Bows and Browns and a Crock
5/16/26
I go up to Potter County to fish Kettle creek and surrounding water to mostly dry fly fish.
I set up my camper in Ole Bull Tuesday evening. Wednesday was an overcast day and the lower part of Kettle was flowing on the high side and the current was fast. When I tried to wade out thigh high deep the current was pushing my body hard as if my companions were nudging me, in this predicament, “you go first!” I was uncomfortable so I stayed in the water around knee deep. I caught trout on Wooly Buggers but really wanted to dry fly fish but the conditions were harsh.
The water was cold, the current was fast and the cloud cover over took the sky like a faded blanket. There wasn’t anything rising and the only activity above water was a few small caddis. To even try to drift a dry the trout would have to be Superman quick to snatch the dry before it passed by. I didn’t waste much time and packed up and drove up creek where the water was narrower and not so fast in the project area.
The water was still higher than normal but still kind of fast. Not seeing any surface activity, under the gray sky, I casted Wooly Buggers for a spell and smoked another cigar.
Wednesday evening and night it stormed and poured down rain. I knew the Kettle was going to be high and currently fast. So, Thursday morning I packed my gear and went to Young Womans Creek to fish.
Friday I fished Kettle not so far down creek. I caught some trout under the surface but I was still itching to dry fly fish. With no rain the past couple of days, Saturday looked like my best choice. The sun was suppose to shine and after noon the temps were supposed to to reach in the 80’s.
I woke up early, had breakfast and drove down creek to my destination. I was first parked aside the dirt road. It was if I was there for the early bird special waiting for the breakfast bar to open. I took my time getting my gear together. I assembled my G2 Scott Fly rod with weight forward fly line. There was supposed to be little wind and this medium action rod is the best for presenting dry flies with easy smooth casts. I made sure I had plenty of caddis flies, March Browns and Sulfurs beside my usual stash. I grabbed a few cigars and looked up to the sky. There wasn’t any sign of rain and any clouds above were just streaks that moved below the blue sky like the spent fuel that trail behind a jetliner. The sun was already rising behind me. I felt like I had a front row seat wherever I decided to choose to stay for the morning session.
As I waded out I was casting Woolly Buggers watching for any rises. I spent, maybe a half hour, before another fisherman showed up. He fished down creek from me. I wanted to get into the middle of the creek to fish the far bank. I caught a few rainbows on a bugger before I got to within casting distance of the far bank.
I saw a few risers but the only thing I saw flying around was small caddis.I knotted on a deer hair caddis and was casting to the risers and about. I’d catch a trout now and then but it wasn’t till near noon when the bigger trout were hungry. There was a rise across creek within my range. I made a cast that dropped the caddis up from the rise and watched it drift into the zone. He didn’t seem to care. Maybe I had the wrong color? I tried another caddis shade but couldn’t get a strike anywhere. I saw a small sulfur and then a March Brown come off the water. Trout started to dot the surface but not big surface splashes. I decided to knot on a March Brown parachute. It was on a #10 2x long hook. That may sound odd but I’ve done well with trout rising to it on wavy surface current. “Give them something they can see” is my theory.
My first cast to the riser cross creek came up and grabbed it with a hardy rise. I reared back the long length of line and had him tight lined. He put up a good battling fight all the way to the net. He was a nice size brown trout.
I continued to cast out a March Brown #10 para. and the trout accepted it like a birthday gift. I missed a few, especially casting up creek, but I was hooking up more than I missed. The ones I was hooking up to were nice size browns and rainbows. They all put up good fighting battles. Some made it to the net while others came loose nearer me.

I surprised one across and down from me in the faster wavy current. He was feeding pretty regularly. I couldn’t get a good drift to him so I waded a bit downstream but keeping my distance. I made a cast and watched my March Brown drift within his eye sight. The March Brown drifted on the rolls of the waves and dips. The size of my MB he couldn’t miss as it drifted near. He rose with a big surface splash as if a coconut fell from the tree above. I reared back the line and the fly rod bowed towards the splash. I could feel the power in the taker as line peeled off the spool. I held on tight when all of a sudden he broke the water surface with a powerful leap in the air. His full body was exposed as if he was wanting to see who was on the other end. He came down with a splash and I could still feel him on the line. Within seconds he surfaced and rose again. This time twisting his body and shaking his head. The line went limp as he splashed down. He spit the hook the second time up like it was his first bite into a lima bean! I’m sure he’s not going to bite into another similar looking March Brown. I continued casting MB’s and caddis and hooking up but there were long dry spells in between.
The temperature was rising and when the sun cleared the spotty cloud cover it shown down its hot rays like an over heating sauna room. Nothing was rising anyway and I wasn’t getting any responses from any trout that hadn’t been hooked.
I waded out and headed to Cross Fork for lunch. After lunch I went back to the camper for a short nap. It was around 4:00 when I arose from my nap. The temperature cooled down some so for the heck of it I decided to fish down creek from the campground. The spot I wanted was taken by a nymph fisherman. I moved down from him getting his OK that I was out of his range. He was doing well catching trout, underneath and an indicator, on whatever he was using. I on the other hand, having good noon time hook ups with dry flies, decided to stick with it.
I knotted on a Deer Hair caddis and made cross creek casts to the slower current on the far side of the main wavy current. The trout only had a few seconds to take my dry before the current would sweep it down creek. They must have been pretty hungry cause it didn’t take too many seconds to tick by before they grabbed my Caddis.
When I got back to the truck it was 7:00. I was hungry and played out. The nap might of gotten me a second wind but the last hour and a half took the wind out of me. I was tired, sore, and I was hungry. I had heated venison stew in the crockpot in the morning and had a half bottle of white wine to finish off!
~doubletaper