Minnesota Fly Fishing Hatch Chart
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Trout Unlimited MINNESOTAThe Official Publication of Minnesota Trout Unlimited - November 2018 March 15th-17th, 2019 l Mark Your Calendars! without written permission of Minnesota Trout Unlimited. Trout Minnesota of permission written without Copyright 2018 Minnesota Trout Unlimited - No portion of this publication may be reproduced reproduced be may publication this of portion No - Unlimited Trout Minnesota 2018 Copyright Shore Fishing Lake Superior Artist Profile: Josh DeSmit Key to Macroinvertebrates Fishing Newburg Creek Tying the Prince Nymph ROCHESTER, MN ROCHESTER, PERMIT NO. 281 NO. PERMIT Chanhassen, MN 55317-0845 MN Chanhassen, PAID P.O. Box 845 Box P.O. Dry Fly Hatch Chart U.S. POSTAGE POSTAGE U.S. Minnesota Trout Unlimited Trout Minnesota Non-Profit Org. Non-Profit Trout Unlimited Minnesota Council Update MINNESOTA The Voice of MNTU TU’s Annual National Meeting By Steve Carlton, Minnesota Council Chair On The Cover t’s been a busy couple weeks for me work we do from the North Shore to our and Trout Unlimited in Minnesota. southern border. On September 29th, the Josh DeSmit ties up before fishing the A few weeks back, the MNTU Ex- Fall State Council Meeting was held up North Shore’s Sucker River, hoping I ecutive Director, John Lenczewski, and on the North Shore where it is tradition- Lake Superior steelhead have arrived I attended the Trout Unlimited National ally held at the end of the fishing season. on their spring spawning run. Read Meeting in fire ravaged Redding, Cali- After the productive meeting, we got to more about Josh in our first artist pro- fornia. You may remember that the Carr chase some steelhead (chinook salmon file on pages 4 and 5. Photo by Kelley Fire and the Delta Fire played havoc on and big brown trout for me). DeSmit. that region. On our drive up to fish the McCloud River, we drove up Highway I hope you all had the chance to get out 5 and through the area where the Delta fishing this season. It’s been another Fire was still smoldering. Those two odd weather year. There were some fires were the largest in California his- nasty storms that tore through the Drift- tory, one after the other very close to less Region. It was nice to see many fundraising banquets and those that each other. I really enjoy the TU Na- of our habitat projects hold up through pledge to support our mission on Give- In This Issue tional meetings. I get to learn about all the flooding. TU continues to learn and to-the-Max Day on November 15th. the wonderful things that TU is doing all adapt from these weather events. Thank And a special thank you to our partners • Lake Superior Shore Fishing over the country to protect trout, salmon you to all the volunteers who continue at the Minnesota DNR who help make and the watersheds they inhabit. Min- to help Trout Unlimited in our mission. fulfilling our mission possible. • Fishing Newburg Creek nesota TU was highlighted again for the Thank you to all of you that attend our • All About Trout Youth Series • Macroinvertebrate ID • Trolling the Web Table of Contents Artist Profile: Josh DeSmit..............................................page 4 A Walk Through the Seasons........................................page 6 Fly Tying: The Prince Nymph..........................................page 7 Fishing Our Habitat Improvement: Newburg Creek....page 8 Join TU Today! Lotic Love....................................................................page 10 Want to subscribe to this newsletter? See the back page for details or visit All About Trout: Youth Series.....................................page 11 www.tu.org to join Trout Unlimited! Key to Macroinvertebrates.........................................page 12 Minnesota Hatch Chart..............................................page 13 Trout in the Classroom Update..................................page 14 Trout Unlimited Minnesota is the of- ficial publication of Minnesota Trout Book Review: Cloudbursts..........................................page 15 Unlimited. Issues are distributed to all members of Minnesota Trout Unlim- Shore Fishing Lake Superior........................................page 16 ited chapters. Subscriptions are avail- able by joining Trout Unlimited. See Select Poems...............................................................page 18 the back page for further details. Garvin Brook Research...............................................page 20 Copyright © 2018 Minnesota Trout Unlimited. No portion of this publica- Chapter News..............................................................page 22 tion may be reproduced without writ- ten permission from Minnesota Trout Reeling it In.................................................................page 24 Unlimited. Advertising rate sheet available on re- quest. Send all editorial and advertis- ing correspondence or other inquiries to the editor: Carl Haensel 2067 E. Pioneer Rd. Duluth, MN 55804 218-525-2381 [email protected] Send address changes to: Trout Unlimited, 1550 Wilson Boulevard Arlington, VA, 22209. Volunteers and the MN DNR work on seeding prairie grass on the South Branch of the Vermillion River 2 From The Executive Director A Good Excuse to Get Out on the Water By John Lenczewski, MNTU Executive Director n late October I stopped by our Trout on new roles. Workdays now are just Brook restoration project near Mies- as likely to involve removing stands of Iville to see how the habitat work was invasive buckthorn, planting and cag- faring. Numerous wild brook trout, and ing trees in the north, staking down ero- a few browns, had already been digging sion blankets, spraying invasive plants, spawning redds in the gravel which our or reseeding areas. As MNTU and the restoration work had exposed. By nar- chapters restore more degraded habitat rowing the stream’s width, we enabled each year (more than 70 miles of streams MNTU the stream to naturally flush excess sand since 2009!), We are asking volunteers which the wide, degraded channel had to take on another equally important Connections allowed to accumulate. The change role: that of stream monitor. from sand (biologically speaking an un- Executive Director derwater desert) to gravel and cobble has Trout habitat work, especially stream- John Lenczewski been dramatic. bank work, is increasingly subject to [email protected] more severe flooding. Project bank slop- 612-670-1629 On the hike back from watching spawn- ing means most floods quickly release this “grueling” task of exploring a new www.mntu.org ing trout I got to thinking how the their energy on the floodplains, rather (or old favorite) piece of trout water. roles available for volunteers have also than in the stream channel. Still, stron- Population sampling with a fishing rod changed. A decade ago we mostly built ger and more frequent flooding means is strongly encouraged, as is spending Minnesota Council Chair “lunker structures” to install in stream- some spots will occasionally need main- a few bucks in the rural communities. Steve Carlton banks. While we still utilize these struc- tenance. Regular inspections of all proj- Please help TU step up its game, by fish- [email protected] tures based upon the site conditions and ects are key. And this is where trout an- ing one segment of improved habitat in land use, we have added more tools to glers can step up. We are renewing our 2019. Please see the box on page 18 for the tool box and asked volunteers to take call for lots of volunteers to break up details on how to sign up and help. TU MN Editor Carl Haensel [email protected] 218-525-2381 TU MN Copy Editor Jade Thomason [email protected] TU MN Communications Coordinator Dan Callahan [email protected] Gitche Gumee Chapter Brent Notbohm, President [email protected] Headwaters Chapter Bob Wagner, President [email protected] 218-586-2798 The walk back after a long day on the water is an experience to be treasured alongside the fish caught. Read more in Micah Crider’s article on Page 6. Hiawatha Chapter Phil Pankow, President Editor’s Angle [email protected] www.hiawathatu.org Planning Your 2019 Season and a New Hatch Chart By Carl Haensel, Editor Mid-Minnesota Chapter Micah Barrett, President s the first snows of winter be- It takes time to plan out and tie these [email protected] gin to fall in northern Minne- flies, and in this issue of the newslet- Asota, and the brook and brown ter we’ve got a hatch chart to help your trout spawn on clean gravels around the planning on page 15. If you’re new to Twin Cities Chapter state, anglers like myself start thinking the insects found in streams and rivers Janine Kohn, President of spring. As I dream of the first green around the state, check out the key to [email protected] blades of grass along the creeks in the identifying them found on page 12. It’s 612-564-TCTU spring, I plan out the flies that I will need set up for you to remove and take along www.twincitiestu.org for the next season. I know that I’ll need the stream, and it’s got great kids infor- nymphs in the late winter, when the trout mation on the back about trout that we lay deep in pools. Later, I’ll want midg- have in Minnesota for younger anglers. Win-Cres Chapter es and black stoneflies, then caddisflies Dr. Chuck Shepard, President as the waters warm and the hatches be- If you’re fortunate to have plenty of time [email protected] gin. Heavy streamers and woolly bug- to tie flies for yourself, and maybe a bit www.wincrestu.org gers will be useful as the streams swell of extra time, our mentorship program and discolor from heavy spring rains. needs donated flies to help get new an- Mayflies of all sizes and shapes will fill glers on the water. Contact Tim Hems- my boxes as flowers bloom and greenery tad, listed on page 18 to learn more and returns in earnest to Minnesota. When donate. Good luck tying flies and mak- www.mntu.org summer comes, grasshoppers will be ing lures this winter, I hope to see some available, and the brown trout excited.