Ellis Lake, Feather River, Putah Creek

Let It Ride

After a huge surge of water pushed through California’s rivers and streams, reservoir levels are now at the highest they’ve been in over five years. It’s been about a week since the storm event and many rivers are still running high and brown. Water clarity isn’t a big issue for me, it’s high or low flows that will generally dictate whether I head out or not. The Yuba is currently sitting at 9,000 CFS which means that my local go-to is out.

The Feather River, Putah Creek, and a few stillwaters were my best options this week.

Feather River
The spring-run is my favorite run of the year on the Feather. These fish will eat swung patterns and are a thrill to fight on the end of a fly line. With the huge push of water we got earlier this month, I’m hoping that the steelhead fishing will be good this year with plenty of fish to go around.

The Feather below the dam was still running brown with a clarity of about 1ft-2ft. My day ended with one good grab from a 4# steelie that gave me the fin as it made a two foot jump after breaking me off.

Afterwards I fished Dog Park Pond for warm-water fish. The suckers were in spawning mode chasing females on redds, the bluegills were actively eating every little thing in sight, and the bass were cruising along the banks.

Bluegills were my only catch while I was there. Dry flies, wet flies, and streamers caught little gills all day. The kiddos on spring break were having a field day with them.

Putah Creek
My outing this week to Putah Creek fishing a low and murky 70 CFS was a new experience. Prior to this trip I have never fished the creek while it was this low. While wading around the creek, I found that many of the runs, riffles, and pools were only knee-deep which made it difficult to find fish.

The only action I found was in the morning with one bigger fish hooked and one smaller landed. I tried to figure out the puzzle by switching between flies, rigs, and techniques but nothing seem to make a difference. Where did all the fish go?

Baby Putah BowAfter running a nymphing rig through a run about a dozen times, I finally decided to switch to a streamer. While stripping back my streamer, I observed as a 16” Putah bow popped out of a small rocky crevice to attack my fly. My guess is that at these flows the fish are either hiding underneath rocks or in the frog water waiting for optimal feeding conditions. Note to self, don’t fish Putah Creek when it is less than 100 CFS.

Ellis Lake
Spring is finally here and the warm-water fish are beginning to become active. Ellis Lake is improving but challenging.
This time of the year when the weather is warm but the water is still cold, bass and bluegills will hold in shallow water along the banks. Although a few bass are spawning, most of the fish holding in these areas are sunbathing/taking advantage of the warm water near the top and around the rocks.

Sunbathing fish are extremely spooky fish. These fish will spook into deeper water if they see you or if they feel any disturbance in the water. Lures, plastics, and even flies hitting the water will alert these fish and spook them away.

These sunbathing fish are the best fish to target at the moment because they have been warming up their metabolism and can be turned on to eat. Despite being out on the lake for several hours, I was only able find one active bass. Many of the gear anglers who were blind casting went fishless which proves my theory of targeting sunbathing bass correct.

The bluegills were active in the evening and I caught a bunch of them on dries when the opportunity presented itself.
How do you tell the difference between a spawning bass and a sunbathing bass? Spawning bass will not spook if fished, generally won’t bite, and may be sitting on yellow eggs; sunbathing bass will spook easily but will eat if you are lucky enough to sneak up on one. To practice good ethics, I leave the spawning fish sitting on beds alone.

Hopefully the rivers will clear soon, until then get out there and let it ride.

Yuba goldfields, Yuba River

Tough Luck On The Yuba

Singular Sunset

After spending a few days on the Yuba this week it’s official, the river is fishing tough. Crowds continue to flock the river despite the poor fishing conditions. Every angler I came across shared the same results; skunked.

Why is the fishing so difficult? The river was fishing great when there was a murky tint to it but now that it’s cleared up a bit the fishing has been very tough.

Here is my hypothesis:

The Yuba was flushed about a month ago and we are finally seeing the aftermath of it. The trout were having a full-on feeding frenzy when the murky water was flushing around a buffet of bugs but now with three weeks of clearer green water, the buffet is closed and there isn’t a whole lot of food going around.

Before the blowout the rocks on the bottom of the river were clean and full of insect life. After the blowout the majority of the river is now covered with slimy slippery brown algae. After fishing a run without a single bump, I went over to the riffle above it and flipped over a few brown algae covered rocks. Each rock I flipped had zero bug life. Eager to confirm my hypothesis, I waded to an area were the rocks were cleaner and there they were… bugs!
So not only is the algae a pain to wade through, it is also life-less like the gross slimy crap that it is.

The water is also colder than usual which slows down the trout. It’ll take awhile for the river to regain its strength so we need to adapt and make the best of the cards were dealt with.

Lil Chrome Yuba

I enjoy the challenge and low numbers means every fish counts. The skwala dry fly fishing is as it always is, not a lot of numbers but if your dedicated and enjoy blind casting in attempts to rise a fish then go for it. Nymphing is producing for those who figure it out.

I’ve come to the conclusion that when I am on the water I need to try and be as productive as I can. Learning how to adapt to different conditions makes you a better angler, sticking to one technique when you know it won’t be as effective doesn’t. You don’t throw emergers when nothing is emerging right? Why throw dries when nothing is rising?

Every Inch Counts

I am currently reading Dynamic Nymphing by George Daniels in efforts to try and advance my nymphing knowledge. Nymphing is the most productive way to fish due to a trout’s diet of subsurface insects therefore it is essential to have good knowledge of different nymphing techniques.

I’ve been perfecting my tight-line/Czech nymphing techniques on the Yuba with great results. Tight-line nymphing is productive, active, and fun.
The ponds haven’t turned on yet but I did find a bunch of dry fly bluegills and a bass.

Bluegill Beetle All Day
Basstastic
1 3 4 5 6 7 23