
How to Fish a Small Creek
from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can EditGasoline prices are causing many occasional sportsmen to leave their boat and motor on the trailer at home, and keep their recreational activities near where they live. Even if you do not have access to large bodies of water like rivers and lakes, you may still be able to enjoy a fun angling experience in a small, often overlooked stream or creek.
Steps
- Locate a small stream or
creek suitable for fishing. You will need to address several
considerations in making your choice. Here are a few:
- Is the stream on
public property, or do you have permission to fish there?
- How clean is the
water? Streams in agricultural or industrial areas may have pollution
levels that make the fish unhealthy, or, in extreme cases, poisonous.
Ideally, choose streams above the elevation of nearby industry.
- Does the stream have
good water flow year round? Some streams only maintain a flow during
snowmelt season[1], or when sufficient rainfall occurs to support them.
- The species of fish
you are intending to fish for. Keep in mind, small streams generally dont
support large sized specimens of the fish that live in them, due to the
limits imposed on this particular environment.
- Gather up the things you will
need for your trip. Generally, the basic items you have to have are a hook
and line, and bait. For practical purposes, though, you may want to look
at some refined fishing tackle for small stream fishing. These are some
things to consider:
- Use light or
ultralight fishing tackle. Small streams are often crystal clear, and you
will need a very light monofilament line to keep the fish from being
spooked.
- Bait or artificial
lures appropriate for the fish you are fishing for.
- Use long shank wire
hooks in the smallest size suitable. You will get hung up on
snags, and long shank wire hooks will bend, rather than breaking, so they
will pull free of the snag. This will save time replacing lost hooks.
Another benefit is the ease of getting a long shank hook out of a small
fishs mouth.
- Appropriate
accessories may include insect repellant, a creel or bucket for the
catch, and in some cases, waders to keep your feet dry.
- Choose your bait. Creek fish
are usually truly wild fish, or natives, and will often prefer native food
for bait.
Worms ,
grubs, insect larvae, and small insects like crickets and grasshoppers are
good choices. Small jigs and spinnerbaits may be easier to use if the
species of fish you are angling for will bite them. - Dig or catch your bait, if
applicable. Digging worms requires a suitable location, like a compost
heap or other place with good moisture and rich soil. Catching crickets or
grasshoppers will test your reflexes, speed, and eye-hand coordination,
but either method will add to the self-sufficient experience if that is
what you are looking for.
- Load the equipment, and take
to the road. Unless you are fortunate enough to have a creek nearby, you
will need to load the car or truck and drive to the creek. Finding a
remote area like a state or national forest can offer an experience both
of good fishing and pleasant scenery.
- Get away from the beaten
path. Even small streams may experience significant fishing pressure,
so heading away from civilisation can increase your chances of having a
good trip, both in the amount of your catch, and the enjoyment of
untrashed forest or wood.
- Dont judge a pool or stream
by its surface. Fish any pool or eddy that has enough water to support
fish. Often, a good fish can lay in the current motionless and invisible
until your bait or lure gets close enough for him to attack. Fishing stump
holes, bank undercuts, eddy pools, and other places that provide enough
water to support fish will give you a better chance of success.
- Match your technique to the
conditions. Small streams in heavy woods will often have brush-cover banks
and lots of blown over or washed in trees over the stream bed itself. You
may find the only approach to a potential fishing hole is to wade
the stream and stand in the current while fishing your chosen spot.
Underhanded casting, if using a spinning reel, or flipping, if using a
cane pole, can get your bait underneath any but the lowest branches and
obstructions.
- Fish each hole at different
depths. Fish will suspend at a depth where the water conditions are most
favorable, and feed in the depth where the natural food is present.
Sometimes, this is on or near the surface, sometimes, it is flat on the
bottom, so dont exclude any zone from your bait offering.
- Use the streams current to
present your bait. If you fish with a spinning or baitcasting rig, you can
approach a pool from the downstream end, cast to the upper end, and allow
the bait to drift through the water. This will offer the fish the most
natural presentation of the bait, since insects and worms that fall or are
washed into the stream follow a similar path.
- Change your bait if you are
having little or no success. When using different artificial lures, try
different colors, types, and sizes to try to establish the fishs
preference. For live bait, you may try worms, insects, or insect larvae,
even insects you may find on the creeks bank. There may also be
helgrammites and crayfish in the steam which you can catch to fish with.
- Use a float or bobber if the
current and space permits. This makes it much easier for a less
experienced fisherman to tell if a fish is biting, and also keeps the bait
at a desired depth. Use the smallest float that will keep the bait off the
bottom. This makes the setup more sensitive, since the float requires less
force to be pulled under when the fish bites. Using a smaller sinker and
hook will enable to use the smallest float possible.
- Unhook your catch and string
them on a stringer, put them in your creel, or simply drop them in a clean
bucket with some fresh water dipped from the steam in it to keep your
catch alive for as long as possible.
- Load your catch and your gear
up when you are finished fishing. Dont leave anything but your foot prints
when you go, so the next visitor to the spot you have enjoyed will find it
clean.
- Clean your catch. This may be
an incredibly painstaking process for very small creek fish, but scale,
gut and remove the heads in preparation for cooking. Keep the waste parts
so they can be buried or disposed of to prevent an odor problem later.
- Cook your catch. Small fish
can be difficult to eat because of the many tiny bones, but fresh caught
fish from a clear spring-fed stream are great, fried up crisp and golden
brown (so that the bones are crispy like crackers).
- Add some hushpuppies,
coleslaw, and baked beans, and you have a delicious meal to end the day.
Tips
- Look at maps, particularly
topographic maps[2], to locate streams and creeks and suitable access points
along them in your area.
- Learn what specific fish
species inhabit streams in your area, and find out what bag limits, size
limits, and restrictions apply to these.
- Check for additional
regulations such as catch and release only and artificial bait
only, which are fairly common in some areas.
- Match the size of your bait
and tackle to the size of the fish you expect to catch.
- Keeping the fish alive for as
long as possible ensures they will be fresh when eaten.
- Remove overhead branches or
other obstructions from your fishing hole only if you have permission from
the landowner or jurisdictional authorities.
- Check the water conditions
prior to setting out on your trip. Muddy water, particularly after a rain,
can be stained, and make fishing more difficult.
- Catch and release is an
excellent way to enjoy fishing while maintaining the natural balance of
the stream.
Warnings
- Make sure you have
appropriate licenses before going fishing. Some management areas or parks require
special permits for recreational activities within their boundaries.
- Some streams and creeks may
contain dangerous wildlife, such as alligators and venomous snakes.
- In bear country, avoid
cleaning fish until you are home or in a safe area. If camping, bury
entrails far from camp.
- Watch for deep pools,
especially if wading with hip or chest waders.
- Be careful walking or
climbing on wet surfaces, since these can be very slippery.
- Be aware of the possibility
of flooding if there are rainstorms in your area. Some streams can rise
rapidly, even if the rain is not at your location, since rainfall
occurring upstream will eventually flow down to you.
- Let someone know where you
are going, and when you will return.
- Keep in mind that going to
the local store to buy your fish will likely cost you less money even in
the short run.
Things You Will Need
- Fishing license
- Tackle and bait
- Suitable clothing
- Insect repellent
- Maps of your area
Related wikiHows
- How to Fish for River Trout
- How to Spear a Fish
- How to Clean/Gut a Fish
- How to Fish Without Line or Bait
- How to Cook for a Southern Fish Fry
Sources and Citations
- Is the stream on
public property, or do you have permission to fish there?
- How clean is the
water? Streams in agricultural or industrial areas may have pollution
levels that make the fish unhealthy, or, in extreme cases, poisonous.
Ideally, choose streams above the elevation of nearby industry.
- Does the stream have
good water flow year round? Some streams only maintain a flow during
snowmelt season[1], or when sufficient rainfall occurs to support them.
- The species of fish
you are intending to fish for. Keep in mind, small streams generally dont
support large sized specimens of the fish that live in them, due to the
limits imposed on this particular environment.
- Use light or
ultralight fishing tackle. Small streams are often crystal clear, and you
will need a very light monofilament line to keep the fish from being
spooked.
- Bait or artificial
lures appropriate for the fish you are fishing for.
- Use long shank wire
hooks in the smallest size suitable. You will get hung up on
snags, and long shank wire hooks will bend, rather than breaking, so they
will pull free of the snag. This will save time replacing lost hooks.
Another benefit is the ease of getting a long shank hook out of a small
fishs mouth.
- Appropriate
accessories may include insect repellant, a creel or bucket for the
catch, and in some cases, waders to keep your feet dry.
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