Feather River, Yellow Creek

You Should’ve Been There 45 Years Ago

Yellow Creek Meadows

With 95-100 degree temperatures in the first week of June, I’m going to say its unofficially summer. School is officially over which leaves me with more time to spend on the water. I have a feeling this summer is going to be a long hot one.
This week I spent some time on the Feather fishing for steelhead as a small warm up for Yellow Creek where Amanda and I fished and camped for the first time.

Feather River
Its been awhile since I’ve fished for steelhead but the low-flow section is looking good with hatches of caddis, mayflies, and midges. The CFS flow is higher than usual due to the farming season but wadeable if you are careful. I’ve always found that the hardest part of steelhead fishing is finding the fish. Taking the time to poke through pocket water, drift through riffles, and tight-line through deep holes are the only ways you’ll find these beauties.

Wild Beauty

After eliminating all of my usual holes and riffles, I finally found where the fish were. However, the only way I could present my flies to the fish was by stand upstream, dead-drift my indicator and at the same time feed line directly downstream. This technique can be difficult to pull-off because if you set the hook, you could potentially pull the flies out of the fishes mouth instead of hook them. I was able to get two BIG beautiful fish to take with this method.

At first I thought I had hooked into a big sucker or a spring salmon because it felt heavy but didn’t fight hard. After getting the fish closer towards me I saw that it was a steelhead. There was no way my dinky net would be able net it, so instead I did the famous steelhead tail grab and brought it to the bank where I could admire it. Definitely one of the better fish I’ve caught out there. A couple more casts in I hooked another steelhead that was a lot more chrome but lost I it before I could net it. My luck ran out the rest of the day so I decided to call it quits. It was starting to get hot and I didn’t bring my sunscreen!

Yellow Creek
Manda and I planned a weekend camping trip to Yellow Creek to beat the heat. I’d never been there before but have heard and read good things about it. The road to the campground off HWY 89 was well-maintained and easy to drive on. Once we drove over Butt Creek bridge and through the woods we finally arrived at our destination. Meadows of tall green grass, a spring creek flowing through the center, and pine trees surrounding the borders between valley and forest. The great Humbug Valley!

Humbug Valley

Once we set up camp, I headed out to scout what I was up against. Never have I seen water so clear and pristine with a bottom mixed of volcanic stone and aquatic weed beds. The tall grass lined the entire bank and thick bushes grew over parts of the creek providing ample shade and cover for the fish. As I waded upstream I saw little fish dart out of the weed beds to try and get avoid me. The fish were small but they were there.

Small Creek Fly Fishing

“You should have been there 45 years ago!” was what I was told during my visit to the local fly shop.
The spring creek section of Yellow Creek was once known to have supported trophy-sized brown trout. Several decades have passed since the last big brown was caught however rumors tell of a few living trophies that have defied extinction. The creek hosts an abundance of weed beds and undercuts that could help keep the big ones hidden during the day until night when they come out to feed. My expectations and chances of finding a trophy were extremely low. However, before I could start looking for a trophy I had to first figure out how to fish the creek.

Beautiful Cool Slow Water

Spring creek fly fishing is a whole new level of fly fishing. Presentation, fly selection, and stealth are critical. With an emphasis on the stealth, you basically need to become a trout ninja blending into the grass, stalking the fish that you see, and try to make them rise. This is a challenge that will make you forget about the fish’s size and was by far the greatest fun of the trip.

First fish, a Nice Brown Trout
First Brookies I’ve Ever Caught

The fish I caught out there were not easy to catch. It took some hard work to try and accurately present the fly to them without spooking them away. The creek hosts a rare trifecta of trout. Brookies, browns, and bows. This trip will always be remembered as the one where I caught my first brook trout!

Rare Meadow Bow

Yellow Creek’s meadow section is an fantastic place for small spring creek fly fishing. Something I notice was that the fish were only to be found within
15 minutes of the campground. The further upstream or downstream I waded the less fish I found. Perhaps it is the natural degradation of the area or maybe the fish just like it there better? What ever it may be, I believe that CalTrout did a great job restoring this unique spring creek habitat.

All fisheries go through a cycle prime and decline and many believe Yellow Creek is going through the latter. Here’s to hoping that it gets better so I don’t have to tell the next generation of Yellow Creek visitors “You should have been there X amount of years ago when there were actually fish there!”

Although I couldn’t find a trophy fish, I can cross Yellow Creek off my bucket list as a place I must experience. There are very few spring creeks in California as accessible as Yellow Creek and every fly fishermen owes it to themselves to challenge their skills here.

Tiechert Pond

Chico’s Tiechert Pond

Tiechert Ponds

One of my favorite characteristics of largemouth bass is their explosive topwater tenacity. Unlike salmonoids that quietly rise to eat whats on top, a bass eating off the top sounds like someone threw a stick of dynamite into the water. Convincing a nice size bass to eat off is off the top is one of my top favorite adrenaline rushing ways to fish.

Imagine throwing a frog pattern into a small 2ft hole surrounded by weed mats. You strip it once, you strip it again, the frog creates a V-ring each strip moving a bit of water. The frog sits their just floating. You being to stare at your fly and with each second your focus gets stronger and stronger. Your hand gets into position as you ready to get the hook. Time stops… SPLUSH! You set the hook!

Largemouth bass can be found in just about every body of water but very few places hold bass that eat off the top with such ferocity. Several factors that can make bass prime topwater predators are weed/aquatic plant growth, prey, and cover. Ponds and lakes with these characteristics replicate ecosystems in the South where largemouth bass have evolved to become big mean green eating machines. We aren’t talking record breakers that get big off eating planted trout, we are talking about specimens with the most natural and wild growth.

You Never Know If You Might Get A Big One Out Here

There are very few ponds and lakes in California that have the Southern everglades look that we dream of: lily pads, fallen trees, duckweed, trees growing out of the water. In my opinion these are the coolest and most ideal places to fish for largemouth bass. In Chico we have Tiechert Pond which has the ideal aquatic vegetation that supports a number of species within the swamp biome.

Tiechert pond is made up of three ponds. I refer to them as the East, West, and South ponds. There are several access points to the ponds but the one I usually use is the bike trail along Humboldt Road.

  • The West pond has a small boat launch and is very small compared to the other two. I’ve caught more bullfrogs than bass here which makes it a fun place to go if your looking to hook into some frogs!
  • The East pond is the most fished because it is the easiest to access. This is the pond I usually launch into. The water is deeper here and the fish like hold under and near the edges of cover.
  • The South pond is shallower but is more ideal for largemouth in comparison to the East pond. This pond is fished the least because it is the most difficult to access. The only way to access this pond is to use a kayak or pontoon boat. I float tube this pond all the time and though not ideal, it is manageable if you slow down and navigate around the timber.
Greedy Dink

I find that fishing Tiechert pond in any other season besides the summer can be unproductive and difficult. In early summer as the weather gets hot, the pond becomes matted with weed growth putting the fish that were in deeper water near or under the mats. The largemouth can get pretty hefty out there and I would recommend an 8wt rod to ensure that you can land them after they dig themselves into the weeds.

Throwing anything other than topwater frogs can be pretty difficult out on Tiechert, but damsel fly dries and low riding buggers are manageable.
The pond is open year around and if you are willing to put in the time there you can hook some big bass, we’re talking about 8+ pounds.

and Another One…
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