Feather River

Spring Break: Day 3

Looks Almost Like a Native?

Day 3: On The Feather The Swing Is The Thing
I woke up this morning at 5am to get to the Feather at around 6:15am.  The plan today was going to be swinging flies all day. The day began on the high flow section and although I saw several rises I did not get anything to take. The fish that were rising were in slower water and I’m going to go out on a limb and say that they weren’t steelhead, most likely hardhead or pike minnow. After wading down a bit and not getting anything I drove further upstream and fished several riffles and runs that I’ve never fished before.

At this point I decided to go all in and rigged up three flies. At one point I had a nibble but the fish did not commit so there was nothing to set the hook to. I’m about three or four hours in fishing with nothing to show for. Needless to say I was starting to feel a bit discouraged about this steelhead trip. I saddled up, got in my car, and drove further upstream. It was about noonish when I had lunch. After I finished lunch, I geared back up and was ready to give it another go.

I fished a run that I’ve never fished before below the outlet and about midway downstream I get my first take on a swing. The fish jumped straight into the air after it hooked itself and threw the fly. Not fair! After wading further downstream, I hooked another fish that did the exact same thing except this time it didn’t unhook itself. The spring-run steelhead are a feisty fish that can really test a fly angler’s fish fighting ability. The fish made hard headshakes back and forth, would dart out every now and then downstream making my reel scream, and slowly swim towards me forcing me to strip in fast to keep a tight line. I fought him like a champ, landed him, took a picture, and let him go. It felt refreshing to be back in the game. While fishing the run, I had one more hit but not a commitment. With no luck, it was time to waded back to my car and drive further upstream.

Now I am at Outhouse Riffle. On the way to the river there is a pond where I saw a few people fishing. I watched and chuckled as a young angler fishing for bedding bass made a bass pro lip ripping hookset only to get his lure stuck in a tree. Keep at it kid…
While covering water downstream, I finally figured out where the fish were holding. Deeper water! My strategy worked and I found a nice fish and several more in the riffle below. I left the Feather river at around 5pm, therefore I fished around 12 hours today for three fish landed, two lost, and a lot of uncommitted hits. Total worth.

Half-Pounder Spring Chrome

I will be taking it easy tomorrow as there are things around the house that need to be done. What a wonderful three days.

Feather River, Horseshoe Lake

It’s Spring Break!

Nice Average Horseshoe Lake Bass

One of the perks of working in education is that you get days off. It is officially spring break and the fishing has just gotten better. I have a few places planned to fish so I will be updating as I go. These places are the Yuba Goldfields, Yuba River, Ellis Lake, Horseshoe Lake, and possibly Butte Creek. The fishing will be great with warm sunny days like the ones we’ve been seeing for the past few weeks. I’m looking forward to it but until then I’ve been fishing the Feather River for steelhead and Horseshoe Lake for bass and catfish.

Feather River
There have been reports that the spring-run steelhead are in the system and from my own personal experience the days I went out I did see them but I did not catch them. I have been fishing in the morning and my guess is that the fish become more active mid-day when the water is warmer. I swung flies and nymphed but did not get any takes. The steelheading has been pretty tough this year and although the numbers are low the quality of fish is good. I would like to spend more time figuring out what works and what doesn’t but my focus this year was to get better at still-water fishing. I will have to put the Feather on hold.

Horseshoe Lake
I’ve changed and experimented with new techniques and figured out a system that works pretty well on the lake. It’s still tough but my success rate went from zero to one take to about three. Although certain flies work I want to tie flies that have an even better success rate.
I landed a nice 16” largemouth and lost another fish that was either a catfish or bass. This pond has some quality fish. I recall in late spring fishing the lake and hooking a fish that literally broke me off it was so strong.
I found some carp clooping but they were right literally underneath a tree. Tough casting. They were later spotted clooping in an area I could cast easier but I spooked them after the third cast. Tough fish. My guess is that they were clooping pollen. Looks like I’m going to experiment and tie some flies that look like pollen.

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