February 21, 2017 – A Leisurely Few Hours with the Dry Fly – Pickering Creek DHALO
Sun and clouds, calm and wind, but a good day and much more appropriate weather for February. |
After Sunday’s tiring disappointment with Eric, I decided to take an easy walk on the Pickering Creek today and, if I was lucky, just target risers. Besides tying on a midge to target one deep hole I had not fished in a while, I stuck with the plan too. I worked the morning from home and cashed in some comp time for the afternoon. I did have to come back to get the boy at the bus stop around 4 PM, so the window was short but long enough to make something of the afternoon. The air temp got up close to 55, but it was breezy at times, which played a little havoc on my 3 wt. set up. I had a 4 wt. in the ‘Ru, but I didn’t want to leave rising fish to hike back and re-rig. It all worked out just fine in the end.
The Griffiths gnat despite some little black stoneflies around. |
I fished from around noon until a little after three, and had plenty of action and five fish to hand. For the first couple of hours, I had the place to myself. In the last hour, one older gentleman arrived and headed upstream, and a few anglers were arriving as I was leaving. The footprints and mud everywhere showed the signs of the weekend’s festivities, though. I saw little black stoneflies coming off sporadically, but anything close that I had with me was refused. The fall stockies have been in there long enough to refuse even a hi-vis Griffiths gnat (so much for giving the eyes a break). I did play a sixth fish who took a zebra midge dropper under the hi-vis dry, so there was that option for a future day with less educated fish. When I tied on a size 20 gnat, however, it was game on.
Some fatties showing signs of being caught many times... |
Some of the fish I caught showed signs of being caught half a dozen times, but a few looked pretty pristine too, believe it or not. The fish are getting bigger, and they were big to begin with, the average being 12 to 13 inches, with a few 14 inchers prowling around too. A lot of the water seemed devoid of fish, and other holes had 10 risers in them. Fish were rising in flat pools, but I had much more luck when some current was present, as is often the case. The midges were size 22 or smaller, so the current also hid the fact that I was not exactly matching the hatch. I don’t carry anything smaller than 20, generally, probably never will (?). The warm up is coming again, but I prefer these 50 degree days. I just hope it doesn’t get frigid when I have a week off in March…
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