
I know they are , just gotta figure out which pattern.
Moderators: William Anderson, letumgo
I totally agree with you on that. I just got back from teaching a wet fly clinic on a stream that had just been stocked. I gave my demo, and we spread out on the stream. It was a combat fishing situation; mixed bag of spin/fly fishers. There was a major hatch of little brown stones underway, but I saw a number of them skitter downstream as far as I could see without being molested by a fish. Power bait did well, though, as did any fly that looked a hatchery pellet. The worst part was being offered fish that had been killed by bait fishers, saying that "I don't eat trout, but it seemed a shame to put them back and go to waste." (I don't mean that the catching of the fish killed them, they could have been easily released, but not after they're gutted.)Soft-hackle wrote: For the life of me, I can not see the fun in catching fish that were just placed in the water. If stocking is a necessity, as it seems to be, here, for God sake, give them a chance to survive the change in their environment and get accustomed to living on their own. Stockies are not good on the table either. I am thinking it's greed or bragging rights.![]()