Monday, August 21, 2023

Monday 8/21/23 Farmington River Report

Store Hours have changed to 5pm, 7 days a week, not 6pm anymore: 
Mon-Fri 8am-5pm & Sat-Sun 8am-5pm.

We just purchased another huge collection of fly tying materials last weekand are in the process of pricing it out. Stop by and check it out, and if a material your interested in isn’t priced just bring it up to the counter and we will give you a price for it. All sorts of stuff: dubbing, flash, hooks, hackle, squirrel, pheasant, threads, tying tools, fur, Zonker strips, rubber legs, deer hair, foam, and LOTS more. 

Our summer sale has changed a bit
SALE is now 10% off used & clearance fly rods & reels over $500 in store only-this is an additional discount off the marked price. Most clothing is 20% off the marked price. Select packs & vests are also 20% off the marked price. All Landing Nets are 10% off the marked price. The sale merchandise is going fast as it's rare that we mark things down during the height of the season.... but we can use some income, and you, our loyal customers, should benefit. 

Monday morning 8/21:
Pictured are a couple of trout by Jim DeCesare, taking advantage of an short outing in cooler early morning water temps after a night down into the 50’s.  

We will be closing at 5pm every day now.

No significant changes since the last report. Water level is about 75cfs lower as the Still River continues to slowly steadily drop, the dam is steady at 120cfs in Riverton, and the Still is reading 85cfs this morning, putting the total flow below that at just over 200cfs. You still need to keep a very close eye on water temps, it’s coming out of the dam at about 66 degrees. From there it rises in temperature both as the day progresses, and as you move downstream away from the dam. The Still River is a warming influence in Augest, so the coolest water in the afternoons will be above that. On warmer sunny days it’s been cracking 70+ degrees, even at the Rt 20 bridge in Riverton (Hitchcock/Riverton Self Storage). On days like that, if you are fishing in the afternoon you need to stay from Beaver Pool up to the dam. Not a long stretch of water at all, but it will keep you in water temps of 68 degrees or less. Direct sunlight is the biggest driver of increased water temps. The 10 Day Forecast looks pretty good starting Tuesday, with highs in the low/mid 70’s, and nights mostly in the 50’s. The most consistent fishing is nymphing the faster water with nymphs. Hatches remain overall slow. 

Your longest window of lower water temps is first light to mid mornings, especially after a night that goes down into the 50’s followed by an overcast morning. When it’s like that, you can venture downstream into the permanent TMA/Catch & Release (C&R), maybe even into New Hartford (where UpCountry is). But…. by late morning to noonish, you better be up in Riverton above the Still River, and you may need to stay from Beaver Pool up on hotter sunny afternoons to stay in water that is 68 degrees or cooler (it’s coming out of the dam at about 66 degrees currently). If you have rising trout, by all means match the hatch. Summer/Winter Caddis & regular assorted Caddis are a possibility. Tricos haven’t gotten going up here yet, but I did get a report over the weekend of a handful of Trico’s spotted in the permanent TMA- literally a handful though, not enough to call it a hatch. Fingers crossed, hopefully it gets going this week, we will keep you posted. Overall the best morning tactic has been nymphing the faster water & pockets. A favored AM nymph rig would be a bigger #8-10 Stonefly nymph paired up with a #16 Caddis Pupa or a #18-20 nymph like a Pheasant Tail/Frenchy, Walt’s Worm, or a Blue Winged Olive Nymph. While bigger trout have been scarce lately, I did get a customer report yesterday of a nice 18” brown landed on a big Stonefly Nymph fished in the pocket water in the early morning. 

Please DO NOT fish in 70+degree plus water or you will stress the trout out and can potentially kill them by catching and releasing at those temps (not enough oxygen in warmer water). If you are fishing in Church Pool on a sunny afternoon, you will 100% be fishing in 70+ degree water. Don’t be that guy. If you have a thermometer, please use it- it will show you where & when you can and cannot fish. Pretty much on sunny days by about 10am you better be up in Riverton above the Still River (it’s a warming influence that dumps in warm to hot water in the summer), and you may need to move even closer to the dam release to stay in cool enough water. When water temps move into the 60’s or higher, many trout will hold in the faster water due to the higher oxygen content. FYI when you take the water temp, make sure you are in the current and your thermometer is shaded, otherwise it will give you a reading higher than the actual temp. 

It’s not so much the actual water temp per se that creates issues for the trout when temps get into the 70’s, but rather the lack of oxygen in the water. Water that is faster and turbulent holds more oxygen, and trout will often prefer to hold in faster water as water temps move into the 60’s. Think riffles, rapids, and pocket water. Optimum water temps for brown trout and rainbow trout is about 50-65 degrees, 75+ is very stressful and trout will migrate to find cooler water (closer to bottom release dams, tributaries, spring holes) if it stays there for a while, and sustained periods at 80+ degrees is typically lethal (it literally suffocates them). FYI for Brook Trout you can subtract about 5 degrees from the above water temps, they require colder water.

Hatches have been very light since July (likely due to rising water temps, the bugs like the same cooler water temps that trout prefer), and we haven’t seen a legit morning hatch of Tricos yet in the permanent TMA. Dry fly fishing this summer has been below average so far. The best dry fly reports have been from those fishing Beetles & Ants, as well as blind fishing attractor dries in faster water with or without a nymph dropper 18-24” below. We are seeing Yellow Sally Stoneflies, they average #14-18. It’s not uncommon to see clusters of Yellow Sally shucks on the downstream side of rocks, I’ve seen as many as 50+ shucks on some rocks, August/September is peak time for them on the Farmington River. I find imitating them with nymphs more productive than dries, they look like a miniature Golden Stone and can be imitated with a #14-18 yellow brown Sulfur type nymph pattern. There are a few Isonychia around in the faster water averaging #10-12, some small #24 Blue Winged Olives, a few assorted Caddis, some Summer/Winter Caddis in the early to mid mornings, and at dusk a few Light Cahills/Summer Stenonema #12-22. If you are out in the evenings, stay until full dark and you may hit a 15-30 minute window of good bugs hatching & rising trout feeding on them. 

Nymphing has been the best tactic by far lately, hatches have been weak overall. Fish that faster water with nymphs. Bigger #8-10 Stoneflies will crawl out to emerge between first light and about 10am, making that pattern a good choice to nymph faster water in the mornings- look for the empty shucks on rocks in fast water, as well as on bridge abutments. Pair them up with a #16 Caddis pupa or a #18-20 Mayfly type nymph such as a small Pheasant Tail/Frenchy. From mid afternoon onward you can pair an Isonychia type nymph (use an imitative pattern, a Prince nymph, or a big Pheasant Tail) with a smaller nymph. Mornings are a great time to get out there and nymph and also catch the lowest water temps of the day. If ever there was a time of year to wake up early and be on the water at first light, the time is now.

We sometimes get pushback from customers who always fish the same pools in the permanent TMA/C&R and don’t want to hear the truth about water temps. “Oh, your taking the SURFACE water temperature” is the reaction I often get when taking water temps in Church Pool, and a regular asks me what the water temp is and I give them a high number they don’t like. If you’re fishing Church Pool in the afternoon on a warm, sunny day right now, you WILL be fishing in water that is 70+ degrees. Don’t be that person. In rivers there is not any significant degree of thermal stratification, so don’t tell us that the trout are sitting in cold water on the bottom, because it’s BS. In the deepest, slowest pools there is maybe 1 degree of temp difference between the surface and the bottom. Every time water moves through riffles, pocket water, and rapids, it all mixes together. And every trout you catch has to be pulled through the water at the surface anyway. Don’t rationalize unsporting behavior. 

Saltwater anglers take note, we have quite a few saltwater rods on sale or clearance, including models from both Sage & Hardy.

The FRAA stocked 57 large rainbow trout in New Hartford on June 8th from 19-24” and very fat, ranging from about 3-4# up to 7-8#. They were stocked from below the Rt 219 bridge (the Wall) down to Satan’s Kingdom. These fish are spreading out above & below that, and quite a few have been hooked, lost & landed since then. These are high quality Kamloops Rainbows that come from Harding Hatchery, a very tough strain of trout. They are quite fat with great coloration.

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Hatches/Dries:
Hatches have been very light, with dusk to dark being the best window, albeit a short window- don’t leave too early!
-Ants & Beetles #12-20: good choice late morning through early eves when bugs aren’t hatching but trout are sporadically sipping small stuff, you can also blind fish bigger ones
-Tricos #22-26: not yet, but anytime now, a few (as in a handful) have been spotted
-Summer/Winter Caddis #18-24: hatching in early to mid morning
-Summer Stenos/Cream Cahills #12-22: evenings at dusk
-Assorted Caddis #14-22 (tan, olive/green most common): hatching in early to mid AM, come back to egg lay at dusk in the riffles
-Isonychia #10-12: fast water insect, late afternoon through dark, spotty hatch this year
-Blue Winged Olives #22-26: esp. cooler cloudy days
-Midges #20-28: mornings & eves, try a Midge Pupa subsurface
-Mole Fly #20-24 (olive, brown): deadly emerger that covers many small bugs & fools difficult trout in flat water

Nymphs

Early to mid mornings are the longest & best window of lower water temps right now, focus on the faster water when nymphing (more oxygen & more trout).

-Big Stoneflies #8-12 (gold/yellow, brown, black): early to mid AM in fast water, you will see the shucks on the rocks, as well as on cement bridge abutments
-Yellow Sally #14-18: use a yellow brown Sulfur nymph to imitate them
-Isonychia Nymph #10-12: nymphs are working, fish in fast water, both dead-drift & swing them. Princes & large Pheasant Tails work well to imitate them.
-Caddis Pupa #16-18 (mostly tan or olive/green): dead-drift & swing in medium to fast water, especially early & late in the day, entire river
-Frenchies & Pheasant Tails #12-20: various sizes imitate many different Mayfly nymphs (BWO, Sulfur, Iso, etc.) & smaller Stoneflies and are quite effective everywhere
-Antoine’s Perdigons #12-20: various patterns, all year
-Caddis Larva (olive to green) #14-16: anytime, lots of these in the river
-Cased Caddis #12-14: abundant bug, effective during/after flow bumps (knocks larva into the drift) 
-Jigged Streamers #8-12: various colors/patterns- dead-drift, twitch, swing & strip, best 
on a Euro rod & leader
-Attractor Nymphs #14-20: anything flashy, gaudy, or with a hot spot such as Rainbow Warriors, Sexy Waltz, Prince, Triple Threats, etc.- not uncommon for these to outfish drabber, more imitative flies, even on big wild browns
-Junk Flies (Eggs, Mops, Squirmies/SJ Worms, Green Weenies): good in cold water, during non-hatch periods, also for higher/off-color flows & fresh stockers, or just as a change-up to natural/imitative flies after you fish through a run with standard nymphs

Streamers:
Big trout are almost always on the lookout for bigger bites, especially early & late in the day and during lulls in bug activity. Also a great choice anytime the flow is up or off-color. 
-Rich Strolis articulated streamers (assorted), tied by the man himself, restocked recently 2 times
-Jigged Streamers #8-12: various patterns/colors, deadly fished on a tight-line/Euro rig
-Rio's Precious Metal #4 (Kreelex copper, olive, white)
-BMAR Yellow Matuka #6
-Zuddler #4-8: olive, yellow, white, brown, black
-Complex Twist Bugger #2-6: assorted colors
-Conehead White Marabou Muddler #8
-Woolly Buggers #2-8 (peach, black, olive, white, brown, tan)

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Diamondback Ideal Nymph Reels:
These are the most well thought out & designed Euro nymphing reels out there, the product of Joe Goodspeed who designed the Diamondback Ideal Nymph Rods. It has a full cage which makes it very unlikely for long/thin leaders or Mono Rigs to work their way outside the frame- a common problem with most modern reels (very few are full frame, 90% have a half frame). The machined tolerances are also extra tight to help with this. It has removable weights so you can fine-tune the rod/reel balance. The ultra large arbor, large diameter, narrow spool is ideal for Euro nymphing where you don’t want or need a ton of line capacity- this also gives you a faster retrieve rate and less line coiling. The drag is ultra smooth to protect light tippet. The most unique feature of all is the offset reel foot, which gives you the ability to put the mass of the reel even closer to the rod butt, improving rod balance. If you need to take up slack quickly the reel is designed so you can hit the spool with your palm to spin it rapidly and take up excess line. Anywhere the line/leader can rub against the reel when stripping line has been machined round to eliminate abrasion. The Ideal Nymph reel is unique, with all the features you wanted and clever ones you never even thought about. They use the latest 5D-5 Axis machining to make this unusual & beautiful fly reel. These reels have already become a hot seller.

The T&T Contact II 10’ 9 2wt rod debuted in 2022, and it is an excellent addition to the best line-up of euro rods. I absolutely love it- the perfect rod for conditions that dictate lighter tippets & smaller/lighter flies: casts great, very sensitive, very low swing weight, and a blast to play the fish on. It is my current favorite rod, it’s really fun to fish with, and guides Zach St. Amand & Derrick Kirkpatrick are also big fans of it, as is shop employee/shop rat Joey. The length is ideal for rivers like the Farmington, allowing you to fish & cast further away, make longer drifts, cast easier, faster hook sets, and the soft tip will protect your tippet against big trout. Enough power in the butt section to handle bigger trout when necessary, and a bit of extra flex in the tip for casting thinner micro leaders and lighter flies. The new 2wt is a great compliment to your arsenal, especially if you already have the 3wt, which is the “all 'rounder” for Euro Nymphing. 

The Diamondback range of Ideal Nymph rods are in stock. These fantastic Euro nymphing rods are available in 10’ 1wt, 10’ 2wt, 10’ 10” 2wt, 10’ #3, 10’ 10” 3wt, 10’ 10” 4wt, and 10’ 10” #6, with more models to come soon. Joe Goodspeed, (formerly of Cortland and T&T) designed this new series in 2022, and he did a great job. At $525-550, these rods are a deal and easily the best Euro rods in the $500 range. Using the latest, state-of-the-art materials & construction, the rods are light with excellent recovery & sensitivity, plenty of big fish playing power, double rings on the downlocking reel seat, 3 snake guides on the rod tip for minimal line/leader wrap with thinner/micro leaders, and 2 single foot ceramic stripping guides to reduce friction & improve line shoot. The 10’ 10” #2 has been a best seller for the Farmington River, also the 10’ #1 (a unique & very fun rod). The 10’ 10” #3 has the backbone to handle larger trout & heavy jigged streamers. I’ve also noticed the 10’ #2 is very popular with top competition anglers who have access to any rods they want, Joe really nailed it on this particular rod.