![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjUAE2YgYTLNzaWeDSQwT4xFnl4-LiadEkgiP_eBifG5iVuNRT6NIoSKtH7DQSAkb5RayugOcfmX1Pa6YrlYyCfAd_hE46KP8MYUnAkavNrlW4SAdLntxk9vbBBaMzU0UuFmZwrK62OEx08/s400/kenduskeag+stream2.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiXK9s4sktPLLTHVEF2vLSmjlhkAWd1MQg7dOyfW5CXmOS3snt7jZbFeluZcSlHJ1wiUHbo0_aopq2-MMngVsCyT0JczBJj1nEWvbZmC-8JTSLu3M9sX3OfLkctZfCbWvP5VC_x6BCjGnns/s400/kenduskeag+stream3.jpg)
I stopped a couple of weeks ago along the upper Penobscot river which is also black and in a spot that was moving but not rapids. I saw the fish rising. I think the fish like mosquitoes because they about carried me off.
I was also amazed that being 45 miles inland from the Atlantic ocean that the Penobscot is affected by tidal change.
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