Monday, May 12, 2014

Itch


Last week after work one evening I had the chance to fish a local stream for the first time and it did not disappoint.  I had stopped at this particular section of the Croton River back in early April to take a look and what I found was just a simply gorgeous stream.  I was happy to be able to wet a line there so I met up with a young angler who shared some great nymphing techniques and we fished together for an action packed couple of hours.  Brown after brown came to net.  Nothing too large but these were spirited trout.  A surprise rainbow even came to hand as we worked our way downstream.  I had hoped to find some fish on dries but there were very few rises and we were having so much fun fishing subsurface that I thought it best to stick to this method.  It was nice to fish with this kid and I silently appreciated his youth, knowing that he has his whole life ahead of him and he's got one of the keys to happiness all figured out.


With the itch of the dry fly not scratched and sparse time over the past several days, I hit a local stream for the last hour of daylight this evening.  I thought for sure that with the warm temps there would be bugs about and plenty of them but this just wasn't the case.  When I arrived at the stream I debated going with nymphs again but ultimately decided against it.  After all, I specifically came out here without dinner, straight from my son's soccer practice, to fish dry flies.  A commitment being what it is, I stuck to it.  I tied on a Hendrickson because this is the hatch that I keep hearing about to match the season.  Soon enough, a fish came to net.  It was a hell of a good feeling coaxing a fish to the top.  It wasn't large and it was only one, but it rose to the fly.  Scratch, scratch, scratch, ahhhhhh.  After a couple more misses, it turned off.  I reeled up the line and clipped off the fly.  I looked to the sky and gave thanks.


Hope to get out again soon.  It's already starting to itch again.

Tight lines.

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Stockies and Dry Flies

A detour between work and home was in order this afternoon and I settled on a nice little stream that is very close to home.  I hadn't fished it since last season and had recently learned of it's stocking (this stream typically gets stocked later than most around here) so that was a helpful bit of knowledge to have.  I don't generally get too romantic about the stocking truck but after and 0-fer the other day with my daughter I was ready for some cheap romance and a good confidence boost.

I tied on a small elk hair caddis as I thought about how nice it would be to catch a trout on a dry for the first time since last season.  One gets a bit tired of a clunky nymph with dropper set up so I compromised and tied on the caddis with a pheasant tail dropper.  No luck for the first half an hour...so...on I went.

Got in the car and drove a bit further downstream to a productive little pool and re-rigged to the double nymph set-up (oh well, what's a guy to do?)  I quickly landed a gem of a trout on my first drop and then hooked and lost another on my second.  Things were looking up, weighted line or not, stockies or not.  I had some fun moving about the stream to let the pool settle and returned within ten minutes or so.  Another fish came to hand shortly.  A nice looking trout, and the largest of the day by far.  She put a beautiful bend in the rod and gave a quickness to my pulse.



Things began to settle and I thought about calling it quits and actually getting home at the hour that I had said I would.

Slurp.

Huh?

Was that a...

Sploink!

RISE!!!

There were a few of them and a smattering of bugs on the water, hovering about.  The rain came in just in time to confuse me but there were some rises that left no doubt.  The skies darkened in a tandem pace with the rain and here I was, glad I had stretched out my decision to leave.

I tied on the smallest blue winged olive that I found in the box and looked to an area that showed a consistent rise.  Could I pull this off?  This was more delicate work than I have been used to.  False casting as I let out some fly line...and...I let it go...SMACK!  FISH ON!

I played the fish toward me and looked up to a sight that you may not believe that I actually saw.  In fact, I don't know if I even believe it.  There, across and downstream of me, was a big doe.  She caught my eye instantly as I played the trout and then she did something I have never seen a deer do.  She nodded.  Not just once or twice, mind you, but she nodded for a few good seconds as if to say, "Yeah buddy, you got a fish on, good job".  Embarrassingly enough, I actually spoke these words out loud to the deer like she was an old fishing buddy, "First fish on a dry fly!", and then netted the little silver bullet.  Hey, at least I recall talking to an animal...there are worse things a guy could do.

I caught trout on top for the next half an hour.  Some came on the drift, others as soon as the fly landed.  A couple of trout were hooked and lost, a couple more to net.  Was this an actual April hatch?  Darned if I know but it sure felt like one to me.

Ya know, come to think of it, I should have gotten that doe's number...

Tight lines.

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Daughter

She says to me on the way to the stream,  "I hope when I get married someday he likes to fish, Daddy, so we can all fish together and, ya know, you can get to know him."

I don't have the heart to tell her she's not ever allowed to get married.


Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Opening Day

A few hours on a new stream. Walking the banks in solitude.  Breaking an April sweat. Give thanks. Opening Day. Even landed a trout.  Happy fishing season one and all.



Monday, February 17, 2014

A year of "Wading" in the blogosphere...

"At Last to Wade the River" turns one tomorrow and I just wanted to take a moment and give you all a heartfelt thanks for stopping by, reading, commenting, and otherwise supporting the site.  I know how valuable time is and any attention that this little blog gets is genuinely appreciated.

I also appreciate those bloggers out there that continue to inspire me, whether it be in fishing, in writing, or both.

Tight lines...here's to the spring birds that I have been hearing these past few mornings...may they bring warm sun on our shoulders and bent rods in our grips sooner than later.

Mike

Monday, January 20, 2014

Warmer Days

As the cavernous trunk of the old but well kept silver '82 Buick Regal creaked open, the first burn of the dewy daylight slid in and glowed on the stowed gear.  Whispers of "go ahead, get in", as if we'd wake Mom or anyone from the driveway, quietly came out of Dad's mouth.  He tucked the last bag just right, climbed in the driver's side as I slid back in the passenger seat and lounged my thirteen year old frame while wiping the crust out of the corners of my hazy blue eyes.  The engine started softly, all in the theme of calmness.  The windows inched down a touch with a roll of the wrist to let the warm June morning in as we backed out over the long crumpling asphalt.  We were on our way.

Route 17 heading west rolled past.  Tall roadside grass and shoddy billboards shone the sun back from it's eastern stare.  His big wrist with gold watch confidently yet carelessly gripped the worn wheel.  Talk radio, fading out and back in until eventually turned off, greeted the ears with a familiar tinny backdrop.  Not too much was said between us.  Any questions I had could wait.  This road silence between us was, in fact, golden.  My worn Yankee cap with it's tiny cross embedded between the interlocking NY, a la Billy Martin, was tipped slightly low on my brow.  The seat belt strap was aimlessly flapping in the slightly humid breeze, clunking once in awhile against the plastic door frame.  "The Famous Roscoe Diner Just Ahead!" sign told me that we would soon be there.

The sunlight shuttered through the large and rusted steel beams that held the highway up over the old road we wound around on.  The fleeting images of men already at their craft, waving their rods in false casts in the rivers below. The abandoned restaurant, "Hansel and Gretel", which seemed must have held happy if not raucous memories behind it's boarded windows, was finally in sight and just up on the left.  I propped up higher in the big front seat.  The Buick turned and the car crunched it's tires over dirt, dust, and scattered pebbles as it descended the sharp hill down to the paint peeled green and white cabins.  It was now officially morning, maybe 7 AM or so, and the light shimmered along with the breeze through the maples and hemlocks that rose behind the dwellings and atop the banks of the Beaverkill River.  We crept along the makeshift road, sure not to hit the ragged chickens that scratched at the ground.  A big old scruffy brown dog lazily lifted one eyebrow from his perch near the woodpile.  It was his only greeting.  The car came to a stop.  The click click of the engine through the vast metal hood as it made it's first attempts to cool.  "Here we are", he said, "let's get the stuff."

The others had not arrived just yet.  Dad liked to be first.  We made trips like workhorses from trunk to cabin.  It was short work.

Inside was not much.  A bench seat.  A lamp with busted shade or two.  Pull chain type.  A small wooden table and chair with removable square checkered cushions that protected one from the protruding rust colored metal springs that supported the seat and back.  Floorboards that led to linoleum of a putrid yellowish-green that was laid in the tiny kitchen.  A small gas stove with a fridge that bubbled out in front all white. "Fridgidaire" in script along it somewhere written in metallic.  It was clear that these cabins had been here since the 50's.  A bottle of some sort of spirit or other was placed on the counter along with a bag of pretzels.  A deck of cards flopped on the small shellacked kitchen table.  He went to the porch where we had hung the waders.  The screen banged shut behind me as I followed.  His eyes smiled.  A satisfactory type of slow inhale through his nose. And out with, "Might as well get down there, no sense waiting for them.  Get your gear on."

The trail to the river was a tough slope.  He'd keep his eye over his shoulder on me but I showed no trouble.  The few rocks rolled down here and there past his feet.  "Sorry, Dad", I uttered.  I wouldn't fall.  A smirk crossed his lips, for he had been a boy too.  Once our footing was found on the banks of the river, we gazed at the emerald green pool in front of us with the undercut banks in the darkness across.  Golden orange rays of the new day bounced off of the stream as it gurgled and gushed.  Soft bulbous clouds in the lush blue sky way over the mountains marched slowly along like tired soldiers.  You could see forever in each direction.

His fly rod pointed out from his arm and he made a slight circular motion with it.  "In there", he said as he nodded me along, "Careful wading.  Cast the way I showed you in the yard at home."

"Okay."

I stepped into the stream and took a few awkward steps.  "That's it", he exclaimed, "get in there."  A slip, a correction, and on into the river.  A number of steps more.  The water to my knees.  Another glance over my shoulder at him.  With an approving nod, I took the fly off of the hook holder.  I pulled at the line from the rod tip until the fly line was out.  I raised my rod as the current sang it's melody of gargles and plunks and trickles.  I stripped the neon line as I brought the rod back and forth.  "That's it", he said convincingly, "Atta boy."

I let go of the line and watched as the dry fly gently touched across and upstream.

"Beautiful", he said.

These were warmer days.




Monday, December 30, 2013

Reconnecting

Things slow down a bit this time of year, thankfully.  It is, hopefully, a time of reconnecting with those that are most important.  I am lucky to have the family and friends that I do and a touch luckier to have some time off around the holidays to spend some quality time with them.  This, for me, is the entire meaning behind the season.

Leading up to Christmas, I had managed a couple of December outings to the East Branch of the Croton River.  A gift in its' own right because this stretch of river remains open year round.  If you can brave the conditions, you might even get a reward.  Fishing for trout is tough on the fly at this time of year and that proved to be the case on these two outings.  The river can be a lonely place in the winter as you don't run into too many folks.  The ones that you do run into seem to have the same luck as you do, which is no luck at all.  The lack of our friends with fins, of course, makes the stream a whole lot lonelier.

Either way, with the afterglow of the season coupled with the anticipation of the New Year, I figured I'd hit the river once more and see if I couldn't close out '13 with a bend in the rod.

I chose a different stretch of the water today than on my previous December oh-fers, and I was happy to find it vacant of anglers.  Lonely is one thing but not having the stretch you want is another.  With a twist of a couple of knots, I sunk a dropper nymph rig and hoped for the best.  It was somewhere around 9:30 a.m. and the indicator, as red as Rudolph's nose, disappeared into the depths.

Finally, I reconnected.


I hope that all of you have had the chance to reconnect with those you hold dear during the season and I hope that 2014 brings you an abundance of those connections.  And, yes, the other kind too ;)

Thanks for a great '13!  Tight lines.

Mike