Showing posts with label early July. Show all posts
Showing posts with label early July. Show all posts

Thursday, July 24, 2014

Summer Fishing Trips

Sometimes it's nice to get away from the urban hustle-bustle, even if your in the suburbs. In some suburban regions, such as the outskirts of Philadelphia, there are decently stocked trout streams.

Earlier in July, I went to Michigan to a wild trout stream. Now, in late July and early August, I'll be taking a trip to Kentucky. This trip doesn't have a main goal of fishing, it's supposed to be mostly sightseeing Louisville. But, I'll find a cane pole or a spin-cast rod and fish for some bass or bluegill.

Summer is a hard time for trout in Pennsylvania when it's hot and water temperatures approach the 70's. But in Kentucky, it's prime time for warm water fish like sunfish and bass. Last year, I went on the same trip and caught over 40 bluegill over an 8 hour period. That's about 5 fish each hour, or 1 fish every 12 minutes.

It's great fishing there, but there's nothing like the pull of a trout on a fly rod. So, getting away from your regular fishing hole every once in awhile is a good idea, just to keep in the back of your head.

Friday, June 27, 2014

Let the 4th be with You

I know it's kind of a cheesy title. Many people across the country are traveling this Fourth of July and fishermen will flock to their nearby streams to catch some fish. There will be lots of men and women getting up early and heading to the stream. With so many people, there will be lots of competition and lack of space. I've already had my own experience with that.

I decided to take off work on the Friday before Independence Day to fish in the afternoon. I was sure the crowds of fishermen wouldn't be out until dusk. After all, the Fourth of July next Friday, still one week away. I got to my usual fishing spot around 2:00 pm and it was already taken. Looking for spots up and down the road, I could find a place where I could fish. After searching for about 30 minutes I had given up and found no location. I did find a few spots that I could use in the future though.

Don't underestimate the number of people that could be fishing, they all have the same idea: get out before the crowds. But so many people go early that they become the crowds. Don't let it get to you, be patient and don't try to push people out of their space.

So let the 4th be with you, but don't make it sour for everybody else.

Sunday, June 22, 2014

The Famed Hex Hatch

http://bugguide.net/images/cache/YZIRCZ7RHHHZ1LXZOLZZOLLZWLSRPLJLWLZZELYL6LKRWLXRNLRZNL0RHHPRRH0ROZ3L2LSZLHERRH5RLHIZVLPRSH.jpg
Hexagenia limbata - The Hex
It's coming soon to a stream near you!

...or not

Southeast Pennsylvania may not have a hex hatch - you may not have even heard of the hex fly.
Hex is short for Hexagenia limbata. It's a fly known for its major hatch in the midwest. It hatches late at night between June and September. The large hatches most know usually occur in late June and early May. Because the hex are so large, they almost always bring large brown trout to the surface. This makes the hex hatch a prime time to catch fish and it brings tons of fishermen to streams.

Some hatches are so large that they appear on
Mayfly hatch radar
Radar image showing hex hatch on Mississippi River
radar. In the radar image to the right, on May 30. 2010, the hex hatch on the Mississippi River was so dense that the waves produced by radar bounced off the flies and went back to the radar.

Each year around the Fourth of July, I take a trip to the AuSable River in Northern Michigan, just after the hex hatch is over. My father used to go out at night and trick a few trout on a hex about a week afterwards. Sometimes he'd catch a few nice brown trout.

It's an amazing feeling when these giant mayflies are all in the air and landing on your arm, your rod, reel, and everything around you. So, it should be on your bucket list to go to a midwestern stream and experience the hatch for yourself.