Driftwood Outdoors: Common carp offer exciting fishing opportunities

The common carp is a hard-fighting fish that can be caught on flies or spinning tackle.
The common carp is a hard-fighting fish that can be caught on flies or spinning tackle.

Standing on a bluff above a clear creek starring down into a large, deep pool, I wipe sweat from my brow while observing cruising shadows below.

The carp are schooled up and actively feeding just below a small rifle. They are prime targets.

Common carp are found in all of the lower 48 states, Hawaii, Canada, Mexico, Europe, Asia, and more. From the banks of the Saint Lawrence River to the California Coast and just about everywhere in between, fishermen pursue carp using many different techniques in diverse environments. Carp are found in clear lakes, rivers, small creeks, and flooded fields. Their preferred habitat is slow or still water, with a vegetative, soft bottom in shallow backwater bays and along shorelines.

Stalking carp in small creeks with fly fishing equipment has become one of my favorite summertime outdoor activities. Now, I really enjoy catching trout, smallmouth and goggle eye, but hooking into a 10-pound plus carp on a fly rod in close quarters is an absolute thrill.

When a carp takes off screaming down stream and empties your reel down to the backing, it's exhilarating and puts catching a 12-inch trout in perspective. Of course, using a spinning outfit can be just as exciting.

Longtime Michigan salmon and steelhead guide, Kevin Morlock, has become a recognized carp expert during the last decade.

"Few aspects of my job are as enjoyable as watching a client change their perception of carp," Morlock said. "As soon they hook into their first carp, I watch disbelief disappear before my eyes. Most people hardly believe the strength of these fish. It's great."

When I'm creek fishing for carp, I'm sight fishing. This means I spot the fish and then work out a plan to try and catch it. Look for cruising carp along the shore and lay a cast out in front of where the fish is heading. Let the fly settle to the bottom. Wait until the carp and the fly are together in an area the size of a basketball hoop. Pop the fly a couple of times to get the fish's attention. If the carp turns on the fly, gently pop it a couple more times to make the fly appear as if it's trying to escape, then stop. Wait. Be still, quiet and most of all, patient.

When you see the carp suck in your fly, or you feel the tug of the carp swimming off, set the hook. Now hold on.

Carp are omnivores. They feed on plants, insects and crustaceans. Flies should imitate what carp are feeding on in a specific body of water. Minnows, crayfish, leeches and mayflies are found just everywhere carp are, so patterns tied to imitate these are often good choices. Morlock's Carp Bunny, Whitlock's Near-Nuff Crawfish, Clouser's swimming Nymph and wooly buggers are a handle full of flies known to catch carp. Spin fisherman can use these flies too by adding a few split shots to your line.

Polarized sunglasses, a net, and waders or wading shoes are important pieces of equipment when pursuing carp. Polarized sunglasses help when searching for carp along the shore or in shallow water bays. You can beach carp if you don't want to drag a net along, but netting is best. A small trout net, like you see in most fly shops, won't cut it. Wearing waders or wading shoes is recommended when stalking in the water. You don't want to take any chances of cutting your feet on an old bottle or piece of metal.

Although common carp are officially classified as a "rough fish" and have been looked down upon for years, they are beginning to gain mainstream appeal. As more and more anglers begin to look beyond past perceptions of these formidable fish they are realizing the common carp offers excellent angling traits of size, fight and numbers in water close to home.

Most Midwestern rivers and streams have populations of common carp. When the weather is too hot to sit in a boat or on the bank, slip on some wading shoes and spend some time wading your local river or stream in pursuit of one of the hardest fighting fish you can tangle with.

See you down the trail.

III

Brandon Butler is an outdoors columnist for the News Tribune. Contact him at [email protected].

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