Baum Lake, Hat Creek

Visiting Fly Fishing Country

Baum Lake Run

I wasn’t able to get out very much last month and haven’t had too much time to work on my writing, I blame it all on adulting. Thankfully things have settled down and I can finally get out and fish again.

June in my opinion is by far the best month to go fishing. This is the last month before summer kicks in and the fish and bugs know it. Many of the most famous hatches such as the Hex hatch and damsel migration occur during this month and the top-water bite for bass can be phenomenal.

My wife and I just recently purchased a new SUV more suited for our outdoor adventures and I believed that it was my job to put it to the test. The Cassel/Burney area was my destination and I planned on visiting both Baum Lake and Hat Creek.

Pelicans Stalking Me

This is my second visit to Baum Lake. The fishing was so much fun the last time that I just had to do it again. The lake is accessible and pretty easy to figure out even for a novice angler. You will need to bring some sort of floating device like a float tube or pontoon to effectively fish the lake because it moves like a very slow spring creek. A pair of waders also goes a long way because the lake is spring fed meaning it remains cold all year around.

I caught fish all day on Baum Lake using a variety of methods: dry flies, indicator nymphing, and slow strips got the job done. In the morning around 10am there was a good Trico hatch/spinner fall that had several pods of fish rising to the surface. I didn’t have an exact Trico pattern match so I jumped the gun and threw on the closest thing I had in my fly box, a size 16 mosquito dry. To my surprised the fish were very receptive to my dry fly and I rose several fish for the couple of hours that they were feeding.

Baum Bow
Nice Brownie

After the dry fly bite died down in the afternoon I switched to indicator nymphing and caught many more fish. The quality of fish this trip was consistently good however I didn’t see or catch any monsters like I did during my first visit. Still, the fishing was great and the catching was fun.

Hat Creek

All my visits to Hat Creek have either been a hit or a miss. Sometimes the fishing will be really good and the fish aren’t as picky and then sometimes the fishing will be extremely difficult with fish ignoring every offer you throw at them. The first night around 8pm there was an epic PMD hatch in the lower section where I hooked fish but was only able to land one. It was like heaven being alone in the middle of the creek during last night with what felt like hundreds of fish rising to feed on duns.

The following day I tried a different spot closer to the Powerhouse Riffle hoping that the same PMDs would be hatching. In the late afternoon I found fish along the edges rising for small size 18 yellowish mayflies. I didn’t have any thing that size in my box but tried anyway and failed to interest any fish. In the evening instead of PMDs I got Yellow Sallies both depositing eggs and hatching. I didn’t have any Yellow Sally patterns and struck out my last night.

The new SUV definitely did its job. I was able to get through unmaintained roads that I would have never been able to get through in my Altima. I also slept in the new SUV and found it much more comfortable with plenty of room to spare. Now that I have a better vehicle I want to plan a trip to a place fly anglers consider the Holy Cathedral of rivers, the Lower McCloud.

Martis Lake

Fishmas On A Lake

It’s every fly fisherman’s favorite time of year, Fishmas! Marking the end of winter and the start of spring, Fishmas is the last Saturday in April trout opener for the majority of streams, creeks, and rivers in California. My last few years of Fishmas have been spent on a creek however with many creeks and streams running either too high or too cold, I decided I wanted to try something different and fish one of the few lakes in California that opens on Fishmas Day.

I’ve been on a bit of a stillwater fix lately and have been enjoying learning how play the stillwater game. Fly fishing a body of water that isn’t moving can be challenging however a few successful trips can raise your confidence drastically. When it comes to my stillwater fly fishing skills I know how to catch fish stripping streamers as well as nymphing however there is a tool that I have still yet to utilize successfully, the intermediate sinking line. A full sinking line that slowly falls about an inch or two a second shouldn’t been too difficult to use however like with all fly fishing techniques learning how to fish it effectively takes time and practice.

Martis Lake is one of the few lakes in California that opens Fishmas Day. It is a catch-and-release, barbless artificials only, and zero take lake that holds wild brown, rainbow, and lahontan trout. This lake is a bit tricky to fish opening day because the water temperature is typically still very cold. Colder water temperatures means that the fish won’t be as active therefore making covering the correct type of water the name of the game. On a stream this usually means either fishing the deeper pools or shallower warmer water, the same strategy can be applied on a lake.

Martis Bow

It was safe to say that the day started off nicely as I landed my first rainbow a few minutes after launching. My main strategy this trip was to strip streamers on my intermediate sinking line and learn the feel and hookset. I had many hits throughout the day but for whatever reason most of the fish never committed to fully taking the fly. This led to the majority of the fish I caught being foul hooked. I’m still debating on whether or not it was me or the fish. Several theories come to mind however I like to believe that these fish where just nipping my flies because they weren’t focused on feeding on bait fish yet.
The lake slowed down a bit in the afternoon and the fishing wouldn’t heat back up until later in evening when a small midge hatch starting coming off. I switched to my nymphing rod and was able to convince two fish to take however I didn’t have much luck landing them. Despite not catching any fish on an indicator rig I’ve found that watching an indicator go down on a stillwater is much more satisfying than watching it go down in a stream. I think its the anticipation of not knowing whether or not you’ll catch something that gets me excited because on a stream I know, for the most part, where to expect my fish to be however on a lake it’s the total opposite.

I didn’t hook into anything big this trip but will continue to fish Martis Lake a few more times this month to hopefully find a leviathan worth bragging about.

Martis Brown
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