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Posts Tagged ‘Australian flyfishing’

I managed a few days in the Snowy Mountains last week. After a long winter, the area was at last snowy in name only, the top of the Main Range the final bastion of white. Mid 20s maximums and sunshine prevailed on Lake Eucumbene and the rivers, providing more than a taste of dry fly action.

In typical early season fashion, stonefly were the predominant insect on the rivers at first, bring a few excited rises as they fluttered too close to the water (although stonefly nymphs are aquatic, adult stonefly emerge on land.) However toward the end of my trip, mayfly duns began to appear, and the dry fly fishing lifted accordingly. My mate Steve, who stayed on after I headed home, gleefully informed me that the hatches have only got better.

On Lake Eucumbene, a combination of ground not flooded since 2006 and the first really warm weather of the season, created the kind of fishing you’d expect. We normally arrived from the rivers late afternoon to find sporadic rises in any shallow bay we chose. Usually these increased (twice, spectacularly, to termites) as the sun sank lower, and continued on into the night as the trout found midges, craneflies and who knows what else.

Many of the trout were rainbows of a kilo or so – typically strong silvery Eucumbene fish that were a battle to keep out of the thistles. Seven pound tippet was a must! Mixed in was the odd brown and rainbow twice that size; all of these I caught came well after sunset.

All up the area is in great condition and as all that flooded vegetation rots, it’s hard not to see the midge fishing equaling or surpassing 2008. As for mudeye and hopper potential, I think I’ll have to schedule a return trip in a month or two.

Thredbo River

Thredbo River

Lake Eucumbene

Lake Eucumbene

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Last weekend I enjoyed my maiden Tassie fishing trip for the new season, finally managing to combine a book event (at Fullers in Hobart) and some media engagements with a cast or two. The first thing I must mention is the quantity of water. In nearly 3 decades of visits to Tasmania, I’ve never seen so much of the stuff running down the creeks and rivers, or simply lying in the fields. Normally dry gullies looked like spring creeks; depressions in paddocks reminded me of trout lakes. In the previously drought ravaged south-east, the Coal and Jordan rivers were breaking their banks. Further north, water was pouring into lakes Crescent and Sorell and they are almost full – something I doubted I’d ever see again. The Cowpaddock at Arthurs, which could have served as exactly that last season, is a major body of water once again, extending right back beyond Buchanan Creek.

The fishing was ultimately very good, although so much water posed its own challenges. Most rivers were simply too high to bother with. Even floodwater feeders were basically out, with sustained high levels mostly flushing all the terrestrial food (and thus the drawcard for edge-feeding trout) weeks ago. Many lakes posed a similar problem, having already filled and spilled.

In the end, two lakes stood out. At Penstock, we found galaxiid feeders on the western shore on a grey, gale-blown evening. If the trout saw a green Emu Woolly Bugger in the slightly murky water (Penstock is over-full and spilling powerfully), they grabbed it. After dropping two good fish (I blame frozen fingers!) I landed a well conditioned buck rainbow of 5 pounds.

The highlight though was a visit to Lake Echo – a favourite water of mine that was desperately low last season. While still not full, I can report Echo is now several vertical metres higher than when I last fished it. Another bit of good news is the recently opened Large Bay access road, which makes boat trailer and conventional car access possible most of the way to the northern end of the lake, opening up many hundreds of hectares of effectively ‘new’ water. With the water still rising over new ground, the trout were making the most of the flooded bounty, busily searching the classic grassy shores, as well as the steeper shores among the trees and rocks. While it was possible to pick up the odd fish blind searching, sunny skies made for very good polaroiding and any fish covered took a small inert Woolly Bugger confidently. Two of us ended up with about a dozen browns either side of the 1 kg mark between us, and I lost a much bigger rainbow in the sticks – a long story which I’ll expand on some time!

Overall, Tassie this season looks to me like turning on some of the best fishing – river and lake – for a very long time. Trout stocks have survived in almost all the drought-affected waters, not to mention those that have fared pretty well anyway over the last few years. Already the fish are slapping on condition and size, and once the weather begins to settle, the fishing in all the major waters (not to mention several we’d almost forgotten about) will be superb. If you haven’t planned a trip to Tassie for 09/10, you really should.

Lake Echo

Lake Echo

Lake Echo

Lake Echo

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Aussie Angler Book Launch

Aussie Angler Book Launch


Photograph compliments of David Grisold

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Thanks to everyone who came out this weekend to meet me at Aussie Angler; your support is appreciated. After a very successful signing at the Greensborough store, this video appeared on the ‘Net – I thought I’d share it with you all. If you missed the signing, you can come along to Compleat Flyfisher in the Melbourne CBD (Flinders Lane) on August 14 at 12pm or Hook Up Bait & Tackle in Melbourne’s Eastern suburbs (Ferntree Gully) on August 22 at 10am. I’ll also be in Tasmania at the Tasmanian Trout Expo in Cressy at the end of the month and will be talking at Fullers Bookshop in Hobart on September 13 at 2pm. You can visit my publisher’s Events page for more info.

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A few years ago, Muz Wilson gave me some of his Emu Woolly Buggers to try. They worked, and as happens with successful flies owned by flyfishers who forget to re-order, their numbers were soon depleted. Eventually I was down to one survivor – a large green one that had caught trout from Lake Jindabyne to Woods Lake. I became careful about when I used that fly, saving it for those tough days or hours when I felt I needed something special. Such a day occurred about 12 months ago fishing with Felix at Millbrook Lakes. The weather was cold and grey, hardly a fish moved, and yet it took only half a dozen casts to hook this rainbow.

2008_0606rainbow0025

Then yesterday I visited Lake Wartook with mate Max. Things got off to a reasonable start, but by early afternoon the action had slowed. I seriously contemplated a lunch break, but instead decided to try one more spot on the eastern shore. Without too much thought, I clipped off a black midge pupa which hadn’t been touched for an hour or so, and reached into the fly box for the Emu Bugger. First cast, and the best trout I’ve ever caught at Wartook inhaled it.

2009_0616Wartook0023
So, either this particular green Emu Woolly Bugger has been infused with some secret essence Muz is working on, or it’s looking very much like a lucky fly. And now I’m faced with a dilemma. Do I push my luck (something I’m intensely wary of doing when flyfishing) and keep using it? Or do I retire this magic fly to a glass frame above my desk? Meanwhile, it’s about time I gave Muz a call to see if he has any green emu left.

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Middle Creek, May 2009

Cold and rainy late season day on the Mitta

Winter is truly here in south-eastern Australia, with another half-metre snowfall across the Snowy Mountains and the Victorian Alps to follow on from the blizzard in late April. I managed a mid-May trip to the Mitta River system for one last crack at the mountain streams. It was great fun, with plenty of fish caught (even on dries) but as you might expect, the action had slowed considerably from just a few weeks earlier.

I knew it was time to say goodbye to the mountain streams for winter when I noticed ice on a shady edge of the Victoria River (the final stream we fished) and measured the water temperature at just 3.5°.

The dilemma of just how long to persevere with the streams is now decided, with all the Victorian and New South Wales streams (bar a handful of sea trout rivers in coastal Victoria) closed to trout fishing from Queens Birthday until Spring. But as one door shuts…

Sticky Caddis

Purrumbete rainbow on Muz's Stick Caddis

The lakes in western Victoria have produced some good, if not outstanding fishing lately. I had an entertaining day with Muz Wilson at Purrumbete recently, catching rainbows of around 1 ½ pounds on stick caddis and the faithful BMS. There were some bigger browns and salmon around too, though these eluded us—this time.

Fishing in the Grampians

Grey day action at Lake Wartook

The Grampians lakes have also been easing the pain of the stream closed season, particularly Wartook. These drought-stricken lakes are enjoying the best early winter rain for years. Since the start of May, Lake Bellfield’s risen from 11340 megalitres to 12980, Lake Fyans from 2760 to 3480, and Wartook from 6910 to 9580.

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After a summer most Victorians would have been better off without, the weather at Millbrook Lakes seems to have swung the other way and we’re now in the midst of a much colder than average June, with snow and heavy frosts already. Water temperatures on the lakes have dropped into single figures and fishing opportunities are changing by the day. Steady rain has the water starting to creep up from low summer/autumn levels.

Highlights of winter so far have included smelters. These fish are chasing huge galaxias at Macphersons, gambusia at Cabin and smelt at Baby Blue. A surprise has been the continuation of very good evening midge hatches, particularly at Harbours, Cabin and Bluegum. How much longer these will last is anyone’s guess, but by August big midge hatches are usually back in force, so maybe we’ll have a whole winter of midge!

Meanwhile guided catches in early winter have been good, with indicator fishing and searching with small wets proving most effective, changing to big wets on dark. John and his two novice friends landed 10 fish between them last week, ranging from 2 to 7 pounds.

The exceptional growth rate of fish has been the real highlight of the year so far at Millbrook, and quite unexpected given the tough summer. Some of the trout we stocked in early spring at 6 inches and a few ounces in weight are hitting 20 inches and nearly 4 pounds. Even the older fish in the 5 to 8 pound range are holding superb condition. With trout like this around, once the water starts to flood back into the grass we could see some exceptional action, so fingers crossed for the next downpour.

Bunny caught May 2009

Dash with a typically chubby Millbrook winter rainbow

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