this, you think, is classic. So does everyone else. Even a novice angler can “read” the quiet run and the flat pool. Almost anyone can locate feeding fish here. And there are plenty of fishermen capable of achieving long, drag-free floats on gentle, smooth-flowing currents. Of course, everyone who comes to the river finds this pool. Someone’s always fishing here, and its trout are well-educated. That’s why, on heavily-fished trout streams, the angler who seeks solitude and eager trout gives that rock-studded fast water a second look. Identifying Fishy Pockets Pocket-water rivers come in all sizes and shapes. Many classic trout streams alternate long, slow pools and rushing pocket water. Hallowed eastern rivers such as the Battenkill, the Beaverkill, and the Willowemoc—rivers whose every pool has a name and a parking area and a well-beaten path leading to the water’s edge—feature delicious stretches of pocket water loaded with trout that rarely see a fly. Big rumbling western rivers, such as the Madison, offer pocket-water fishing on a larger scale. Little streams that tumble off the spines of the Appalachians and the Rockies are characterized by pocket water, too. You can even find lightly-fished sections of pocket water in many crowded tailwaters and spring creeks. Pocket water is characterized by surging currents that swirl around and over gravel, rocks, and boulders. In places, there might be standing whitewater. There are eddies and slicks, deep holes and riffles. At first glance, such stretches may appear hostile to fish and angler alike, but if you know how to read it, you’ll find pocket water loaded with trout eager to eat your fly. There are soft spots behind each of those boulders, cushions in front of them, and smooth, food-carrying runs where the currents funnel between the rocks. The prime pocket behind a boulder is the “eye,” where the divided currents converge. Every slick patch on the surface mirrors a likely trout-holding bump or depression on the riverbottom. A foot-long trout can lie comfortably in a shallow bowl no bigger than a grown man’s footprint. The plunge pool under a miniature waterfall creates a trout-holding pocket. Any edge—often betrayed by a foam line—where quickwater rubs against a slower current is a prime spot. On many brawling rivers, the shaded cushion of slower water that flows next to the bank is the choicest pocket of all and the place where the river’s biggest trout lurk. These soft little pockets give trout everything they want: Comfortable places to rest, protection from predators, cool, well-oxygenated water, and a continuous supply of food. The angler who knows how to identify trout-holding pockets and drift a fly through them can catch a lot of fish.





