Feather River, Fish Talk, North Fork Feather River, Sacramento River, Truckee River, Yuba River

The Flood Of 2017

Not much fishing going on right now as Northern California continues to recover from the flood of 2017. It’s been quite a while since I’ve seen so much water but growing up in Marysville and seeing the soccer fields below the bridges between Marysville and Yuba City flooded isn’t anything new. Although the event wasn’t 1997 flood levels, we did get a heck of a lot of water.

There aren’t a whole lot of options for fishing right now but I’m thinking the low-flow of the Feather River, a few lakes and ponds, and the surf are probably your best bets to wet some line.

Rejoice as the storm provides us with destructive natural disaster entertainment!

Flood of 1997. Over ten years ago.



Storm of the 20th Century in Yuba & Sutter County

Yuba goldfields

Keeping The Yuba Goldfields A Secret

The Yuba Goldfields

The Yuba Goldfields is a controversial area that I’ve been thinking a lot about lately. My dilemma with this particular area is that I want to share it with the world but at the same time I don’t want the world to disturb the limited natural resources that are there. There are very few ponds in the public lands and if everyone started showing up to fish these ponds it would ruin the Goldfield experience.

After thinking long and hard about this, I have decided that I will no longer post anything related to fishing the Yuba Goldfields.

The Yuba Goldfields is a mixed bag of private and public land rights with a long history of the legal access issues. There are hundreds of dredger ponds in the Yuba Goldfields but only about 10% of the ponds are on public land. Game wardens do patrol out there and if you’re not where you’re suppose to be they will cite you a $400+ trespassing fee.

There are several ponds within the public boundary but only four or five small ponds hold gamefish. The ponds that don’t hold fish in the Goldfield I call “dead ponds” because they only host small bait-sized fish species. Within the public boundary I have found significantly more dead ponds than live ponds.

We’ve Landed On The Moon

For the past few years I have been observing the culture of fishing the Yuba Goldfields through social media. Questions asked about the Goldfields were often left unanswered and those looking for access were generally deterred with stories of trespassing violation fees. The small group of anglers who chose to answer the questions were keeping the Yuba Goldfields a secret and within good reason.

10% of public land isn’t much and with only a few fishable ponds, I consider this a sensitive area where one too many anglers can shift the ecological balance. With this revelation in mind, I will no longer be writing about the Yuba Goldfields.