Welcome to Fly Fishing
Car & Truck Tips To Empower You
Search
Fly Fishing


Fly Fishing Navigation
Home
Submit Your Fish Tale
Archived Fish Tales
Fly Fishing Forum
My Account/LOGIN
Contact Flies And Fins

Flies & Fins Social Web
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Google del.icio.us Yahoo! MyWeb StumbleUpon Furl Blinklist Spurl Magnolia Simpy Blogmarks Startaid Netvouz Facebook Shadows

Flies And Fins Feed
 Syndicate or Subscribe

Fish Tale Archives
Fish Tale Archives

Fly Fishing Videos & Tunes
Fly Fishing Videos

Fly Fishing Music

Flies And Fins Member Info
Welcome, Anonymous!
Nickname
Password
Security Code: Security Code
Type Security Code:
(Register)
Membership:
Overall: 3834

Flyfishermen Online:
Visitors: 71
Members: 3
Total: 74

Online Now:
01: Boz
02: bfly
03: OutdoorsBlogger

Random Fish Tales
·Landlocked Salmon: They've Got My Vote
·Kennebec At Shawmut: Browns, Rainbows And A Nice Night For A Swim!
·Fast Bluefish And Striper Action: Flies, Plugs and Everything Else
·Wild Delaware River Brown Trout: Assessment and Observation
·Sebago Fly Shop, Maine: Gone But Never Forgotten
·News Flash! Fresh Water Boy Survives The Salt!
·Maine: Endless Opportunity, A Favorite Of Mine
·Every Man Has A Fly Fishing Story Worth Hearing
·Fall Fly Fishing: Colorful Brookies And Hungry Salmon
·Bahamas Bonefish: Excuses Are A Luxury, Second Chances May Never Come
·Bull Trout: A Deceiving Day Dream
·Great Lakes: An Exploratory Steelhead Mission
·Delaware River: A Quintessential Brown Trout
·Sanbar Stripers
·A Perfect Day: Bamboo And Fly Fishing The Kennebec River
·Brown Trout & more

 
Fresh Water Ausable River: Large Hungry Trout Sipping Duns Off The Surface
Posted by waterwhippa on October 01, 2006

AddThis Social Bookmark Button  Save to del.icio.us 


We glanced out the window over the Salmon River, at 75 mph you don’t get to much gratification. It is no easy task to turn a blind eye at the monsters that are lurking in there during the last week of September. Kranes and I had a different itinerary. The short lived mayfly hatches on our favorite Catskill streams left us both yearning for large, hungry trout, sipping duns off the surface. There was one last chance to satisfy this craving. The West Branch of the Ausable River was calling. It had to be done. When we arrived the flat was quiet, not much activity at all. Against my better judgment or ego perhaps, I did break down and tie on a streamer, then did the walk of shame up to the pocket water. I was starting to get a little jaded, inmy mind I could fish streamers on the salmon. It wasn’t long before kranes walked up on me and said “I’ve got a good feeling” which is refreshing when you are just going through the motions. “Just spotted a nice fish picking off duns in the flat, it’s going to happen”. Not long after that comment, maybe 40 minutes and the section of water we set up on was erupting with tiny blue wings, tricos and gluttonous trout. The nights were cold in the mountains and the trout could sense it. They were in a feeding frenzy, boils on the surface as far as I could

see. This lasted all day and straight into the night. It was just us, the brown trout and the Adirondack foliage, a far cry from the masses of anglers lining the banks of the river we passed on our way up to the North country I was hoping for a few nice fish on the dry. Never in my wildest dreams did I think that the fishing was going to be so spectacular. Countless fish slid into the nets over the next two days, each one more gratifying than the next. That will be a good tape to have upstairs for the long cold Great Lakes winter that will be bearing down shortly.



The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

No Comments Allowed for Anonymous, please Login/Create Account

Re: Ausable River: Large Hungry Trout Sipping Duns Off The Surface
by jeremy on October 01, 2006 http://www.ineedasimplesolution.com
whip - sounds like you made a good choice .. we are just getting into the season of nymphing and subsurface for steelhead .. and you know that come february .. you will be craving for dry fly fishing or anything other than slush, frozen guides and nymphs ... so, bypassing the steelhead waters to fish dries on the ausable was a wise choice ...

ps ... when the silent assasin (aka. kranefly/kranes) say “I’ve got a good feeling” .... you know its gonna be good.

pps ... looking forward to another year of steelheading with you guys ... "tis the season.."



Re: Ausable River: Large Hungry Trout Sipping Duns Off The Surface
by Shaq on October 01, 2006 http://www.theanglersnet.com
Great job, fall can be some of the greatest dry fly action of the year, Hungry fish, not many nymphs around. Cool!



Re: Ausable River: Large Hungry Trout Sipping Duns Off The Surface
by RickW on October 01, 2006
The Ausable is a beautiful river.




Re: Ausable River: Large Hungry Trout Sipping Duns Off The Surface
by greg on October 05, 2006 http://www.fliesandfinsnorth.com
Your the man whippa, I want to fish with you on that river next year. I'm headed for Cape Breton Canada next week for Atlantic Salmon. Get in touch with me and we will go for steelys.


 
Fly Fishing Pictures







Summary: Flies and Fins contains fly fishing pictures, videos, tips, tactics, forums and articles related to salt water and fresh water fly fishing. The stories are comprised of fly fishing trips and vacations to travel destinations worldwide with fly fishing tips and tactics related to trout, steelhead, salmon, tarpon, permit, bonefish, tuna, striped bass, shark, sailfish, and other freshwater and saltwater fish species. Flies and Fins is an online fly fishing community comprised of fly fishermen of all different levels and all walks of life. Flies and Fins is a state of mind, a way of life; an opportunity for fly fishermen to use video, pictures, and the written word to share their fly fishing experiences and live vicariously through the experiences of other fly fishermen. Please browse our stories site map, corresponding fly fishing story archives, and forum site map.