Mikey2006
Active member
Tomorrow I’ll be in the area for a college visit and I figured I'd give the little J another shot for a few hours in the afternoon (the first time I fished it this February I took the skunk) and I thought I’d ask for some advice to hopefully avoid having another bad day. I'm not looking for specific spots or secrets or anything, just some general info would be greatly appreciated as I felt completely lost the first time I fished it.
The first time I fished it, I was with two of my friends and we started in the lower river at the mid state trailhead. We fished upstream using a variety of nymphs (pheasant tails, zebra midges, perdigons, a ton of random bead heads, basically everything I had in my box) and I also briefly fished a woolly bugger. Absolutely nothing. My friend got one take on an olive perdigon but other than that we got our asses kicked. We also tried a section of the river above Spruce Creek, where the water was a little murky for some reason, and I chucked a black circus peanut around for an hour until dark without a single strike or follow.
Obviously if I go back and just do the same things again its unlikely I’ll do much better, so I thought It couldn't hurt to ask around on here. Are there any general areas that fish better than others right now? (basically, would I be better off spending most of my limited time on the lower river or sections further upstream where the river isn't as big) Are there any key fly patterns I should try for this time of year? Any help is greatly appreciated because whenever I'm on bigger water I have no clue what I'm doing
The first time I fished it, I was with two of my friends and we started in the lower river at the mid state trailhead. We fished upstream using a variety of nymphs (pheasant tails, zebra midges, perdigons, a ton of random bead heads, basically everything I had in my box) and I also briefly fished a woolly bugger. Absolutely nothing. My friend got one take on an olive perdigon but other than that we got our asses kicked. We also tried a section of the river above Spruce Creek, where the water was a little murky for some reason, and I chucked a black circus peanut around for an hour until dark without a single strike or follow.
Obviously if I go back and just do the same things again its unlikely I’ll do much better, so I thought It couldn't hurt to ask around on here. Are there any general areas that fish better than others right now? (basically, would I be better off spending most of my limited time on the lower river or sections further upstream where the river isn't as big) Are there any key fly patterns I should try for this time of year? Any help is greatly appreciated because whenever I'm on bigger water I have no clue what I'm doing