My article, “High Light — Low Light,” is over at Hatch Magazine. Here are a few excerpts…..
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… Finding the shady cracks that harbor resting and wary trout is a good challenge on bright days. Offering the flies to them in those small and dark spots is another.
… Brown trout are especially averse to hard sun. They are negatively phototropic, which is a ten-dollar phrase for “don’t like bright lights.” Sure, trout will feed under direct light, but it usually takes a hatch or another significant event to break them out of their wary instincts and face the sunlight.
… I do all that I can to keep direct sunlight behind or to the side of trout. I know what direction my local rivers flow, and I purposely choose to fish ones that flows east on early, clear mornings (keeping the sun behind the fish). I know where the big bends in the river are, and I happily walk two hundred yards to change the angle at which the sunlight reaches the trout. It’s worth it.
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Find the full article at Hatch Magazine.
Enjoy the day.
Domenick Swentosky
T R O U T B I T T E N
domenick@troutbitten.com
Good article, and a lot of guys don’t understand it, but it sure is true.
Yeah, buddy.