Mandy with yet another giant Bow, caught on a small nymph this past weekend- photo courtesy of David Schumacher Photography. UpCountry has just acquired 30,000 dollars of Simms closeouts that will be for sale this weekend and beyond. There is a huge selection of Mens & Womens: Gore-tex jackets, packs, slings, shirts, pants, tee shirts, shoes, wading boots, and waders. Sizes are limited and there are only a couple of each item so when they are gone they are gone. In addtion to the Simms items we will be closing out Lamson Litespeed Reels, Sage "One" Rods, Scott A4 rods, and Temple Fork Outfitters Deer Creek Spey rods. There is also a large selection of used freshwater/saltwater rods and reels from Sage, Orvis, TFO, Redington, Scott, Winston, including some that are not listed for sale on our website. The fly tying bargain bin is currently overflowing with saltwater bucktails, necks, saltwater hooks, mustad freshwater hooks and more.
The Farmington was stocked with 2,000 trout last week.
All of the trout were put in the area from the Goodwin Dam in
Riverton, downstream to Whittemore Pool which is at the northernmost
point of Peoples State Forest, above the Campground. The entire river from Riverton to
Unionville is catch and release from Sept 1 - Opening Day so these trout
should stick around to add to the already good numbers of fish in the
upper river. Fishing has been good in the
morning with Tricos #22-26 close to Riverton and Summer/Winter Caddis #20-24 from Peoples State Forest downstream to New Hartford. Afternoons have been best using terrestrials. Ants,
Beetles, Hoppers and
Mini Chernobyls have been excellent for bringing trout to the surface
even if they are not rising. Evenings are seeing Blue Wing Olives
#20-24, Isonychia #12-14, White Flies #12-14, Tan Caddis #16-18, Summer
Steno/Light Cahill #16-20, Rusty Spinnners 18-24. Smaller nymphs #16-20 are a good choice anytime.
The Farmington is currently 88cfs through much of the upper river (76cfs from the dam, with an additional 12cfs from the Still River). The Goodwin Dam in Riverton is releasing water at 58 degrees. Cooler nights and days have been keeping the river from the Goodwin Dam downstream to New Hartford cold enough to maintain the trout, however we are still recommending fishing in Riverton in the afternoons and evenings where the water is the coldest to protect the trout from being overstressed. The state (DEEP) has closed all tributaries to
the
Farmington from New Hartford and downriver through
Collinsville/Unionville so that they can act as thermal refuges to any
trout seeking colder water to survive. You are not allowed to fish
within 100ft of the signs at the mouth of any brook or stream that
enters the river.
In our opinion this does not go far enough... please refrain from
fishing altogether south of New Hartford unless you are targeting
smallmouth.
Summertime Fishing Advice:
The trout have been getting caught
& released for months, the water is the lowest of the year. Lower
flows means it is easier to spook the trout, so a stealthy
approach can be very important, especially on flat water pools and trout
laying in skinny lies.
Trout sipping bugs on flat water requires using better techniques to
drift the fly. Use a Reach Cast, which helps present
your fly to the fish before your leader, and also usually makes it
easier to get a drag-free float. Longer leaders (12' and up to 15' +),
lighter lines (#2-4), lighter
tippets, smaller flies, proper fly selection, accurate casts, and
drag-free presentations are the keys to unlocking the puzzle. Many
anglers think they are getting a drag-free float, when in reality they
are getting micro-drag they cannot see. Longer tippets & shorter
casts will help give you a natural, drag-free presentation, and as flies
get smaller you need to lighten your tippet. For all but the biggest
dries, think 6x & even 7x tippet (for tiny flies like the #24 Tricos
for example), for Isonychia and big foam terrestrials you can do 5x
and even 4x (it's a bigger, more wind resistant fly, and you are usually
fishing it in the fast water). If it's not too windy and you are
able to turn your dry fly over, lengthening your tippet out to 3 or even
4 feet will do wonders for reducing drag, it will give you the same
effect as dropping down 1-2 tippet sizes.
For nymphers, some of the same advice for the dry fly guys applies to
you too. Longer leaders (12' or even longer, Euro-style nymphers often
use 30+ foot leaders or pure mono set-ups), accurate casts, and
drag-free floats are all
very important. While there are exceptions (#6-14 Stonefly nymphs &
#10-14 Isonychia nymphs), I frequently find smaller nymphs (no bigger
than
#16-20 patterns if tied on short-shank curved scud hooks, and #18-22 if
tied on standard hooks) to be the key to success many days in July,
August & September. Many of the natural bugs are smaller this time
of year, and our highly pressured trout seem less suspicious of smaller
flies too. Use a two fly rig with a bigger fly, but make your second
pattern something SMALL. If one of your flies is gaudy, flashy or has a
hot-spot, make sure your second pattern is drabber & more natural
(maybe beadless or with a black or brown bead instead of a shiny gold,
copper or silver one). Usually 5x fluorocarbon tippet is light enough,
but sometimes in pressured spots (like Church Pool) I'll go down to 6x,
especially if it's sunny, the water is low, and the flies are small. If
you like TroutHunter fluoro tippet, they do in-between sizes: 4.5x, 5.5x
& 6.5x- I use the 5.5x a lot in the summertime, and so do some of
the guides. Many trout pile
into FAST water in the summer, so make sure to make some casts there.
Big Stones, many Caddis larva/pupa, and certain Mayflies all live in
faster water, so put your flies where the food (and the trout) are.
UpCountry is always looking for good trade-in fly rods and reels to sell on our
website. If you are looking for some new equipment we will gladly put
the value of your used gear toward new items in our store. Give us a
call to make an appointment.... our prices on trade ins are typically
higher than found anywhere else.
If you like our fishing report, please consider buying your gear from
us. We generally ship the same day, for free anywhere in the country on
all but the smallest orders. Our shop can only exist with your patronage.