Fish are in full spawning mode on the lower Savage right now. I fished yesterday morning and there are a lot of fish paired up on redds. Redds are sections of cleaned light tan gravel that are very noticeable and many of them are very close to the bank. Do not wade through these areas because that would destroy the eggs and future generations of fish for the Savage. Fishing for these fish on redds is not a good idea either. When a female in spawning mode is hooked many times this distress will cause her to jettison her eggs losing future generations of fish for the Savage. You can fish responsibly this time of year with great results. A method that I used in Colorado is once you locate these redds fish deep water around them. The biggest fish in the river spawn mainly at night, but are always close by during the day. This way you can avoid walking on the redd and fishing to actively spawning trout. This is how I caught the beautiful male brown pictured below yesterday. There is still a BWO hatch in the afternoon, but it is starting to tapper off a bit and will probably end soon. I have had my best success with small scud patterns fished deep. That is what this guy took. I am happy that I caught that fish contrary to my face in the picture, but it was the best picture of the fish that I got.
Thanks for the post, Travis. I plan to fish the Savage this weekend. Is there any particular area of the tailwater that appears to have more spawning activity that other areas, as I would prefer to know and avoid that area if possible.
ReplyDeleteThanks,
Andy
No I fished the upper half of the tail water and they seemed to be pretty evenly distributed. The water is so clear right now that you will be able to see them easily.
DeleteAwesome Fish!
ReplyDeleteThanks! I need to get up to the Yough. You guys pull big fish out of there pretty consistently.
DeleteLove this fish
ReplyDelete