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Backwater Alternatives The
mighty Goulburn River is a formidable water anywhere downstream of Lake
Eildon. Used as an irrigation conduit it supplies the vastly rich primary
producing regions of the Goulburn Valley and beyond with a lifeline of
water the whole year round. It is for this very reason that it is seen
as such a difficult fishery. High summer flows which the make the majority
of the river unmanageable to traditional methods should open the door
to a bit of lateral thinking and unique fishing opportunities. Huge
summer flows of 8,000 mega litres a day and higher are routine from late
October through until early April. Anything over this flow rate sees the
backwaters and edge waters really start to fill. With this inundation
of new ground come the trout. Fossicking about looking for food, the edges
provide not only a new source of nourishment but also added protection
from predators as these backwaters are quite often found below a canopy
of trees. The confidence this affords the trout really has to be seen
to be believed. Fish will happily rise all day while an angler perched
on a tree trunk a mere metre above, daps the fly trying to illicit a response.
I have on many occasions spent four or five hours on one fish and would
not have realised the time spent if it weren't for the sudden lack of
effectiveness of my polaroids! Backwaters
come in all shapes and sizes. Some are 30 metres in circumference some
as small as a television set. Almost all hold trout. They are the lazy
Susan's of the trout world, funnelling a never ending supply of food to
whichever fish happens to occupy it. All he has to do is casually fin
in the slow moving water and wait. These reverse currents extend right
down and so a constant supply of nymphs, stick caddis, snails not to mention
all the bugs found on the surface or in the film are on offer. Consequently
they are locations highly desired by trout. Once you come to this realisation
you can safely assume that competition for these places is high and therefore
the better, bigger, stronger fish will occupy them. This is the case.
The trout found in these backwaters tend to be considerably bigger than
those found in the main flow of the river. As I look back through my diary
for the past 5 years I see a distinct trend whereby most of my big fish
came from backwaters. Even in the past two seasons where we haven't had
many real high-water situations (recent droughts have meant Lake Eildon
has been running well below capacity. This has caused some rationing of
irrigation releases ) most of the big fish of four pound and up came from
the edges and all the ten pounders we saw were all located in such waters. One
thing that closely observing a backwater teaches you is the pecking order
of trout. A couple of years ago I spent the better part of a week in one
particular tree! It was during this week that the Goulburn first swelled
to its summer levels and the fish were on the lookout for new lies. From
my perch I had a great view of a backwater some twenty metres square and
maybe five foot deep. Trout after trout would cruise through looking for
food and the best position. Fortunately the pick of the water was directly
below me on the crease of two reverses and a pocket of scum rapidly developed.
Almost every day a new and bigger fish occupied this position and it was
fascinating watching these large trout aggressively chase away smaller
intruders. Eventually a four pound fish occupied this niche and was caught
and released twice that season. Perhaps the most attractive attribute of this style of fishing is that it is totally visual. Donning a pair of Polaroid sunglasses and a wide brimmed hat the angler sets out at around 10.30 most mornings. With the sun at your shoulder your Polaroid glasses have maximum penetration through the glare and an underwater world is revealed. To anyone who is yet to experience this all I can say is get out and do it. It can be thoroughly exhilarating and the whole day can fly by in an instant. Gargantuan battles are fought well before the fly reaches the water. A
typical session will go somewhere along the lines of this; after selecting
the stretch of water to be fished you have to work out how you will go
about it. Fortunately other anglers are not a consideration as in all
my time fishing this way I have only ever seen a lone few compatriots.
All these backwaters are best approached from an upstream direction. Now
before you say I'm crazy that's because these edges we are talking about
generally are home to a current reverse and the fish are facing upstream
into the reverse. That means they are facing 'Downstream' as far as the
river is concerned. Armed with this knowledge the angler picks suitable
looking water and approaches from an upstream position. Keeping a low
profile, shadows off the water, using slow movements, wearing drab clothing
and tramping lightly are all par for the course. This is hunting and you
need everything in your favour if you are to fool a wary, timid trout
in such a location. Quite often you will need to crawl poking only the
tip of your nose over the edge to see what's down there. Scan
the water carefully looking not only for a trout but any irregularity.
A shadow on the bottom, the white of a mouth as the trout eats something
down deep, anything that doesn't quite look right. More often than not
it wont be too hard. The fish will be on station and making regular runs
on a 'beat' whereby he will patrol his backwater. It is important to note
this as I have seen a number of people spook fish by casting thinking
the opportunity is about to be lost. This is not the case and as long
as you haven't done anything to alert the fish he will return to his spot
within a few minutes. Be aware that many of these fish will sit hard against
the bank or in the undercuts. Although you wont see all of them in time
its is definitely worth carefully scanning this water. I remember spending
20 minutes in a backwater I knew there was a good fish in. As I went to
move a fish of around seven pound shot off from right beneath my feet.
Also of interest is the fact that these trout will remain in such areas
for as long as the water is up falling back to the main flow when it drops.
They will return however as soon as it rises again and it is not out of
the ordinary to find the same trout in the same backwater season after
season. The
hardest part of this style of fishing is getting the fly to the fish without
spooking it. What I would flatly state is false casting is an absolute
no-no. In 90% of my backwater fishing only the leader and maybe a few
feet of fly line are through the tip. Coiled on your hand you must be
ready to present this with as little disturbance to the water as possible.
Flick casts, bow and arrow casts and all sorts of other unorthodox deliveries
will be called for; all that matters is you get it over the fish. Sometimes
you may have to
present to a fish at a greater distance and may even have room to do so,
but keep false casting to a minimum and as low to the water as possible. Refusals
can be expected while fishing these edges but I would like to share a
few secrets with you. Firstly, a refusal isn't a problem as although you
cannot afford to rip the fly off the water as you will spook the fish
all you have to do is wait for the fish to go off on its regular beat.
You can then retrieve the fly and change it. What I've found is it's best
to keep your arm movements against your body while changing flies or in
other words only use small body movements, that way not alerting the trout
who may come back on station half way through this process. Quite regularly
a lack of interest will be taken as a refusal but this is not always case.
These fish will sometimes swim very close to the surface and therefore
their field of vision is greatly reduced. Remember if the fish is near
the surface he won't see your fly unless it is right on his nose. Also
in regards to this 'hand to hand' combat, watches should be taken off
and kept in a pocket or vest. Its quite frustrating for an hours stalking
to be ruined by flash from a watch catching the sun. So
you've done everything right. You picked good looking water, approached
from upstream in a commando like fashion with leader coiled in your hand
all at the ready but what fly should you have on ? These is the easy part.
I have found the majority of these trout are feeding on small terrestrial
items. Small beetles, leafhoppers, ants, caterpillars, grasshoppers and
cicadas are frequently on the menu. The fly of choice for me though is
a number sixteen or eighteen Cochybondhu. This rather innocuous Welsh
pattern is a real gem in such water. I have watched even the most selective
trout in a variety of bug falls rise and sip this fly like it was the
'proverbial' last feed he was ever going to have. Also of note is it is
quite often, as with other types of fly fishing, only a matter of going
down in size rather than changing patterns that is the key to success.
On a few rare occasions patterns as small as a twenty four have proved
the undoing of picky trout. In the more open backwaters with no tree coverage
a small paradun will also fool most fish. Most beetle patterns, ant patterns
and in season grasshoppers will take trout. Perhaps those taken on grasshoppers
are the most exciting in that unlike the beetle and ant sippers who seem
content to leisurely sip them from the film the trout taking the hopper
more often than not slam the artificial from the top sending water in
all directions. Sub surface presentations are sometimes required and can
be very difficult to get them to the fish as they show little motivation
to move much for underwater items. Fortunately they will come to the top
on most occasions but if not a small green nymph works enough of the time
for me to recommend it. However the sheer joy of fishing the dry and seeing
the take override the desire to fish below the surface and make something
more difficult than it really should be. But no matter how you do it this
close up 'eye ball' fishing really gets the blood pumping and the heart
racing. Did
I say the hardest part of this fishing was presenting the fly without
spooking the fish ? Well I lied! The hardest aspect is landing the fish.
Guide Geoff Hall is notorious for clichés such as " get 'em on first
worry about getting 'em off later" and I am a firm believer in this
'Geoff'ism'. Four weight rods and four pound tippets are not necessarily
the best equipment for stopping a large trout from finding refuge in the
sunken log just two metres from where he took the fly. But this is what
you are looking at. Locking the fish up from the word go is of paramount
importance if you want to retrieve that pattern and not have to re-tie
your tippet. Most of the water is inherently 'snaggy' by nature of its
location and getting their head up early is the only hope for landing
such fish. Many trout will be hooked and lost but it is surprising how
much pressure you can exert with such gear. Hooking some four pound tippet
onto your back fence and testing exactly how much pressure you can put
on this mono is a great confidence booster before putting that expensive
graphite wand through its paces in amongst the snags. Nevertheless all
things going right you will still lose more trout than you land. So there you have it. Sight fishing with the dry fly to the largest fish in the river. Not back country New Zealand, Alaska or Patagonia but a lazy 90 minutes driving time from Melbourne. So go on, give it a go and see why those in the know keep returning to the Goulburn River summer after summer. |