The Farmington River at Riverton Center is 300cfs this morning, and the Catch & Release area is running 600cfs and dropping. At this level, fish the larger pools for the best action on dry flies, and the heads of those same pools with nymphs for some of the large trout that you see in our photos. The riffles are fishable but stick to the areas close to the bank where the trout are piled up until the river drops a bit more.
Went out after work Sunday night with a friend, and the Sulfurs were
already hatching heavy from the time we set foot in the water (about
6pm) until dark. I nymphed (of course), and he mostly fished dries. We
both picked up fish, and as it got later the fishing picked up. I stuck a
heavy brown in shallow water at the top of a riffle, and several
minutes later just under 21" of brown trout graced my jumbo landing net.
What a sweet trout, with perfect fins/tail, big red dots, awesome
color, and a fat girth. At the very least a multi-year holdover, and
more likely a wild brown in my opinion. During many hatches, some of the
big trout stay down and chow on the nymphs exclusively. FYI I caught
that trout way outside of the TMA. There truly are big trout all over
the river, from the dam in Riverton down through Unionville, and even
below that. Years ago a friend hooked & lost a 30" brown on a
streamer right above the Tariffville Gorge. The Baranowski brothers were
floating the river last night in high water, tossing big streamers at
the banks, and they pummeled the big browns.
Sulfur hatches are cranking now, medium to heavy in
almost all areas, upstream to Riverton at least as far as just below the
Still River (extra-cold flow above the Still delays hatching in upper 2
miles), and down through Unionville and even below that. Make sure to have matching patterns in nymphs (Pheasant Tails
in #16-18 normally work great), emergers, duns & spinners. While it
is traditionally an evening hatch, we've seen them coming off as early a
1pm some days. The closer you get to the dam, the more "evening
hatches" tend to come off earlier in the day. Nature loves to defy the
rules, and cold tailwaters such as this one can make traditional hatch
calendars wrong at moments. Evening Sulfur spinner falls can brings some
pigs to the surface. Still lots of Tan Caddis around too.
Isonychia are starting to appear
downriver in the Canton through Unionville stretch (a few, not a lot
yet), and I saw a couple by our store Sunday night. It's not really a
full-blown hatch yet, but soon. In the C&R section, Winter/Summer
Caddis #18-22 have been
hatching well early morning to 11am, with
adults on the water in the late afternoon and evening. Sulfurs
#16-18 are on the water in the late evening (sometimes afternoons).
Blue Wing Olives
#18-24 have also been out in good numbers at moments, especially when
it's cloudy.
Caddis #14-18 in both olive/green body and tan body colors have been
strong- the tan ones seem to be the more dominant hatch now, but check
body color because it can be the difference between a great day and a
slow one. And FYI, they ALL look tan in the air until you catch one and
turn it upside down. Lt Cahills & March Browns #10-14 are showing up
from mid afternoon and on. March
Brown Spinners (sz 10-12), Rusty Spinners (18-20), and Sulpher Spinners
(sz 16-18) are on the water toward dark.
Subsurface,
Caddis Pupa & Larva in both olive/green & tan #14-18, Hare's Ear
soft hackles #12-16, Golden Stoneflies #6-12, Pheasant Tails #14-20,
March Brown Nymphs #10-14, Fox Squirrel Nymph #10-14, Prince
Nymph #12-18. We are seeing Golden Stonefly nymph husks on the
rocks in fast water, so they are active & hatching, and are an
especially good nymph choice in the mornings (they crawl out to
hatch/emerge at night and in the early to mid mornings) FYI big trout
LOVE them, use matching nymphs in #6-10 right now. Streamers are working well in the early morning and again
toward dark- look for either low light or murky water for best results
during this time of the year on the Farmington. Mice, Rats and giant
Streamers are working after dusk.
UpCountry
has just received a huge closeout of Hardy Zenith and Hardy Proaxis X
fly rods- these are literally flying out the door, so don't wait or they
will all be gone. As anyone who has been in earshot of me over the last
few
years knows, these are my absolutely favorite fly rods. These rods use
Sintrix, a technology licensed from 3M which makes them stronger and
nearly unbreakable under normal fishing conditions. You can find them in
our flyshop or in our online store at a great discount. - Grady