Feather River

October Levee Bassin’

5th St. Bridge

October is usually the month I begin catching less bass. Although the current day temperatures are still pretty damn hot, the water is a lot cooler than it was a month ago. I haven’t figured out how to fish the Feather River in Yuba City for bass yet so I decided to go out and try to unlock some secrets.

Anglers have begun to amass below the bridge in efforts to try and hook a salmon. Mostly snaggers using heavy jigs. Although the salmon are in, they weren’t biting.

This was my first time fishing below the bridge on the Yuba City side. There are tons of rock piles along the levee on this side of the Feather which are perfect spots for bass to hold in.

A Few Smallies

Judging from all the trash, I presume this side of the river receives a heavy amount of pressure. A low profile and the correct fly selection was critical if I was to be successful here.

The bass in the Feather are very finicky. I’ve notice that the spotted bass in the Feather always chase my fly but never eat it. Weird. The smallmouth are usually my main takers which I don’t mind because they put up the better fight. I caught a few but not enough.

Litte Crayfish Eater

Throughout the day I kept switching flies and leaders to try and figure out what these bass like. Nothing I tried was successfully enough for me to say I learned something new. The best clue that I found this trip was a small 8” smallmouth with an entire crayfish in its mouth.
I switched to a brown woolly bugger to see if they would go crazy for it but I kept getting the same results; a few eats but mostly follows.

Hardheads Too

I did some research and read that smallmouth switch from feeding on crayfish during the summer to minnows in the fall. The shad eggs hatched a few months ago so maybe a shad pattern will work….

Feather River

Good Morning On The Feather

Feather River Fall-Run?

Steelhead can be found in the Feather River all year around from below the hatchery to the end of the Oroville Wildlife Area. These anadromous fish aren’t too picky about what they eat and can be pretty grabby depending on the time of the day and the weather. However as most anglers who pursue these magnificent fish know, the most difficult aspect of fishing for these elusive fish is finding where they hold in the river. Fact: 90% of the steelhead hold in 10% of the river.

The fall-run salmon are currently very limited in this section as of now and it’s getting pretty sad to see less and less fish return each year due to the drought. No salmon equals no egg-bite. Today I fished a lot of productive runs and riffles in the low-flow section but only one run had fish in it. The fish were literally stacked in this particular run and I hooked four before they stopped biting. Most of the fish were bright and looked like spring-run holdovers with the exception of one fallish looking fish.

Pretty Water

At around 10am the sun was up and it was game over. There were a number of anglers out trying their luck as well but, in my opinion, they arrived on the water too late. I sense an increase in fishing pressure coming…

Unreal Egg

Unfortunately, no takes on the egg pattern yet. Usually the fish start taking eggs in early September but since there are very few salmon this year, a lot of steelhead have decided not to follow. Let’s cross our fingers for a halfway decent egg-bite this year!

It is illegal to fish for salmon in the low-flow section. The game wardens are on patrol and ready to catch some snaggers. Please be respectful and let these spawners do their thing.

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