Epicurean Angler-Matthew Supinski's Selectivity/Nexus Blog- Everything Trout/Steelhead/Salmon

Epicurean Angler-Matthew Supinski's Selectivity/Nexus Blog- Everything Trout/Steelhead/Salmon
Showing posts with label midges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label midges. Show all posts

Sunday, January 21, 2018

FEBRUARY IS TROPHY STEELHEAD TIME...PLUS BIG BROWNS ON THE POST SPAWN MEAT HUNT

( February beauties in a thaw )

                                          If  I had to pick one or two months of the year that are really special on the Muskegon, it would be the February/March period.
Early March double red- bander

The steelhead are in the curious/ aggressive territorial dominance pre spawn mode, and the browns are on the perpetual carnivore meat hunt after spawing.
With a mid-winter thaw after a brutal December and early January of sub-zero temperatures, grouse are moving in the woods, and the fish are also on the move.
 Stoneflies are moving, midges are hatching and hex nymphs are leaving their burrows.

The biological drift is alive and stirring things up!- truly the best time for a trophy steelhead or brown!
                           (chrome Valentine's Day female)

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Midge Bread and Butter 101 on the Muskegon/Big Manistee


                                 ( Morning midge feeder on the Muskegon - who say's a 20 incher won't t                                                                           take size 20 dries?)

Diptera midges have completely taken over two tailwaters significantly in Michigan- the FERC re-licensed rivers of the Muskegon and Big Manistee. Due to low stable flows/plankton from impoundments, these rivers have seen increased vegetation/decaying detritus which harbors massive benthic diptera and Simulium midges beyond epic proportions.The ridiculous sucker populations of both rivers ( they feed 90% on midge larvae as they turn their suction noses on a rock and flash their golden sides) are a direct result of the insane midge populations.Either fish big drakes and Hexes in the evening, or prepare for morning sippers now on midges and then eventually caddis and tiny bwo's as the year progresses.6 and 7x will be the norm with long 14-18 foot leaders and 2/3/4 weight 10/11 foot rods. Trout will sip midges daily from now thru the summer thru November and December.
(The ideal fine gravel/vegetation mix of  these rivers favors midges/clinging mayflies and scuds)
PRESENTATION
Target pods of trout in slow pools and back eddies/gravel shelves. Use a midge emerger dry and dropper pupae ( my WMD-weapons of midge destruction in last year's Fly Fisherman article are deadly) If you get refusals go down in size and silhouette- but the trout will eventually make the mistake of a take. Try twitching your presentation to get your flies noticed in the maze of naturals.
You can  now tie size#26/28 midges using # 20 wide gap hooks from Daiichi for better hooking percentages and short shank bodies. Also the supple Varivas tippet material is ideal for presenting minutiae  down to 8x/9x
Enjoy this wonderful way to fish in a traditional manner where  trout sippers can be ultra fussy but pleasing to dry fly aficionados. 

Check out the massive midge larvae cluster found on a stick!....click on the link below 







Wednesday, June 1, 2016

$250.00 HATCH MATCHERS SPECIAL,,,,NEW TECHNIQUE REFRESHER!!!

TARGET THE MORNINGS OR EVENINGS...BOTH HAVE THEIR SPECIAL CHARM!
LEARN HOW TO FOOL FUSSY BROWNS AND RAINBOWS ON BIG TAILWATER CONDITIONS LIKE THE MUSKEGON WHERE THE FISH COULD EMBARRASS AND HUMBLE YOU FAST!.....(use it as a primer for an out west trip to Montana or the Delaware!)

QUESTIONS TO ASK YOURSELF?


* ARE YOU MAKING  THE RIGHT CASTS AND PRESENTATION TACTICS NECESSARY-(I.E. DOWN AND ACCROSS REACH CAST THAT ALLOW FOR 50 FT DEAD DRAG DRIFTS/...ARE YOU FISHING YOUR CADDIS WITH THE PROPER MOTION?...WHY EMERGERS ARE SO IMPORTANT ON TAILWATERS?


* DO YOU UNDERSTAND ALL THE MASKING/MIDGE HATCH SITUATIONS?....ARE STIFLED BY TROUT RISING AND REFUSING YOUR FLIES ON COUNTLESS TRIPS?


* ARE YOU USING 16-18 FOOT LEADERS AND TURNING THEM OVER LIKE 9 FOOT LEADERS?....ARE YOU USING THE RIGHT FORM OF THE INSECT?

* LEARN TO FISH THE NEW WONDER HATCH OF THE RIVER;MIDGES!- THE MUSKEGON'S BREAD AND BUTTER MEGA HATCH


CALL OR EMAIL FOR MORE INFO!

Sunday, March 6, 2016

EARLY MARCH UPDATE FOR MUSKEGON/MICHIGAN

It has been a very long week! Blizzard snow conditions Tuesday, near zero fahrenheit temps at night time, freezing up  rod guides all week on the river, finally sunny warm relief Saturday.

Like to thank our good friend and client Chris Vanover from Texas for enduring the week , but I got him into some gorgeous steelhead, trout and yes a nice walleye that did well for the Lenten fish fry!

(Some very nice steelhead)
( a delish Walleye...pan fried with a corn/pepper relish salsa YES!...we are 100% catch and release on all trout, steelhead and salmon-BUT!!!!- walleye are for the table, and btw- they eat all our trout and steelhead business partrners)
( a nice brownie)

( and one gorgeous eagle lake resident Muskegon  cutt/bow rainbow- biggest I have seen in years!...notice the orange belly and slits under the gill plates)

CONDITIONS: perfect!- water level 2790 CFS...water temp still needing to warm up- currently 35F- but very clear 

HATCHES: saw midges yesterday and a few black stone flies in biological drift- 

FORECAST: Warm week ahead. Walleye in the river signals run is ramping up
NOTE: We still have some excellent guide dates and lodging available for spring steelhead but they are going fast....email or call us!!!
Cheers!...Na zdrowie!


Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Deep winter Selective Michigan Tail water Trout- an Underestimated Passion


( Michigan trout are not just for opening day Hendricksons- scuds/midges/caddis are bread and butter all winter)

I love January on our Muskegon River tailwater- today's afternoon indy nymphing . Our Eagle Lake California strain rainbows are so beautiful and avid scud, midge and caddis larvae eating predators- fat footballs that fight like Big Delaware bows even in 34F water temps. These bows took my 'Super Scud': ‪#‎Hareline‬ UV Ice Dub Shrimp Pink,# Kiley's Scud Skin- a killer in winter with great pulsing movement. Our Michigan rivers are all spring creeks cut from a different mold- highly alkaline even though they have freestone and conifer acidic influences. Scuds are everywhere, extreme high protein intake and 'way' too underutilized and fished...cheers!- great weather for winter nymphing and trout are on the hunt!
( a fat healthy Eagle Lake strain Rainbow from yesterday, January /2016)


(If you are trophy "truttasaurus" hunting with streamer meat, February on the Muskegon and Manistee has seen us catch the largest resident and lake-run post spawn browns that are ferocious and hungry!)
(
( Fat Bastard!...a Muskegon brown that was floating belly up in February, looked dead!!!- was netted by anglers next to me- was choking on a bluegill that spilled over from the reservoir- we removed the gill, performed CPR, and it swam away- it was this close to snuffing it!- the aggressive gluttony browns will subject themselves to is amazing- that's why streamer guys love their gig!)

TACTICS FOR ICE COLD WINTER TAILWATERS
*Much to your surprise, winter trout can be as selectivity driven even when the waters are 34-36F- even though metabolisms are way down. The excellent supply of scuds/midges/caddis larvae/stonefly nymphs and annelids etc., keep them on the constant move and constant hunt.Keep moving until you find fish and dont go back to the 'Proverbial well: hot spots" too often-FISH ARE CONSTANTLY MOVING WITH THE FOOD SUPPLY!
*Concentrate on slower sucker water back eddies/vegetation areas and inside/outside river bends- shallow spots that deliver bio drift and have upwelling currents and spring seeps.
* Indy or Euro nymphing very slowly and scraping the bottom are the key-winter "holes" are not always the deepest spots- they are the periphery/edges
*Though your hands are cold, keep switching tandem patterns as often as possible- have a Mr. Heater with you for the hands and a little bourbon/cognac
(Zago's meat wagon)

* Big Meaty Game Changers, D&D's , Double D's work well but keep them moving slow and crippled- swing/jerk-drift/strip/lift/stumble your streamers-ESPECIALLY WHEN WATER TEMPS ARE IN MIDDLE 30'F- southern tailwaters are much warmer-White/Holsten- let them rip fast and furious due to higher metabolisms and fast moving bait fish
Good Luck- enjoy winter!
*

Saturday, August 29, 2015

MIDGE MANIFESTO PARADISE ON THE MUSKEGON/MANISTEE TAILWATERS!_ and ecosystem thoughts


(our Eagle Rainbows from California are truly gorgeous fish- they  normally average 10-14 inches on the midge hatch at this time of year and will kick your three/four weight's butt to its limit since this strain are such hard fighters!- they have cutthroat blood in them- note the orange slits by the mouth!- these two little footballs were from the midge hatch yesterday- note the WMD midge in the lower image)

If you are a true ole' fashioned 'trout bum', the mention of trout sipping minutiae dries...a.k.a tailwater/spring creek style will goosebumps up your spine and a cheshire cat grin!
( rainy/drizzle days are perfect for midge hatches- watch the swallows work the air to what seems like nothing up there-those are midges they are working- note the red dots forming from Gilchrist wild strains)
( here note the Wild Rose Wisconsin strain- both strains stocked in Muskegon...more Loch Leven Scottish in origin and larger brown spotting- both gorgeous truttas!)



 The Big Muskegon and Manistee are continuing to become  true eastern and western tailwater in the summer: midges, caddis, bwos, cahill's, ants, scuds- just like the San Juan. With the very cool/cold week water temperatures and flows have become ideal and the hatches really took off!

Yes!..I'm very aware that we are in the land of BIG AND BIGGER!...Hex, mousing, streamers- I love them all!. But being an east/west coast minutiae freak, what is going on now and for the next two months will blow your mind!...and you'll never want to see another steelhead and salmon!- not really!,... but dry fly trout taking size #20's...long 6x tippets, three/four weights is an epic experience! - especially if you watch every trout suck your fly in right in front of you.

Our spring stocked Wild Rose, Gilchrist browns and Eagle Lake rainbows ar betting fat and pushing the 10-13 inch range- holdover surface feeders are 14-18 inches- some leviathan 20 inch browns will focus on larger caddis/mayflies at dusk, preferring to hunt crayfish along the shore. 
This morning  we stopped fishing after 20 trout landed in an hour and half window. Water temps have plunged with a week of 'global cooling'- 50's-60's,  into surface temperatures ideal for dry fly trout ( NOTE: unfortunately the USGS temperature gauges are installed at the 'worst spots' on the Muskegon and Manistee- by the top spill dams operating from warmed up ponds currently operating now. The water temps actually cool as you get farther downstream with all the thousands of springs, cool night- especially on the Muskegon , thus cooling the water- although the bubbler operations are providing "ideal" comfort (dissolved oxygen being as important or if not more important than temperature ) for the fish regardless of actual Fahrenheit temps- mid 60's are ideal for total surface orientation for the fish!- Bob nymphed a riffle that we hammered the trout on dries the other day and only took one trout- meanwhile we hooked several dozen on dries- total surface orientation at this time of year due to low clear waters)
( non- obvious)
(Obvious-note cold water loving/alkaline watercress along shoreline-image taken at 5 F in January )
( despite the obvious springs we see, there are thousands of tiny rivulets that are between 47-51F for miles and miles throughout the entire tailwaters we take for granted- here are some I took yesterday after examining shoreline rocks for caddis larvae- which BTW! are still loaded in larvae stage and ready to pop any day- they as all things lately are running way behind in maturation- these are all a function of "plus or minus heating and cooling days", which or 'global cooling' winters put a major damper on the "norm"- Wish we had a college/university hydro or fisheries biologist student looking for  master's degree thesis material studying thermal refuge/trout migration/prey ditribution and biological drift models on our tailwaters- we would finally have some "unbiased and realistic data to manage our resources!- Mark Guzniczak? )

MIDGE TACTICS/METHODS
( beauty of midging is that it can be done year round- 365- deep January Muskegon bow surface feeding in air temps in the teensF )


I am aware that size #20 flies scare most anglers. Also hook penetration and hooking confidence is lacking due to smaller gapes in hooks. The first most important thing you should do is have regular eye exams and bi-focals so you can see - sounds basic , but you would not believe the difference in vision you will have especially if you are older.
HOOKS- Daiichi has speciality midges hooks with a very wide gape in tiny sizes. I always bend my hook gape outwards in the vice to increase hook ups immensely- here is a size #24 bwo minutiae with one of the Daiichi speciality hooks
LEADERS- I use 18 foot leaders with 5-8 feet of 6-7x tippets for supper long dead drifts and easy manipulation of the fly. Some are saying, how the hell do you turn that over?...EASY, they will cast like 9 foot leaders. If you buy your leaders , buy a 12 foot /4x, take the butt loop section ( .023-.021) off an old leader and just blood know a 3 foot section extension of the butt- thiu making your leader top heavy which allows you to cast any length.- so 3 feet of old butt nailed to the new 12 footer, than add your 5 feet of 6/7x.
TECHNIQUE- Midges act slightly like caddis as dries- they skitter, twitch, dead drift. Impart very, very subtle twitches and than long dead drifts to your dries.


 ( not all trout are on the smaller side when midging- this 27 inch brown from Wisconsin's Driftless spring creeks was caught midging on a hot June day on a #22 WMD-weapons of midge destruction pupae)


MORE INFO
The internet is loaded with midge information and patterns. My Selectivity book and DVD has tons of midge information and patterns /techniques. If you could find this old article I wrote as a very young man in the early 90's on midging in American Angler, there is a ton of information in it
Also next month  in Fly Fisherman magazine ( September) I have an article coming out on spring creek/tailwaters forage feeding profiles-midges included and two new midge patterns.
The next two months will have epic dry fly fishing on our tailwaters- come out and experience the magic. Yes salmon and steelhead are fun....but once you get hooked on minutiae dry fly fishing for trout, you will become an endless minutiae  junkie- trust me!
ALSO...in my Paint Creek Selectivity Clinic in two weeks Ill be covering midging in greater detail- The beauty of Michigan trouting is we have it all!






  



Friday, August 7, 2015

August is Unfolding Nicely!

Summer steelhead are just coming in. Mild days and cool nights perfect weather for  summer steelhead, trout and Atlantics. Caddis /midge and trico hatches, terrestrials and night fishing all in full steam!...and large tomatoes and heirloom sweet corn?...life couldn get better!- no heat waves in sight!

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

SUMMER MINUTIAE!!...THE MIGHTY MUSKEGON'S FINEST DRY FLY FISHING

( gorgeous MO brown on a size #24 August WMD midge)
I know...I know!!!!...Michigan IS the dynasty for big mayflies!...Hex/Lithros/Iso/Drakes...you name it!- our big mayfly hatches are the greatest in the world!- also giant streamers and mousing!- bar none!.  I have lived and  fished in many destinations and I can fully feel comfortable in making that claim. 

BUT!...having cut my teeth on small spring creeks for fussy trout since a kid, I have always loved the tiny game...small #20's- 6/7/8x tippets, 2 weights and finicky risers- IT IS AN ADDICTION! ( and good bifocals help also!- modern optometry is a miracle today!)

Since being on the Muskegon for this the 20th year, I have always told my wife, ..." If I could take one month off , it would be August , to fish the Muskegon- the dry fly fishing is at its finest! As long as you don't fish in the heat of the day, are extremely careful with the trout and temperatures..( #keepemwet), our trout rise and feel comfortable even when the waters are approaching the low 70's...-FACT!- ....it has been that way since the days of the 1930's -Swisher/Richards/ Pobst/Mansel...yadda yadda. Our Eagle Lake rainbow strain can tolerate temps well into the upper 70's/80....the Wild Rose and Gilchrist browns feed late or early and also tolerate very high temps. This is obvious by how "fat and rotund" our trout are all summer long- no starving stressed out snakes here!

August is prime midges and caddis time. Trout will ingest hundreds of them a day -cloudy days all day feeding. Little green caddis start the cycle- #18-22, then the mix with cinnamon caddis and the all the time #22-28 midge fishery which is actually taking over as the prime substance forage. My two weights are loaded and ready- awesome stuff ! The bend in the pole a fat 11 incher will give you is epic!
(caddis image- JGMiller)
Early mornings, after cool nights will see awesome Trico hatches from Pine St to Henning Park. One of the biggest F'k ups the USGS did is put the temperature gage in the wrong spot...right on the left side of the dam where warm water usually spills. As the water gets past all the dozens upon dozens of springs below Thornapple high gradients, insect hatches are more diverse, less zebras and incredible hatch matching opportunities with cool water trout refuge areas and larger more wary browns that cruise the flats.
( this August/Sept. brown on the Muskegon is far from stressed and starving like many hot freestoners)

By mid month, #24 BWO Pseudocloeon olives dominate the lower river along with late season Stenonema Cahill's , late Isonychia and zillions of flying ants. The olive activity lasted for me last year well into November and at times the water is covered so thick by rusty spinners and adults its like sawdust and trout sipping everywhere!
Late August/through September is flying ant time!!!!- size 14- through #20- trout eat the shit out of them!!!!- and will move several feet to take them!
Yes its a great time for smallies/pike..night mousing/hoppers on PM...etc. , whatever floats your boat man!

( from Mid August through September- lower river has massive cahill hatches on cool weather nights with rising water)
( smaller Pseudo bwo spinners are rusty-#24- JGMiller image)


But if you like long 7x leaders, fussy trout, and watching trout refuse your fly- or occasionally take it!- August on the Mo is epic!...( sorry guys that know the gig,  which are now saying .."why doesn't he keep his damn mouth shut!)
 Fact is the fish are not all in the San Juan between Dam and Pine, they are spread out everywhere,growing an inch a month- do the math from stocking size- are extremely particular at times and what they feed on- midges and more midges are the staple!, you can have a great summer season!!!
(another late August/early September fatty)

 My point: the more people get out and experience this, the less DNR BS propaganda kool aid they will drink about marginalism and become sheep to the propaganda slaughter . Only thing marginal about the MO in the summer is the marginal understanding and  maximum stupidity and propaganda people have been led to believe by one biologist that has one three goals!- 1. walleye...2. walleye and one more 3. walleye !
Cheers!..na zdrowie..Ga Day Mate !
BTW....For the killers and trout eaters- personally I love our biologist's fish- walleye!...go get a frying pan and catch the rainbows- they are for you!!!. Leave the browns to grow big for the" head game of nods"- plus the small bows taste better!...:)