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.

Fly Tying

Do You Even Tie?

List of Master Tiers

Amanda and I spent some time in Redding this weekend to check out Redding’s Fly Tying Expo at Turtle Bay Aquarium. We got to meet and talk to some of the best tiers in the world as well as enjoy the rest of the exhibits at the park. All very friendly, knowledgeable, and amazing people. Fly fishing heroes!

Bud Heintz
Bud is the first person I talked to and he was tying mayfly dries. Bud is from the Modesta area and is a master tier who has tied for big names in the fly fishing industry. We talked about using the correct fly material, how to use it, and trying different things with different materials. Bud introduced me to one of his original patterns the “No-Hackle Dry Fly” which innovates the use of Puglisi fibers as the wings rather than natural animal hair. This makes the fly more durable, better floating, and adds some nice color to the wing. He also gave me some fibers and a few partridge feather to use. Thanks Bud!

Dorothy Zinger
Dorothy is a fly fishing master tier from the Los Altos area. She has been fishing for years and was teaching how to use turkey biots. I have always been interested in using biots, but I’ve haven’t gotten the chance to pick up any feathers. Biots are look great for a natural segmented abdomen look. We watched her tie a CDC PMD dry which she let me have. Thanks Dorothy!

John Ryzanych
John is one of the founders of the product Softex which is similar to epoxy. A true innovator who enjoys fly fishing using very unique flies tied with his Softex. Some of his flies looked like hardware poppers but they were made entirely from synthetics and feathers. John had some stoneflies that looked very realistic all tied with just one feather. Very awesome. We talked for quite some time about the theories of fly tying like what kind of hooks, feathers, etc. John told me that all in all his motto for fly fishing in general was basically, “Just go fishing.” Thanks John! Now I gotta get me some of that Softex.

Doug Ouellette
Doug is the originator of the famous “Popcorn Beetle” pattern that is used on Pyramid Lake. I didn’t notice who he was until he told me that the popcorn beetle was his fly. Needless to say I was starstruck! Doug’s fly pattern is responsible for catching some of the biggest fish in Pyramid Lake. A very chill, friendly, and awesome guy; Doug was demonstrating how to tie a Pyramid Lake Ice Cream Cone Midge. He gave me the midge he tied and two beetle patterns. These are definitely going into the collection. Thanks Doug!

Also shoutout to Bill Nelson son of Dick Nelson the originator of the Aztec fly. The Aztec was possibly the first fly to inspire a lot of minnow patterns. I didn’t get to chat with him much but he gave me a few of his signature flies. Thanks!

Fly Tying Collection

We spent the rest of the day exploring Turtle Bay which was pretty cool. There was a Candy Exhibit in the other room that Amanda really liked. There were also animal exhibits, points of interests, and an aquarium in the park to check out. Overall I learned a lot and met some great fly fishing legends.

Atlantic Salmon Flies

Ellis Lake
You know those days where you just feel like everything is off? I was at the Yuba and was having the most frustrating time with fishing, so frustrating that I just went home. You have good days and bad days. This was a bad day.
Instead of just calling it a skunk I just wanted to take it easy, so Nick and I headed to Ellis Lake. The bass fry have popped and the adults are guarding them. The adults don’t seem very responsive if your targeting them so bass fishing was slow. I had a 16” black crappie chase my fly but I pulled it out of the water too early before it could take. The bluegills that were trying to eat the fry were a lot more aggressive than bass so that’s what Nick and I caught most of the day. We had a contest of who could catch the most on a top water fly. I got 9 and Nick got 6.

Horseshoe Lake
Weekends are a busy day on Horseshoe. Too many dogs and people put the fish down. I had a catfish roll on the surface and eat my fly but I didn’t set the hook quick enough. Hopefully the carp out there will start becoming more active. I haven’t seen any feeding in the shallows yet and this is usually about the time when they are there.

1 133 134 135 136 137 168