Home arrow Articles arrow Spring Trout Fishing on the River Usk
Spring Trout Fishing on the River Usk | Print |
What a fantastic time of year this is. The end of the winter has almost come with the usual upsets in the weather but the long dark nights are starting to draw out and those feelings of excitement at catching the first wild fish of the season start to take over.


Trout Spring Fishing On the River Usk

What a fantastic time of year this is. The end of the winter has almost come with the usual upsets in the weather but the long dark nights are starting to draw out and those feelings of excitement at catching the first wild fish of the season start to take over.

Times change however and many different things effect our river that result in a change of fish behaviour. The main one I believe is the failure  over several years of the great March Brown hatch that the river was famous for.
I read all the regular fishing mags like the rest of you and I am amazed at some of the articles that still promote the March Brown hatch on the River Usk as being the story of legends. Well the truth is it used to be one of the most prolific hatches of the fly on British rivers and was renowned as the place for people to travel to and catch earlier season Browns with abandon.

I for one who has regular access to many areas of the Usk have seen a total of 7 X March Browns in the last five years.

For those of you that do not know what to look for then view the photograph below.





The fly is big and once seen on the water can not be mistaken for anything else other than what it is at this time of year (March/April)
Where confusion reigns is when an angler sees a great hatch of Grannom Sedge. These flies come up out of the water and dance and fly about but always upstream. They will hatch in their thousands and cover the angler.
Trout will be seen moving and rising amongst them, but please look carefully and see how many of the flies are eaten by those rising trout. Not that many.
Look closer and you may see that they are in fact taking olives which are hatching amongst them.
I will never say never but I would always prefer to fish an olive in a hatch of Grannom. I don’t think the trout like them, but that my own view and I have been known to be wrong. (My wife and daughter say I am alwayswrong but they don’t fish).

The best way to lift your confidence at this time of year is to get down at the river bed and start to do a few kick samples.
To explain all you have to do is get a bit of fine netting and get it to the shape of your landing net and ensure that it fits tightly over the rim. Now put it into the water and hold the handle upright with the rim on the gravel/stones and gently kick your feet disturbing the bottom. The rubbish will settle again to the bottom of the river but the fine netting will collect the nymphs and aquatic life that the trout feast upon.
You will see that the majority of food that the fish eat is a lot smaller than the flies and the colours are a lot darker than you expect. What you will also notice is that most of the insects will be some form of caddis larva or worm.

Last year in April I went out and did just what I have explained and here are the results.

Below or pictures of Olive nymphs. Note the different colour changes of olive.








Here is a photo of a Cased Caddis.



Here is one of a Caddis Larva (Hydropsyche Larva)


A May fly nymph (Ephemera Vulgata/ Danica)




The other insects that prevail at this time are the two types of Stonefly first shown here is the wingless Stonefly.




And now the winged stonefly.




The photograph below is of a Dark Olive.



The best thing I can get you to do is to join our own Tom Richards on one of his fly identification surveys or alternatively get in the river and have a good reference book to hand. Pat O Reilly’s comes to mind with stunning photos by Melvin Grey.

What about fishing and what flies to use.

For wet fly fishing on a dead drift I would suggest a three fly cast with a Wet Olive Quill on the top dropper.





An Usk Naylor on the Middle dropper.




And a Pheasant tail on the point.


More traditional patterns such as a snipe and purple, Greenwell’s spider and a Waterhen Bloa should also be considered.

For Upstream dries then you cannot beat a Hares Ear Dry


Or Gwilym’s Olive for an Emerger.




Other patterns to consider are a Kite’s Imperial and an Olive F Fly.


The time to fish is between 11am and 4pm each day and any rise in the air temperature will see a hatch of olives.
Watch nature and it will tell you when to get ready and in spring just look out for the wagtails as they appear like magic when a hatch is about to start.

My last bit of advice for you is not to dive straight into the river. Watch from the bank first and see where your fish rise. More often they will be in a few inches of water next to the bank and only go a sulk in the deeper water when a careless footfall or splash of line send them scurrying away.
Think about short casts and drag free drifts.

Fishing for wild fish is not easy but I think one wild fish is worth 20 stocked.
Well it is up to you now. Go softly to the river and look before you jump in. It is the careful and considerate angler that often catches the most fish.


Add this page to your favourite Social Bookmarking websites
Reddit! Del.icio.us! JoomlaVote! Google! Live! Facebook! StumbleUpon! Yahoo! Free social bookmarking plugins and extensions for Joomla! websites!
One person has commented on this article.
Show/hide comments on this page...
 1. Untitled
curlyboy80, Super Administrator
This is great. I remember reading this last season, and it is a great insight for me this year, having been tying all winter and now tying like crazy ready for the start of the season. I just cant wait to get out there now!
 Posted 2008-02-11 20:43:57
Please login or register to post comments.
J! Reactions 1.09.00 • General Site License
Copyright © 2006 S. A. DeCaro
 
Copyright 2008. Gwent Angling Society. All rights reserved .

Valid CSS! image linking to 100 Top Fly Fishing Sites