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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
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    Shepherdsville
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    5,596
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    Re: Gatlinburg Fishing?

    Quote Originally Posted by troutcrazy View Post
    Fished there last year. I went to the smokey mt. fishing store in Gatlinburg. Guy knew his stuff. I fished out off of hwy 401 10 or so miles from Gatbrg. I was told that you can only use single hook lulres, so most of my lures were useless. I bought a ton there at his shop which made me think that he might not have been all that truthful about the single hook thing, but I did catch a ton of trout and ran into some nice folks along the way.

    The guy wasn't pulling your leg, anywhere in the national park is restricted to single hooks.

    BTW, the best fly shop is in Townsend, TN. The folks at Little River Outfitters are an awesome bunch and I always go out of my way to stop there when I am down that way. Here is their web site: http://littleriveroutfitters.com/

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
    Location
    Evansville Area of Southern IN, USA.
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    Re: Gatlinburg Fishing?

    Little River Camp Ground in Townsend is where I use to camp. Townsend is the quiet side of the area. It's closer to Cades Cove too. And there are no outlet malls in Townsend. LOL So you can eat all you M&M and won't have to drop them on the floor.

    Gatlinburg, TN, Pigeon Forge, TN and Townsend are my favorite vacation spots.

    I might add that the hooks have to be single hooks and BARBLESS. Also no fish attractor scents are allowed on the baits. Now this is inside the park.

    The rules are different in the areas outside the park. Might want to check with the bait shops or park rangers to find out for sure.

    I purchased a book on the mountain streams and still have it.

    Cades cove is the most fertile stream in the entire park. There is a limestone bed that the creek runs though and this helps to raise the water's pH. Acid rain has lowered a lot of the streams pH and aquatic insects don't do well in water with low pH. Acid water that is. The limestone bedrock in Abrams creek allows the water to be more neutral and there is abundant aquatic insect life in this stream. That's why there are big fish in Abrams Creek. Most of the mountain is granite and granite won't neutralize the acid rainfall.

    If you go up above a certain elevation you may run into some Brook Trout. Not sure what the regs are these days or how the Brook trout are doing. But they were off limits back in the early 1990's when I last fished in the park.

    Little Pigeon River and Pigeon River along little pigeon River road has a lot of spots where you can pull over and climb down to the stream and fish.

    And look out for the bears or the wild pigs. I only saw a few bears and they were all in the parks picnic area. The bears like to come down and run the people away from their food and then eat anything that they can find. Most people don't argue with the bears. LOL

    I have smelled what I though was a bear along the trail but never ran across one while I was out hiking or fishing in the streams.

    Stay for a week or more and put a few days aside for the wife to go shopping and then a few days for you to fish. That makes the wife happy.

    Seems like every time I fished the streams the water levels were very low. I caught a few small rainbow trout using a fly rod and a cadis fly nymph.

    The park ranger checked my bait and was looking at the hook to make sure if was barb-less and didn't have any attractant on the bait. I was fishing just downstream from the ELKMONT Ranger Station and campground. I saw huge trout in the deeper parts of this stream right by the main road going into the campground. There is a steep drop from the road to the stream that's lined with rip rap. There is a deep pool there that you can see from the roadway. It's about 15 ft deep or so and you can see the huge boulders on the bottom as the water is so clear. I think that's my favorite spot in the entire park. But the trout would not touch my baits. They would look at them and just move aside and then sip something from the surface film. What ever they were eating was too small for my old tired eyes to see. Those trout are educated and hard to fool The ranger told me to fish the rapids and that I had a better chance to catch a trout in the rapids or turbulent water.

    Get some dry stocking foot waders and wade in the streams with a fly rod.

    Quote Originally Posted by Tim_T View Post
    The guy wasn't pulling your leg, anywhere in the national park is restricted to single hooks.

    BTW, the best fly shop is in Townsend, TN. The folks at Little River Outfitters are an awesome bunch and I always go out of my way to stop there when I am down that way. Here is their web site: http://littleriveroutfitters.com/

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