October Colors 10/ 3/14

Early October feels like November when a cold front comes in with overcast skies, occasional showers and wind. By noon the rain started to let up but the day had not improved much. If I was going to fish this was as good as it was going to get. This looked like a streamer day. Don't waste time just cast and twitch, strip or let hang. The river had come up a foot since I last visited and was off color...Yup a streamer day.

Second cast into the first run connected with a 14 inch brown. It was a male colored up as they do in the fall. Moving down stream with an Olive Pine Cone streamer and working cover and banks produced five browns in all, two of which were pretty nice in the mid teens. One female was very bright with a butter colored belly and brilliant red surrounding the brown spots on her side.

I picked up two bonus rainbows from this years state stocking. They were healthy but didn't appear to have grown much since they were stocked. 4 hours on the river bringing 7 trout to hand is not a bad way to spend an otherwise crummy day.

Beach

Dowagiac Creek 9/6/14

I intended to fish the Little E all day on Friday September 5th but soon realized the water temp in the river had crested 70 degrees. 70 degrees is kind of that ceiling temperature that one should not trout fish if you intend to release the trout alive. I managed several trout on dry flies prior to the 70 degree spike.

On Saturday the 6th Brandon Rasler and I made a short trip north to fish the Dowagiac Creek north of Cassopolis Michigan. The creek there was shallower than the Little E and somewhat less volume but nice clean cold water. The fishing was kind of tight with trees and tall grass lining the banks. Nymphing was difficult due to the only depth being in the log jam cover. We soon found trout feeding on the surface on hatching Blue Wing Olives. We both were utilizing a BWO sparkle dun and picking up several small browns. The fishing was best during the hatch that happened with the overcast morning. By noon the skies had cleared and the fishing slowed but we still managed trout. Several places we needed to do our best Joe Humphries immitation at casting under tangles into the runs.

I ended up with an even ten small browns and Brandon had 8 or 9. We fished from 8:00 till 4:00 trading first in line after every trout since the creek was not wide enough for two abreast in most areas. I highly recommend this creek and expect to try it again.  

-Beach

Late Summer Trout


 

Labor Day weekend at the end of summer can be one of the toughest times of the year to take trout on the Little Elkhart River. This is due to the high daytime temperatures, low water levels and gin clarity. It is also your best chance to take trout on dry flies in the early mornings, evenings or overcast drizzle days. That was the case on Friday afternoon August 30. The morning started with a rain shower and it was a humid mildly hot afternoon. It was one of those days that you work up a good sweat just walking to the river. I started out fishing my trusty olive nymphs. The spots that always hold trout were not producing like they should. My first choice was to downsize the nymph and change the color but after an hour of that I realized that was not working either. The river seemed dead but I knew it was not, the trout wanted something else.

 

I increased my leader to about 12 feet dropping the tippet down to 7X and tied on a size 12 parachute Madam X. I like this fly because it can imitate a caddis or a small hopper. I made long casts upstream working each bank, riffle and trough. My first fish was a fat hefty creek chub that hit the drifting fly like it was the only meal it was going to get that month. The next fish hit the fly exactly in the same manner and thinking it was another chub I did not play the fish and to my surprise it was a little brown. Ah hah I’m not going to get skunked!

 

As I moved upstream I started to take trout after trout on the dry. The Little E is not generally a dry fly stream. I have taken trout on dries but I usually only fish them when I happen to see a trout actively feeding on top. I will cut everything off, tie on a dry and take the trout then return to whatever it was I was using prior. This day was different the trout wanted the fly on the surface.

 

I had taken 9 browns and one skinny rainbow and decided to head home as the sun was setting and the mosquitoes were emerging. I walked back through the meadow toward my truck when I heard a trout feeding on hatching bugs. I walked over to the bank and watched hoping the trout would feed again and show me where he was hiding. It was probably 5 minutes before the trout fed again under a branch on the far bank. It looked like a nice trout. I moved downstream of the fish and started my advancement sneak on the fish. I got within casting distance just as the trout fed again. The trout ate my fly on the first drift and pushed the limits of my 7X tippet as it jumped twice. The 15 inch brown was soon in my net, smiled for the camera and was returned to the river free to swim back to its holding spot. I reeled up and returned home completely satisfied. It was one of those afternoons that do not happen too often. Maybe the Little E is a dry fly river after all I just never tried it.

- Beach