It doesn’t get much better than a trout on a dry fly. Jeff Lund | For the Capital City Weekly

It doesn’t get much better than a trout on a dry fly. Jeff Lund | For the Capital City Weekly

Dry fly fantasies

There were trout, but they were following steelhead waiting for eggs or feasting on newly emerged salmon fry.

I put on a No. 16 elk hair caddis because I was determined to catch a trout on a dry fly for the first time this year. I proceeded to catch zero fish.

I wasn’t surprised, but I was a little disappointed both in my decision to clearly ignore what I knew was the best method to catch a trout that day and by the defiance displayed by the trout. After all, I don’t just eat cake on my birthday. I’ll eat it any month of the year whether it’s my birthday or not. Why can’t trout take a similar approach? Now that I think about it, a salmon egg is probably more an equivalent to birthday cake than a bug with wings, but whatever.

I wanted to catch trout with a dry fly, because on that day it was the most fun method I could think of to catch a fish. It’s impossible to measure the most fun way to catch a fish overall because the variances in styles. Catching a steelhead swinging a fly is not at all like watching a cutthroat surface, mouth open, to take a dry fly. Both are nothing like being seven reels into retrieving a herring plug and having it crushed by a king salmon. Which is better? Does it matter?

Though we do understand the impossibility of an answer, we still ask the questions as if with new experiences, we will be enlightened enough to reach finality.

The best fish to catch is….

The best fighting fish pound for pound is…

The most fun is…

It’s okay to not have the answer, and in fishing, it’s okay to like, say, a brook trout on a dry fly as much or more than a king salmon on a trolling rod. In my case, I much prefer the brookie. I have to place the fly where it needs to be, see the fish rising and remain calm enough to not set the hook until it takes. I missed two salmon-sized brown trout on the White River in Arkansas because I jerked the foam hopper from the mouth of the trout that calmly rose to take it. Pulled it just before the mouth closed. Twice.

Anyway, once the brookie is on, the fight is just a trembling of my one-weight fly rod. There are no epic runs and when the fish is in, it’s only slightly larger than my hand. At least the ones I have caught in the Ketchikan area or the mountains of California.

A brook trout is accompanied with a feeling of happiness. It wasn’t an epic battle that ended in a knife to the gills to bleed it. You feel warm and satisfied after releasing a brookie, Golden or small cutthroat. You feel like a predator when a king is on ice. You do, in fact, feel like the descendent from the type of hunter-gatherer who survived so that you could one day exist.

You can’t eat the memory of the prettiest 14-inch cutthroat you’ve ever seen, but it’s not always about filling the freezer. Sometimes it is, and shortly it will be about that. My freezer is almost completely salmon and halibut free. By the way, I don’t see how catching a halibut on a fly rod would be a bad time.

Anyway, I’ll always have a spot for dry flies and little trout because that’s what fishing is about.


• Jeff Lund teaches and writes in Ketchikan.


More in Neighbors

Adam Bauer of the Local Spiritual Assembly of Bahá’ís of Juneau.
Living and Growing: Embracing progress while honoring Our roots

I would like to take a moment to acknowledge that we are… Continue reading

Maj. Gina Halverson is co-leader of The Salvation Army Juneau Corps. (Robert DeBerry/The Salvation Army)
Living and Growing: “Don’t cry because it’s over, smile because it happened.”

Ever have to say goodbye unexpectedly? A car accident, a drug overdose,… Continue reading

Visitors look at an art exhibit by Eric and Pam Bealer at Alaska Robotics that is on display until Sunday. (Photo courtesy of the Sitka Conservation Society)
Neighbors briefs

Art show fundraiser features works from Alaska Folk Festival The Sitka Conservation… Continue reading

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski meets with Thunder Mountain High School senior Elizabeth Djajalie in March in Washington, D.C., when Djajalie was one of two Alaskans chosen as delegates for the Senate Youth Program. (Photo courtesy U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s office)
Neighbors: Juneau student among four National Honor Society Scholarship Award winners

TMHS senior Elizabeth Djajalie selected from among nearly 17,000 applicants.

The 2024 Alaska Junior Duck Stamp Contest winning painting of an American Wigeon titled “Perusing in the Pond” by Jade Hicks, a student at Thunder Mountain High School. (Photo courtesy of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)
THMS student Jade Hicks wins 2024 Alaska Junior Duck Stamp Contest

Jade Hicks, 18, a student at Thunder Mountain High School, took top… Continue reading

(Photo courtesy of The Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska)
Neighbors: Tunic returned to the Dakhl’aweidí clan

After more than 50 years, the Wooch dakádin kéet koodás’ (Killerwhales Facing… Continue reading

A handmade ornament from a previous U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree. (Photo courtesy of U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree)
Neighbors briefs

Ornaments sought for 2024 U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree The Alaska Region of… Continue reading

(Photo by Gina Delrosario)
Living and Growing: Divine Mercy Sunday

Part one of a two-part series

(City and Borough of Juneau photo)
Neighbors Briefs

Registration for Parks & Rec summer camps opens April 1 The City… Continue reading

Easter eggs in their celebratory stage, before figuring out what to do once people have eaten their fill. (Photo by Depositphotos via AP)
Gimme A Smile: Easter Eggs — what to do with them now?

From Little League practice to practicing being POTUS, there’s many ways to get cracking.