It’s after 11:00 pm and tomorrow we’re meeting Ian early for a float trip — which is my way of saying this is going to be brief.

Today, after running errands (license, backpacking goodies, etc), Rich and I drove, hiked, sweated, hiked, sweated some more, and hiked again — all to fish a small brookie stream.

Rich Margiotta on a smoke mountains brook trout stream
Rich Margiotta fishes a small plunge pool. This was the easy part.

Located near a heavily trafficked trail — which for informational purposes we’ll call “Hot Babe Trail” — it was more work than we thought it should be, and the fish were pretty small.

Do we regret it? Don’t be silly.

Rich on the Little RiverWe started by hiking 1.5 miles up a steep trail (wearing rubber pants) on an 80 degree day, bushwhacked our way up a steep, brushy streambed, climbing over rocks the size of Volkswagens.

You can do your own Return on Investment (ROI) calculation, but for some reason (possibly related to brookies and hot babes), I was pumped.

Less thrilling was our evening stint on the Little River; we fished a couple spots and didn’t land a single fish between us.

The hatch? A short one of the smorgasboard variety. I never figured it out.

Tomorrow we fish one of the tailwaters with Ian; the next day my backpacking trip begins. Forecast calls for 40% chance of rain during most of the trip.

This, I think, should prove interesting.

BTW — today I fished the 7′ 3wt Diamondglass rod that Rich just built me, and wow — perfect for that little stream. Smooth and fun, it’s testament to the suitability of fiberglass for fly rods.

Rich went with a 7.5′ 3wt T&T Heirloom glass rod that he emphatically states is the best 3wt rod he’s ever used (and Rich has used a lot of them).

As always, see you on the river, Tom Chandler.

smoky mountains brook trout
A really bad picture of a real pretty Brookie. Bad camera!

[tags]fly fishing, fishing, smokies, smoky mountains, gsmnp, brook trout[/tags]