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View Full Version : Trout trifecta in PA


Doug Vitale
06-08-2017, 11:56 PM
I hit the trifecta a few weeks ago in the Claremont TCA, and today I had an even better day on my favorite wild trout stream in Pennsylvania. Conditions for troutin' were perfect all around, and consequently the fish were aggressive. The temperature was around 68 degrees, sky was mostly cloudy, water temperature was 55 degrees and the stream level was high thanks to recent rain, but the water was not discolored at all.

The last time I visited this WTS in 2015 I was concerned because I hardly caught any trout unlike the previous year, so I was afraid that something had happened to cause the native brook trout population to plunge. My fears evaporated today as I was getting strikes from feisty little brookies in almost every holding area.

I caught almost ten brooks, and I had at least 10-15 missed strikes. I also caught a few wild brown trout, and in the river that the WTS flows into I got a nice rainbow and several smallmouth bass. Can I say I hit the "grand slam" with all three trout species and some smallmouth, or would I need to get a tiger trout too? :) All fish were released healthy.

https://thumb.ibb.co/m5ChFv/IMG_0760.jpg (https://ibb.co/m5ChFv) https://thumb.ibb.co/fP9jTF/IMG_0761.jpg (https://ibb.co/fP9jTF) https://thumb.ibb.co/cHVf2a/IMG_0762.jpg (https://ibb.co/cHVf2a) https://thumb.ibb.co/g22tNa/IMG_0765.jpg (https://ibb.co/g22tNa) https://thumb.ibb.co/foxSha/IMG_0766.jpg (https://ibb.co/foxSha) https://thumb.ibb.co/jMByoF/IMG_0767.jpg (https://ibb.co/jMByoF) https://thumb.ibb.co/f197ha/IMG_0769.jpg (https://ibb.co/f197ha) https://thumb.ibb.co/n8ryoF/IMG_0771.jpg (https://ibb.co/n8ryoF) https://thumb.ibb.co/jLdNFv/IMG_0772.jpg (https://ibb.co/jLdNFv)

Doug Vitale
06-08-2017, 11:57 PM
Only ten images allowed per post...

https://thumb.ibb.co/hQW9vv/IMG_0776.jpg (https://ibb.co/hQW9vv) https://thumb.ibb.co/kHpwav/IMG_0777.jpg (https://ibb.co/kHpwav) https://thumb.ibb.co/n8wbav/IMG_0778.jpg (https://ibb.co/n8wbav) https://thumb.ibb.co/jU3B8F/IMG_0779.jpg (https://ibb.co/jU3B8F)

thmyorke1
06-09-2017, 12:17 AM
Awesome, you put good work into that spoon. How shallow were the waters and how do you work the spoon in such water?

meatwad555
06-09-2017, 07:00 AM
Absolutely beautiful fish. Nice job.

FASTEDDIE29
06-09-2017, 08:03 AM
That is a beautiful river Trout slam dude! Great fishing right there for sure! You had the entire stream to yourself I'm sure! Way to go man!!!:D

JDTuna
06-09-2017, 11:07 AM
Very nice, dude! Congrats!

Capt. Lou
06-09-2017, 04:17 PM
Doug,
U caught way to many trout ! In the future I must ask that u check in with me before coming over here to PA for trouts sake &'mine 🐟🐟🎣😜😎! Great day!

Doug Vitale
06-09-2017, 04:56 PM
Awesome, you put good work into that spoon. How shallow were the waters and how do you work the spoon in such water?

Shallow water and spoons don't go well together. I try to use spoons in high, fast water. Stand upstream from the spot where you want to present the spoon. Cast the spoon toward 12:00 and let it settle; the current will pick it up and it will start wobbling downstream. When the spoon reaches 9:00 or 3:00, retrieve slowly. Be careful not to cast too far upstream if you use this technique otherwise the current will push the spoon down to the bottom and will greatly increase the chance of the lure getting hung up. Try to use at least a 1/6 oz. spoon which will get down deep and tease the fish that are not in the mood to rise to the surface to bite.

Thanks everyone for the kind words. Here's a photo of a wild brook trout I caught in the same stream in 2014. I would put it at 1.5 lbs. easy. He was safely released, but unfortunately I wasn't able to hook into him again in my subsequent two trips. Hopefully he's still swimming out there somewhere.

https://thumb.ibb.co/mriexa/IMG_0474.jpg (https://ibb.co/mriexa)

Hookmanski
06-09-2017, 05:45 PM
Awesome catches! Congrats on the tri. I like your method for catching them too, never tried that before but I think I'll have to now!

thmyorke1
06-09-2017, 08:38 PM
Shallow water and spoons don't go well together. I try to use spoons in high, fast water. Stand upstream from the spot where you want to present the spoon. Cast the spoon toward 12:00 and let it settle; the current will pick it up and it will start wobbling downstream. When the spoon reaches 9:00 or 3:00, retrieve slowly. Be careful not to cast too far upstream if you use this technique otherwise the current will push the spoon down to the bottom and will greatly increase the chance of the lure getting hung up. Try to use at least a 1/6 oz. spoon which will get down deep and tease the fish that are not in the mood to rise to the surface to bite.

Thanks everyone for the kind words. Here's a photo of a wild brook trout I caught in the same stream in 2014. I would put it at 1.5 lbs. easy. He was safely released, but unfortunately I wasn't able to hook into him again in my subsequent two trips. Hopefully he's still swimming out there somewhere.

https://thumb.ibb.co/mriexa/IMG_0474.jpg (https://ibb.co/mriexa)

Thanks for the tips, and that brookie is a beauty.

AndyS
06-09-2017, 09:57 PM
LOVE the tri-fecta !!!!!

Cuz
06-10-2017, 09:47 PM
That's my son! An adventurer at heart like his Dad! Now if I only could get you to fish saltwater too, you would become an all around fisherman. There's lots to learn about all the different species in the ocean. You will learn that every species takes a different approach, bait, lure, hook and method. And there are many more species to fish for. From top water fish to bottom fish.
Great pictures in your post. Healthy looking fish. Love, Dad