Dog Days of Summer

The drought of 2016 continues throughout most of Maine and New England. Most natural rivers are too low or warm to fish well or perhaps shouldn’t be fished at all to protect the stressed fish. I have never seen rivers in the Rangeley area as low as they are now. For example, the Diamond River at the Dartmouth Grant, which can flow as high as 14,000 cfs during snow melt was down to 34 cfs.

It is no better in Massachusetts or the other New England states with the exception of the northern half of Maine that has fared somewhat better.

As I outline in my first book, “Fly Fishing the Seasons of New England” some fishing options remain even under these conditions. Rivers from bottom-release dams such as the Magalloway River flowing from the Azischos Dam has still been fishing well, all the way to the New Hampshire border. I fished it several days ago and we caught 5 species of fish – salmon, brook trout, fallfish, smallmouth bass (up to four pounds), and yellow perch!

Moreover, these foods must be eaten raw, or within the case of cheap viagra in canada rice, unwashed, as trace minerals are easily cooked and washed. The study included important site on line cialis both prescription and over-the-counter medications. The manifestations are commonly resolved through time yet these symptoms should be treated at once because it might harm you in the near future then. buy cialis cheap canterburymewscooperative.com Ask a spokesperson for the pharmaceutical industry, and this is a severe case of andropause – that’s the new word Big Pharma has coined to stand in for the menopause (shame “men” are mentioned in an entirely female “complaint”). buying viagra in india The headwaters of rivers and streams high in the mountains are still cold with adequate flows. For example, the upper Ammonosoc River near Mt. Washington was packed with brook trout and rainbows several days ago – I assume because they moved upstream as lower stretches of river warmed.

Lakes in the Rangeley area fished very well all summer until slowing down recently. Fish still rise early in the morning and right at dark. More nights like last Monday night when night time temps dropped into the lower 40’s will lower the surface water temperatures.

Pray for rain!

Comments are closed.