Yuba goldfields, Yuba River

It’s Almost Time To Come Home

Pond Bass

Its funny how we never truly appreciate the area where we grew up until we leave. I was raised in Marysville, California a small town full of history. From the historical brick buildings downtown to the bridge that divides the county, Marysville was the one of the few areas in the valley where travelers congregated and stayed during the days of the Gold Rush. One of the reasons why people settled here was due to its proximity to two of the most important rivers in California, the Yuba and Feather River.

Before I started fly fishing I always thought the area I grew up in was boring. Everything that was “fun” was across the bridge in Yuba City. The mall and the theater were the only highlights of “Things To Do In Marysville” that I knew about. However, after I took up fly fishing a whole new world began to open up.

Fly fishing trips to Ellis Lake, the Yuba River, and Feather River, have started to become more frequent and I have come to truly appreciate these places. There are many other lakes, rivers, ponds, and streams that I have yet to experience and explore around the Marysville area and from a quick glance at the map, it looks like I have a lot of catching up to do.

Amanda and I are planning on moving out of Chico to start the next chapter of our lives this summer and like the
salmon returning to its native waters in the fall, I am coming home.

Yuba Goldfields
My plan this Saturday was to float tube one of the bigger ponds in the goldfield. However, I wasn’t able to because I forgot my life-jacket in Chico. Safety first! Instead I wet waded and fished one of my favorites ponds the majority of the day and caught a lot of 12”+ bass on topwater with a popper and frog pattern. Although the bass don’t seem to get past the 2# mark in this particular pond, there are a ton of them and they were are all willing to chase and eat a frog pattern. I actually had the chance to watch a 2# bass stalk my frog and eat it 2 feet in front of me. The fishing action was insane!

A Good Average

It was a fun time bushwhacking through tall grass and thorny blackberry bushes trying to find better casting angles. My battle scars this trip include rough thumbs from handling the bass and several scratches on my legs from running through thorns and sticks. Luckily no ticks.

Monster Bluegills

The entire lower Yuba River area can be a very confusing place to navigate around due to private property. I personally believe that the entire area should be made into a wildlife refuge similar to the Oroville Wildlife Area to protect anadromous fish spawning habitat. Maybe with more people being aware of the area and using it for recreation we can someday make it happen.

Yuba River
The Yuba River is one of the streams that I am looking forward to fishing the most when I move back. I haven’t fished the Yuba River since February and my visit on Saturday was a reminder on how difficult it was to fish. I left a lot of my trout gear at home so I was pretty limited on fly presentation this trip.

My usual nymphs weren’t working that afternoon so I tried a sculpin which didn’t generate any interest either. As I was stepping out of the water onto the freestone gravel to rethink my strategy, I noticed a grasshopper flutter away. We are about 2-3 weeks ahead of fishing schedule so what the heck this might work… I tied on a foam grasshopper pattern. To my surprise, I was able to get two fish to rise but missed both of them. Damn it! Needless to say I was pretty frustrated. Typical Yuba River. Next time I’ll bring my A game

A friend of mine is leaving the school he’s taught at for over 11 years. Its feels almost like fate that we met whereas he is a fly fisherman too. He has gone out of his way and provided me with many opportunities to help me become a better teacher. I made him my first shadowbox project themed with Trinity River fly patterns as a going away present. The Trinity is his favorite watershed and someday I hope that we can both make a trip to fish it together. Cheers!

First shadowbox project
Middle Fork Feather River, Yellow Creek

Memorial Day Get-A-Way

Lower Yellow Creek

After a long week, this Memorial Day weekend was a perfect time to get away from the world and fly fish. Manda’s parents were out of town so we planned a house-sitting, fly-fishing, and get-away weekend. The weather on this particular weekend was overcast but warming. We were told that Quincy had been getting rain for the past few days which was good news. My target this weekend were trophy trout on the Middle Fork of the Feather River fly fishing with streamers.

Yellow Creek
On the way up to Quincy we planned a stop in Belden to hike and fish Yellow Creek. Yellow Creek is a tributary of the North Fork Feather River and is better known for its spring creek fly fishing in the Humbug Valley outside of Chester.  The spring creek section eventually enters a canyon where it forms the traditional riffle-run-pool. I’ve fished Yellow creek at the mouth once before but stopped about a quarter of a mile in, so on this trip we set out to explore further upstream.

First Hellgrammite Find!

When we arrived around noon, I noticed that the weather was warm and overcast; the fishing should be good today. Every fly fishermen knows that flipping over rocks can be a great way to gather intel about the stream your fishing. Match the hatch. I found a lot of mayfly nymphs and even a hellgrammite larvae this trip so I tried nymphing first.

The water was pretty low and nymphing was unproductive so I tied on a red humpy and the rest is history. Although dinks, these trout fought harder than most trout their size. My first catch bolted downstream as soon as it was hooked and the chase was on. Past the boulders, rapids, and finally into a pool where it was landed. I didn’t realize I was steelhead fishing! Overall we hiked about half a mile in and the fishing was pretty good until the sun came out.

Yellow Creek Fighter

Lower Yellow Creek is absolutely breath-taking! The clear cool water reflecting the yellow rocks, the warm rain rippling the water, and the canyon walls full of green. This creek is one of the reason why Plumas County is one of my favorite counties to fish. There are endless beautiful streams to explore and tons of fish to catch.

Scenic Yellow Creek

Feather River Middle Fork
The Feather River Middle Fork is truly a wild and scenic fishery. Enclosed within canyon walls, the only way to enter and explore the Middle Fork is to hike, rock climb, wade, bush-whack, and boulder hop. If you want to feel like a true adventurer then this place is for you. The Middle Fork is difficult to access but extremely rewarding in fishing and sight-seeing.

Scenic Middle Fork

The target I was searching for today was a trophy trout. A sculpin pattern on a sink-tip was my go to rig. I had never fished a sculpin pattern before so I didn’t have much confidence at first, but that quickly changed when I hooked my first fish.

Covering water is the number one rule when fishing streamers. You want to look for a big aggressive fish that is pissed off or hungry enough to eat a 4” sculpin. After covering a bit of water I found a deep slow run that looked like a prime holding spot. I threw my prototype Hero Sculpin upstream and started stripping in my line to imitate a darting sculpin. Halfway through I stopped for a second because I thought I hit a snag. It wasn’t a snag. On my second cast I made the same retrieve and got a take, and its a big one! First fish, trophy fish!

Middle Fork Trophy Bow

I continued to adventure downstream and hooked several nice fish. The clear water allowed me to watch as the fish chased and attacked my sculpin fly with no mercy. Their response was an aggressive kill reaction rather than feeding behavior. Most of the fish I caught were over 12”, a nice change from catching dinks. After about 6 hours in I finally lost my sculpin fly on a snag and decided to call it a day.

There is a lot of water I haven’t been able to explore on the Middle Fork and I am looking forward to seeing a different part of the river the next time I visit.

No dinks today

Fly fishing with a sculpin pattern is an awesome way to look for trophy fish. Now that I’ve discovered how well they work, I will continue to tie and use them. I’m sure someday one of my “fish of a life-time” will be caught on a sculpin pattern

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