Looks as if Skidmore doesn't require a trout stamp which leads me to believe it's not hatchery supported (if I understand the va license system correctly). Therefore, this may save you some extra $$$ unless you've already purchased your trout stamp
On Thursday, May 5, 2016 at 11:41:20 AM UTC-4, Ashley Frohwein wrote:
-- On Thursday, May 5, 2016 at 11:41:20 AM UTC-4, Ashley Frohwein wrote:
It just got stocked with bows yesterday, so expect plenty of good ol boys. Get there early or wait a week. I caught at least 50-60 brookies there last Tuesday, mostly on a black gnat parachute dry. It's an easy place to figure out. I use a 2 wt there, 3 is fine; 4 is on the big side but will also be fine. The biggest brookie I've caught there was 13 inches. 5x is fine, especially with the higher flows from the rain.
On Thursday, May 5, 2016 at 10:58:48 AM UTC-4, TurbineBlade wrote:5x is pretty standard "brook trout tippet" for most people. I've caught plenty on 4x with larger dries, and I'd rather have 4 feet of 4x than 2 feet of 5x, but you're in the right ballpark.Anything drifted well works -- grab whatever you like and whatever you can easily see. I use Rob's beetle more than any other fly for trout, and have had a couple of 100 fish days and several 50s on that fly alone.Since I do not fish the dry much and will likely not fish it again for the next 10 years or more, I'm happy to report to you that the skidmore fork below the reservoir holds a LOT of brook trout, and some VERY nice ones. There are sections down there that are large enough and with even enough current that you can swing soft hackles and really destroy the place. I hooked one in that section 2 years ago that was black-mouthed, fat, pretty, and every bit of 14 inches. Naturally, I had no camera that day and only had a flip phone back then.Parking is available at the boat launch area, and you can easily walk around the dam, through the meadow, and down along the fork. There is a pretty decent path beaten into various banks that cross the fork at various points there.Have a blast man! That's a great, great brookie stream but it's just too damn far to drive for me anymore.Gene
On Thursday, May 5, 2016 at 10:36:10 AM UTC-4, Bryan wrote:Rob,Thanks for the info. I understand that there are pull-offs along 33. I may also try Skidmore Fork between the confluence and Switzer Dam. Thinking 4 wt as I don't have a 3. 5X tippet?Regards,BryanOn Thu, May 5, 2016 at 9:45 AM, Rob Shane <robert...@gmail.com> wrote:I've fished the dry river a few times. it's a beautiful stream. One of those places where I think everyone should learn to fly fish. Plenty of room to back cast, and LOTS of eager brook trout. The further up 33 you go into the park the smaller the stream gets but there are fish the whole way down, and everywhere you'd expect them to be. You can probably catch your limit on a light nymph rig pretty quick but my hunch is as long as the water isn't too high with this rain that you'll have some luck with your generic dry fly patterns (i.e. adams, royal wulff, cadis, etc). Most of the fish are 3-6 inches but i'm positive there are some bruisers in there. As with most brook trout fishing I don't think you'll have to match the hatch too close just get it in front of their nose and as long as the profile looks right they'll take. Here's a quick write up on Mossy's website on the dry: http://--mossycreekflyfishing.com/ portfolio-item/local-public- waters-dry-river/ Good luck!
On Wednesday, May 4, 2016 at 6:30:06 PM UTC-4, Bryan wrote:Thinking about hitting the Dry River on Saturday AM. Anybody have any experience and pointers on where to fish it and what flies might be productive?
Thanks
Bryan
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