I've been away on vacation the past week, but the parade of big trout continues. Check out the measured 24" dry fly brown caught by guide Zach St. Amand's customer Howell, just wow! Customer Tristan caught the beautiful brown pictured below on a dry fly, he is a young up-and-coming angler. This is one of many bigger trout he caught so far in 2018, I have featured pictures of him before.
For those of you worried about the weekend water conditions, you have nothing to worry about: the Farmington is currently a medium 251cfs from the dam in Riverton, downstream
to the confluence of the Still River. The catch & release area
through Barkhamsted is medium-high at 541cfs & dropping fast (the Still River drops like a stone). Rain this week added water to the river, but it is still very wadable with great hatches
throughout the day. Water temps are low 50s right below the dam in Riverton, and in the upper 50s to mid 60s down in the Catch & Release and into New Hartford. As the Still River continues to drop, so will the water temps (the Still River runs warm in the summertime).
No real changes in the bugs from last week. Mornings are still bringing Winter/Summer Caddis #20-24 in the very
early hours. 7am-10am has been seeing Needhami Duns #22-26. Late morning
through the evening has been seeing various caddis #16-20.
Isonychia #10-14 and Sulfurs #16-20 are still hatching in good numbers
in the late afternoon and evening. Terrestrials such as ant &
beetles have been excellent as well during the day. Hatch times will
vary
depending upon time
of day, air temps, and how far up or down river you are. Make sure to
have more than
one
size Sulfur, because if they are on the smaller #18-20 ones, they likely
will refuse a #16. Isonychia live in fast water so look for them there-
pool heads, riffles,
pocket water & runs, Sulfurs live/hatch in a variety of water types
(especially medium-slow to medium fast). You can even blind fish large
Isonychia dries and
bring
fish up to them. Dry/dropper is very effective in the summer here, run
one or two small weighted nymphs behind a buoyant visible dry (2-3 feet
under your dry if you are searching/blind-casting the water, but only
about a foot if fish are actively rising during a hatch). Isonychia
nymphs are also very effective- try both dead-drifting &
swinging/stripping them. They are excellent/fast swimmers, and sometimes
the trout want them moving, and sometimes they don't.
The 3rd autographed batch of
George Daniel's brand new book "Nymph Fishing" arrived at UpCountry recently. I've read
it, and in my opinion it's
excellent. He covers new things he learned in the last 6 years since
"Dynamic Nymphing" came out, plus things he has changed his opinion on.
Lots of new patterns shown in this book too, plus some new leader
formulas. FYI I'm in it :). The first two batches sold out fast. We also have
the brand new 2nd DVD on Euro Nymphing from Devin Olsen & Lance Egan
(filmed by Gilbert Rowley) in, it's called "Modern Nymphing Elevated",
and is the follow up to "Modern Nymphing". This one covers many new
things, and is geared toward intermediate to advanced anglers (the 1st
was more for beginers to intermediates). And just like the first one,
the cinematography is excellent.
George Daniel Clinics coming this fall at UpCountry- click on the clinic
name to take you to link with clinic descriptions/info. Call shop at
860-379-1952 to sign up, cost is $150, paid in advance, nonrefundable.
FYI payment in full is required when you sign up, we cannot "hold" a
spot for you without payment. The 9/29 Nymphing Workshop is full now,
but we have a #2 Nymphing Workshop scheduled for Saturday October 20th,
9am-2pm, plus a 3rd on on Sunday October 21st:
-9/29/18 Nymphing Workshop (full but we have another on 10/20, and 10/21 also)
-9/30/18 Streamer Fishing Workshop
Mark Swenson's next "Fly Fishing 101 Class"
for beginners is scheduled for August 4th, 2018 from 9am-4pm, cost is
$150, class is limited to 4P. Click on link for details, call shop at
860-379-1952 to sign up, payment in full is required when you sign up to
lock in your spot.
Bugs:
Sulfurs are still a major hatch, both the slightly larger #16 (Invaria- mostly upriver now) and the
smaller/yellower #18-20 Sulfurs (Dorothea). #10-12 Isonychia are hatching everywhere. I
typically think of Iso's as a late afternoon to evening hatch, but you
may see them earlier in the day up closer to Riverton (due to colder
water closer to the dam). We started seeing #22-26 Needhami recently,
they are typically an early/mid morning deal, but can also be on the water in the
evenings. They are the size of a small Blue Winged Olive, but have a
chocolate brown body and darker wings. Assorted Caddis averaging #16-20
in
olive-green
& tan are hatching everywhere, typically popping in the late
morning to early/mid afternoon normally, and then egg-laying at dusk.
#12-14 Light Cahills,
#18-20 Attenuata (a bright green almost chartreuse sort of
Blue Winged Olive),
and #18-26 Blue Wing Olives (early/late, especially on cloudy days) are also
hatching. Small Midges are always present, especially in the colder & less fertile
flows up
near the dam in Riverton.
Subsurface,
Sulfur-type nymphs, big Stoneflies, Caddis Pupa, Pheasant
Tails/Frenchies, #10-12 Isonychia nymphs, and small Blue Wing
Olive nymphs are taking trout, and big Stonefly nymphs are working
(especially early/mid morning for the Stones). A variety of attractor/hot-spot nymphs
have been very
effective also, including Antoine's Perdigon series. When trout aren't rising,
the nymphing has been good. Catching trout is
not always about exactly matching the hatch (sometimes it
is though,
especially during a hatch when trout are surface feeding), it's about
getting a trout's attention and enticing them to eat your fly. The best
nymphing has been in medium to fast water with some chop to it- just
look for current breaks, seams between fast & slow water, drop-offs
and structure. Wet flies & Soft-Hackles have been catching plenty of
trout too, we have a good selection of them if you need us to pick you
out a couple of winners. Wets are both fun to fish & good fish
catchers. They also enable you to efficiently cover a lot of water and
search for fish. They are most deadly when fish 2 or 3 at a time, with tag end droppers.
Dries/Hatches:
-Isonychia #10-12 ("Iso's, faster water, typically late afternoon until dark)
-Sulfur #16-20 (Invaria & Dorothea, mostly eves, but mid/late afternoon upriver closer to dam)
-Needhami #22-26 (morns & sometimes eves)
-Caddis (olive/green, tan) #14-18
-Light Cahill #12-14 (evenings/dusk)
-Baetis/Blue Winged Olives #18-26 (mostly afternoons & eves)
-Summer/Winter Caddis: #18-24 pupa & adults (early/mid AM)
-Attenuata #18-20 (evenings- like a Blue Wing Olive, but bright
green, almost chartreuse)
-Ants & Beetles #10-20 (anytime, especially during non-hatch times)
-Mini Chernobyl #12-16 (great for "searching the water" or dry/dropper)
Nymphs:
Sulphur-type nymphs #16-18, bigger Stoneflies #6-12, Pat's Rubber Legs #6-10 (esp. coffee/black), Tan & olive/green Caddis Pupa #14-18, Olive Nymphs #16-20, Pheasant Tail/Quasimodo Pheasant Tails
#12-20, Isonychia Nymph #10-12, Midges / Zebra Midges #16-22, Caddis Larva
(olive to green) #14-16, Mop Flies (various colors, especially cream/tan)
#8-12, Antoine's Perdigons (various colors, especially olive, black) #12-20, and Attractor/Hot-Spot nymphs
#12-20 (Pineapple Express, Frenchy, Triple Threat, Pink Soft Spot Jigs, Carotene Jigs, Egan's Red
Dart, Rainbow Warrior, etc.).
Cortland's "Top Secret" Ultra Premium Fluorocarbon
tippet is by far the strongest out there with the most
abrasion
resistance, stretch, flexibility & clarity. Total game-changer, and
an extra-good choice if you like to nymph with lighter tippets - here's a
link to purchase it off our site: http://www.farmingtonriver.com/cortland-top-secret-ultra-premium-fluorocarbon/
Streamers:
Try
#2-14
patterns, especially in colors like olive, white, black or brown- other
colors are good too, and it pays to experiment. Typically
the low-light periods of early & late in the day are the optimum
times to fish a streamer. During the day, target structure (undercut
banks, fallen trees, undercut banks, big boulders, etc.) and shady
areas. If you're
specifically targeting larger trout, go bigger, but expect to catch
less fish. Water temps are mostly in the 50s to mid 60s now, which
means you
can speed up your retrieve. Play around with your
presentation & retrieve and see what works. If you
listen, the trout will tell you what they want. Think Zonkers, Woolly
Buggers, Bruce's
Yellow Matuka, Dude Friendly, Ice
Picks, Mini Picks, Mop Heads, Slump Busters, Sculpin Helmet patterns
(for a weighted sculpin imitation), etc.
If you have some equipment gathering dust in your closet, our shop is "hungry" for trade-ins. We
give fair market value toward new equipment in the store..... no
waiting for your item to sell, just bring your used fly rods, reels, and
fly tying equipment to us and we will turn it into something shiny and
new for the upcoming season. Please call ahead for an appointment.
Tip from Torrey:
By customer request, a tip for those of you doing tight-line/Euro/high-stick nymphing:
Make sure to "lead" your drift when you are tight-lining nymphs.
It's important to be in touch with your flies so you can detect the
strike and set the hook quickly before the trout spits your fly (FYI on
average, I've read fish will hold a fly for 2 seconds before rejecting
it, and heavy catch & release fishing pressure can make them spit
even faster). By "leading your drift", I don't mean pulling your fly, but rather keeping your rod tip downcurrent/downstream
of where your leader enters the water. All you are trying to do is keep
pace with your drift so you get as drag-free a presentation as
possible, while minimizing the slack by keeping light tension so
you can detect subtle hits. Keeping your rod tip slightly ahead of the
drift does this, and also puts you in a great hook set position (FYI set
the hook downstream and to the side- I'll do a future tip about that).
If you keep your rod tip exactly even with where you leader enters the
water (as many people do and as many outdoor writers mistakenly say you
should do), you will not be in as good contact with your flies.
We are in that time of year (summer) where in order to catch
the best evening dry fly fishing you should to stay LATE. Leave too early
and you may completely miss it (especially on hotter days when the evening fishing kicks off later). And remember that spinner falls occur
over riffles. Having said this, it also depends upon the section of
river and
the weather that day. Riverton with it's colder water often sees
"evening" bug activity begin & end earlier in the day, and morning
activity begins later upriver due to colder water. In the rest of the river,
cloudy/cooler weather will often see the "evening bugs" start up earlier. Super hot
days might see the evening hatch begin right at the edge of darkness.
Quite a few trout are holding in only 1-2 feet of choppy
water lately (especially during hatches and/or low light conditions) and sometimes even skinnier water than that, so don't
focus only on the deep stuff. Typically when trout are in shallower
water, they are there
specifically to feed. Plus many bugs (Isonychia
and many Caddis species for example) hatch in fast, often shallow water. Spinner
falls typically occur over/in riffles and pocket water. Plus fast water
is more oxegenated. All reasons you should should not ignore faster
water. Personally I've been targetting fast water almost exclusively
since early/mid May, and there have been plenty of trout in residence
there.
In water that's not too deep, dry/dropper with 1-2 weighted nymphs about
2-3 feet under a buoyant, visible dry fly can be very effective, not to
mention fun. It also enables you stay back a bit, and gives you the
opportunity to catch fish on both nymphs/pupa & dries. Most days
they'll take the nymphs, but you will get plenty of bonus trout on the
dry.