I went fishing a few times in the past couple weeks. Last Sunday my car broke down in Oconomowoc while I was fishing out there. At least I caught a fish -- it was a nice one too! Rosenow Creek was really amazing Thursday and Friday. Thursday I just fished a little while waiting for the tow truck to meet me. I caught two fish right away.
The colors on that first one are so rich, it looked more like a dolly varden or an arctic char or something.
I took my daughter with me yesterday so she could see some trout. Of course, she fell asleep on my chest instantly while I hooked up with trout after trout on spinning tackle. I didn't even keep count, that creek was full of trout. Fresh green grass is starting to show around the creek, and weeds are starting to grow in the stream. It will be overgrown and almost unfishable soon.
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Friday, April 12, 2013
All This Rain
When I went out to Waukesha County today, I was sure I would leave my gear in the car because the streams were unfishable. As I drove, all the streams I saw were flowing through the trees, showing no regard for Man's attempt to tame them.
I had to see though, what Rosenow Creek looked like.
I parked my car and walked the trail, totally expecting the creek to be flowing over the narrow bridge, but it wasn't. It was high, but not that high. And it was as clear as the Milwaukee River on an average day, if not clearer.
I went back for my gear.
I went downstream first. The area around the creek was really swampy, and the fishing was hard, much of the prime structure was unfishable. I went back upstream and fished the other side of the trail.
I'm less familiar with this stretch, so I explored a little more. I found a pond back in the overgrowth that I had no idea existed. I walked upstream past the overpass on the north side of the stream and took the south side back, fishing the structure and the rocky banks.
I was making single casts at each fishy looking location, casually fishing while walking back to the car. Finally, despite the high water, the wind and the rain, a trout took my bugger.
I had to see though, what Rosenow Creek looked like.
I parked my car and walked the trail, totally expecting the creek to be flowing over the narrow bridge, but it wasn't. It was high, but not that high. And it was as clear as the Milwaukee River on an average day, if not clearer.
I went back for my gear.
I went downstream first. The area around the creek was really swampy, and the fishing was hard, much of the prime structure was unfishable. I went back upstream and fished the other side of the trail.
I'm less familiar with this stretch, so I explored a little more. I found a pond back in the overgrowth that I had no idea existed. I walked upstream past the overpass on the north side of the stream and took the south side back, fishing the structure and the rocky banks.
I was making single casts at each fishy looking location, casually fishing while walking back to the car. Finally, despite the high water, the wind and the rain, a trout took my bugger.
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Trailer
I threw this together for my youtube channel.
Saturday, April 6, 2013
My First Driftless Trip
I made my way to a couple of driftless streams on Wisconsin's western edge today. My first stop was Mills Creek. It was cold and windy, and the water was rather clouded. I looked around and cast to some likely cover, but no results.
Back in the car to drive twelve or so more miles to Reads Creek. I pulled off the road, assembled my rod, and walked down from the overpass to the bluest, clearest water I have ever seen, and watch fifty or so trout scatter in every direction. I couldn't believe the number of fish in this stream! I found a pool just downstream of the bridge that had a lot of trout in it, and one trout that looked to be between 15-18 inches. I spent too much time trying to catch that Boss Fight of a fish, and he eventually took off.
I went downstream a little more, there was a tree down in the creek with a pool behind it, full of trout that wouldn't bite a thing.
Back in the car to drive twelve or so more miles to Reads Creek. I pulled off the road, assembled my rod, and walked down from the overpass to the bluest, clearest water I have ever seen, and watch fifty or so trout scatter in every direction. I couldn't believe the number of fish in this stream! I found a pool just downstream of the bridge that had a lot of trout in it, and one trout that looked to be between 15-18 inches. I spent too much time trying to catch that Boss Fight of a fish, and he eventually took off.
I went downstream a little more, there was a tree down in the creek with a pool behind it, full of trout that wouldn't bite a thing.
Back up to the bridge, I made a couple casts with a wet fly, and finally had a hit. A beautiful brook trout fell for it.
Now I'm feeling confident. After I landed the brook trout, I had hit after hit, with every trout shaking the hook. I ventured upstream a little more. The creek came tumbling over some rapids, and in the pool below, trout were rising and dimpling the surface. I couldn't see the bugs, I assume they were tiny little midges. I really wanted to try out one of my hand tied Elk Hair Caddis though. I chose the best looking one from my box, greased it up, and cast one of the longest, most perfect casts of my life. The fly landed so gracefully upstream. I slowly stripped the line back and let the fly drift for what seemed like five minutes, and then, the rise came. I was dumbfounded, I almost forgot what to do, it had been so long since I caught a trout on a dry. Eventually, I remembered to set the hook and reel in the fish. A decent sized brown took the Caddis.
After that, I had many more rises to the caddis, but missed each one of them. I could have fished for hours and never tired, but I had a long drive ahead of me. I only fished about a thousand feet of the stream. Next time I'll know long perfect casts are what these fish rise to more than any particular pattern. Thanks, Damien for sharing these locations with me, I can't wait to get back.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)