Long Pond is a 275-acre body of water located in Parsonsfield, York County, Maine (see The Maine Atlas and Gazetteer map 4 D2). The public access is at the southern tip of the pond and consists of a narrow and poorly maintained hardtop boat launch located on Road Between the Ponds, off Joe Berry Road. This pond is moderately developed and embedded in a forested region in the northwestern corner of York County, a couple of miles from the NH border. It is open to angling between October 1 and December 31 but using artificial lures only and with the stipulation that all salmonids must be released alive and at once.
I selected Long Pond to go fishing this morning with 14-year old Geovani because the state stocked it earlier this fall with 250 13″ brook trout in preparation for the upcoming ice fishing season. I successfully trolled this pond for bass last month, and noticed that the area around the boat launch was relatively shallow and sandy, and therefore ideal for wader fishing.
The water is crystal clear and the bottom is firm, sandy, and unobstructed. Ideal wading conditions!
We reach the boat launch at Long Pond by 8 am. It’s a chilly (33°F) but sunny and wind-still fall morning, just the way I like it. We don our waders and walk into the water armed with our ultralight spinning rods, a small spinning reel, and #2 Mepps spinners. I removed one of the three hooks from the treble and flattened the barb on one of the two remaining hooks to minimize harm to the fish. I start fishing to the left of the launch, and Geovani casts to the right. The water is crystal-clear, the bottom is sandy, firm, unobstructed, and vegetation free. In fact, this place is one of the nicest ones I have fished using waders over the last several years! I see two rises on my left. I toss my spinner in that general direction and hook a fish five casts later. It is a male brook trout in brilliant spawning colors. Yes, I found trout! Giovani wades over to my side and we start to systematically fish the whole area.
And the brookies keep coming. They are sitting right on the bottom in less than 4 ft. of water. Geovani is giddy from excitement every time he hooks and lands a fish. The fish slowly move to the left in response to the commotion. When the bite slows down, we just move 50-75 ft., reconnect, and catch a few more trout. This kind of fishing is so much fun! We are also hoping for a “double hooking”, when we both fight a fish at the same time. This wish is granted, but then the trout move again, and this time out or range. The bite comes to a hard stop, and we are unable to reconnect with the brookies after 15 minutes of fruitless casting around. Oh well, it’s time to move on to our next pond anyway. Angling does not get any better than this: Geovani beat his grandpa (his 7 fish to my 5), the bite was strong, the weather conditions were perfect, and, as always in the fall, we had the fish and the place all to ourselves!
The results: I caught 5 brook trout (largest = 14 inches) and Giovani caught 7 brook trout (largest = 14 inches) in 45 minutes of spectacular fall fishing.
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