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Author Topic: Fishing the Spring River  (Read 1146 times)
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Kevin
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« on: December 16, 2009, 09:34:18 AM »

The Spring also has chain pickerel but I have never caught one.
 

The Spring River is bigger water than the Norfork but smaller than the White. It is quite wadable but a lot of the best water has a bedrock bottom that is pretty slick and treacherous to wade. I recommend that you wear studded boots and carry a wading staff.


If you want to avoid bedrock, I would recommend fishing at Lassiter’s, a public access in Mammoth Springs, Arkansas. To get to the Lassiter Access  turn south from SR 9, Main Street in Mammoth Springs, (the last corner before 9 intersects US 63) onto 2nd Street and following 2nd St. and then River View Drive for about .75 miles until you see the access parking area on your left. It is directly behind the Riverview Motel (which is located on US Highway 63).

 

This is the spot where I learned to fly fish. It is also where I met my wife, Lori. I was teaching a fly fishing school there for my fly fishing club, the Mid South Fly Fishers, and she was my student. That class worked out very well for me and it is a spot I will never forget. It is a broad area of the river with no deep holes but plenty of easy wading. There are a lot of weed beds that hold trout. My favorite flies here are red San Juan worms, pheasant tail nymphs and olive woolly buggers. It is a great place for novices.

My favorite place to fish is the Dam 3 access. This is where the State Trout Hatchery is located. Turn west onto CR 342 from US Highway 63 two and one tenth miles South of Mammoth Springs. Cross the railroad tracks and park in the parking lot across from the Hatchery. The Trout Hatchery is located on an island with a dam running across it on the upper end of it. The channel running in front of the parking lot is productive and easy to wade. This is where Lori filmed her sequence for the television show, Adventure Guides. The section at the end of the island is laden with big rocks and bedrock and is more difficult to negotiate. The top flies for this access are gold ribbed hare’s ears, pheasant tails, red San Juan worms, egg patterns and olive woolly buggers.

For the adventurous angler that wants to get into some bigger fish, I recommend walking the tracks down stream. About a half mile downstream is a productive section that does not get nearly as much pressure as the area near the accesses. You must scramble the bank and the wading is much more treacherous. This is where I have caught my biggest fish on the Spring, a twenty seven inch bruiser of a rainbow. I prefer to fish this section with woolly buggers or Clouser minnows on a sink tip line.

For more accesses or additional information on restaurants, lodging and canoe rentals, I recommend that you obtain a copy of the Home Waters at any local fly shop. This book also has a great map of the area.

I have fished and guided on the Spring River for over twenty five years and I love it! It is a great place to fish when they are running a lot of water here. Give it a try.

 John Berry
(870) 435-2169
berrybrothers@infodash.com
www.berrybrothersguides.com
« Last Edit: December 16, 2009, 09:40:32 AM by Kevin » Logged
DeerWoods26
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« Reply #1 on: December 17, 2009, 09:40:42 AM »

You can stop at pretty much any of the campgrounds and fish for just a couple of bucks. Many Islands and Riverside campgrounds are good places to start, but there are tons of accesses. It's a great river that really is known more for recreation in the summer than it is for fishing. Good article.
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Kevin
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« Reply #2 on: December 19, 2009, 12:36:55 AM »

I am actually up right now loading up my Sage fly rod and Ross reel getting ready to head to North Central Arkansas for the holidays.

I plan on hitting the Spring River, as well as the Norfork River, if I have time. Also, I've booked a trip with Shane Goodner in Hot Springs on Monday. If you want to catch some trout or smallmouth in Central Arkansas, you guys need to give this guy a call.

He is great and just a damn joy to be out on the lake with all day. He guides mainly below Lake Catherine and December is THE month for catching fish, apparently. I'm pumped, to say the least.
« Last Edit: December 19, 2009, 10:22:43 AM by Kevin » Logged
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