I first fly fished the Salmon River in Pulaski, New York in October 2015. It remains one of my most memorable solo fishing trips. I’ll never forget the excitement I felt driving north at three in the morning wondering if I’d be successful. I caught my first King salmon on that trip and the reality is I had no idea what I was doing. I used a 9’-6wt fly rod that was good enough to swing a woolly bugger, and when I hooked that first fish, I chased it up and down the Douglaston Salmon Run for the better part of 15 minutes.
Read moreWild Brook Trout Of Madison County And Shenandoah National Park
Throughout 2019 I spent time researching the brook trout fishing opportunities in Shenandoah National Park. I was waiting for the right time to hike in at an access point I’d discovered in Madison County, Virginia. Having talked to several people that were familiar with the area, a small tributary to the Rapidan River named Staunton Run seemed like a great place to start.
Read moreWinter Brook Trout Fishing In Pennsylvania’s Blue Mountains
Everyone was talking about winter storm Harper late last week. The storm was moving across the Midwest on Friday and was expected to make landfall in Pennsylvania on Saturday afternoon. The weather report was telling me I was going to have a four or five hour window on Saturday to fly fish. The air temperatures were supposed to hold steady in the mid-30s into Saturday morning and this was actually an increase from earlier in the week when overnight temps were dipping into the low 20s. My experience is that any gradual and sustained increase in temperatures in the colder months can mean active brook trout.
Read moreNescopeck Tributary And The Wild Brook Trout Of State Game Lands 187
The wet weather continued in Pennsylvania last week. A storm system dumped rain across the state overnight Thursday into Friday afternoon. Any big trout waters that were on their way to normal December flows once again pushed out of their banks. I’m thankful that Pennsylvania has so many spring-fed streams in its mountains. The blue ribbons that fill the map of the keystone state wilderness make me feel alive.
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