Rob

Rob
Boat on a bond in the early morning.

Gearing Up for Springtime in the Adirondacks

As I started writing this, I was in Texas wrapping up my annual bowhunting trip. It amuses me that the folks there think it is unbearably cold in December when it is 40 degrees out!
They wouldn’t like our December. When we got home, we found our typical winter weather and with it, the official kickoff of my fly tying season— time to fill up the fly boxes for the coming spring in the Adirondacks, including some flies for trout pond fishing.

 

Ponds and lakes are often the best place to start flyfishing in the Adirondacks as the
spring runoff and rainfall entering streams usually keeps them high and cold. For fly anglers, this doesn’t make for productive conditions. Our fun typically doesn’t start until water temperatures hit the mid 50’s. The ponds and lakes can have actively feeding trout well before things heat up in the streams. Once the ice melts trout start feeding on the spring bounty as soon as the sun warms up the shallow areas, and a simple float tube and some fins will get you on the water.

 

Food sources for stillwater trout in the Adirondacks are much different than the insect life
found in the streams. One of the biggest sources of springtime food are damsel and dragonfly nymphs. In early spring, these nymphs swim towards shore where they eventually hatch. Trout feed on any of the nymphs that they can get. My usual fishing strategy for damselfly or dragonfly nymphs is to cast out into deeper water with a sink-tip line and retrieve the fly in little twitches like the real thing heading toward shore.

 

One of the oddest foods pond trout hit are salamanders. I learned this from Adirondack
Fishing Guide, Joe Hackett. He even developed his own fly pattern to match the salamanders that end up getting washed into the ponds after a good rain, one he tied from scraps of an old fur coat. A salamander is a big meal for a trout and an easy one they won’t ignore. I have a little more refined pattern of my own that I tie as a jointed fly, giving it plenty of motion.

 

Some ponds have leeches, and they are another food source for springtime. Simple leech
patterns or even a Wooly Bugger will work on a slow twist retrieve on a sink-tip line if that is what they are interested in. Ponds typically don’t get a lot of dry fly activity, but it does happen. A couple of years ago I was paddling around a Warren County pond in the spring and the trout started rising to a midge hatch. Fortunately, I had some midges along and was able to paddle to shore and switch to a floating line and immediately started catching rising fish on a Griffith’s Gnat. Midges are an important food source in stillwaters, and even though they are tiny, trout feed on them. Midge larvae are another good subsurface pattern for springtime.

 

Long winters make springtime in the Adirondacks magical. For fly anglers, early spring
isn’t always the best, but putting a little time into fishing trout ponds or lakes before things heat up in the streams is a lot of fun. If you can shift gears and match the hatches in the ponds, it can be really productive too!.

Boat on a bond in the early morning.

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The Adirondack Style of Fly Tying

As I have travelled this summer fly fishing for trout in a number of states, a question came to my mind, “Is there really an Adirondack Fly Tying Style?” I cast flies for trout in Pennsylvania, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine, all places where there is plenty of angling history, and certainly regional fly tying styles, but is there really an Adirondack style? In Maine, Carrie Stevens is certainly well known, and there are ageless landlocked salmon patterns. Pennsylvania also has patterns known for the state— think of the Marinaro dry flies. Or what about the Clouser smallmouth bass patterns? Yet, can the Adironadacks claim a style? Simply put, I say yes!


The first Adirondack fly tyer of renown was a man who lived in Rome, New York, and his name was William Scripture, Jr., a lawyer and the son of a famous New York State Supreme Court Judge. Scripture, Jr. learned fly tying by reverse engineering the flies of Ida Wolcott, a fly tackle dealer from the same area. Scripture tied his flies by holding the hook in his hand, not in a vise, and his patterns were rugged, yet highly effective.


Lee Wulff created the hallowed series of hair winged flies, the Wulffs (Grey Wulff, White Wulff, and Royal Wulff) out of a disdain for the English style of dry flies that took root in the Catskills. Granted the Catskill flies are very effective, but they were designed for waters that don’t flow as fast and rough as the West Branch of the Ausable River. Wulff’s flies floated well in rough water, and were eagerly taken by big hungry trout in the high flows and the pocket water of Adirondack rivers. Wulff also tied his flies in hand, with no vice or tools.


Another Adirondack tyer of fame, was Ray Bergman, the beloved Fishing Editor of Outdoor Life magazine. Bergman is known today for his brilliant book “Trout” and his many wet fly patterns, but what most do not know is he had his beginnings and inspiration from his fishing expeditions with his wife Grace in the waters of the Adirondacks near Cranberry Lake. He created nymphs, wet flies, and the streams of this region inspired many of his patterns.


Wulff’s flies, like all other brilliant inventions, were tinkered with by other inventors. Perry Ehlers, who lived along the Upper Hudson River in Warren County, was another Adirondack fly tyer, and his patterns were tough, maybe somewhat simple compared to fancier flies, but were built to catch a lot of fish before falling apart. Ehler’s mentored another tyer, Ed Bendl, who eventually established a popular fly shop in Northville, New York. 


Bendl once tried to teach a fly tying class, but had students ask him why the way he tied differed so much from the available books of the day, and his humble answer was that was how he was taught to tie. According to Bendl, Adirondack flies were supposed to be tough, and while they were not the prim and polished flies that other places in the Northeast are known for, they work very well.


Fran Betters is well known as an Adirondack fly tyer, and again, his patterns are geared towards the rough waters of the West Branch of the Ausable River, His pattern, the Ausable Wulff, is a fly that catches trout anywhere where attractor fly patterns work. His creations extended beyond the fly that was inspired by the Wulff series, he created the Haystack, and the Usual, among other patterns, furthering the work of those who came before him. His contributions were so great, that the town where he lived honored him with a memorial that includes metal sculptures of his three most famous flies.


So is there an Adirondack style? I posit that there certainly is. Adirondack flies aren’t always pretty and can be roughly tied compared to other methods, but they sure hold up for catching a bunch of fish. History may not have documented the Adirondack style of fly tying as well as it should, but it can’t be denied that there is an Adirondack fly tying style.

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Blue Line Brookies

Time is the greatest gift you can get, and my relatively new retirement has afforded opportunities that I never had time for while working a full-time job, owning a small business, and also having another part-time job. One thing that I’ve found more time for is fly fishing on Blue-line brook trout streams in the Adirondacks.

 

Crawling up on a plunge pool in eager anticipation, then making the perfect cast, soon to be rewarded by a feisty brooking grabbing your fly is great fun during the times when it all comes together. Just getting to these streams and fishing them is its own reward.

 

When I was younger, there really were not a lot of wild brook trout streams with decent populations of fish. Now the native brookies are more widespread and with a little research, it’s possible to find them. In general, I like to find a stream on the map that is at least four miles long or so, and from there you just get out and explore. I certainly don’t find brookies in every one that I try, but have found some that were great.

 

Flies and gear are easy. A box of attractor dry flies, like my favorite, the Ausable Wulff, plus a few foam Chubbies to fish dry/droppers with, and a couple of beadhead nymphs like the Pheasant tail, Frenchie, and Perdigon and you have everything. I bought a new rod for exploring these streams, a 6.5 foot 3 weight, which has been ideal.

 

These trout don’t have a ton of food in terms of hatches. They largely rely on whatever washes into the stream, and typically are going to eat any fly that comes by them. The challenge is in getting a shot to present the fly. They see very well and you have to wear colors that blend in and position yourself downstream where you won’t be seen when you cast.

I generally find there is a point on the streams where you start catching  mostly  small trout. Usually the lower couple of miles from the mouth of the stream upstream are where the bigger fish will be found. On these streams a 7-incher is average, and a 12-incher is a monster. 

 

If you do try this sort of fishing, please keep a couple of things in mind. These streams and the trout that are in them are pretty delicate. They can’t handle a ton of fishing pressure. Also, have a plan for releasing fish before you catch one. I have a rubber coated net, but I usually wet my hands and just wiggle the hook out and let them go without touching them.

 

Water temperature is the key to when you shouldn’t fish. This season we’ve had a lot of rain in July which has cooled these streams, providing more summertime fishing than usual. In general, try and fish when they are 65 degrees or less and the trout will be in good shape when released.

 

The Adirondacks are a gem, and the wild brook trout are a treasure that are doing well on a lot of streams. Backcountry fly fishing for them is a challenge, and while not every stream is going to yield good numbers of trout, it is great when you find one that does!

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