Horseshoe Lake, North Fork Feather River

A Little Bit of Spring on the Fly

Smaller Horseshoe Cat

The spring wind is in the air. Consistent days of wind are the norm as well as bad allergies. Many anglers believe that we are about a month ahead of season schedule. With early arrival of steelhead, stripers, and shad, the weather is feeling like early summer yet we’re only in April! While waiting for trout season to open, I’ve been fishing at Horseshoe Lake and the North Fork of the Feather River.

Horseshoe Lake
Despite windy conditions this week of 10-20 MPH gusts, I was able to put a few fish to my name out on the lake. I decided to wet my line after work on Wednesday and after covering some water I had a small catfish and later a fat bass on a fly. There was an odd cold front that just passed Tuesday lowering the air temperature to a chilling 66 degrees so I’m assuming the fish were still in the process of waking up.

17” Fattie Bass

I went again the following morning and had 3 takes. The first one was very subtle and felt like a snag so I raised my rod instead of setting the hook. The second take was a catfish that was a good skunk beater. The third take was a lunker bass over 5# that kept jumping to throw the hook. She was probably a little bigger than the biggest one I caught a month prior or possibly the same fish. The lunker bass finally threw the hook after several headshaking jumps. Darn. At least I saw what I lost instead of it never knowing what it was. I’ll get her next time.

North Fork Feather River
Sometimes the wind in the Feather River canyon can be twice as bad as it is in the valley. This Saturday the weather was absolutely perfect. I started in Pulga and made my usual rounds. Fishing one of my more productive holes, I saw a silver flash as I stripped in my flies; my first target of the day. My next cast I adjusted my dead drift and got the take. A nice little fish to start the day.

First of the Day

I fished around Pulga a little longer but didn’t have any luck. Once I got back to my car, I took some time to scout out some new spots to fish that were legally open. The fish on the North Fork are very particular of where they like to hold. A lot of spots that look like it should hold fish often don’t. After parking and hiking a bit, I found a nice riffle pool near the dam that looked nice and fishy. My first cast here was a dead-drift swing which, to my surprise, enticed a few nibbles. I threw two more casts but what ever it was that bit wasn’t interested any more. After switching to a caddis pupa, I swung my line across the current then BAM hook set! The fish made my reel scream and also displayed some acrobatics jumping out of the water a few times to try and throw the hook. After a few minutes I landed quite the beauty.

Fish of the Day

Once I landed the fish I thought to myself, “Maybe I can rise a few fish.” The next patterns I threw were a caddis and mayfly dry which was able to get a total of 4 fish to rise. Although I didn’t land them it was pretty awesome to get some dry action for the day. Lost a nice 16 incher.

Magical North Fork

In the evening I tried fishing the Sac for shad but it looks like they haven’t made their way up to Chico yet. They are being caught down river near Verona though.

The trout opener next Saturday is looking good. A lot of streams are fishing well early this year. On Sunday I will be exploring the Upper Sacramento River for the first time.

Sunday Update:
After not really feeling up to the drive to the Upper Sac, Amanda and I decided to hit up Paradise Lake. The lake was closed for some reason so we had to drive all the way back down to Chico to go to Upper Bidwell.

There were a few kiddos catching catfish on salmon eggs but I didn’t get a take until my very last cast. As I was leaving I dragged my flies back to put them away and thought I snagged on something. It wasn’t a snag it was a fish! A nice 2# bass that made fishing the 2.5 hours worth it.

Feather River, Horseshoe Lake, Middle Fork Feather River, Truckee River

Windy Days, Fun On The Feather, and Truckee Love

Begin the Truckee River Canyon

It’s been pretty windy with the spring wind starting to come in, but its learn to fish the gusts or don’t fish. The wind is my friend… unless its blowing at 30 MPH. Casting and feeling the take can be difficult with the wind blowing your line and rod around but there is still good fishing to be had. The Feather River, Horseshoe Lake, the Middle Fork of the Feather River, and the Truckee River were some of the places I spent this week fighting the winds.

Feather River
The steelhead are around but I think we need a weather system to mix up the water a bit. Thursday morning I hooked two. Swinging flies on my switch rod with a 10ft Rio spey sink tip was the name of the game for this trip. The first fish I hooked felt like a snag on the bottom but once it started moving… holy crap that’s a fish. The fish came unhooked within 10 seconds so there’s the first one lost, hopefully I can get more shots at fish today.

The next fish I hooked made a good run and once it stopped its initial run I started to play the game. Please don’t come off, please don’t come off is what I kept telling myself as I started to strip in some line. The next thing you know the fish comes off. I let out a big sigh. Damn it… I stripped in the rest of my line and checked my flies to find a scale of the fish I lost. Haha. It was probably a snagged fish. The rest of the day I didn’t get a single nibble. That’s the name of the steelhead game folks.

Horseshoe Lake
Manda wanted to take a walk in
Upper Bidwell so I had some time to fish the lake. The day was windy and
it made casting a bit of a challenge. I made a new fishing buddy while
fish the lake that day. He looked like a 4th grader, was using a
spinning rod, and would follow me everywhere I went. After I hooked a
catfish he watched as I played it and landed it. His sister came over
and took a picture of him with the fish I caught which I thought was
funny. I gave him some tips about fishing the lake and left after Manda
got back.

Later in the week I decided to wet my line at the lake
again. When the wind blows from the east, the fish bite the least. Not
unless your using bait I guess. Using my
awesome fly fishing senses I saw that the wind was blowing from the east
that day and then it clicked, today is going to be tough one.
Looking at the water on the
surface, it kind of looked like the water didn’t know where it wanted
to go. I fished for a couple of hours and didn’t get any takes. There
were a few bait anglers out catching some cats but most of the fish they
caught looked like the average cat out in there. I commend them for
releasing the fish though. Once the fish learn to stop eating the liver
bait, that’s when they start getting big.

Horseshoe Cat

Feather River Middle Fork
The stretch between Portola and Blairsden opened this Saturday. Manda and I ventured to Clio to fish around the canyon. I’ve never fished this section so it was a good adventure. We hiked, piggybacked, and bushwhacked around the river but nothing looked fishy enough and the water was brown from tannin. I fished a little but overall it was just a good hike.
The water level this year is bad low. The lower section which opens up the last Saturday of April should be looking a lot better though. I have a feeling it’s going to be a short season this year.

Beginning of the Canyon

Truckee River
After the Middle Fork disappoint I saw a sign that said Truckee was about 43 miles away. After the okay from the girlfriend, we headed off towards Truckee. I’ve driven past the Truckee River before but never had the chance to fish it. Seeing the Truckee River again was like love at first sight and this time I finally had the chance to make my first move. The water is very unique and holds native browns, rainbows, and whitefish that all have the potential to get trophy size. The Truckee’s wild trophy sized fish are the products of a well-managed river. The river is open year around which means an endless opportunity to fish. The locals are very protective of the river and they should be with such an amazing fishery.
We fished a little bit outside of Hirschdale. The water looked amazing, a good flow and green tint. The only downside of the day was that it was pretty windy.

After high sticking tight lining a deep run I manage to land my fish Truckee fish. A beautiful 16” trout. The rest of the day I targeting browns but wasn’t able to hook any.  After testing the waters I can truly say I fell in love with the Truckee.

First Truckee River Bow
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