Feather River, Yuba River

First Rainfall Of Autumn

Yuba River

I can’t remember the last time it rained… maybe in April or perhaps as far back as March? Fortunately Northern California got a lot of water during the last El Nino storm in March that filed many of the local reservoirs. It’s been a long hot summer but thankfully fall is starting to show its colors.

The first rainfall of autumn usually signals the opening of the fall steelhead season. Fall is infamous for the “egg hatch” that happens on rivers where salmon are present. Both resident trout and anadramous steelhead key in on these nutritious red eggs that are dislodged below the salmon and their redds.
After fishing the egg bite for several years I’ve simply grown out of the hype. It can get crowded with anglers camping at the most productive holes both nymphing and swinging in addition to boats drifting through them. Early bird gets the fish I suppose.

Yuba River
The Yuba is flowing at about 1,500 CFS right now with the 500 CFS coming from Deer Creek. The last storm really brought up the creek and added some good tint to the usually gin-clear water.
I spent a few hours nymphing below the bridge and didn’t do too well until I fished the opposite side. I had one little fish take an egg but the other three ate nymphs. Exciting jumpy fights.

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Feather River
I started at the low-flow section looking forward to swing the Feather but upon arrival I found a ton of salmon. A lot of salmon have made their way up to the low flow section with many of them in the process of pairing up. There was no way I could swing through them without snagging them.
Not only were there a lot of salmon but also a bunch of anglers. I wasn’t expecting so much company on a Tuesday. Instead of waiting for my turn to fish the run, I hiked to another run further downstream that I had all to myself for a moment. As I swung through the riffles I was expecting my first grab of the day but it never came. After switching my pattern I covered the riffle/run one more time but was left fishless.

I gave up on the low-flow section and decided to try the high flow since the outlet was still flowing high. Despite the high-flow section having better riffles and runs for swinging, I’ve only caught a few steelhead in this section. It’s a bit of a long shot but it beats fishing around the crowds. The end of salmon season in this section also makes it much more enjoyable to fish on a fly.

High-Flow With Some Steelhead Green

In the first riffle I swung through I finally got my grab. Not a very big fish but a steelhead on a swung fly nevertheless. I felt pretty confident that I was going to land it but after a few seconds of tiring it down it threw the hook. That’s steelhead swinging for you.

I got a few nibbles throughout the rest of day but no grabs.

Ellis Lake, Feather River, Yuba River

Local Fun-filled Fishing

Yuba Quality

Another week of high Yuba flows means tough fishing and no pressure. I found the fish though, I always find them. Three hook-ups, three in the net.
The warmer months are a tough time to fish the Yuba. Not much is happening with the bug life but with a few secret tricks I was able to hook and land three fish over the 16″ mark. The fish hooked to amount of time spend ratio was good this trip at about one fish per hour. The conditions were bright with high flows and gin clear water, some of the toughest conditions you can face on the Yuba.

Big Head Mode

The longest fish I landed this trip had a huge head but skinny body almost like he was starving. I’ve heard that when big storm events with huge flows blowout the Yuba several times a lot of bugs get dislodged and blown away downstream. Once the river settles and the flows go back to normal the fish have a hard time finding food which causes them lose a lot of weight. Could we possibly see this event again? It’s too early to tell at the moment but I’m crossing my fingers it doesn’t happen.

The Yuba Is My Fly Fishing School

Another theory that could explain why this fish was skinny could be related to the spawn. Fish tend to use a lot of energy when they are spawning and it’s not uncommon to find them looking like they haven’t eaten in several weeks after they are finished. Yuba bows spawn in the spring which means that there could be a few fish in the system in their post-spawn bodies.

Feather River
The flows have been cranked up and the wading is even more difficult than before. Waders were necessary if you want to hook fish in the run I was in. The water is high, discolored, and colder than usual. I went out one evening this week and hooked a couple of small male shad. Nothing too exciting, shad to be had.

Shad Splash

Ellis Lake
The lake was stocked this last weekend with catfish for the Kid’s Fishing Derby. As always there are a lot of dead catfish floating along the banks after the event due to the heavy fishing pressure and bio imbalance. Why the organizations that put this event together don’t clean up their mess after it’s over is beyond me. As I drove around town today I saw a man with a pool cleaning net cleaning up their mess. Bless that man, the Guardian of the Lake.

There are a lot of anglers bait and waiting the lake but very few are catching any fish. After top water fishing for bluegill in the evening, I finally caught my first catfish of the year on a clouser.

First Catfish of 2016
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