50 Best Places Fly Fishing the Northeast. Bob Mallard

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50 Best Places Fly Fishing the Northeast - Bob Mallard

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Reed Pond Cabins)

      Munsungan Lake, Maine

      May–November 207-433-0660

      December–April 207-746-7777

      www.bradfordcamps.com [email protected]

      Red River Camps

      Island Pond, Maine

      Deboullie Township

      207-554-0420

      www.redrivercamps.com [email protected]

      Penobscot Lake Lodge

      Penobscot Lake, Maine

      207-280-0280

      www.penobscotlakelodge.com [email protected]

      Closest lodging

      Refer to Closest full-service lodges.

      Closest food

      Refer to Closest full-service lodges.

      2 . Maine Brook Trout Ponds

       Location: Western, Central, and Northern Maine, about a 2- to 3-hour ride from Bangor, a 3- to 4-hour ride from Portland; and a 4- to 5-hour ride from Boston, Massachusetts or Manchester, New Hampshire. Full-service airports are available in all four cities. Float plane pickup from lakes within an hour of Bangor can be arranged.

      Maine boasts one of the largest (if not the largest) inventories of pond-dwelling, self-sustaining native trout populations in the continental United States—in this case Eastern brook trout. There are more than 600 such waters scattered across the state. Roughly 325 have never been stocked. The rest have not been stocked in at least 25 years. This represents approximately 95 percent of the remaining self-sustaining native brook trout lakes and ponds in the country.

      There are another 500 or so ponds in Maine that are stocked with brook trout. Many of these support strong populations of holdover fish. This brings the total number of brook trout ponds in Maine to roughly 1,100—far more than are found anywhere else in the country.

      Approximately 175 of the brook trout ponds in Maine are classified as Remote by the Land Use Planning Commission. This means that there is no development—including permanent roads—within a half mile of the shoreline. In most cases, even unimproved roads have been blocked. These represent some of the most pristine brook trout ponds in the Northeast.

      It would be impossible—and I believe a real disservice—to try to name just one of these ponds for the purposes of this book. In aggregate, they represent a fly-fishing resource unlike anything else found in the Northeast. In fact, they probably bring more anglers to Maine than all the rivers and streams put together. As a result, I have opted to cover them as a group.

      The majority of Maine’s best brook trout lakes and ponds are found in the western, central, and northern parts of the state. They are located off a network of unmarked, and often unmaintained, dirt roads. While many of these are located on private land managed for forestry, others are on public land such as sprawling Baxter State Park, private land owned by individuals such as philanthropist Roxanne Quimby, private land owned by conservation groups such as The Nature Conservancy, and conservation easements managed by groups such as the Appalachian Mountain Club.

      Under Maine’s Great Ponds Act, all lakes and ponds over 10 acres are open to the public for the purpose of fishing. This law guarantees overland access solely for fishing—all other activities fall under the standard laws governing trespass. This does not allow for vehicular access, or even unobstructed foot access. Landowners can—and do—gate their property wherever they see fit, often requiring a long walk to reach the water.

      Bob Mallard hooked up on a remote pond. Thomas Ames, Jr.

      Most of Maine’s best brook trout lakes and ponds are located outside the power grid. Gas, food, lodging, and services are often in short supply. While this presents a certain logistical problem for the visiting fly fisherman, many of these waters are near traditional sporting camps that offer lodging, meals, guides, rental boats, and even float plane service. This is often the most convenient, and safest, way to take advantage of this wonderful resource.

      Fishing Maine’s brook trout lakes and ponds effectively requires some type of watercraft. Shorelines are lined with trees, and the bottoms are usually muddy, making wade fishing all but impossible. Float tubes, canoes, and small rowboats are often used. Some of the larger waters have boat launches. In many cases, it is the distance from the road that dictates what type of watercraft is needed. On many of the more remote waters, sporting camps maintain an inventory of rental boats.

      Bob Mallard with spring-caught wild brookie. Libby Camps

      Most of the better brook trout lakes and ponds in Maine contain only brook trout and a native minnow or two—usually some sort of dace. This lack of competition allows the brookies to prosper. This also adds to the uniqueness of these waters, as many brook trout ponds found elsewhere in the Northeast have succumbed to the introduction of one or more nonnative gamefish and/or baitfish.

      Many of the best brook trout lakes and ponds are restricted to fly fishing only—some to artificial lures only. Many have some sort of a slot limit prohibiting, or restricting, the harvest of large fish. Bag limits are often restricted to just one or two fish per day—and in a few cases they are managed for catch-and-release.

      Hatches on Maine’s brook trout ponds start soon after ice-out and continue right into the fall. Mayflies, such as Black Quills and Callibaetis, come first. These are followed

      Bob Mallard fishing a remote pond. Thomas Ames, Jr.

      by caddis—including Giant Traveling Sedges. Then the often overlooked ants, beetles, dragonflies, and damsels. Next is the Hexagenia—the largest mayfly in the country—and as much an event as it is a hatch. The dry-fly season ends with an early fall midge hatch, which is also overlooked. Fish also feed on the ever-present leeches, minnows, scuds, and in some cases, crayfish. Early and late in the season—and in between hatches—brook trout can be caught by fishing scud, nymph, leech, and streamer patterns below the surface. In fact, this is probably the best way to target large fish—regardless of when, or what is going on at the surface.

      The fish in Maine’s brook trout ponds run from 6 to 20 inches. Most are somewhere in between. Ponds have either lots of small fish,

      a medium number of mixed-size fish, or a small number of large fish. This does not mean you cannot catch a large fish out of any water at any given time, just that the best way to catch big fish is to target waters that are known to hold big fish. Conversely,

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