Since the beginning of the year I’ve been enjoying time as a homeowner and new father of two. A busy schedule has left me with little time to myself however with all the water that we received this year it doesn’t seem like I’ve been missing out on much.
This year California was blessed with a heavy snowpack after suffering from a severe drought for the past several years. As summer approaches our rivers, streams, and creeks continue to rage with monstrous flows making them extremely dangerous to recreate on. Most rivers probably won’t be safe to play on until July therefore it’s best to shift our focus to stillwaters.
After about six months I was finally able to find some fishing time and attempted to test my stillwater skills on Buck’s Lake for a third time. I came well prepared with my float tube this time and planned to fish around the Buck’s Creek inlet again. Bucks Lake is currently over capacity for water storage at 109%.
As I drove up to Bucks Lake I was able to observe the amount of snowpack that was still high up in the mountains. The Bucks Lake area was still surrounded by snow making it look more like late April rather than early June. Bucks Creek was flowing nicely and completely filled in with still more snow-melt to come. The water clarity this trip was about 3ft which was a bit unusual as Bucks Lake is usually one of the more clearer lakes that I’ve been on. The weather called for possible thunderstorms all week which had me a bit worried. The fishing would either be really good in the morning until the storms roll in or completely suck due to unstable weather.
I was surprised to have the Bucks Creek inlet all to myself both days I was there. Granted I was fishing in the middle of week, Bucks Lake usually sees a lot more people recreating on it this time of the year. My typical stillwater plan is a two rod setup: an 8.5ft 5WT floating line with an indicator rig with a balanced leech and a 9.5ft 6WT sinking line with a woolly bugger. As I made my way into the water my fish finder marked an average depth of about 15ft around the cove of the inlet. The water temperature the first day was 55 degrees and the following day it rose to 60 degrees. The inlet had a temperature of 48 degrees. There were midge shucks and adults all over the surface of the water and I saw small fish rising for them all throughout the cove. Now that I had all the data I needed it was time to turn that data into results.
I like to start by searching for fish with the sinking line setup. I cast around the area for about an hour and had some possible nips but nothing willing to commit. As I trolled to get to a different area I felt a strong tug and set the hook. After an exciting short battle I brought in my first fish a nice size brown trout.
I continued to troll and strip retrieve and hooked several more fish that managed to beat me. After losing fish after fish I became frustrated and decided to head further into the Bucks Creek inlet to see if I could find any fish. The water in the inlet was completely clear and I kept a sharp eye out for fish. I found several good size rainbows in a seam and in a deep pool. Due to the shallower water I switched to my indicator setup. I hooked several more fish but only landed three of them.
Once I got bored of the inlet I made my way back to the cove and switched back to the sinking line. I was able to hook and land a few more nice browns and noticed that the browns were feeding within the cove and the rainbows were more in the inlet of Bucks Creek.
They say don’t leave fish to find fish however my curiosity broke the rule. After a successful day around the Bucks Creek inlet I wanted to explore the Mill Creek inlet on the north side of the lake. I arrived at the Mill Creek day use parking after about 15-20 minutes of driving and quickly set-up my tube to get in some time before the thunderstorm off in the distance rolled in. The water in the Mill Creek cove was running much warmer at 63 degrees. The depth was about the same as the Bucks Creek inlet. I managed to get one brown trout to the tube and got about halfway to Mill Creek before I heard the first crack of thunder. Time was up. I quickly waddled along the shoreline until I got to the inlet of Mill Creek. I was surprised to find the inlet much smaller than I had imagined. The creek was flowing much stronger and faster than Bucks Creek making it impossible to fish. I made a few cast into mouth of Mill Creek but stopped once the thunder started getting louder.
The afternoon thunderstorm had kicked me off the water but I went back the following day and caught more some more fish before another predicted thunderstorm ended my time. I finally had some success at Bucks Lake and it was a quality over quantity trip. I am very much a catch-and-release fisherman however I couldn’t help but harvest my limit for my friends and family. I predict that the water will be too warm for trout in about two or three weeks. Now that I know when to fish Bucks Lake I’m looking to forward to many more trips in the future.
Thanks for the great report. Looks like a very good day in the water. I went to Fuller Lake and I got the same storm system you got – hail too which just made it impossible. Still grateful for the water and storms, though.
Hey Matt,
Thanks for the report. Is that a current picture of the Middle Fork Feather? I’m heading up there this weekend.
~Jeff F. (from Keine’s Board)
That is the middle fork at Red Bridge. I didn’t catch anything. Insane flows. The MF around Clio and Graeagle looked somewhat fishable though.
Great report Matt. Only been to Bucks Lake once and no fishing was on the agenda (work related trip). Always wondered if it was worth making a fishing trip out of. Will put it on the list.