Want to drown nightcrawlers (GASP!) and catch catfish? How about catching a few smallies after dinner? Maybe head to a local pond for bluegills the size of your hand? It's all right here. The neighbors won't cry if you don't cut your grass tonight...go out and catch some fish. Before you know it, we'll be starting out the window at snow flying instead of actually being able to spend time on the water.
That being said; Meg and I headed to a nearby lake after work this week to enjoy the nice weather by cooking out and try to catch a few bluegills. Meg is preparing to take her boards, so she decided to study while I strung up the 2wt in search of bluegills...which proved to be less than cooperative.
After some heckling from Meg, I decided it was time to take drastic measures to tip the odds in my favor. I couldn't help but feel a bit guilty about shredding up a hot dog bun and tossing it in the water, but that guilt quickly faded when three big bronze heads starting poking through the surface and slurping down the clumps of bread that were hovering in the water.
It was during this moment that my excitement got the best of me and I honestly forgot that I was holding a 2wt in my hand. Before I knew it, my bread fly (yes...I have a bread fly) was pinned in the mouth of a carp, my reel was making sounds reserved for a broken coffee grinder and my rod was bent to the cork...
I made quick stop by the river after work on Thursday to see if I could luck into a few fish before heading home. While the fishing wasn't great for me, the guys using bait were doing great. Schools of minnows were cruising up the banks and the smallies were slashing through them and tearing them apart. I managed to luck into a few fish by throwing into the schools of panicked baitfish, but this place is definitely not very fly rod friendly and I need to seek out some areas where my backcasts aren't met by trees, rocks and guys who don't read the consumption advisories regarding eating catfish from the Ohio river...
Things are looking pretty bright for the upcoming steelhead season. We've finally had a normal, somewhat wet summer. Stream levels are a bit higher than they should be and I'm sure the past week's nighttime temps in the mid 50's have more than a few steelhead junkies hoping that first push of chrome will come a little early this year. In the mean time, I'll be working on some new speys and getting the gear ready....
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