Тёмный

Seeking Autumn Browns After a Hard Summer (Small Stream Trout) 

Connecticut Angler
Подписаться 4,1 тыс.
Просмотров 1 тыс.
50% 1

Episode #77
Summer 2022 was hard on the small, wild trout stream of Southern New England, bringing a simultaneous drought and heat wave that lasted for nearly two months. With the drought long behind us now and cooler autumn weather taking hold, I set out to fly fish a brook in Connecticut's Fairfield County in search of whatever wild trout may remain. But can I find these fish after weeks of severe drought pushed them far from their fair weather lies?
➤ Location(s)
Secret Stream "Y", Fairfield County, Connecticut
➤ Gear Used
7.5' 3wt w/floating line
dry-dropper rig
➤ Online
Connecticut Angler website: www.connecticutangler.com​​​
Facebook: / theconnangler​​​
Instagram: / theconnecticut
➤ Music Credits
Song: VDGL - Mesmerize
Music provided by Vlog No Copyright Music.
Video Link: • VDGL - Mesmerize (Vlog...
Dreaming Journey by GalaxyTones / galaxytones
Creative Commons - Attribution 3.0 Unported - CC BY 3.0
Free Download / Stream: bit.ly/3W2A87O
Music promoted by Audio Library • Dreaming Journey - Gal...
"Aurora"
Beat Provided By freebeats.io
Produced By White Hot
"Dusk 'til Dawn" by TrackTribe
Music: Changes - Metro Vice
Stream / Download: hypeddit.com/metrovice/changes
Creative Commons - Attribution 3.0 Unported - CC BY 3.0
Music promoted by BEATS MUSIC:
• Metro Vice - Changes (...
Rock by KV / kvmusicprod
Creative Commons - Attribution 3.0 Unported - CC BY 3.0
Free Download / Stream: bit.ly/3s7cklp
Music promoted by Audio Library • Rock - KV (No Copyrigh...

Спорт

Опубликовано:

 

7 ноя 2022

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 16   
@AlecColon
@AlecColon Год назад
Great vid as always!
@tylerfish6206
@tylerfish6206 Год назад
Love your content
@stevez4600
@stevez4600 Год назад
Again with the culvert. I always go around (or turn around) when I get to one. Nice whack on the EHC.
@wildbrookies
@wildbrookies Год назад
Yes, it’s been a really bad summer for the trout in my local waters also. I actually had a fantastic spring on one particular stream that hasn’t produced well for a few years. And it was fishing incredibly well this April ,May and into June the way it used to back many years ago. Producing nice big fat healthy bows on every trip out all over the river. Then when the dog days of summer rolled in I usually leave it alone til it cools back off in September. Went back after temps. dropped significantly and couldn’t find any fish. Tried 3 different areas in 3 different trips and alot of leg work. Not one taker. My brother, who is even a way better flyfisher than I am went after my 3 complete skunkings and tried it with different flies and presentations and he also couldn’t get a taker. So, I really think this summers drought and high temps. completely wiped those big fish and all trout that were in this river in a large 5 or more mile stretch. Very sad indeed , so it was nice to see you get out and find survivors in this particular stream. I also think wild trout can somehow survive harsh conditions better than stockers and stocker holdovers even. They are so much more intune with their environment and more resilient . Well, so glad to see you produce yet another very informative and interesting video! As always thank you and I’ll be looking forward to more in the future.
@ConnecticutAngler
@ConnecticutAngler Год назад
Yes, I think the double-whammy of drought and heat wave this summer did a number on many small streams. And, this is just me speculating, I think the bigger fish are the first to bite the dust when the going gets tough. Easier targets for predators and high dietary needs that can’t be satisfied when flows dwindle. The younger fish get by though, and since the lifecycle of small stream wilds is only 3-4 years generally, and breeding age is 2, a population can rebound fairly quickly, especially if we can get slightly more forgiving conditions next summer. But stockers… yeah, they generally can’t hack it long, at all, outside of ideal conditions. Thanks for watching!
@stevenschoppmann4946
@stevenschoppmann4946 Год назад
Great video. Very encouraging to see wild browns in a small stream after the draught and heat we experienced this summer.
@snakeeyes9246
@snakeeyes9246 Год назад
Nice video. Any updates regarding the salmon stocking? I think I missed my opportunity for the fish stocked in September, but I'm waiting for the big ones.
@ConnecticutAngler
@ConnecticutAngler Год назад
Oh, the Atlantics are out there and biting! I’ve gotten two in the last week or so on the Naugatuck. I’m not certain if they dropped in the behemoths yet, though.
@griffinwetmore762
@griffinwetmore762 Год назад
Nice video - were you using an indicator when fishing the nymph?
@ConnecticutAngler
@ConnecticutAngler Год назад
It’s been a minute since I worked on this vid, but as I recall, I was exclusively fishing the dry-dropper. So the nymph was being fished beneath a dry fly which served double-duty as both a topwater offering and an indicator.
@griffinwetmore762
@griffinwetmore762 Год назад
@@ConnecticutAngler that’s awesome thanks! Great videos
@woodsspy327
@woodsspy327 Год назад
I enjoyed your video and the explanations you give to explain the dynamics resulting from the hot and dry summer, resulting in high water temperatures we had. My question is what size Elk hair caddis and nymph were you using when you caught the nice small Brown at 7:45 and what is your target sizes when fishing in small skinny water when using a dry dropper setup. Thank you for sharing.
@ConnecticutAngler
@ConnecticutAngler Год назад
Generally speaking, if these small stream wilds are looking up and willing to eat off the top, they’ll attack damn near anything. You could run a giant #8 stimulator and get takes. And, for example, I was on a small brookie stream mid-December last year nabbing em on a #10 stimmie! That said, while I’ve found that opportunistic small stream wilds will often rise to virtually anything presented well, sizing down dramatically improves successful hooksets, as the fish can more easily get their mouth around a smaller hook. Typically, when running a dry-dropper, I opt for an elk-hair caddis in sz14 or 16; smaller hook and generally smaller profile, but still very buoyant (def pre-dress the EHC with floatant before it even touches the water). For nymphs, it’s a bit more variable. During warmer months, when the fish are most opportunistic and lively, I’ll run nymphs up to #14, with #16 being the most common. Colder months, I size down to #16-20, with #18 being the most common.
@woodsspy327
@woodsspy327 Год назад
@@ConnecticutAngler Do you always use a smaller size nymph under the dry fly and the dry fly acts also as buoyant indicator. For example #14 EHC with a #16 nymph? Thank you.
@ConnecticutAngler
@ConnecticutAngler Год назад
Generally yes, the nymph will be of a smaller size than the dry, primarily just because anything much larger will drown the dry too easily, especially as the rig goes through drifts with some turbulence. Smaller nymphs will also help prevent the rig from bottoming out too easily, as they’ll sink slower and tend to sort of glide over the bottom to some extent when the rig is drifting through water quite a bit shallower than the dropper tippet length. You can, of course, run double-fly rigs that aren’t intended to have a surface component, but those just wouldn’t be dry-droppers, that’s all (double nymph rigs, double wet rigs). In some cases, I even run dry-droppers in scenarios in which I don’t necessarily expect a rise, purely because the dry fly serves as a great indicator with virtually zero “spook” factor on account of touching down so gently and looking natural (compared to an indicator). This is very situational though, because the dry-dropper isn’t adjustable depth, so an adjustable yarn indi is often a good choice in those sorts of cases, too.
@woodsspy327
@woodsspy327 Год назад
@@ConnecticutAnglerThank you very much for taking the time and explaining this to me. I am new to fly fishing with under 10 hours of "in water" experience and look to get out next season.
Далее
My BEER Chooses Where I Go Flyfishing
25:15
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.
Catching Connecticut's Elusive WILD Rainbow Trout
1:00
Dry Fly Fishing for WILD Brook Trout with my KIDS
19:06
INTENSE Fight with Atlantic Salmon on the Fly
0:59
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.
Bleed Water (Harrison Anglers Story)
14:12
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.