Troutnut.com Fly Fishing for Trout Home
User Password
or register.
Scientific name search:

> > The Rise: performed ballet style.



FalsiflyAugust 17th, 2009, 1:59 pm
Hayward, WI.

Posts: 661
Many years ago, while fishing the gin clear water in the rarified air of the much higher ups, I witnessed a rise to my dry that has forever been indelibly recorded and stored in the My Videos folder of my psyche. What a gift it is to have vivid total recall, off the water. I often wonder if others, like me, spend the restless and sleepless hours surrounded in absolute darkness recalling the myriad of memorable trout fishing memories in a way that brings them back to life.

I had just finished nymphing a section of water between shore and the bank of a small island, working downstream. At the downstream apex of the island I set course in the opposite direction, again fishing the deeper cut between shore and island bank. The morning trout had, up until now, remained not only tight mouthed but invisible. Always mindful to remain vigilant I caught the fleeting glimpse of a rise, along shore opposite the islands upstream tip. Abandoning my fruitless attempt at dousing dead weight I made a stealthy Bee-Line to a point about forty feet below my center of concentration. It was from here that I first noticed a very sparse and well staggered number of duns slowly skirting the bank. Closing in I spotted the fish holding tight to the bank in about two feet of water, refusing to take anything unless it pasted directly over its head. My choice of dries was limited; the best match I could come up with was in size only. I looped in my longest leader which was a twelve foot tapered to 5x, and bound in a #16 Adams. The first cast, although close, didn’t even produce a fin tingle, but the second cast produced an epic slow motion video that has been stuck on replay ever since. I will describe the setting first and then reveal, as best I can, what was set into motion.

It was early mid morning, not a cloud in the sky, the lighting was perfect. I was about twenty feet below the fish, a Brown of about eighteen inches in about eighteen inches of water. The water was crystal clear over white gravel, and the fish was hugging the bank in an almost non-existent current. If this fish had eyelashes I could’ve counted them. The cast placed the fly as far ahead as I was able without lining the fish, and the current set the motion to dead slow. Immediately I knew this was the cast. As the fly approached the fish, on a path placing it directly over its head, the fish remained motionless, five feet, four feet, three feet, and nary a flicker of a fin. I had given up hope on this drift when, at about two feet, a most incredible event took place. The head of the fish began to rise in perfect harmony with the speed and distance of the fly. But the fish wasn’t rising in a horizontal manner; it was rising in vertical stature, as if its tail was a pair of feet firmly set on the bottom. This continued until the fish was standing perfectly vertical, still facing upstream with the fly on the tip of its nose. I was mesmerized watching this unfold, but the fish had not taken. It was then that I watch in total awe. In a perfectly executed vertical maneuver the fish performed a one hundred and eighty degree pirouette, now facing downstream the fly departing from the tip of its nose; it opened its mouth and sucked the fly in from behind.


Falsifly
When asked what I just caught that monster on I showed him. He put on his magnifiers and said, "I can't believe they can see that."
GONZOAugust 17th, 2009, 2:24 pm
Site Editor
"Bear Swamp," PA

Posts: 1681
Nice description, Falsifly. I've seen that same vertical inspection posture, sometimes resulting in a take (with or without a pirouette) and sometimes resulting in a sullen sinking and a return to the original position. One of my most vivid memories of this was a fish on Big Spring that stood on its "tiptoes" and tracked my fly, about an inch from its nose, for about 12 feet before sucking it in. I've seen many other lengthy inspections like that, but they usually ended in refusal.
DayTripperAugust 17th, 2009, 5:52 pm
Northern MI

Posts: 70
Had the same thing happen on NY's Ausable a couple weeks ago. That fish was messing with me big time.

Quick Reply

You have to be logged in to post on the forum. It's this easy:
Username:          Email:

Password:    Confirm Password:

I am at least 13 years old and agree to the rules.

Related Discussions

TitleRepliesLast Reply
Re: Umbrella hook Green Drake pattern
In Fly Tying by Rgiffin
10Sep 27, 2010
by Ditch
Re: Salmon River NY
In Fishing Reports by Jimdicken
1Apr 8, 2010
by Wbranch
Re: Amber Wing
In Fly Tying by FredH
2Aug 1, 2011
by FredH
Re: Banksiola
In the Caddisfly Genus Banksiola by Entoman
4Jan 22, 2011
by Entoman
Re: South Platte
In Fishing Reports by Sundula
1Sep 21, 2006
by Troutnut
Re: Isle Royale fly fishing
In General Discussion by Valleyridge
1Jan 12, 2011
by Jmd123
Re: The Lions Den
In General Discussion by Iasgair
1Oct 22, 2018
by Martinlf
Re: Chile in early March
In General Discussion by EricStroup
9Dec 14, 2007
by Jmd123
Re: "Texas Trout"
In the Photography Board by Flatstick96
8Apr 20, 2010
by Oldredbarn
Re: Drift boat vs Raft preferences
In General Discussion by Flyguide1
6Sep 14, 2018
by CaseyP
Most Recent Posts
Re: large free living caddis rhyacophila?
In the Identify This! Board by Kjfeen (Taxon replied)