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The Rainbow Connection

By Adrian (meppstas) Webb

The weather forecast wasn't all that flash for today, with rain and gusty 30kph NNW winds. That forecast kept me home for most of the day and we did have a very light shower of rain and the wind was gusting at 30kph on and off throughout the day. At 4:00pm I'd had enough of sitting around the house and decided to shoot off for a quick spin session in a stretch of river that I hadn't fished for a very long time.

By the time I put the wading gear in the car and hit the river it was 4:20pm. With daylight saving I had a good few hours up my sleeve to catch a trout or two. The river was actually running a little higher than expected, but still safe enough to cross over and head to my starting point a few hundred metres downstream.

The crossing of the river was a little tricky, due to the rocky river bottom being very slippery. With the water being just above the knees I had to take it easy as one slip and I would have gone for a ride downstream in a hurry. When I was halfway across the river I cast directly upstream with a Mepps Stone Fly coloured Bug spinner and on the retrieve I hooked and landed a small brown.

I had a few more cast and retrieves as I slowly made my way across the river and had a couple of light hits without hooking up. Once across the river I couldn't believe how much it had changed here. The place was overgrown with willows, weeds, thistles and blackberry bushes. The ten minute walk to where I was to enter the river was going to take much longer than I had expected. In fact, it took me twenty five minutes to reach it.

The reason I hadn't fished this area for such a long time was due to the lack of trout in the river here. This used to be a great area to fish and catches of a dozen trout were quite common. Then, for some reason, the trout fishing went downhill. One or two small trout was all that I could catch here, so today I had returned mainly to see if the trout have returned. The water I was fishing today was mainly fast water runs. Water that used to give up quite a few nice size rainbow trout and brown trout were in good numbers here as well, with some large fish in the mix.

After the bush bash to reach the area that I wanted to fish, I then had to cross it again to start the spin session. The crossing here wasn't any easier than the one where I crossed earlier, in fact this one was a little tougher. The water here was where the river split into two runs, so this crossing was narrow and running hard and fast. The safest way to cross here was to face upstream, making sure I had a good footing on the river bottom, before stepping sideways, one slow step at a time.

I always cross a fast water facing upstream. One should never cross it by facing across the river as that's when the force of the water will catch the leg as it goes forward and spin you around. Before you know it you're facing downstream, lose balance, fall forward and you're in the water. Once you've gone into a fast water face down it's very hard to turn around and stand up. The best thing to do is not to panic, turn onto your back, turn yourself around so your feet are facing downstream and go with the flow, while keeping your head raised.

I know it may sound easy, however it's not, so if you're not experienced in fast water fishing then never try crossing a fast water run. Lightweight waders and a good pair of spiked felt soled wading boots are essential for this type of fishing. So, by facing upstream when crossing a river, if the fast water turns you to the left or right as you side step you still can keep your balance. Your body weight is on the leg/foot that is turned downstream and still grips the river bottom.

Now I was on the side of the river that I wanted to start fishing first. I stayed with the #0 Mepps Stone Fly Bug spinner, with the amount of insect life in the area. Also, seeing as it had already sucked one trout in, I felt it was worth using here too. The first of the water to be fished was a divided stretch of the main stream that was wide and around 80cm deep. It was flowing reasonably fast too.

The first couple of cast and retrieves in and I had hits from small rainbow trout, while the third cast with the Bug spinner resulted in a small brown being caught. It wasn't until I reached the tail end of this run that I noticed a small trout jump from the river. A cast into that area and the little trout took the lure, only to toss it as I was about to get hold of it.

From here I moved into where the divided river was one again. This area used to be one of the best rainbow waters in the North of Tasmania in my book. I have caught so many rainbow trout here in the past and all good size, well-conditioned fish too. After having a few casts with the Mepps Stone Fly Bug spinner, without having a touch, I thought a brighter lure may work better in the deeper fast water here. I was going to change to a rainbow or brown coloured Aglia Fluo, before deciding to go with a#1 Mepps Aglia Furia. This water was ideal for casting and drifting too, which is something that I love doing when chasing trout.

With the heavier 3.5 gram spinner I had no trouble lobbing the lure to the edge of a flat water, some twenty metres away, before letting it drift with the fast flow. It was on the fourth cast and drift that the Furia was taken hard and fast by a solid fish. At first I thought it may have been a large brown, until I saw the fish leap from the river some fifteen metres away.

It was a rainbow, and a beauty at that! This fish made the most of the fast flowing water and was putting the thin 4lb Platypus Super 100 mono to the test. It was holding deep and pulling hard as it ran side on with the flow. It broke the surface several times, leaping from the water and at the same time giving some massive head shakes. After a couple of minutes it slowed down as it became tired and I had control of it, before easing it into the net.

This was the best wild rainbow trout (490g) that I've caught for many years in a river and I'll be going through my season records to see when the last decent one was caught. The next cast into the same area and another solid rainbow took the spinner. Two rainbows in two casts, I couldn't believe my luck. This one was a little smaller than the other one but not by a lot. The sad thing was that it had gill damage and had to be kept.

Four minutes later I had my third rainbow in the net and another decent size fish it was too. From here on, while using the cast and drift method in this stretch of river, I went on to catch another two rainbows and two small browns from six hook ups. I was feeling on top of the world at this stage, seeing that there were some nice rainbows back in the area, and hopefully they were here to stay.

I was about to head further upstream when I decided to have one more cast and drift in the fast water. This wasn't a good decision at all. A long cast toward the opposite side of the river was hit by a wind gust, carrying the Aglia Furia into a small willow on the river bank. There was no way I could get to it, due to the water being too deep, and it wasn't worth risking my life to get the lure back. I had no choice but to break the line. I know exactly where it is and next trip back here, when the water level is lower, I will approach it from the other side of the river and retrieve it.

After setting up a new rig and replacing the old Furia with a new one, it just didn't seem the same. I hooked and lost three more trout in the following stretch of water, before I thought it was time to head for home as I still had to do some bush bashing to get back to the car anyway. On the way back to the car I tried one more fast water run, using an Aglia Fluo brown inline spinner and caught and released another two small browns from three hits.

As it turned out the decision to head here, to see if the trout had returned, was a good one after all. Even better was seeing some decent size rainbows back in this area and hopefully they're here to stay. The downside was the size of the brown trout; all small fish. The upside is that they will grow into larger fish as the years pass by. I'll head back here for a morning spin session in a couple of days, when I'll have more daylight time to fish further upstream.

Equipment used on various trout trips:

Okuma Celilo Finesse Spin Rods - ULS 1-3kg trout rods
Okuma LRF Spin Rods - Split Grip 1-3kg
Okuma Inspira Blue Spin Reels - ISX-20B
Okuma Helios SX Spin Reels - HSX-20
Okuma Epixor XT Spin Reels - EXPT-20
Okuma Ceymar Spin Reels - C-10
Platypus Super 100 Monofilament Fishing Line
Platypus Pre-Test Monofilament Fishing Line
Platypus Stealth FC Fluorocarbon Leader
Mepps Inline Spinners
Boomerang Tool Products

Adrian (meppstas)