|
Catching the elusive
Sea Trout
Seatrout are avid hunters. At
the same time they are true soldiers of fortune - always on the
lookout for an easy meal. Thus they can be found almost everywhere
- and caught in many different ways.
Some days seatrout will eagerly
strike anything you throw at them. At other times they may have
their stomachs full and thus show no interest whatsoever in flies
or lures. They just follow the bait to the rod tip - with no
ill intent!
Still there are methods and baits
that produce fish on a more regular basis than others:
Fly Fishing
More and more fishermen realize
that flies fished traditionally on fly rod and fly line can be
a very efficient way of catching seatrout. Very often you do
not need long casts to connect with seatrout.
Fly fishing for coastal
sea trout is becoming increasingly popular.
© photo Steen Ulnits
In fact seatrout spend a substantial
part of their lives chasing bait in the shallows where they are
easily reached by fly casting. And very often, seatrout target
small food items when they really haunt the shallows.
When this is the case, fly fishermen
stand a much better chance of succes than their spinfishing colleagues,
simply because they are able to offer perfect imitations in a
realistic way.
Tackle
A 9-10 foot 7 or 8-weight fly
rod is what you need for most conditions. Lines should be weight
forward (WF) to handle the windy conditions often encountered
and the long casts sometimes needed.
In shallow water bay areas you
may use a floating line to advantage. But if you are fishing
open coastlines where wind and waves are the norm, an intermediate
line is to be preferred. It slices through the wind better than
a floating line and it sinks just below the surface. Thus it
is not affected but wind or waves. Instead it keeps a straight
line all the way out to the fly, making it easier to detect subtle
takes.
A line tray is immensely
practical if you fish where rolling waves, rushing currents and
floating seaweed will otherwise grab your line and interfere
with your casting. Once you get used to it, you will never want
to be without it.
Leaders should be around 12 foot
if you are fishing with a floating line - 9 foot if you have
an intermediate line on your reel. Tippets in the 0.20-0.25 mm
class are adequate - with 0.20 being a good choice on calm and
sunny days with clear water. - Don't go any lighter than 6 lbs.
test!
A saltwater resistant reel finishes
off the equipment needed. You can get by with a click check but
disk drags are much preferred if you encounter big fish. For
that very reason you should never go fishing in Jutland, Denmark
without at least 100 yds. of 20 lbs. backing to support your
fly line.
Flies
Seatrout flies for fishing in
the salt usually are divided into two categories: Imitative flies
that aim to represent specific food items on the trout's menu.
And provocative flies whose only goal is to excite the fish into
striking.
Big flies produce
big sea trout in the salt!
© photo Steen Ulnits
Gaudy fantasy flies - fluorescent
or not - generally work best during wintertime where water is
cold and food scarce. During summer when food is abundant, flies
that imitate of represent specific food items - bait fish, crustaceans
or worms - are needed.
If you plan to go night time
fishing, big, black and bushy flies are preferred. Muddlers and
Zonkers can be fished in or just below the surface where they
draw waves and push water, making it easier for the seatrout
to spot and catch them. Often, you will hear the strike before
actually feeling it!
Thus, the well-prepared fly fisherman
carries several types of flies in his box. He will have small,
shrimp-like flies size 8-12 ready for those days where only small
flies fished deep and slow will produce. And he will be watching
for the sligtest indication of a subtle take that requires an
immediate strike.
He also carries big and gaudy
size 2-6 streamers for those memorable days when trout are feeding
like mad, slamming into longshank flies fished fast just below
the surface. This is often the case on windy and rainy days where
small flies will usually be left untouched.
The right retrieve
Generally, small flies should
be taken home slowly in short strips. Large flies should be retrieved
in long and fast strips. And as always it is important to vary
the speed of retrieve according to the water temperature. Fish
being cold-blooded respond instantly to changes in their environment.
So be sure to fish your flies
slowly when the water is cold and fish are sluggish. And faster
when the water is warm and fish feed actively.
If you carry the following flies
in your box, you will be able to handle most situations you will
encounter along the coastline of Jutland, Denmark. They catch
fish all year round:
"Mysis" # 8, 10
"Magnus" # 6, 8
"Mickey Finn" # 4, 6, 8
"Black Zonker" # 2, 4, 6
"Juletræet" ("Christmas Tree")
# 2, 4, 6
It always pays to pay the local
tackle shops a visit. They know what fly or flies are the most
productive right then and there.
Spin Fishing
Spinning is the most commonly
practised method of catching seatrout from the shoreline. It's
a method where long casts are possible and much water can be
covered in a dayís fishing.
Spinning is an effective
way of catching sea trout from the beach.
© photo Steen Ulnits
Spinning is used by the majority
of fishermen, and spinning therefore produces the majority of
fish caught. Generally, larger fish are caught by spining than
by fly fishing - simply because most big fish tend to stay in
deeper water, outside the reach of fly casting.
An 8-9 foot long spinning rod
capable of casting 10-20 g lures will handle most conditions.
A medium sized fixed spool reel filled with 200 metres of 0.20-0.25
mm monofilament line completes the outfit. Add an assortment
of pirks, spoons and wobblers but don't forget a handfull of
flies for those days where seatrout time and again follow your
lure to the rod tip without taking.
Good producers are spoons like
Toby, Smelt, Sølvpilen and Jensen Tobis. Shoreline wobblers
like Gladsax, Hingsten and Kutlingen should be in every fisherman's
tackle box. These lures can be fished very slowly without hitting
the bottom. Thus they are ideally suited for wintertime fishing
in cold water where fish are sluggish.
During spring and autumn where
the water temperature is ideal and fish fed actively, you normally
get the best results using a fairly fast - and varied - retrieve.
Baitcasting reels and shoreline
wobblers
When seatrout have reached a
certain size, food found in shallow water no longer seems able
to fill their stomachs. They need larger prey and the easiest
way of achieving this goal is to seek deep water where schools
of herring, sprat and sand eels abound.
Long casts with heavy tackle
and large shoreline wobblers fit the bill if you want to catch
these big fish. And you are advised to seek open coastlines offering
deep water close to shore. Secluded brackish-water bays only
rarely yield large herring feeders.
If you want to make the most
of this specialized kind of seatrout fishing, you need a powerful
9-10 foot spinning rod plus a medium-to-large sized spinning
reel or better yet, a multiplying reel capable of handling 200
metres of 0.25-0.30 mm monofilament line. Or equivalent unelastic
PE-line of even smaller diameter.
Add to this an assortment of
20-30 g shoreline wobblers in natural colour combinations - silver
with black, blue or green backs. In the wintertime provocative
colours like hot fluorescent pink and orange are often a better
choice.
A 4 kg sea trout is
always a prize catch. This author was pleased!
© photo Steen Ulnits
Choose between Danish classics
like Gladsax, Sandgrævlingen and Kongetobisen - all plastic
moulded. In fact it was Denmark who came up with the first ever
specialized shoreline wobblers for long distance casting - heavy
wooden plugs that took up water and left the paint peeling...
But they cast the required distance and they caught fish!
Ultralight spinning
At the opposite end of the spectrum
we find the light line enthusiasts - the UL or ultralight fanatics.
They swear by long and limber 9-10 foot spinning rods capable
of casting tiny spoons and spinners weighing no more than 2-12
g. Reels are small fixed spool spinning reels filled with 0.15-0.20
mm monofilament line.
This is yet another way of fishing
that originated in Denmark - a method which has proved very productive
when seatrout are in the shallows searching for sticklebacks
and other small baitfish. Add to this the excitement of fighting
even a two pounder on tackle this light!
Mepps and Vibrax spinners size
1-3 are good producers when long casts are not required. If more
distance or a faster retrieve is needed, focus on small spoons
like the classic Toby and Æbelø.
When it comes to local favourites
amongst flies and lures, do pay the local tackle shop a visit.
They know what works in their waters and they also know where
the best fishing can be found at any particular time.
The right retrieve
When casting lures from the coastline,
you should always opt for a varied retrieve. A lure speeding
up and slowing down has much more appeal to hunting fish than
a monotonous retrieve of the same lure.
Very often the fish will strike
when you speed up the retrieve. Fish often follow the lure for
long distances without striking. But when they sense that their
potential food is trying to get away, the strike comes almost
automatically.
Still you will often encounter
the so-called "followers" - fish that have a hard time
deciding whether to strike or not. Fish that not even a varied
retrieve can lure into striking.
If this happens to you, try letting
your spoon or plug drop towards the botton - with no retrieve
at all. Often seatrout will pick up the lure immediately - as
if afraid it would escape. As if it was some sand eel trying
to bury itself in the bottom. At other times the fish will not
strike until you start the retrieve again.
Bubble floats and flies
If necessary, the spin fisherman
has yet another ace up his sleeve. By using a so-called "bubble
float" which can be filled more or less with water, he may
in fact fish very small flies on very long casts.
The water inside the float gives
you the weight necessary for long casts. And the small flies
makes it possible to imitate even the tiniest creature that seatrout
may have keyed in on!
The classic Bubble is round and
transparent. It is filed via two holes that can be closed. It
has two line eyes - one for the main line and one for the leader.
Modern Bubbles look different.
They are elongated and often made of hot coloured plastic that
can be seen from a long distance. Just like its classic predecessor
it is filled with water to add weight. Filled completely it sinks
slowly. Otherwise it floats. In this way you may adjust both
the weight and density of the float.
In modern Bubbles the line is
threaded through the float and fastened to a splitring or swivel.
To this the 2-4 m long leader is then attached - and at the end
of that the chosen fly of the day.
The idea behind this construction
is that you are always directly in touch with the fly through
the float. This makes it easier to detect subtle takes that would
go unnoticed with the classic Bubble. At the same time wary fish
will feel no or very little resistance from the float when they
take the fly.
The retrieve when fishing flies
on Bubble floats should be very, very slow. In fact so slow that
many spin fishermen do not have the patience needed for this
most effective way of fishing. You cast out the whole thing and
then brake the float with your finger just before it touches
water. This is to stretch the long leader so that you will be
fishing from the time of impact!
Leave the fly some seconds to
sink before you start the retrieve. Think of it as "crawling"
the fly back to you. Take half a turn of the handle and then
pause before the next half turn. If you want to make the most
of it, it takes several minutes to fish out each cast.
The flies needed for this particular
kind of fishing are the same as mentioned above under fly fishing.
Fishing the Water
Naturally, it pays to be able
to make long casts if you are to encounter seatrout on a regular
basis. Long casts let you reach distant fish and cover more water.
Still a surprisingly large percentage
of all fish are caught with 10-20 metres from the shoreline -
a fact which proves the productivity of the shallows when it
comes to fish food. It is also a reminder that you should never
wade into the water without having fished the shallows first.
Often you will find what we call
a "bath tub" - a deepening between the shoreline itself
and the first sand bank - very close to shore. If this is the
case then fish it thoroughly before wading out. Water in such
a bath tub is relatively stagnant and therefore warms quickly
in early spring. Seatrout know just that!
More often than in the bath tub
itself seatrout are to be found on the outside of the first sand
bank. Here they have easy and direct access to the protection
of deeper water. This makes them feel safer and, consequently,
easier to catch.
Fish carefully
Except for early in the year
where warmth from the sun is important for both fish and fish
food, the shallow water is always most productive during dark.
Thus you will find fish in close early in the morning and late
in the evening - plus all night long during the heat of summer.
When you are fishing a piece
of coastline, you cover the water by spreading your casts in
a fan in front of you as you walk or wade along. If you are fishing
from a protruding point or are standing on a large rock, you
also cover the water in front of you by casting in a fan. This
way you search every inch of water thoroughly so that any seatrout
- if present - will see your offering.
If wading is necessary, do so
carefully. Partly not to frighten any fish in shallow water -
partly to protect yourself agains unwanted dunkings... Where
the bottom is covered by round and slippery rocks, you have to
move slowly and feel your way forward. A wading staff will prove
a great help in such places.
Clothing
A large part of the seatrout
fishing takes places in the colder months of the year where water
temperature does not suggest a swim. But modern hi-tech products
have taken the sting out of cold. If you are wearing the right
clothing, you will be warm all day long - all year long.
Full length waders are required
for most seatrout fishing in Denmark. During summer you can easily
get by with a pair of thin nylon or PVC waders. If you can afford
it, breathable Gore-Tex is a sure winner. Then you will avoid
much of the sweating associated with long walks in hot weather
and waders.
Spring and autumn where water
temperature typically ranges between 5 and 15 degrees Celsius,
warmer clothing is required. As a minimum you need one layer
of insulating fleece between your body and your waders. A pair
of 3-4 mm neoprene waders is an investment you will never regret.
With equipment like that, cold has ceased to be a problem.
Come winter it is time to jump
into thicker 4-5 mm neoprene waders. Add a pair of woollen gloves
or better yet - fleece which does not take up water and can be
easily wrung dry. Then winter can even be enjoyed!
The fly fisherman who has to
handle a wet flyline all day long, would be better off wearing
thin neoprene finger gloves - preferably with polypropylene inner
liners to wick away the inevitable condensation.
Find more information
on flies and lures suitable for sea trout fishing on www.angling-eastjutland.dk
© Steen Ulnits
|