Ellis Lake

First Timer On Putah Creek and Beating The Skunk

Nymphing Putah Creek

Putah creek is a tailwater below Lake Berryessa. The water is diverted for the agriculture fields below the creek. This creek is known to hold big 18”+ finicky trout that are uniquely more darker in color than most other rainbows. The “creek” is fairly small and has a slight green tint with a bottom that is full of brown algae covered boulders. Putah Creek is also a unique fishery in that it is a constant battle
between agricultural water usage and fish habitat. Due to the creek’s proximity to several urban areas, there is a lot of illegal poaching that happens here. Putah Creek is a wild trout stream meaning zero limit C&R fishing all year around. DFG make frequent visits to the creek in order to enforce a wild-trout fishery.

Today I made my first trip to try to catch and photograph a Putah Creek trout.

Putah Creek
When I first arrived on the creek I had a somewhat solid mindset of what to do and what to look for. The creek was surprisingly smaller and deeper than I had expected. I fished around turnout #3 and hiked up and down the trail scouting out runs, riffles, and holes to fish. I did what any angler would do and fished the fishy spots with no luck.

There was one spot where I was able to visibly see the three Putah bows and sight cast to them. I threw a lot of different flies to them but no reaction. They looked like they were feeding and even if I didn’t make a good enough presentation with my first few nymphs I should have had a bite through curiosity with my egg and worm patterns.

During my time there I met up with a man named John from Berkley. He was very polite and gave me pointers on where to fish. He told me that it was his 6th trip out to Putah and over 6 years of fishing the creek he has never seen the fishing this bad this time of year. “It’s as if they stopped eating,” was a quote John said that stuck in my head while I continued to fish. I found no luck so I decided to call it quits. John made a comment about the fishing being really good in November before the spawn. I’ll probably try again in that time frame but as of right now it was overall an interesting experience.


Ellis Lake
After an unsuccessful day on Putah Creek, I decided to beat the skunk at Ellis Lake before heading back home. A few bass were in prespawn and within a few hours covering lots of water I went 2/3. A few kids were fishing the rocky edges with hot dog bait and were catching tons of little bluegills. The water was surprisingly warmer than the air temperature. The bass aren’t on their beds yet but catching a few after a skunk feels great.

First Ellis Lake bass of 2015
And the 2nd

I will be swinging and nymphing for spring-run steelies on the Feather this week. This is about the time the bugs start coming out making it a fun productive day on the Feather.

Butte Creek, Ellis Lake, Yuba goldfields, Yuba River

Closer To The First Greens of Spring

I’ve been out a few times the past month and haven’t had much luck on the winter bite. With the good amount of rainfall passing last weekend and a warming trend of 70 degrees, a lot of the plant and wildlife have woken up. It’s been quite beautiful out there and I’d be punching myself in the face if I didn’t spend sometime outdoors.

Fish On!

Ellis Lake
I’ve been tracking the pattern of the lake and so far the fish aren’t active yet. I fished during the storm which wasn’t the brightest idea. I was also on the lake a week after the storm and with the warming trend passing through I was hoping a few prespawn fish would be active. I was wrong.
As I’ve observed before, the first bedding bass usually don’t start becoming active until March. I will continue tracking the pattern for the lake in hopes of finding some quality bass in a not so quality place.

Yuba Goldfields
I fished around the ponds today and found a few active fish. Definitely prespawn bass. There are a lot of small fish, bass and bluegill, hanging around vegetation while the bigger fish are either in deeper water (which I did not have luck fishing) or in flats near potential spawning beds. The water was relatively warm despite a few wind gusts here and there. The fish were pretty grabby which is a good sign. I tried a bunny leech in purple this time and it did pretty well. I’ve always had a lot of luck with the color purple when it came to bass. Its still a bit early but I know more fish will start becoming active as spring approaches.

Preggo Prespawn Bass
Purple Leech Eaters

Yuba River
The flows are a good 750 CFS with good color as well. I think we got what we needed here; the conditions are ideal for fishing. I didn’t cover the river as much as I usually do but I did go 2/3 in one riffle and anyone who fishes the Yuba knows that’s a good day. There were A LOT of cars on the Parks Bar side of the river so I don’t know how well that part of the river is fishing, either really good that everyone is fishing there or really bad because everyone is fishing there. Below the bridge there is less pressure which is more enjoyable both in tranquility and in fishing. The fish I caught took a rubberleg and an S&M nymph. Super strong fish despite their size. I was using 4x and 5x tippet so it took a bit maneuvering to get them in.
I didn’t see any skwalas while I was there. I did see a few risers and quite a few midges and brown mayflies.

Yuba Native Beauty
This One Kinda Looked Like a Frog

Butte Creek
The creek is closed now and unfortunately the flows were a bit too high to fish productively before it closed. I fished my usual holes and found it difficult to wade in spots I usually had no trouble getting to. The steelhead most likely just raced up with the flows being around 400 CFS.

The almond trees are blooming and the plants around here are starting to bud. Spring is around the corner and I can’t wait.

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