Indian Creek, Middle Fork Feather River, Spanish Creek

Exploring Plumas County On Cooldown

This Labor Day weekend I spent a lot of outdoor time with the in-laws in Quincy. The weather is starting to turn around with night temps in the high 40s and day temps in the low 80s. Although the weather is great, the water levels are still very low. Here’s to the predicted El Niño of 2015.
The only fish I landed this weekend was a baby smallmouth, but I was able to fish a few new streams and sections of rivers I’ve never experienced before.

Indian Creek Tailwater

Indian Creek
This small creek is a tailwater of Antelope Lake in Plumas county. Indian Creek flows from below the lake to Spanish Creek which eventually merges with the North Fork of the Feather River.

After doing a bit of researched, I found that there wasn’t much information about Indian Creek aside from the fact that there’s suppose to be a lot of brown trout in it. This weekend I set off to chase rumors to see if the fishing was any good.

Below Antelope Lake

The area surrounding the creek is very unique. The hills are full of dead broken trees that were killed by a fire years ago. The creek is very small and has a spring creek feel to it with a lot of aquatic plants, tall grass, fallen trees, and slow moving water. Unfortunately the creek is subjected to low flows all year making the water clarity muddy and swampy. The entire creek from below Antelope Lake to Taylorsville is covered in red algae which can’t be good for the fish. After flipping a few rocks, I was able to find caddis and midge larva which means that there some life in the creek.

Throughout the day I was able to get four fish to flash and attack my bugger but no hook ups. Although I couldn’t identify what species they were, I am predicting that these were brown trout. They were illusive and difficult to catch. The fish were only holding in deep pools which were too far in-between. Other than the fish that hit my fly, I didn’t see any fish holding in the runs or riffles.

If the flows were higher throughout the year this creek would be amazing. What we have here though isn’t worth fishing.

Gasner Park Spanish Creek

Spanish Creek
This creek is one of the main tributaries of the North Fork of the Feather River. Spanish Creek flows downstream from Bucks Lake and merges with the NFFR at Belden. The information I found about the creek was that it was once stocked with catch-able sized trout. However when stocking stopped years ago the fishing declined.

I explored the section of the creek that runs through the town of Quincy. The creek was running extremely low similar to many other small streams in the Sierras due to the drought. After wading downstream a bit, I found zero fish. Unless you’re micro fishing for 1″ fish, this creek is a no go. The section of Spanish Creek that flows within the Feather River canyon may be a better spot to try and fish, but I’ve yet to try it.

Upstream MFFR La Porte Bridge

Middle Fork Feather River
With cold nights cooling the water, the MFFR is in good condition. The MFFR is anually subjected to warm water during the summer which move a lot of the fish. After the Spanish Creek bummer, I drove to fish the MFFR to test my luck. This trip I explored above the La Porte Bridge which is one of the last roads that crosses the river.

So far I’ve explored downstream of the La Porte bridge and downstream of Nelson Creek. Curiosity got the better of me and I decided to wade upstream from the bridge this trip. Who cares if I get skunked, let’s go on an adventure!

The river in this section is an canyon that had more frog water than riffles, runs, or pools. Although I did find a pool with a few nice sized trout, the biggest looking about 18″, they were very spooky and nearly impossible to catch.

Not very much good water here. So far the best section of the MFFR I’ve experienced is below Nelson Creek where there are better quality riffles and pools for trout to hold. I also broke my 3wt this trip marking my second broken fly rod. Bummer.

I’ll be heading back up there soon to fish the North Fork of the Feather River and explore the Middle Fork further downstream. Overall a great weekend.

Middle Fork Feather River, Yellow Creek

Memorial Day Get-A-Way

Lower Yellow Creek

After a long week, this Memorial Day weekend was a perfect time to get away from the world and fly fish. Manda’s parents were out of town so we planned a house-sitting, fly-fishing, and get-away weekend. The weather on this particular weekend was overcast but warming. We were told that Quincy had been getting rain for the past few days which was good news. My target this weekend were trophy trout on the Middle Fork of the Feather River fly fishing with streamers.

Yellow Creek
On the way up to Quincy we planned a stop in Belden to hike and fish Yellow Creek. Yellow Creek is a tributary of the North Fork Feather River and is better known for its spring creek fly fishing in the Humbug Valley outside of Chester.  The spring creek section eventually enters a canyon where it forms the traditional riffle-run-pool. I’ve fished Yellow creek at the mouth once before but stopped about a quarter of a mile in, so on this trip we set out to explore further upstream.

First Hellgrammite Find!

When we arrived around noon, I noticed that the weather was warm and overcast; the fishing should be good today. Every fly fishermen knows that flipping over rocks can be a great way to gather intel about the stream your fishing. Match the hatch. I found a lot of mayfly nymphs and even a hellgrammite larvae this trip so I tried nymphing first.

The water was pretty low and nymphing was unproductive so I tied on a red humpy and the rest is history. Although dinks, these trout fought harder than most trout their size. My first catch bolted downstream as soon as it was hooked and the chase was on. Past the boulders, rapids, and finally into a pool where it was landed. I didn’t realize I was steelhead fishing! Overall we hiked about half a mile in and the fishing was pretty good until the sun came out.

Yellow Creek Fighter

Lower Yellow Creek is absolutely breath-taking! The clear cool water reflecting the yellow rocks, the warm rain rippling the water, and the canyon walls full of green. This creek is one of the reason why Plumas County is one of my favorite counties to fish. There are endless beautiful streams to explore and tons of fish to catch.

Scenic Yellow Creek

Feather River Middle Fork
The Feather River Middle Fork is truly a wild and scenic fishery. Enclosed within canyon walls, the only way to enter and explore the Middle Fork is to hike, rock climb, wade, bush-whack, and boulder hop. If you want to feel like a true adventurer then this place is for you. The Middle Fork is difficult to access but extremely rewarding in fishing and sight-seeing.

Scenic Middle Fork

The target I was searching for today was a trophy trout. A sculpin pattern on a sink-tip was my go to rig. I had never fished a sculpin pattern before so I didn’t have much confidence at first, but that quickly changed when I hooked my first fish.

Covering water is the number one rule when fishing streamers. You want to look for a big aggressive fish that is pissed off or hungry enough to eat a 4” sculpin. After covering a bit of water I found a deep slow run that looked like a prime holding spot. I threw my prototype Hero Sculpin upstream and started stripping in my line to imitate a darting sculpin. Halfway through I stopped for a second because I thought I hit a snag. It wasn’t a snag. On my second cast I made the same retrieve and got a take, and its a big one! First fish, trophy fish!

Middle Fork Trophy Bow

I continued to adventure downstream and hooked several nice fish. The clear water allowed me to watch as the fish chased and attacked my sculpin fly with no mercy. Their response was an aggressive kill reaction rather than feeding behavior. Most of the fish I caught were over 12”, a nice change from catching dinks. After about 6 hours in I finally lost my sculpin fly on a snag and decided to call it a day.

There is a lot of water I haven’t been able to explore on the Middle Fork and I am looking forward to seeing a different part of the river the next time I visit.

No dinks today

Fly fishing with a sculpin pattern is an awesome way to look for trophy fish. Now that I’ve discovered how well they work, I will continue to tie and use them. I’m sure someday one of my “fish of a life-time” will be caught on a sculpin pattern

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