Showing posts with label trout. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trout. Show all posts

Monday, April 30, 2012

Notes for April, 2012

It is the last day of April and the ice has been out on most lakes since the middle of March. This spring came early, but within the last two weeks, we have had some serious frosts. The loons are back as are the mergansers. The red wing and yellow wing black birds showed up early this year too. The male turkeys are "struttin' their stuff" and the hens are ignoring them just like females of most species ignore males' posturing. Not much in the way of precipitation has occurred for sometime now and the fire alert is "High" in the Chequamegon. My favorite trout streams are the lowest I have seen them in a while, with some of the best "holes" nothing more than stagnant, muddy pools. And Lake Superior is the lowest it has been since the early 1900's. We are in need of some serious rain, but the concern with that is the effect it will have on the ground nesting birds, such as the turkey and grouse. Suffice it to say, there is a trade-off for everything. Need more rain, but some will have to suffer. There is nothing cruel about it; it just is the way of nature. Long term drought, however, has much more in the way of serious consequences for life than a few heavy down pours during the spring.

My wife and I, with our dog Maggie, of course, have taken some long walks in the deep reaches of the forest over the last couple of weeks. The dog loves the opportunity to smell new smells and we all enjoy the opportunity to see the forest come alive with spring. The cowslip is beginning to bloom in some locations, but we have as yet not seen any trillium. The dog wood is flowering and the rich, sweet smell of balsam fir permeates the forest. We have sighted a few bear, but we missed the large bear that left tracks around our house just after our last snow fall. Yup, we still are getting a few snow flurries now and then, but about two weeks ago we got enough to cover the ground with a couple of inches. The prints left by the bear were "good size." But, we did not get a glimpse of it as it passed through.

That is about all to report from here. Next weekend is the opener of the Wisconsin fishing season, except, of course, for bass. For information regarding the respective fishing seasons please see either the Wisconsin DNR website or The Arrowhead Fly Angler website. Please keep our lakes clean by obeying the regulations covering transportation of exotic/invasive species; clean your boat and trailer before and after fishing; pack out your garbage; obey the catch and possession limits; and have a good time. Take care of our resources.

Vaya con Dios.

Hawkeye

Monday, April 20, 2009

Spring Rain

It is raining out. It is an early spring rain, the kind that isn't quite certain if it wants to be rain, snow, or something in between. The sky is that grey that looks like beached carp three days dead. Even the loons are hunkered down on our little lake, stoically maintaining.

I sit at my computer looking at pictures of last year's trout adventures, laughing, sighing, dreaming. I watch as the Department of Natural Resources fishery personnel pull in their survey nets just off of the rocky point adjacent to our beach. They call it Maggie's point after our golden retriever, because, as they explained, they can locate it easily enough, as our dog has stood off the far end of the point barking in greeting every year for the last 5 years. I watch as they throw her a handful of small "Milk Bone" dog treats. She scampers into the water and retrieves as many as she can before they get too soggy and sink below the surface of the water.

I have spent the last few weeks, when I can, hiking along some of my favorite trout streams, watching the progress of the coming of spring. I make note of some of the changes that have occurred since last year, observing in some cases that what once was a tantilizing rock structure has now all but disappeared due to the spring run-off. I record the changes, take pictures of some, simply note down others. It will be interesting to see how the fishing has been affected due to these changes. That is what I like about stream fishing. It is never the same experience no matter how many times you fish the same location.

I just saw the vixen who lives up the road , carrying a rabbit in her mouth. I will have to check the den again to see if she has kits, as she has been gone from her normal routine for about a week. Maggie keeps an eye on her, but has never interfered with the fox as it passes through our forest to her den. Maggie has never been leashed or penned, so she has had ample opportunity to chase and otherwise, harrass the fox. I wouldn't be surprised to one day find Maggie out in the backyard playing with the kits as the vixen stands around watching. It would be just like Maggie.

One of the loons has just expressed its displeasure at the sight of a newly arrived eagle flying over the lake. Since these loons are nesting here-- (and there has been a nesting pair with a least one chick for over 10 consecutive years) --it appears that the eagle is getting a heads-up on what hunting opportunities exist. We have watched the drama play out numerous times over the last 10 years between the loons and the eagles. Some years the eagle has won; others, the loons. There is nothing right or wrong about it; it just is.

Well, I think I will close for now and go off to tie some more emergers, nymphs, and dry flies; and dream of warm sunshine, soft breezes, and the joy of being alone with the "...art that is performed on a four-count rhythm between ten and two o'clock." (A River Runs Through It, by Norman Maclean).

Vaya con Dios

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Cruising my favorite trout streams around Gitchi Gummi

I haven't written for a while and I apologize to my many readers and fans. (Yeah, right. I think I am the only one that reads this blog.) I have spent the last month and a half looking for a new consulting contract, as I finished my last gig at the end of February. Boy, you can sure tell the economy has gone south. (Something, BTW, I should have done for the month of March). Anyhow, I haven't really wasted my time. I have built new bird houses, bird feeders, owl nesting platforms, and some twig furniture to sell at the rustic decor tourist traps. But by far my most favorite activity has been cruising the trout streams that I have fished over the years in Northern Wisconsin.

I started my examination of those streams and creeks in the middle of March, when there was still enough snow in the Chequamegon/Nicolet National forest to require snowshoes to get around. Of course, most of the streams were still locked up tight with ice, but you could see evidence of the beginnings of spring. As I have ventured out in the past few weeks, I have seen the slow awaking of the streams, the wildlife, and the surrounding forest. There are new bird songs to listen to. (Beats the heck out of the raven calls one hears all winter up here.) The sound of the flowing water creates a harmonic backdrop to the many sopranos singing in the forest canopy. Just yesterday (Saturday, April 18, 2009) I saw my first bear of the year and came across evidence of a recent visit to one of my favorite creeks by one of the many wolf packs that frequent the north country. And, of course, this entry would not be complete without mentioning the return of the nesting pair of loons to the modest lake I live on.

The leaf buds on the trees, however, are still wrapped tight as if not quite certain that they want to face the vissitudes of spring. The deer are struggling to find something to eat, and, consequently, have devastated my newly planted white cedar trees, my high bush cranberry bushes, and my dogwood shrubs.

The forest floor is still solidly frozen, but it is always the last to give up to spring. However, the damp and cold has not intimidated the hardy grouse. The drumming has begun and the forest echoes with the sound of rapidly beating wings. Cruising over the newly open water are the returning eagles and osprey. And, of course, with the retreat of the snow and the uncovering of the unfortunate victims of the long winter, there are the vultures scanning the ground from their spy-plane like vantage point.

As I venture along my streams, I dream of dewy mornings shrouded in fog while I cast a small fly to a promising riffle beyond that beckoning rock. I dream of the rise of a brook, rainbow, or dare I think, a monster brown trout. But I must be patient, as spring only has a tenuous hold on the forest. However, it grows stronger every day.