Pyramid Lake, Yuba River

A Few Winter Outings

Dad life has officially taken over. I’ve been getting very little time on the water as my now 10 month old son has grown to become more and more interesting every day. In the past I’ve been able to leave the missus at home alone to wet my line but now every time I’m away from the both of them it makes me feel bad. Babies grow fast. I love fly fishing but there’s no love like having a little one.

This year I’ve been in the honeymoon phase of child rearing so not being able to catch a few key hatches hasn’t had too much of a FOMO (fear of missing out) effect on me. My go-to place to fish this year has been the Yuba River. I can catch fish out there year around however I find that hiking around to get some exercise is more important than a few into the net. With COVID19, a mostly sitting office job, and taking care of a little one the infamous dad bod creeps up quick.

I was able to get out to Pyramid a week ago and didn’t do to well despite tying a few fresh balance leeches, nymphs, and midges. I had three strikes but failed to set the hook on all three. I started out at my favorite spot, Warrior Point, and tried Windless Bay and Pelican as the day went by. The anglers who were in kayaks and boats were doing really well which led me to believe that the fish were further out in deeper water that I couldn’t reach. For future winter outings on Pyramid I’ll be sticking to the deeper beaches and bringing along a float tube. With not being able to put as much time on the water as I would like I need to start maximizing my effectiveness as best as I can.

To make up for my skunk on Pyramid Lake I put in a few hours on the Yuba River. Conditions during my outing on the Yuba River were a bit tough with rising barometric pressure and clearing skies. The fishing was initially slow however once I found a fish and changed my flies things started to turn around fast.

Some anglers look down on the idea of throat pumping however as I mentioned earlier with being effective on the water a throat pump is a tool that will not only help you catch more fish but also help you learn the body of water you’re fishing. I started with a BWO nymph and PMD nymph which typically do really well doing this time of year however despite seeing a bunch of BWOs and pinkies coming off in the afternoon I didn’t get a single take. I thought about trying dries but searching for fish on a dry fly rather than head hunting for risers just doesn’t appeal to me. I switched to a rubberlegs and finally got my first grab. I throat sampled my catch and found two small stonefly nymphs and to my surprise three green caddis larva. I adjusted my rig replacing the nymph for a caddis larva and hooked a bunch of fish the rest of the day. Most of my grabs were from the rubberlegs but the biggest came from the caddis larva.

There are so many places that I would like to go but I’m morally shackled by my own will to streams and stillwaters within an hour drive. I’m thinking about trying to learn the float-n-fly for bass for my next outing to expand my options. The more the merrier.

Happy new years!

Yuba River

Translating Fly Fishing to Spin Fishing #2

Life has been getting busy with baby and wife going back to work and there isn’t as much time to fish anymore. However I’m still chugging along and trying to get as many hours on the water as I can. I wish I could get out further and longer but family comes first.

The first place I wanted to try my new UL spinning outfit was at the Yuba River. I’ve seen a handful of gear anglers on the Yuba but have never actually seen one catch a fish. I was always curious to know whether or not the fish on the Yuba would consider eating hardware. It was time to find out for myself.

I initially started out trying to nymph with my TFO panfish rod. I used a barrel swivel and attached about 3ft of 4x tippet, a splitshot, and rubberleg stone with a PMD dropper. I used a regular fly fishing indicator and was surprised at how well I could cast the rig.

Dead-drifting this rig was a bit difficult because the presentation would drag when it reached about 45 degrees downstream however the fish were receptive to my presentation and I had several hits with a few good hook-ups. The trout on the Yuba tend to be super strong but the UL spinning rod reeled them in within seconds with little to no challenge. The disappointing UL spinning fight was a good reminder of why I took up fly fishing; a fair fight between man and fish. A fully bent UL spinning rod does not compare to the feeling of a fully bent fly rod; it’s just a totally different sensation all together.

Dead-drifting nymphs on an UL spinning rod works just fine but throwing hardware such as spoons and spinners is where a spinning rod really shines. I had zero confidence with these types of lures on the Yuba so I figured why not give them a try to see if they worked. To my surprised they worked… and they were absolutely deadly making me question why I never saw gear anglers catching any fish out there. I plan on getting out there again soon to see what other lures and rigs work.

I made a stop at some of my favorite largemouth holes and absolutely crushed them on a topwater Zara Spook. Spinning gear is definitely much more fun when targeting bass. Some of the hardbaits that I used were so fun to just watch swim in the water that catching fish was just a bonus.

I spent one of my 100 degree evenings night fishing for bass for the first time and was surprised how active they were at night. Anything that made a lot of noise on top of the water was getting hit and more so that day than during the hour of power before sunset. I hooked a fish every other cast and had an absolute blast.

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