Fished the lower west and upper main. With the exception of 2 other anglers in a drift boat, we didnt see another soul the entire time. Its like a different river this time of year, and I love it.
Low water on the west but float able with a raft. Went 3 for 5 on decent energetic rainbows on nymphs. No surface action until an hour before dark when there were small bunches of ISO's above the riffles. Saw one or two legit rises before dark.
On the Main, the water was around 1800. I rarely fish the main and I am finding it is hard to wade in most sections, which are really deep. Even some of the riffles seem bottomless. Anyway, pulled off below an island and didnt expect much, until my indicator dipped, and the horses were off to the races. The fish rolled initially and I got a glimpse of it. Easily 20"+ rainbow. This thing fought like a steelhead. Head shaking like crazy. Took tons of line and went from one side of the river in seconds. I fought it hard for around 4 minutes until it shook the hook.
Can someone confirm for me that my mistake was letting the fish get directly below me? Thats when it shook off. I was right in the middle above the confluence of two riffles, right below an island. It ran from one side to the other, and then straight down river. It came off seconds after it stopped and started that head shake. I have to assume the direct inline pressure allowed it to shake it free. What to do in a situation like this? I couldn't of re-positioned myself quickly enough to prevent it from getting directly down current of me.
I landed another bow in that riffle, around 12-13" that was acrobatic as could be. Then landed a cookie cutter 14" brown above Buckingham. One of the Bow's had a deformity (see underwater photo below) and some type of protrusion of tissue from its lower jaw. Can someone tell me is this potentially from previous hook damage? Or some type of growth?
Bottom line - I am absolutely in love with these Delaware rainbows. Good god I keep replaying that fight over and over. Wish I could have landed the big one, but happy to of met him or her regardless! And I have a new respect for the Main.




Low water on the west but float able with a raft. Went 3 for 5 on decent energetic rainbows on nymphs. No surface action until an hour before dark when there were small bunches of ISO's above the riffles. Saw one or two legit rises before dark.
On the Main, the water was around 1800. I rarely fish the main and I am finding it is hard to wade in most sections, which are really deep. Even some of the riffles seem bottomless. Anyway, pulled off below an island and didnt expect much, until my indicator dipped, and the horses were off to the races. The fish rolled initially and I got a glimpse of it. Easily 20"+ rainbow. This thing fought like a steelhead. Head shaking like crazy. Took tons of line and went from one side of the river in seconds. I fought it hard for around 4 minutes until it shook the hook.
Can someone confirm for me that my mistake was letting the fish get directly below me? Thats when it shook off. I was right in the middle above the confluence of two riffles, right below an island. It ran from one side to the other, and then straight down river. It came off seconds after it stopped and started that head shake. I have to assume the direct inline pressure allowed it to shake it free. What to do in a situation like this? I couldn't of re-positioned myself quickly enough to prevent it from getting directly down current of me.
I landed another bow in that riffle, around 12-13" that was acrobatic as could be. Then landed a cookie cutter 14" brown above Buckingham. One of the Bow's had a deformity (see underwater photo below) and some type of protrusion of tissue from its lower jaw. Can someone tell me is this potentially from previous hook damage? Or some type of growth?
Bottom line - I am absolutely in love with these Delaware rainbows. Good god I keep replaying that fight over and over. Wish I could have landed the big one, but happy to of met him or her regardless! And I have a new respect for the Main.



