Yuba River

Go All-in Or Go Home

Yuba River
Casting all day and not catching anything can be pretty frustrating, especially if you feel like your making all the right presentations and fishing in all the right places. The Lower Yuba River thins out the casual anglers versus anglers that are willing to cover water all day risking a day without a single take.
This river will make you drop your rod and ask yourself what am I doing wrong? Am I using the right fly? Are there even fish here? That was the perfect drift! And with a few curse words finally come the words. I’m done. Keep your confidence up and enjoy the scenery because the fishing will be difficult.

I started on the other side

I arrived at the river around 730am and while I was gearing up an older gentleman came up to me and told me that he and his party were fishing the Yuba for the first time and wanted to know where he could wade and what he could use. I gave him some general advice but kept the locations, flies, and techniques to myself. I figured they could learn better that way. The difficulty and frustration of the river is what makes it fun plus I’d have a place to guide friends or keep to myself.

Flow goes down

The flows are at 1200 CFS which makes certain areas of the river crossable. I fished these areas with little luck missing two takes by setting the hook too early. Later in the day I hooked and landed four bows on nymphs. I forgot my landing net at home so I wasn’t able to take pictures of all of them. In the afternoon I fished a hopper down riffles but no one was interested. The fishing is still slow and you will only catch fish if you cover water.

15” Yuba Bow

The section above the bridge where I was fishing will be closed for the salmon until December so that will give me a chance to explore the river downstream. I am looking forward to discovering new water on the mighty Yuba.

Deer Creek, Ellis Lake, Horseshoe Lake, Yuba River

Sometimes You Win and Sometimes They Win

Yuba River Bow 16”

Summer is coming to an end and fishing has been pretty good. I’ve been fishing here and there catching some and losing some. I often never get skunked but I will admit that I enjoy it when I do. Fly fishing is challenging and each aspect of your presentation is important. If the fish aren’t taking then your doing something wrong and need to adjust your presentation. If you go all day without a single take then the fish have won for the day. That is one of the reasons I keep coming back to bodies of waters that are difficult to fish.

What I liked most from transitioning from spin fishing to fly fishing is that I can feel like I did my best to try and catch fish. With a fly its all about presentation and fighting the fish properly. Make a single error and the fish is gone. Throwing bait or tossing lures all day just isn’t fun and once you hook one it takes about 30 seconds to reel them in. You can’t appreciate the power and fight of the fish. Although there is some skill in gear fishing I just find it boring. But that’s just my opinion.

Yuba River
The more I return to this river the more confident I get in my skills of fishing it. The Yuba is super technical water and requires perfect presentation and knowledge of the river’s hatches. I fished the river two days before and hooked one on a foam hopper and a nice 16-18” on a nymph but I couldn’t land them. Today broke my record of catching trout for the summer. My biggest fish was a 16” bow out of the three I caught. The fish were taking mayfly and stonefly nymphs with no indicator. A little bit of thunder and lightning made the day a bit more interesting. Waving a fly rod back and forth is just asking to get hit by lightning. These Yuba River fish are the hardest fighting bows in California, patience and skill is required to hook and land these powerful fish. They fish like steelhead and fight like them as well. A day with a single bow on the Yuba is a good day spent.
 

Beware the clouds

Deer Creek
Manda and I hit up the creek for my birthday. I missed a couple of big fish but the fish there are still hungry and the water below Red Bridge is still pretty nice for the summer almost being over. The fish were a bit finicky but good fishing nonetheless.

Birthday Trout

Ellis Lake
Beside my brother losing a piece of my rod… We had a contest on who can catch the smallest fish as the big fish were not biting. Nick won with a LMB fry. We also had a turtle come up to us wanting to be fed. We hooked a bluegill and tried to feed it but it didn’t get a good enough grip and lost its food. Bluegills all day though. Lake is weird.

Baby Bass

Horseshoe Lake
Clooping carp get my adrenaline pumping. I spent hours trying to get one to take my fly but nothing worked. I was so frustrated that I just left and googled how to catch clooping carp on a fly. I think I’ll use some scent on my flies the next time I get out there and see how that works for me.

I’m ready for steelhead season to start. Hopefully I’ll do better this year since I understand the fish and the river better. Summer is almost over and its been pretty rad.

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