Good news: ‘rock snot’ on the retreat

I have nothing but good news from my week-long fishing vacation in Phoenicia, N.Y.

First off, the heavy rains earlier this summer seem to have done a number on the rock snot (didymo, a nuisance algae that is popping up in Eastern rivers).

Dave Kumlien of Trout Unlimited told me back in May that while there is no remedy for rock snot, it doesn’t fare well in cold water and in high flows.

The Esopus Creek downstream of the Portal (which carries water destined for New York City) certainly has high flows of cold water. And all the rain helped, too.

In any event, at Boiceville and off Herdman Road in Phoenicia, where I saw the stuff in abundance in early May, I didn’t spy any at all.

And the state finally got its butt in gear, too, with new signs warning of didymo. Previously, one private individual had made signs at his own expense and stuck them up here and there.

I fished in the Woodland Valley Creek, both the public and private areas, and the Esopus above the Portal, and saw no sign of rock snot anywhere.

Which does not mean we are out of the woods. After an unsatisfactory experiment with rubber wading boots combined with Yak-Trax (which fell apart promptly; they are designed for snow and ice, not rivers), I am designating one set of waders and felt-soled boots for the areas of the Esopus known to be infected, and one mangier set for everywhere else.

And I still hose everything down, dry as thoroughly as possible, and give everything a blast of Tilex Mold and Mildew.

The last couple of days on the Esopus were ideal: good flow, a little murky, and overcast, warm, humid — and buggy.

After fiddling around with a variety of flies, I struck pay dirt with the most Plain Jane pattern imaginable: a soft-hackle wet fly that is basically a bit of dark material for a body and some wavy stuff for a hackle.

It doesn’t look like any aquatic insect in particular but resembles many in general. And the soft-hackle wet fly can be fished upstream or down, with weight or without, dead drift or on the swing. I caught trout all day, both days — so many I lost count. I even kept a dozen or so of the wild rainbows for supper with my parents. I keep fish once a year, and this was certainly the time.

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