gray Fox, Early/Larger Sulphur, Late/Small Sulphur, larger
baetid (BWO), and tiny baetid (BWO). Emergence of sulphurs increased slightly at
duskfall, but overall rising to these duns was nil to infrequent. During
1945-2015 hr March Brown spinners (groups of 5-20) and Cream/White Cahill
spinners (2-5 total seen each evening) were aflight, during and after which
rising did not appear to increase. Surprising was the large numbers of midge
adults flitting just above (and on?) the surface of T-A-N Pool, over its mid
length and continuously to the far (N) bank, but rising was essentially absent,
far different from the constant rising to midges in late March. “All was
quiet” in the three pools by late dusk. I
can’t exactly recall my catch on the first two evenings owing to senioritis,
or to blurring by the main event of the three days. Seemingly I landed a
10-11” Brown and a 10-11” Rainbow on nymphs during each of Sat through Mon,
and lost two somewhat larger fish the first two days. On Mon evening, casting a
#16, bright green (Ice Dub) body, dark dun soft hackle, with dark dun fluff as a
tail/shuck (tied at 0400 hr the previous night), during a natural drift, I saw a
big bulge, concurrently felt the fish on, thought the fish was big, and I peeked
at my watch (1814 hr) for the first time ever to time the play, as I thought
it’d be of major duration (on 6x tippet). Quickly I got the fish on-reel, then
loosened the line so I could move toward shore to try to entice the fish away
from midriver brush. Gaining shallows, I tightened, the fish took off down to
the pool tail, the old CFO ZZZ-ing, the line slicing the surface in a curving
path, and then it went slack, the fly returned. Damn! But I chuckled; that was
cool fun, probably the largest Brown I’d ever hooked!
(And likely the fish had been caught and released in the preceding month
or two.) On
Sun a lure fisher landed an 18” Brown in Picnic Pool. Dehooking it for the
fellow, I noted it to be somewhat slender, unlike the otherwise all robust trout
I’ve seen in hand in GHP and the eastern Salem DHS. On
Mon a River Otter was poking up and downstream along the far bank of T-A-N Pool.
I judge that’s the species as it was much larger than a Muskrat, and had a
slender tail unlike a Beaver tail. Click here for 2008 January - April Fishing Reports Click here for 2005 Fishing Reports Click here for 2006 Fishing Reports Click here for 2007 Fishing Reports Please submit your input to Jon Wilson Please include your name, specific dates, streams, areas, flies used, water conditions, etc. We will make every attempt to update this page on a timely basis. Disclaimer - This writer accepts no responsibility for the accuracy of the information presented or your success in following it. If you're good you'll catch fish anyway - well maybe. |