Feather River

The Tug Is The Drug… If you can find it.

With a broken 6 wt I’ve started using my new switch rod outfit.

Switch Rod Outfit
Redington CPX 7wt  11’3”
Redington Surge 7/8/9
Rio Switch Chucker Line

The CPX is a great discountined rod that casts great and is also fun to fight fish with. I have the Rio Switch Chucker in the spool right now and so far its holding up great for what I need it for. The line does great swinging and is okay at indicator nymphing. I don’t think I’m casting it out the furthest it can go but I can cast further more effortlessly in comparison to my single-handed 6wt.
Nothing feels more bad ass and true to steelheading than fishing with a two-handed rod. Got to get it out there? Bam! There it goes way out there. Don’t have room to backcast? Snap-T! There it is. It can do a bit of everything and I’m diggin’ it.

Feather River
I’ve been reading and talking to anglers who fish the fall-run on the Feather and they say its been the most crowded its ever been. I couldn’t agree more. These fish are being hammered on a daily basis and wrecked on weekends. Before everyone started showing up on the river I managed to catch and land at least one during my half days there but since then its been tough. Not to mention, the lack of rain with no new fish being added to the system, bright clear days, moderate numbers of a returning salmon, and other factors that make it challenging.

I hit the Feather today early and was the first on the river. It always pays off. I swung through a run and hooked a nice steelie on a nice tight-line and it felt amazing when it hit. Of course it jumped and I should have stripped my line instead of trying to get it on the reel. Rookie mistake. Later on the way to my car that same run at two driftboats and a wade angler fishing it. Really…. on a Tuesday? C-R-O-W-D-E-D.

I fished the rest of the day without much luck. Didn’t get skunked though. Caught a little native bow about 8” long. Hopefully the fishing will get better with this weather system coming in.

Big Chico Creek

Hiking Into The Big Chico Creek Ecological Reserve

Big Chico Creek in Fall Colors

Fishing and exploring local waters is always fun but sometimes the effort just isn’t worth the fish. I’m a strong advocate of a do-it-yourself angler, going out and exploring creeks, rivers, and streams not knowing what to expect and fishing to my best abilities. Today I found that the Ecological Reserve section of Big Chico Creek isn’t the best place to go to if you need to wet your line.

Big Chico Creek
The section from Bear Hole up to the Upper Boundary of the Ecological Reserve opened the first November. I’ve never seen this section of the creek before so I decided to go down the Ten Mile House/Green Gate hike to go check it out.

Ten Mile House Trail

The hike down took me about 30-40 minutes until I was next to the creek. I was hoping that I had passed the basalt holes similar to Bear Hole but they were scattered throughout the section I fished. These basalt holes are pretty good spots for trout to hold but they are a pain to get past and a pain to fish. From the entrance of the BCCER I probably waded and hiked a mile or two upstream.

Big Chico Creek Trout

Overall, today I believe I hiked over 3 miles there and back, not counting the boulder hopping, the slipping, and the frustration. I ended the day with only two fish. There were tons of little minnows, possibly roaches and/or pike minnows, but no trout to be found in the typical trouty holds. The hike down was easy but the hike back up was a killer, especially in waders.

I would not recommend fishing this section to anyone. It’s a lot of hard work and the pay out just isn’t high enough. I believe the better section to fish for trout is past the BCCER higher up in elevation upstream from Higgin’s Hole. I’ve read about browns being the dominant fish up there and I’m just itching to catch my second brown trout. I’ll have to try it someday and see whats up there.

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