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Welcome to Outdoor Life
I tried to keep my balance in the canoe. I was executing a difficult maneuver: handing my camera to Sgt. Roger Guay of the Maine Game Warden Service while holding onto a brook trout and avoiding licks to the face from the happy Lab standing between us. Despite the warm air temperature, I knew this Maine pond was full of cold water. Getting wet did not seem like a good idea.
“I don't know why you want a picture of that fish,” Guay said. “There are a lot bigger ones on the other side of the pond.” Maybe so, but this 10-inch brookie was a personal best by several inches. My home waters for brook trout are in Virginia, where a palm-sized fish warrants a newspaper write-up.
The pond in Maine promised to send me into trout nirvana as I hooked fish after fish. I figured if I was going to achieve total fishing enlightenment, I'd better document the ride. I continued casting, hooking a trout every few minutes with a size 14 Muddler Minnow. As Guay paddled us across the pond, the fish got bigger, just as he said they would. The camera shutter kept snapping, and my smile grew in size with the brookies.
The ponds that surround Greenville, Maine, are too numerous to list. Before you go, study the regulations guide as though you were expecting a pop quiz in Sunday school. Each pond has its own rules, ranging from fly-only to barbless hooks, and the one thing that could ruin a day of pond-hopping is a ticket from Sgt. Guay or one of his compadres.
Guay, a Greenville local and an excellent angler, recommends fishing heavily around the source of the pond, usually a spring or small stream. Otherwise, cast to shoreline structure such as rocks or downed trees. —Will Snyder
Comments (5)
maybe someday ill actually get to do this, brookies are the most beautiful fish that swims...definitely picture worthy.
seeing that i am from pa and brookies are our state fish i love reading about them..i love sneaking up brookies and catching some... without a doubt theyre the prettiest fish and the most fun to catch my personal largest native is 9in
I too love the Brookies. I live in Mich. been fishing since 11 in the pigion river ,Black river and more chasing them , i,m 54 now. i married a girl that dont like fish (24 yrs now).I made her try JUST 1. That was the the end of me getting to eat a brookie . At least the wife is happy . my best is 13in . But seen better here. Fish on !!!
head north guys, here in new brunswick we regularly catch brookies up to 8lbs. my personal best is a 22" 4lber, caught on a 1/3 oz little cleo spoon
brook trout are beautiful. i believe that catching pure natives from the crystal clear runs of pennsylvania is awesome and that brookies should be stocked more often to rise their population back up to original levels... my largest native is about nine inches in the sproul state forest in Pa
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maybe someday ill actually get to do this, brookies are the most beautiful fish that swims...definitely picture worthy.
head north guys, here in new brunswick we regularly catch brookies up to 8lbs. my personal best is a 22" 4lber, caught on a 1/3 oz little cleo spoon
brook trout are beautiful. i believe that catching pure natives from the crystal clear runs of pennsylvania is awesome and that brookies should be stocked more often to rise their population back up to original levels... my largest native is about nine inches in the sproul state forest in Pa
seeing that i am from pa and brookies are our state fish i love reading about them..i love sneaking up brookies and catching some... without a doubt theyre the prettiest fish and the most fun to catch my personal largest native is 9in
I too love the Brookies. I live in Mich. been fishing since 11 in the pigion river ,Black river and more chasing them , i,m 54 now. i married a girl that dont like fish (24 yrs now).I made her try JUST 1. That was the the end of me getting to eat a brookie . At least the wife is happy . my best is 13in . But seen better here. Fish on !!!
Post a Comment (200 characters or less)