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Trout by a Hair
by Norm Crisp
Charlie and I met four years ago when we were both camping and fishing on
the Encampment River in Southern Wyoming. I don't know exactly what spawned
the link, but from the start we became the kind of "best friends who just
met". We corresponded by letter throughout the year and met again on the
Encampment the following July. We continued our pattern of letters to tell
each other of our fishing exploits, and there was always our annual pilgrimage
to the Encampment River.
Charlie always got the best of me in our series of fish tale letters,
but this time I got the best of him on the Encampment. In June of this year,
a business trip took me to Chicago, not far from where Charlie lives in
Wisconsin. Of course I went to visit, brag of fishing exploits and, enjoy
an evening of fishing with him on one of his favorite local streams, Black
Earth Creek. While we were walking back to the car after a great evening
of fishing, Charlie spotted some horse hairs on a pasture fence and picked
them off. With a twinkle in his eye he asked me, "You think you could land
a trout on one of these? That's how old Izzak had to do it." Our good natured
rivalry wouldn't let me pass up the challenge. I told him, "Not only could
I catch a trout, but I could catch a big trout". Looking back I can see how
easily I rose to his bait. After a great deal of discussion over the who's,
when's and where's of catching big trout, we settled on 15 inches or more
as an acceptable definition of big. Back home in Prairie Village, Kansas
with the horse hairs Charlie had found, I started to realize what I had said
I could do and had some second thoughts about meeting the challenge. Pulling
on one of the horse hairs and seeing how easily it snapped told me that even
though my horse hairs had a diameter of about .008 inches they weren't typical
3X to 4X tippet material with a breaking strength of 7 or 8 pounds. That
night I started re-reading the copy of the Complete Angler a friend had given
me as a Christmas gift a few years earlier. I found the information I needed
in Chapter XXI: " Direction for the making of a Line, and for the coloring
of both Rod and Line". According to Izaak, hairs from a light colored horse
were the best if you could find one that wasn't flat and uneven. So difficult
were they to find however, that Izaak cautioned "If you get a lock of right,
round, clear, glass-color hair, make much of it". The second best hairs he
pronounced are the black hairs. Luckily, one of my co-workers has horses.
When I asked him if I could have some of their tail hairs, he looked at me
rather strangely but said I was welcome to pluck all I wanted. A Saturday
in the country gave me a lot of potential tippets.
With the dining room table cleared of everything, I started examining
my booty in search of a "glass-color hair that I could make much of" and
use to meet Charlie's challenge. Izaak was right! My co-worker now had a
horse with a very sparse tail and I didn't have a single glass-color tippet.
They were all flat, uneven and broke with the slightest pressure. I decided
that I'd always liked black tippets anyway!
Armed with a sandwich bag full of black horse hairs, my 4 weight rod,
and some "sponge spiders", I headed for my favorite local farm pond for some
experimentation on bluegills. On my third cast a palm sized bluegill inhaled
the spider, and left with the spider and half of my hair tippet. That was
my first lesson. I hadn't checked the black hairs for, as Izaak put it, "galls
and scabbyness". Close examination of the other hairs showed that they all
had an area of "scabbyness" somewhere along the length of the hair. I could
find it by grasping each end of the hair between my thumbs and forefingers
and giving a quick jerk or two. The hair would inevitably break at the scab.
Generally the break left me with about a 15 to 18 inch length of usable tippet.
My second lesson that evening was about the brittleness of horse hair and
the difficulty in tying knots which didn't break when I tightened them up.
I headed home after dark that night a little disappointed. I hadn't caught
any fish, and it looked like a "big trout" might be out of the question.
About a week after the bluegill experiment, the answer to the brittle
hair problem revealed itself to me while I was taking my morning shower.
Old Izaak had said "first let your hair be clean washed". He had been right
about light colored hairs and scabby -ness; so why wouldn't he be right about
cleanliness? I'd give it a try. That evening I shampooed the hairs and soaked
them in conditioner. All the time I was doing it, I prayed that none of my
friends would call and invite me over for dinner or to go out to the show.
They never would have believed the old excuse "I'd love to but I have to
wash and condition my horsehair tippets tonight". This "salon treatment"
really helped to soften the hairs, but they still often parted at the knots.
After attempting several combinations, I settled on a "Surgeon's Knot" for
the leader to hair connection and a loose "Duncan's Loop" for the hair to
fly connection.
Armed with this information about the best knots and 20 of my finest
hand picked and shampooed tippets, I was prepared to head for the Encampment
River for a week of friendship and fishing with Charlie and the possibility
of catching a trout as a "Com plete Angler" would.
It is an 800 mile drive from the Kansas city area to the Bureau of
Land Management campground on the Encampment River where Charlie and I
rendezvous. Even with an early morning departure and the gain of an hour
crossing into mountain time, it was early evening before my little truck
and I finally got to rest. Renew- ing friendships and setting up my portion
of camp was the pressing business. Fishing had to wait until the morning.
Showing Charlie my selection of tippets and talking about fishing was a perfect
way to unwind from the drive.
The trout in the section of the Encampment River where we fish are
very civilized. They don't consider rising to even the best presentation
until at least 8:30 in the morning when the sun has started to clear the
canyon rim. This social grace of Encampment River trout allowed us plenty
of time to drink coffee and prepare for the upcoming day's fishing. With
all the fanfare I could muster, I rigged out my rod and ceremoniously chose
my finest tippet. Besides being the best fisherman I know, Charlie is a good
flytier. It only seemed fitting that one of Charlie's flies should adorn
the end of my horse hair. Newly emerged insects seem to like to seek shelter
on the rain fly of a tent so we always check there in the morning before
deciding what pattern to start with. The morning "tent check" said a dark
brown mottled caddis, about size 16, might be the right choice. Charlie's
"Woodchuck Caddis" would make a good match. As I finished my coffee, I asked
Charlie if I could have a "woodchuck". With a gleam in his eye he handed
me one and warned me, " Remember, this one always gets rises from the biggest
trout on this river. I'm not sure you could land anything over thirteen and
a half inches no matter what strength tippet you use."
Charlie and I have a very similar style of fishing. We only work the
most productive looking areas. And these areas only get a few drifts of our
best possible presentations before we move on. This way we get good coverage
of likely lies and can spend time drinking in the sights, sounds and smells
of the river instead of starring at the water as our flies drift through
marginal water. Because we fish in the same way, we often fish together,
each taking a side of the river. The flip of the coin awarded me the left
side of the section we were going to fish, the side with the best holes.
On the first series of passes, Charlie connected with a brown of about 12
inches. The day was starting out right. There was nothing for me in the first
pool, but on the first drift across the second hole, a brown made a wild
splashing rise. Trying to balance my strike with a force that would set the
hook but not break the brown off at either the fly to hair or hair to leader
knots, I raised my rod tip. The knots held and my first "Horse Hair Trout"
and I did battle. I was so afraid of the knots that I played him like he
was that one big fish that comes along during each trip. ( You know, the
"Oh shit fish.) Slowly I worked him to me and gently slid the net under him.
I had caught a trout using a horse hair. As nonchalantly as I possibly could
I held my 11 inch treasure up for Charlie to see before I slipped him back
into the river. With a smile, Charlie reminded me that we had some good water
ahead of us where I could catch a few more "practice trout" before we reached
the big rocks, a place where big trout often hang out. I started feeling
confident that I could land a big trout on a hair.
As we worked our way up the river, talking about life in general and
what it was about trout fishing that raises our passion, we caught several
more trout. None were big, but each of these practice trout told me that
if I didn't try to "horse" them in (the pun is intended) the hair would hold.
Trout can be categorized into two broad classes based on the way they rise.
Average trout, those somewhere in the 9 to 13 inch range, tend to be rather
emphatic about how they go for a fly. They generally make a spectacle out
of the take, with a kind of wild, splashy rise. It reminds me of the way
my sons Ethan and Dan go for the last cookie in the jar if they think the
other one wants it. The other type of rise is what I call the "minnow" rise.
This is the tricky one. It is just a gentle nudge of the fly. It could be
a little creek chub that is having trouble getting its mouth around a size
14. Then again, it could be one of those trout that can inhale a dun from
two feet away.
The big rocks are where the river's slope changes. Upstream, there
is a series of long pools. Downstream, the river is composed of rocky riffles
with pockets. At the big rocks the trout habitat is a combination of the
best of the upstream pools and the downstream riffles. Big rocks often equal
big trout. As we approached, Charlie headed for the bank and found what he
must have considered the prime vantage point from which to watch me. The
earlier coin flip had been for effect. I was being awarded the entire width.
There were so many current seams and holes that it was hard to decide where
to start casting. Spying one hole that looked particularly productive, I
decided to start there. Here, as the current came around a rock, it formed
a little backwater not much bigger then a skillet-sized pancake. Whiffs of
foam moved along the current seam and collected against the backside of the
rock along with any insects which had been fortunate enough to run the gauntlet.
This hole belonged to the family of one-cast pools. If there was a trout
in the pool it would probably rise to my first offering. The mystery was
which type of rise would it be? Would it be a "cookie jar" rise or a "minnow"
rise? I dropped my fly right on the line that separates the main flow of
the current from the backwater. No sooner had it touched down when I got
a "minnow" rise. My heart pounded with excitement. There aren't any creek
chubs in the Encampment River. About three inches of trout head rose out
of the water and then went to the bottom. A quick lift of the rod tip didn't
do a thing. It was as if a trout-colored log and not a log-colored trout
had my fly. Suddenly my line moved a few inches forward only to stop and
then float back at me. Without the slightest effort the trout had parted
my hair at the tippet to leader knot. As I waded over to the bank where Charlie
was sitting, he looked at me, gently shook his head up and down, and said,
"Nice one wasn't he." Walking back to camp, Charlie pulled a fly box from
his vest, took out another "Woodchuck" and handed it to me without saying
a word.
One of the Encampment's main tributaries is called Hog Park Creek.
Hog Park is a broad meadow up in the Snowy Mountains at about 9,500 feet.
Hog Park Creek is a the nice little ten to twelve foot wide head water stream
that meanders through the valley. It must not be in any hurry to make the
four or five mile trip to the Encampment because it keeps looping back on
itself the way meadow streams have a way of doing. With all the bends and
their undercut banks, flow stabilizing beaver dams and the habitat improvements
made by the Forest Service, the odds of connecting with a "big" trout are
very good. Even if the odds weren't good, it is so pretty it would be worth
the trip just to practice casting. We decided to make the 15 mile trip up
the mountain.
About halfway across the meadow, Hog Park Creek takes a fancy for one
side of the valley and flows along its edge. At the spot where it first meets
the hillside, the creek makes a ninety degree bend instead of one of those
lazy meandering turns. Here, the bend has formed a deep pool with a long
undercut bank. It's the kind of spot where a big brown that had moved up
from the river on its fall spawning run might just decide to retire. It is
also next to impossible to fish unless, of course, you are a left handed
caster with a great sidearm, reach, double haul cast and can get a nice "S"
in your leader. If you can position yourself close enough to the hillside
bank, and the wind is right, you can place your offering right where the
creek drops off the gravel bar and starts toward the bend. There are about
four or five feet of water 12 to 18 inches deep before the creek takes the
right angle turn and the undercut bank begins. If, and that is the operative
word, you can manage to make an extraordinary cast, it is almost guaranteed
that you will draw a rise. Sometimes it is the "cookie jar" variety but most
often it is the "minnow" type.
Charlie had a taste for brookies, rather than bacon, to go with the
next morning's eggs. As he headed for the nearest beaver pond and some brookies,
he looked back over his shoulder and said, "You may be a fair big trout catcher
but we both know your casting is a little suspect. I know exactly where you
are heading and you better hope that not only did the Gods of the Rods bless
you but the wind blowing in the right direction as well." With these words
of encouragement, I started fishing my way up the creek. My knots were holding.
I think in part because I had started greasing the hairs with float paste
before tieing and tightening the knots. This provided a lubricant that must
have reduced damage from friction. My hair held for several sub-big browns
and a couple of breakfast sized brookies. By the time I reached the bend,
it was obvious that I had not been visited by the Rod Gods. Moving in as
close as I could to the hillside bank without overtopping my chest waders,
I made my first cast. It fell short and wide of the mark, not a little but
a lot. Thinking more about the shortcomings of my cast than the dragging
drift of my woodchuck caddis, I wasn't prepared for the assault on the cookie
jar. By the time I realized that some dumb trout had gone for my botched
presentation, it was futile to strike and he was gone. Figuring that my first
cast had been so far off the mark that it and the rise couldn't have spooked
Mr. Big, I took a deep breath, mustered all my skills, and made a second
cast. It was almost an instant replay of the first cast, right down to the
cookie jar rise. There were, however, two differences: first, this time I
was prepared for the take and secondly the trout hit so hard he knocked the
cookie jar of the shelf. In one fluid motion, he took the fly and headed
straight up the creek over the gravel bar with half his back out of the water.
He stopped for a second to "catch his breath" in the next upstream pool and
then turned and headed back over the gravel bar toward the undercut bank
at the bend. Stripping in line as fast as I could, I managed to just keep
him from his safe haven. Trying to negotiate to a shallower and better position,
I lost a few inches of the line to him. This was all he needed. He immediately
took advantage of this golden opportunity to practice his tieing of tippets
to roots. Of course Charlie had already caught all the brookies we needed
for breakfast and had been watching the entire episode. He informed that
one of the finer things associated with trout fishing is "the opportunity
to see a dumb fly fisherman and a smart trout match wits". I'd had two chances
for a big trout on a horse hair and had tallied two misses. I hoped the third
time would be a charm.
A breakfast of brookies, pan fried in a little wild sage, eggs over
easy and a cup of strong camp coffee is a great way to start any day. Warming
myself in the first rays of sun which had topped the rim of the canyon, I
finished my coffee and decided to hike up the river to a spot near where
Hog Park Creek joins the Encampment. It is only about 5 miles up the river
from camp but there is so much good fishing water nearby that not many people
bother to make the trip that far up the river. The area I wanted to fish
is canyon country. In this section the Encampment rushes through a steep
walled flume. In a few places the flume gives way to less rugged conditions
on one bank or the other. In these areas the velocity slows a hair and the
river get a little bit tamer. One of these oasis in particular has always
held a big trout for me during trips I have made in October in search of
spawners. I always get a rise, but I don't alway land the trout.
By the time I reached the area I wanted to fish, it was nearing noon
and the sun was at its fullest. Nothing seemed to be emerging and I didn't
see any rises. With the angle of the sun it would be hard to see my fly on
the water, even with polarizing glasses. Since nothing seemed to be going
on, I figured I might just a well use something like a size 14 Royal Wulff
that I could see fairly easily. Experience with my lucky pool told me that
my best chances were at one of two spots. The first is about half way up
the pool near a boulder which is just below the surface. The second is in
the eddy that forms where the tongue of fast water races past the ledge on
the left side of the river. Slowly working my way upstream, I covered the
boulder area from every angle. Each cast floated back toward me without stirring
the interest of a single fish. It looked like the tongue was my last opportunity.
Stopping just short of the best casting position, I tested my knots and regreased
my fly and horse hair. With my hands cupped to the side of my face to eliminate
as much glare as possible I scanned the water for some tell-tale flash or
movement that would reveal a trout's position. The water was too deep and
the surface too choppy and broken for me to see anything.
Just as it had been at the boulder, every drift of my fly passed through
the tongue and over a potential lie as if it was barren. Discouragement and
hunger for the squashed peanut butter and jelly sandwich in my vest pocket
were getting the best of me. I decided to take one more desperation cast,
then I'd have my sandwich. Without thinking where to cast, I just did it.
It took my Royal Wulff to the very heart of the current, the fastest water.
Out of the corner of my eye I caught a glimpse of motion as my big trout
shot up from the bottom like an arrow toward the fly. Without even rippling
the surface, he took the fly and plunged to the bottom with such authority
that setting the hook was unnecessary. He did it for me. Once at the bottom,
he turned and rocketed back to the surface and through it. Reversing direction,
like a spring board diver, he fell back and sliced into the water. In what
seemed to me to be slow motion, he repeated his performance for a second
and third time. As he entered the water after each jump, I was certain that
I had seen the last of him. You could almost feel his anger and frustration
at not being able to throw the fly. With a burst of energy and using the
current as his ally, he made a run for the mid-stream boulder. Afraid to
put to much strain on the horse hair, I lowered my rod tip and pointed it
at him. Pulling my line to the start of the backing, he reached the boulder
and shot into its shelter. I had to get him out from behind the rock before
the chaffing wore through the tippet or the leader. Reaching out across the
current with my rod parallel to the water I was able to apply enough lateral
pressure to lead him out from behind the boulder. Though he still had some
fight left in him, it seemed that evicting him from behind his rock had broken
his spirit. As quickly as I dared, I moved him toward me in the slower and
shallower water along the bank and into my net. For a moment I just stood
there and looked at him. The realization that I had in fact caught a "big"
trout on a horse hair suddenly hit, and I spontaneously started doing a little
jig that my sons call "Dad's happy feet" and shouting "I did it, I did it".
If catching him had been hard, deciding what to do with him was even
harder. I generally release most of the fish I catch. I ate so many trout
when I was a kid growing up in New Hampshire that I don't have much of a
taste for them anymore. Charlie would have kidded me a little but he would
have believed me if came back to camp and told him I'd caught my "big trout"
and released him. This trout had fought like hell, a very worthy adversary.
I don't know if it was pride in my trophy or the primordial instincts of
the hunter as provider, (probably a lot of both) but I decided to bring him
back to camp.
I didn't fish anymore or even eat my peanut butter sandwich. Carefully
taking my prize from my net, I broke off the horse hair tippet from the leader,
leaving the fly and tippet mated to my trout. Plucking some grass from the
stream bank I ceremonially wrapped him and placed him in the back pouch of
my vest for the trip back to camp.
The walk back down the canyon didn't take nearly as long as the trip
up had taken, and I don't think that was entirely due to the downhill grade.
I don't know if it was the bounce in my step or the ear to ear grin, but
as soon as Charlie saw me he shook his head and said, " You did it didn't
you. I knew you would sooner or later. It was just a matter of time. Well
let's see this treasure of yours." Slipping out of my vest, I removed my
prize and laid him out for Charlie to see. After admiring him and teasing
me about leaving the fly and tippet in his jaw, he said, " Well to make it
official I better get a tape out and measure him." I think Charlie always
measures trout a little short , at lest when he is measuring mine, so when
he pronounced my prize as officially big at sixteen inches I knew I had easily,
at lest as far as size goes, met his challenge. Halfway through my recount
of the catch, Charlie excused himself, rose from the log he was sitting on
and headed for his tent. He returned with an old blue book in his hand. As
I finished my story, Charlie was thumbing through his book. Having apparently
found what he was looking for, he looked up at me and said "Well you did
it. But you did it the hard way. Your copy of the Complete Angler must not
be the Izaak Walton and Charles Cotton edition. Here in Part II of my copy,
"The Second Day, Chapter V - Of Fly Fishing", it says "But he that cannot
kill a trout of twenty inches long with two deserves not the name of an Angler."
Walton and Cotton twisted two hairs together for a tippet. They didn't use
a single hair like you did. I think a sixteen incher on a single hair is
equal to a twenty incher on two." Walking toward me he extended his hand
and said "Hey Angler, why don't you take my copy of the Complete Angler for
future reference." |