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Intro / Trip Report

nicklenuts

New member
Hey there everyone, I thought I'd introduce myself.

Been lurking for a while but was hesitant to post for a long time for several reasons. But I've finally gotten up the nerve, and had a couple things happened to me recently that I thought would be good to share on a forum such as this. And as far as mature, civil discussions on fly fishing is concerned -- with a bit of humor involved as well -- this seems to be the place. Don't know if I need to post a "resume" or "portfolio" but I'll share a bit of my luck from my latest annual trip to the ADKs that I took with my father and sister at the beginning of the month.

The back story is that my grandfather used to take us on an annual fishing trip to the Adirondacks, where he grew up fishing the bush country section of the WB AuSable River before the logging roads were well established and gated off from the general public. Years ago he would take my father and my two uncles and they would camp out each and every memorial day weekend stream-side, and they would make out quite well. ~20 years ago I was brought into the tradition and I hope to continue that tradition with my son if/when he becomes interested in trout fishing. My sister has also taken up fly fishing and she has been joining us for the past several years as well. So to pay homage to my grandfather that is no longer well enough to accompany us, we continue to camp along the banks of the AuSable River and fish some of his favorite stretches before we move on to bigger (and better) waters. Here's what I have to offer in terms of visuals:

Got things started with a few stockies on the AuSable that took a custom woven yuk bug for lack of a better pattern description. And that continued to be the hot fly for the week.

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If I remember correctly this one took a Grey Fox emerger which was the final fly I tied up before leaving the house.

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Then we started getting into the fatter varieties on a different stretch of water, this guy didn't want to hold still for a pic.

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But this one didn't mind a quick photo and measurement though, roughly 20 of these identical 16" browns were caught and released in a matter of hours between the 3 of us.

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This didn't harm anything either...

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A little bow for some color

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I absolutely love pocket water, hard to find down where I live quite like this.

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Just gorgeous wide open pocket water on another river.

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This is the pattern that did the most damage over the long weekend, I had a single weighted and double weighted variation for the deeper sections -- dead drifted with a couple strips to end the presentation towards the bank absolutely crushed these ADK trout. I don't know if they thought it was a stone fly (what I'd been going for), salmon fly, or even a crayfish imitation -- this thing just worked amazingly well on every river we fished that week.

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More 'rock', and some butterflies that just hatched while I was watching. Pretty cool thing to witness as opposed to stating at a computer screen.

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And the ones that mattered most -- of course after the iPhone died and I had to go to a backup disposable camera...

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I caught two 15" wild brown trout, and to cap off the trip I get to land a monster 21" adirondack wild brown trout all out of the same hole, all on that yuk bug pictured above. The pictures DO NOT do this fish justice, again it was a crappy disposable that had been in my bag for a couple years. It took me about 10 minutes to land, and he was peeling line off my reel so fast I had to chase him downstream to keep the upper hand in the battle. After the fight of my life on a fly rod, I was able to net and release this absolutely gorgeous trout. He was the most yellow/golden colored trout I've ever seen let alone caught -- I was very fortunate to have the opportunity to land this fish.

Here he is going back into the water

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Hopefully he'll check back in next year - same time and place!

Well, that's all I have for this trip report this time -- but over 50 trout were caught and released over a fantastic June trip to the beautiful Adirondack Park.

Full disclosure: I ate a couple of brookies, they're my favorite and were delicious.

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I have more on that rod and reel I showed in some of the pictures, but its a topic for another post and one that deserves its own thread.

tight lines!
 
Off Topic...
BUMP...
For some reason, the above post (and a nearly identical one) were dumped into a moderation que...

I just "validated" one of them and (since it's two days old) am bumping it to the "top" with a reply.
 
Great pics ,it is nice to see someone else who enjoys the fruit from the glass lined tanks of Latrobe.....
 
Love that fly...

I call it the "turd"...(it resembles a girdle bug)... It looks like SHIT, but it works like you wouldn't believe, as you know... SOOOOOO easy to tie!!! So shhhhh, keep it hush hush!!!!
 
Just curious though, that pic where you and a buddy are out in the middle of the river, where it says the blurb about pocket water...Why are you in the middle there? That looks to be right off church street, about a mile up from the confluence of the Wb and Eb...That is one of my favorite stretches...Should have went down by that blue house and crossed and fished the other side...much easier that way! :) It sucks they put the fence accross the old bridge... ;(
 
Just curious though, that pic where you and a buddy are out in the middle of the river, where it says the blurb about pocket water...Why are you in the middle there? That looks to be right off church street, about a mile up from the confluence of the Wb and Eb...That is one of my favorite stretches...Should have went down by that blue house and crossed and fished the other side...much easier that way! :) It sucks they put the fence accross the old bridge... ;(




Thats my dad and sister out there.... my dad likes to make a habit of standing in the best holes after he fishes a couple drifts. drives me nuts. my sister is still relatively new so she just follows the old man and stays a bit back from him. I like the upstream section myself and we go all the way down to behind the school. it can be a sweet little all day affair and frankly, it's a piece of property that I dream about while I'm often at work. fish still can stack up in those stretches, although the water was a bit low for ideal conditions while we were there. its so heavily fished and guided there though, so I don't mind talking about it in a public forum because frankly the word's been out for half a century. still fun to fish it though.

---------- Post added at 08:34 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:29 PM ----------

Haha, I actually saw a similar tie on another forum and I had some action on the olive/chart at this one river I fished where nothing else seemed to be working. so I married the colors with that yuk bug kind of pattern and I shit you not -- the thing was electric. I could of fished with my shoelaces and caught trout with that thing. hung in the pocket, dead drift, stripped -- you name it that thing got WICKED strikes, just vicious yanks. easily the pattern of the week.
 
Sweet!

Its pounded heavy by bait guys there..thats about it... Regardless how hard those one tooth wonders whack it, we ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS have a 30+ each fish afternoon/morning there...EASY...

I do lke the stretch above the old trestle myself the best....TONS OF FISH...

As for behind the school, lol...If I tried to count the amount of fish we got there, I would get tired around 150..and 150 is being CONSERVATIVE. LOL

Glad you had a good time man...

If you want to test out your legs and your fish fighting arm, check out the Ausable "bush country"... about halfway between the spill way and wilmington dam... public access is VERY minimal so you need to get to the water then begin UP or downstream...its an all day adventure but the fish are HUGE and plentiful...
 
Sweet!

Its pounded heavy by bait guys there..thats about it... Regardless how hard those one tooth wonders whack it, we ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS have a 30+ each fish afternoon/morning there...EASY...

I do lke the stretch above the old trestle myself the best....TONS OF FISH...

As for behind the school, lol...If I tried to count the amount of fish we got there, I would get tired around 150..and 150 is being CONSERVATIVE. LOL

Glad you had a good time man...

If you want to test out your legs and your fish fighting arm, check out the Ausable "bush country"... about halfway between the spill way and wilmington dam... public access is VERY minimal so you need to get to the water then begin UP or downstream...its an all day adventure but the fish are HUGE and plentiful...


thats where my grandfather, father, and uncles all went growing up -- we've gotten in there a few times since I was a kid. tough hiking for the old men in the group though. pristine water back in there though.
 
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