Yesterday was 8/8/16, a nice bit of numerology even if you’re not mathematically inclined. (For the record, I am not. But I do love and am attuned to numbers.) Water flow was a low 178cfs, voluminous compared to the current trickle that is the Farmington. And warm. Mid-to-upper 70s warm. (I can confirm this from personal sampling as I managed to fall into the river twice. A treacherous wade, that TMA.) There is something to be said about the cooling effects of wet wading inside your breathable Simms on a hot, sunny day.
To the fishing. I am not long on smallie experience, but I am a quick study. Here’s what I can tell you.
I fished from the general area of the West Cornwall covered bridge down to the Rt. 7 bridge. Six hours, 3pm-9pm. My M.O. was fish, drive, park, repeat. While the sun was up, the bass were, without exception, in brisk, moving water. They also tended to be on the small (5″-7″) side. I found players in every run I fished.
A smallmouth that Goldilocks would have loved. I like how the surface blends with the depths. The Hous is a weird-colored river.
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Fly selection was irrelevant. Bright white and fluorescent chartreuse? Loved it. Muted earth tones? Attacked it with prejudice. Horrible, dreadful pattern (like the TeQueely)? Total annihilation. The only fly I didn’t hook up on was the Gurgler, and that’s because I fished it in daytime and the little guys couldn’t manage the wide gap size 2 hook. This is the first time I fished the Deep Threat for smallmouth, and it was met with unilateral approval.
Crayfish are an anecdotal smallmouth favorite, as are flies in browns/orange/olives/black/etc. The river is loaded with the naturals.
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Once the sun dipped behind the hills and trees, the bigger fish action turned on. I lost count of the number of smallmouth I caught long before I took this shot, an attempt at an artsy silhouette portrait.
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The vaunted white fly hatch never materialized. From 8pm-8:30 there was a consistent surface bite, but I had to work for every fish, and quite frankly, what was rising wasn’t worth the effort I was putting in with my Light Cahill dries (12-16). As dusk deepened, I decided to bail on the dries and go surface streamer. First cast toward the bank with the Zoo Cougar and I was on — and I mean on fast and hard. For the next half hour, I was in smallmouth heaven. Pound-for-pound, these might be the hardest fighting fish I’ve ever experienced. Tremendous sport.
My biggest smallmouth came as night settled in over the water. Sadly, he slipped the net while I was getting my camera ready, so you’ll have to be content with this shot of his younger brother.
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You know how sometimes on the drive home from the river something doesn’t sit quite right with you? Sure, you caught fish, but you may have LDRed a good one. Perhaps you lost a favorite fly on the bottom. Maybe there was that one fish you just couldn’t fool. You’re glad you got out, but there’s that little negative something inside that keeps gnawing away at you — and in a way, it wrecks the whole thing?
This trip wasn’t one of those.
That looks like a Rusty Crayfish. Did that invasive make it to your area too or are they native? Here in Michigan our lakes and rivers are becoming over run with them. So much so that the resident crays are gone.
It sure looks like one with the dots on the carapace in front of the tail. It’s an invasive in CT. If it makes any of us feel better, there were countless shattered remains, courtesy of the birds, on rocks everywhere.
Like all your work , I particularly liked this one.
Thanks for taking the time, to fish -that’s for you- sharing the experience – that’s for us(me).
Sent from my iPhone
The pleasure’s all mine, Sal.
They are sch fun fish, especially when they are taking that well. Love your ending!
You made my day, Rowan. 🙂
Steve-
this post is one of the reasons why your blog is my favorite fish porn- thanks for sharing this one with us!
Kind words, sir! I’m delighted you enjoyed it so much.