some local roads in Fillmore County |
Despite what you may have read about the richness of river bottom lands for farming, the farms are on the heights for the most part. Campgrounds, and cabins are scattered along valley bottoms and state forest land covers hillsides. It's an interesting and scenic pattern, but very different than what some of us who live in more level parts of Minnesota are used to.
trout might see you even if you don't see them
Photo by J. Harrington
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Much of our morning was spent reconnoitering several designated trout streams. The one that seemed most "fishable," without requiring a machete to get near the water, or looking so shallow as to be barely short of being declared "intermittent," had a nice view, from the bridge, of a stretch where we could see several trout feeding underwater on something. We tried a soft hackle on our tenkara rod and the fish responded with the old "if you can see them they can see you and probably won't play." The Better Half tried dapping a dry fly a little further downstream with the same result. It will, no doubt, take awhile to get back in the swing of fly fishing small streams. Meanwhile, we enjoyed the wild flowers, butterflies, and what, as far as we remember, was our first "in the wild" view of a hummingbird (ruby-throated female?) feeding on streamside jewelweed.
Speckled Trout
By Ron Rash
Water-flesh gleamed like mica:orange fins, red flankspots, a charshy as ginseng, found onlyin spring-flow gaps, the thin clearof faraway creeks no mapcould name. My cousin showed methose hidden places. I lovedhow we found them, the way wefollowed no trail, just stream-soundtangled in rhododendron,to where slow water openeda hole to slip a line in,and lift as from a well brightshadows of another world,held in my hand, their coloralready starting to fade.
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