Zach with 24" of brown trout on a Caddis Pupa Saturday evening!!! |
Matty B and big brown #1 at 23.5" |
Matty B and big brown #2 at 21.5" |
Tail of a 21" brown caught on a dry fly by Jon Bye |
Derrick Kirkpatrick (CTFishGuides) got Jim into a big brown |
you want some elbow room either fish there at the crack of dawn, or venture outside of that area.
Andrew Kerilla doing some quality father/son time |
A big Nature's Spirit order arrived last Friday, and it includes new colored Solarez resin (fl. orange/pink/chartreuse, etc.). It also restocks us on competition style barbless hooks, including the best-selling Hanak 450 Jig Superb hook. FYI we received & put away almost $15,000 (our cost) worth of fly tying materials from Wapsi & Hareline recently. We have tippet rings in stock again, Squirmy Worms, and lots of fly boxes. Tacky boxes are also back in stock, and we now have their new breathable fly box! No more rusty flies...
FYI we have a KILLER assortment of custom tied soft-hackles in our bins by Dick Sablitz, they are both fun & deadly to fish. Dries are producing a few fish, but at this flow you have to pick your spots carefully (bigger/wider pools). The bulk of the Hendrickson hatch is up river now, mostly above the
Greg Hallam holding an extra pretty brown |
A little wild native Brook Trout |
If you think you are fishing over a lot of fish, go through the area several times, changing flies on each pass. If you aren't hitting fish, then keep covering new water, change flies, and try different tactics/presentations. In general, the more water you cover, the more fish you will catch. And especially if you are fishing streamers, make sure to cover lots of water. For those of you who arent great nymphers, a killer rig is a weighted streamer (such as a conehead Woolly Bugger), with a #14-16 nymph or soft-hackle trailed 14-18" behind it (tied off hook bend of the streamer). Typically some fish will eat the streamer, but many who won't will eat the smaller trailing fly.
We are getting a lot of good to excellent fishing reports from customers lately, but some anglers are
still struggling, despite large numbers of recently stocked fish
combined with actively feeding trout in optimum water temps. Heavy
fishing pressure can make even recently stocked trout fickle about fly
patterns, especially after they've been pricked a bunch of times on
popular patterns. Adaptable anglers who move around, cover the water, and are willing to fish dries, streamers, nymphs or wets/soft-hackles will always have the best success.
If you fish the same 10 yards of water with one technique for 4 hours
straight, don't be surprised if you have lackluster results. If you
aren't doing well, try different techniques, presentations, and flies.
Also move around and cover the water if you aren't catching fish where
you are.
If you are nymphing, think about fishing a #14-16 olive/green to tan Caddis Pupa, a brownish #14-16 Mayfly type nymph (can be a Pheasant Tail), or something smaller & olive in the #16-18 range to imitate the Baetis/Olives. The 'ol PT (Pheasant Tail) is a very effective imitation of Olives and many other mayflies (depending on what size you choose). If you are nymphing in the early AM or late in the day, try using imitations of flies that will be hatching in June, as they will end up in the Behavioral Drift- think Sulfur nymphs & Caddis larva. If you are targetting the fresh stockers, I'd try pairing a natural looking nymph with a Junk Fly like a Mop or Squirmy Worm, or maybe a flashy/gaudy hotspot nymph- deadly combo! FYI higher flows knock quite a few Cased Caddis into the drift, it's definitely an underfished fly pattern. Streamers continue to be productive, and give you a shot at some of the bigger trout. Play around with size, color & style of streamers, and experiment with your retrieve until you find the winning combo for that day. Be aware that color preferences for streamers can change throughout the day as light conditions change.
During higher flows, stick mainly to the major wider pools/runs, and look also for inside turns that break the current. High flows push trout closer to the banks, out of the heavy current. Find a current break that's close to where they normally hold, and you will find trout. Don't make the classic mistake of wading out in high water, I see anglers walk right through the fish all the time in high water, it's a rookie mistake that many veteran anglers make. Look for the current edges and fish the transition between the fast & slow water. Again, don't walk through the prime holding water! Rule #1 is find the fish and fish where they are, and Rule #2 is don't spook them! Rule #3 is fish something they want to eat, and Rule #4 is present it in such a way they they will eat it. Medium to large streamers in various colors (olive, black, white, brown, etc.) are good in higher flows, as are nymphs such as big Stoneflies #6-10, Cased Caddis, #12-14 brownish nymphs (imitate Hendricksons), Frenchies, and Junk Flies (Mops, eggs, worms, Weenies). I generally wouldn't go smaller than #14-16 nymphs during higher flows. Having said this, in clear/high flows if there is heavy bug activity on smaller bugs like Blue Wing Olives, a #18-20 matching nymph may be in order. Fluorescent hot spots and/or flashy UV dubbing can help the trout to spot your fly.
Water temps have been averaging low/mid 50s most days in the permanent Catch & Release (C&R)/TMA, (reaching upper 50s on warmer/sunny days), and in Riverton the temps have been in the mid 40s.
Nymphs & streamers continue to catch most of the trout, especially the bigger ones, but now that flows are down somewhat look for more rising trout when the bugs are hatching. If you are targeting freshly stocked trout, make sure if you are nymphing that one of your flies is a "Junk Fly"- Mop, Squirmy Worm, Egg Fly or Green Weenie. Pair it up with a more regular, natural looking fly (Hare's Ear, Pheasant Tail, etc.). Small to medium streamers such as Woolly Buggers can be lethal on fresh stockers too, make sure to play with colors (Rainbows usually LOVE black FYI, and olive is another top color).
FYI we are now in our extended hours: 8am-6pm weekdays, and 6am-5pm on weekends.
We have
Devin Olsen's hot new book "Tactical Fly Fishing", and it looks really,
really good- second batch arrived recently. It cover Euro style
Bigger streamers continue to pick up less but bigger fish. If you wanna throw 4-6" streamers
for trophies, you are swinging for the fence and may strike out, but some days you will hit a home run and catch a
giant. Smaller streamers will often catch more trout, but you are less
likely to get a giant on them. Be patient and cover lots of water,
change colors/retrieves/patterns/fly size. Experiment and the trout will tell you what
they want. It can vary from day to day, and even during the same day as
water temps, trout metabolism, insect activity, and light levels all
change as the day progresses.
nymphing, plus a whole lot more. Based
upon what he's learned from years of the highest level fly fishing
competitions against the best trout fly fishermen in the world. It
covers things in an extremely detailed way, and has some great "Case
Studies" where he shows you different water type pictures with photo
sequences of how they were able to successfully catch fish in them, and
what adjustments they had to make in their rigging, approach,
presentation & flies to find success. It's a good
new option that does NOT duplicate George Daniel's two books on
nymphing, but rather it compliments and adds to them.
Flow as of 11am Monday 5/28/19:
Currently the total flow in permanent TMA/Catch & Release per the USGS gauge is medium high & very fishable at 519cfs & dropping (the Still River is 88cfs & dropping), and in Riverton the in the 2 miles above the Still River the Farmington is medium-high at 431cfs. USGS average historical total flow for today is 383cfs. The Still River joins the Farmington River about 1/4 mile below Riverton Rt 20 bridge, roughly 2 miles below the dam. East Branch release is 50cfs, it joins the West Branch about 3/8 mile below UpCountry near condos & sewage plant. The Still River drops every day we don't get significant rain.
Click this Thomas & Thomas blog link for a very recent review I wrote about their awesome new Contact 10' 8" #6 rod for Steelhead & Lake Run Trout/Landlocks: https://thomasandthomas.com/blogs/news/torrey-collins-contact-1086
Check out this link to my blog post on 10 of my favorite books on a variety of subjects:
http://www.farmingtonriver.com/classes-news-reviews/10-of-torreys-favorite-books-december-2018/ I'll be doing more blog posts on recommended books in the future, there are many great books out there.
A favorite image of mine Matt Supinski used in "Nexus" |
Hours:
We are open 8am to 6pm Monday through Friday, and 6am-5pm on weekends.
Water Temps:
Look for water temps to average in the low/mid 50s in the permanent TMA/Catch & Release (mid 40s in Riverton above the Still River), but will vary depending upon the weather, time of day, and specific location. Long range highs are normal will be mostly in the low/mid 70s, with lows in the 50s. Mild, sunny days will see the biggest water temp increases. The exception to this will be during high water releases from the dam, as the colder water from deep in the reservoir chills down the river. Highest water temps will occur in mid/late afternoon, with sunny days seeing the biggest temperature increases- this often activates both the aquatic insects & trout. Typically the best bug activity (and fishing) correlates to the most pleasant time of the day for us humans.
Hatches/Dries: