|
Photo by Lefty Kreh
Photo by Lefty Kreh
|
Today,
the river affects the lives of everyone living along it.
The economy, water supply and recreation of the area rely
on it. Mink, raccoons, ducks, geese, osprey and eagles
call it home, as do many area residents who have summer
residences on the numerous islands in the stream,
commuting by boat with the shore. In addition to fishing,
at various places and times the river provides power
boating, floating, picnicking and rich photographic
opportunities. Whether casting from a boat or
wading or float fishing, whether looking for lots of dry
fly action on a summer evening, late fall lunkers or the
occasional musky, the Susquehanna will meet your needs.
Because of the enormous area it drains, the river
generally runs high until well into June. From then
through October you can find stretches to suit your
sport.
Waders or, in summer, wet wading with felt
soled shoes, Stream Cleats or Korkers are the regular
drill. On a river sometimes stretching a mile wide and a
few feet deep a boat certainly enhances mobility. Evening
dry fly action on 4-5 weight rods can readily translate
to 30 fish 10-13", better than most trout fisheries,
coupled with the fact that these are native fish, free
risers and strong. Casting sinking flies will readily net
more larger bass, over the 15" mark. Ironically,
really huge fish are rare. Some of the deepest pools,
especially in the series of impoundments below Middletown
or in some of the deep holes of the North and West
Branches will dish up the occasional Loch Ness bass.
Still, in all his years, mostly fishing the
Middletown-Harrisburg stretch, Bob Clouser, "the
Commodore of the Susquehanna", has seen few fish
over six pounds and has himself landed only seven over
the five pound mark. Yet the consistency and widespread
action rate highly with most anglers and the river's
reputation has been built on numbers of smaller fish
regularly interspersed with two to three-pounders.
Open seasons in past years during spring
spawning seem to have damaged the population of larger
bass. On the section from Harrisburg's Dock Street Dam to
Holtwood Dam, well down stream below Middletown, special
regulations, 4 fish, 15" minimum (as opposed to 6
fish, 12" on the rest of the river) have had
positive impact on the quality of the fishery. Clouser
and the highly active and visible Susquehanna Smallmouth
Alliance are currently pressuring the Pennsylvania Fish
and Boat Commission to extend the trophy regulations to
other parts of the river. Fly fishermen are spreading the
catch and release gospel to locals who have traditionally
killed limits of fish and their efforts have born much
fruit, as evidenced by higher average size and numbers of
bass in the trophy area.
One other problem the bass face has been a
seemingly cyclic, though natural, fish kill, in which
many two and three year class (10-16") bass in
post-spawn weakened condition, succumb to additional
stresses brought on by rapid temperature and volume
changes. Some years are worse than others and fishermen
are trying to understand the phenomena more fully.
Biologists also report that an otherwise harmless
parasite may kill bass if contracted during spawning. At
any rate, efforts of anglers to limit the kills of former
years can only help the situation by assuring that at
least some more of the larger bass are returned to the
river. A seemingly heavier than normal post spawn die-
off in 1993 made for a sub-par season in the lower river
but most anglers expect steady improvement over the next
several seasons.
The Susquehanna's currents are rich in food
for the bass. The wide, shallow riffles and rocks are
laden with mayfly, caddis, helgramite, damselfly nymphs
and crayfish and the volume of shallow water and the
amount of sunlight penetration insure prolific hatches
and rapid growth rates for forage and game fish. All this
is enhanced by the fertile limestone waters supplied by
certain tributaries. White fly (Ephoron leukon) hatches
reach blizzard proportions and blot out the far shore
like a dense snow storm. The first insects generally
reach Middletown in late July, showing a week or more
later at the Sunbury junction. The hatch lasts longer in
the lower river but parts of the West and North Branches
have other hatches like brown drakes and various sulphurs
to supplement the shorter white fly season.
Juvenile bass, river shiners, black-nosed
dace, madtoms and, in the warmer, lower stretches,
gizzard shad also provide much forage. It is in no way
strange that the most productive flies to use here are
those designed by Clouser himself over a lifetime of
fishing this water. The Clouser Deep Minnow has to be the
first choice of most anglers. Carry them in chartreuse or
chartreuse combinations, sculpin or the original baby
bass pattern. Tied sparsely, Ultrahair Deep Minnows are
especially productive when fishing clear, low water. His
weighted Swimming Nymph, light or dark, meets most of the
mayfly nymph requirements. No better crayfish imitation
has been found for this river than the Clouser Crayfish,
drifted slowly and steadily. To complement this
assortment, I would recommend the time honored red and
white hackle fly popularized in more recent years by
Lefty Kreh.
|