Dog Days Trout

  • LenH
    Wisconsin
    Posts: 2385
    #1552114

    The weeds are up to your armpits. You have to step down the weeds just to cast. Your casting window is severely lessened due to foliage and nearly casting while standing on your head. You finally get a hook up and you set it. This is a big one. Your heart is racing and then it happens. That little space in the weeds you stomped down just became smaller. Your spinning reel sucks a weed into the bale and that trout you were battling seized the opportunity to escape due to the slack in your line and it is gone.

    You stand there afterward and try to assess what you did wrong. Maybe you could have stepped down a bigger area? You dismiss this right away because the weeds being stepped down would alert that huge trout. Your only option to increase your windows and chance of landing that big trout is to get in the water.

    The next hole you get to you try your theory out. Big trout live in outdoor fortresses. Your getting in the water idea was good in theory but hard to actually achieve and get a good casting opening and battle area. This is not considering the wading in log jams and treacherous steps in stream. The water in these big trout hideouts vary in depth from two to eight feet in one step. A wading bet is a must for these folks that are Kamikaze Anglers and go into stream where the feeble dare not go.

    This combat fishing is not for everyone. It is like doing aerobics while fishing. Don’t make a plan of hitting lots of water if you are up to the top of your waders and mining log jams for big trout. I guess unless you want to catch tiny trout and are not skilled enough to Kamikaze Fish. You could always go to the Trout Theme Parks and fish a well manicured stream with ten inchers being the target.

    There are a few other tricks to try in these days. Looking back at my log books I found the last large trout I caught and kept in 1998. My keeps have dramatically decreased in the last fifteen years but this fish was a true science experiment.

    It was August 9th ,1998 and the skies had opened and dropped some serious rain on the southwest corner of Wisconsin. I had not had much success with spinners right after rain but this was four days after a major rain event. The streams were stained and high and they were coming down fast. I remembered my dad fishing right after major rain events with worms, from upstream with a fly rod. . I have opted to not fish with worms due to the mortality with worms.

    So this was four or five days after a gully washer. Those large trout my dad caught after lots of rain on worms have always been in the back of my mind from decades ago. I decided the water was clear enough to fish. The water was not really clear and the trout were less spooky and you could get closer to them. I put on a silver panther martin in a size 9 and cast up in a feed through and slowed down my retrieved to get a little deeper and to give the trout a little longer look at my lure. It worked like a charm. A big black weighted wooly bugger under an indicator would work good too. The dark color would be easily seen by the mad feasting beast.

    The fish immediately headed towards cover. I never fish with a flimsy rod and muscled the trout to the surface. It was an odd colored female. It had hardly any spots on it and was shaped like a football. It fought like a much bigger fish because of its girth. I finally netted it.

    Back then I typically let all big fish go but this one was an oddity. It was just so fat. It nearly looked like it was going to burst. The final straw that made me keep this round female was when I went to unhook her. There were three or four crawlers literally hanging out of her mouth. This fish was obviously not hungry but hit my spinner anyway. I needed to do a little research.

    I went home immediately with my science experiment. I cleaned her and was in awe of what I found. Counting the crawlers hanging out of her mouth and in her stomach there were over one hundred crawlers. She also had four crab pincers and two small minnows in her stomach. This mad scientist was flabbergasted. Why did this trout with a distended stomach and three different food sources in her stomach hit my spinner?

    I have no specialized training in trout but I do have common sense and life experience. Eating is a task of survival. Trout have a brain the size of a pea. They eat instinctively to survive. This trout had the feedbag on for three or four days and was in a nonstop feeding frenzy, even though its stomach was about to burst. After years of fishing a few days after a big rain I have seen this type of feeding frenzy in trout. The rhyme or reason for the binge eating is a mystery to me.

    My tips for the summer angler are put on those waders, make sure your wading belt is on, and go right into the thickest trout environment in the area with a stiff fishing rod right after a major rain event and hang on!

    ………………………………..

    I don’t believe the crab claws will ever be digested and would eventually be regurgitated by the trout. They were way too big to pass.

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    kwp
    Eden Prairie
    Posts: 857
    #1552124

    Nice report Len. We are planning a Canadian Tundra Brook Trout trip in the far wilds of Northern Canada. We wont have to worry about weeds or foliage but maybe black flies and mosquitoes.

    youngfry
    Northeast Iowa
    Posts: 629
    #1552881

    After reading this post I got to thinking about a stream with big fish. We had gotten a huge rain a little over a week ago. I checked it yesterday and knew it would be fishable for the first time. I worked late but with the wife out of town decided to give it a try. With short time and s long hike I had to double time it in but made it with a little more than an hour to fish. Found that the stream had really been blown out. All holes different from the last time I fished it. First couple holes nothing. Now I’m worried that the fish had blown out. Maybe some did but not all. Landed 7 and lost another probably same amount. Biggest was 17″… nice male. But I caught this fella that again reminded me of this post. I didn’t keep him but its a 13″ long fish but almost 5″ deep.

    As I think about the stream… the rocks and bottom had all been washed clean. No bugs left. Maybe the trout can sense a lean period ahead. Or maybe some other explanation. Interesting observation though.

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