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LenHJanuary 27th, 2008, 5:19 pm
driftless area

Posts: 58









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LenHJanuary 27th, 2008, 6:13 pm
driftless area

Posts: 58




LenHJanuary 27th, 2008, 6:19 pm
driftless area

Posts: 58







(The image file this user tried to include was not found.)

WbranchJanuary 29th, 2008, 8:41 pm
Starlight PA

Posts: 247
Just awesome photos! It is great seeing them in the middle of the winter. I was very impressed with the brookie pictures. Was that one brookie or a couple. Are they wild fish or stocked fish? PA has very pretty hatchery brookies and in a few weeks in a stream get even prettier. That is one very large hook jawed brown! Looks to be 24" - 26". The other one is bragging size too.

By the way what is the Driftless Area???
West Branch & main stem fly fisher for forty-two years.
Shawnny3January 29th, 2008, 10:23 pm
Pleasant Gap, PA

Posts: 573
Beautiful fish and photos, Len. They make me a bit jealous, actually.

-Shawn
Jewelry-Quality Artistic Salmon Flies, by Shawn Davis
www.davisflydesigns.com
MartinlfJanuary 29th, 2008, 11:25 pm
Palmyra PA

Posts: 933
Len, how is the "driftless area" defined? Where is it, and how did it get its name?
Louis

Is it not an art to deceive a trout with an artificial fly? A trout! that is more sharp-sighted than any hawk . . . and more watchful and timorous than your high-mettled merlin is bold!

--Izaak Walton The Compleat Angler
AftonAnglerJanuary 30th, 2008, 10:44 am
Brule, WI

Posts: 39
Ya, nice photos Len

Louis - Driftless meaning it was skipped by the last Ice Age epoch. The area of the upper Mississippi (and Lower St. Croix) River basin is a much older landscape than much of the upper Midwest.

The Driftless basically starts just south of Hudson, WI/Afton, MN (just north of the Chin on the Indianhead that makes up the shape of NW Wisconsin)and extends south with the Mississippi into Northern Iowa. It's also known as Coulee Country due to the seemingly endless valleys cutting up into the limestone hills. Each one of these coulees generally harbors a tiny little limestone spring creek...

There are thousands of spring creeks in the Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa driftless area. Some like the Rush and Kinnickinic are famous and heavily fished, most are seldom explored and offer a lifetime of angling solitude.

Len is right-smack-dab in the heart of the best concentration of water and has all of the fish named from what I hear...
See you on the Water.

Brad Bohen

The Afton Angler
www.BradBohen.com
AftonAngler@BradBohen.com
FalsiflyJanuary 30th, 2008, 1:15 pm
Hayward, WI.

Posts: 111


how is the "driftless area" defined? Where is it, and how did it get its name?



Louis-
I would like to add to Brad’s well worded explanation. As you will recall, from high school history, man once traveled in nomadic groups and were called hunters and gatherers. Tens of thousands of years ago, during the glacial period, a small group of these nomads crossed from the Asian Continent to the North American Continent, via the Bearing Strait; which at that time was a small finger of land connecting the two continents. These people drifted throughout North America and happened upon a small glacier less area which would eventually include what is called Southwest Wisconsin today. As luck would have it this area was full of spring creeks boiling up through huge limestone deposits and teeming with native trout. Realizing the significance of this discovery to their daily sustenance they became trout fishermen and are today considered the earliest known to partake in this activity. Many took root deciding to stay hence the term Driftless Area. It is with great reservation that I reveal this little known fact lest those of you from back east will descend upon our sacred waters, take stand in our pools, and force us to fish shoulder to shoulder, causing us to become drifters once again.
Falsifly
Designated by Troutnut as the heir to Pat McManus
WbranchJanuary 30th, 2008, 4:15 pm
Starlight PA

Posts: 247
There is another fly fishing web site, that will go unnamed here but they have a couple of annual get togethers called "Fish-Ins". The premise is that anywhere from 50 - 100 guys and gals descend on an area and spend three days wading through all the good lies, drinking beer, and generally making life tough for the resident fly guys. I am thinking of having my TU chapter take our annual week long outing in the Driftless area as we all love those little limestone creeks. Thanks for giving us all that great information!
West Branch & main stem fly fisher for forty-two years.
MartinlfJanuary 30th, 2008, 7:09 pm
Palmyra PA

Posts: 933
I now know where I will be retiring.
Louis

Is it not an art to deceive a trout with an artificial fly? A trout! that is more sharp-sighted than any hawk . . . and more watchful and timorous than your high-mettled merlin is bold!

--Izaak Walton The Compleat Angler
MikeAJanuary 30th, 2008, 8:36 pm
Port Jefferson, NY

Posts: 2
Beautiful fish.

Is the one a tiger trout?
LenHJanuary 31st, 2008, 9:41 am
driftless area

Posts: 58
Have been running it to Tigers around here as of late.






LenHJanuary 31st, 2008, 10:03 am
driftless area

Posts: 58
I get lucky with my Sony w-7 point and shoot from time to time.


(The image file this user tried to include was not found.)













SmallstreamJanuary 31st, 2008, 1:32 pm
State College, PA

Posts: 99
The fourth picture down from the top is my favorite, that brookie is awesome!
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