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January 10th, 2005
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Q. My question concerns a trout's field of vision. On limestone trout streams, brown trout are tough to catch because they can see you before you see them. How far in front and how far in back can a trout see? I have spooked trout even when approaching from behind like the book says to do. Nothing I do seems to work except to fish very early or late in the day when there is not much light. Thanks for any reply.
A.
You've broached a complicated subject; the subject
of how a fish sees takes up over 10 pages in one
text I have. I'll try to simplify it to get at
what you are interested in.
A trout looking upward, we'll assume straight up,
can see through a circular area that is bounded
by the angle at which light is refracted back
into the water from the surface. This angle is
roughly 45o from the vertical and thus about 90o
in total. The size of this circular window increases
with depth, so a fish in 5' of water will have a
larger window than one just under the surface.
That tells you how much of an area a trout can see
through, but doesn't tell you how far to the sides
it can see. You are familiar with the way that
light rays bend in water; things aren't where they
appear because of this refraction. The same thing
happens in reverse for the fish. Light rays bend
away from the edge of their circle of vision; thus,
they can see objects that are outside of the "line
of sight" from their eye to the edge of the circle.
Unfortunately, we can't see this circular window
to gauge how far to stay back or down. The only
rule of thumb is that the closer you are to the
vertical above a fish, the more likely it is to
see you and the lower and further back you stay,
the better chance you will have of not being seen.
One other point you alluded to. Even when staying
low and behind objects, don't forget that a fish
can be spooked by senses other than sight. Most
importantly here is the lateral line on the sides
of fish. These nerve endings are sensitive to
pressure changes resulting from such things as
heavy walking or jostling of rocks on the stream
bottom. These can send a fish away just as sure
as a visual sighting.
~ C. E. (Bert) Cushing, aka Streamdoctor 105 W. Cherokee Dr. Estes Park, CO 80517 Phone: 970-577-1584 Email: streamdoctor@aol.com
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