Benny wrote:This is quite interesting, people actually voted "Yes, I don't care if the wild trout are stressed or not" Makes me wonder about some of the guys on here
Why would any ethical fly fisherman not care about the wild trout that bring so much joy when fly fishing for them? I hope who ever voted "Yes, I don't care if the wild trout are stressed or not" were just kidding and did it as a joke.... The bottom line, if your serious about keeping the resource intact, fly fishing for wild trout when they're stressed is not the smartest thing to be doing. Then again if you don't really care, I guess it would be tough crap for the wild trout and all the rest of the guys that find joy out of fly fishing for them.
Benny, I just think its people who didn't like to options presented. But I also think in some cases this gets overblown. I'm personally planning on getting a thermometer for this summer's fishing, but last summer, most of the places I fish always were "* that water is cold!".
Now, I'm not saying that's every stream. And I can see how, especially some streams in the Angeles range could get dangerously warm, as many of them are often fished at quite low elevation.
For me, if I start seeing a warming trend this year, I will just move to higher elevations to find suitable water to fish, and/or fish for bluegill or something.
Obviously I'm not planning on fishing when high temps/low oxygen threaten the well being of the fishery.