Feather River

Riverfront Park’s Feather River Access

Feather River At Riverfront Park

Riverfront Park is a recreational park below one of the bridges that connects Yuba City and Marysville with the Feather River separating both counties below. The park is maintained by Yuba County and is primarily used for soccer events. There is a small boat launch that was recently cleaned up and gives access to the Feather River upstream from Shanghai Bend. I set out to explore the banks of Riverfront Park in search for any thing that bites.

The species present in this part of the Feather are largemouth, bluegill, spotted bass, smallmouth, and trash fish like suckers, hardhead, carp, and pikeminnow. Although this section is better known as a warm-water fishery, runs of salmon, stripers, steelhead, and shad can also be found throughout this part of the river.

Feather River Largemouth

Armed with a sink-tip line and streamers, I fished downstream below the boat launch. I caught a few small bass on a clouser but overall nothing too exciting. During my bank exploration I was able to spot a few big fish that spooked into deeper water. A #6-7 pound spotted bass and several 14”+ smallmouth. The possibility of hooking into these big fish will have me coming back.

Little Smallmouth

After exploring a bit I also found a big population of 10+ pound carp just slowly cruising around. After about an hour of casting several flies at them, the closest I came to a take was a 1” refusal. So close and very frustrating.

Bridge Sunset

In the evening I returned to fish under the bridge. There were several anglers out trying their luck for salmon but they weren’t doing too well. While fishing the area, I found that the banks were riddled with weed growth about 5-10ft in making it difficult to give a good presentation without getting snagged. I managed to hook into a nice largemouth in the evening but only landed a big hardhead and pike minnow.  Sculpin patterns didn’t work well here.

Hardhead Streamer Eater

The access and fishing was pretty good. The only downside is that there are a lot of tall weeds and yellow-star thistles all over the place making it painful to bushwhack through in shorts and sandals. I am currently cooking ideas for patterns to use here on the Riverfront Feather River and will be back hopes of catching and releasing some nice bass and carp.

Big Ol Pike Minnows Too
Sacramento River

In Search of Stripes

The Striped Bass

The striped bass also known as a striper is an anadramous fish that is prized by many anglers due to their strong fighting abilities, size, and taste. The possibility of catching a 30-pound striped bass keeps anglers fishing on their toes in hopes of landing a fish of a lifetime. Native to the Eastern United States, the striped bass was introduced to California in 1879 as a commercial food source until 1935. Commercial fishing for striped bass ended at this time in efforts to enhance California’s sport fishery.

The striped bass is unique in they can be productively sought after in both salt and fresh water. Although most commonly fished for when they migrate back to freshwater rivers to spawn, striper fishing can be done in estuaries, surfs, and oceans. The living conditions of striped bass provide anglers opportunities to catch them all year around.

A truly adaptable predator, the striped bass is one of the top aquatic predators where ever they are found in California. Eating both non-native and native fish, the striped bass is voracious in both fresh and salt water unlike anadramous salmon that stop eating once they leave the ocean. Striped bass will eat flies, lures, and bait making them easy targets once found.

My fishing experience for striped bass is pretty limited. Information on successfully fly fishing for this species was also limited for some odd reason. From what I could find online, it seems like striped bass fish like black bass. Striped bass like to hold and feed around structure such as rock piles, trees, boulders, etc the same as black bass but add river current as a factor in finding the most ideal holding spots. Riffles and runs are for trout, low moving currents are for stripers. Striped bass like to hang out in schools so if you find one your bound to find another. Good flies to use are the classic saltwater patterns like the clouser and deceiver.

A boat is the most ideal way to chase striped bass. Not having a boat has always limited my striper fly fishing accessibility, therefore I focus more on fly fishing for trout and steelhead which hold in areas that are more bank angler friendly. This year I’ve found that it’s not impossible to find and catch striped bass along the banks of the river. Although it can be difficult depending on the timing and where the fish are, fly fishing for stripers on our very limited riverbank space is doable.

Sacramento River off River Road

Sacramento River
This river is the super highway that the striped bass own when they make their way up from the ocean. From what I’ve research, most of the best striper fishing is done around the Colusa area downstream. Although there are local stripers that never leave the river system, the bulk of the migratory fish arrive in spring to spawn and hang out eating shad until summer.

Yesterday I went out on a gamble to see if I could find any striped bass outside of Chico. To make the gamble a bit more enjoyable, I used my switch rod to get some spey casting practice in. The flies I used were bait fish patterns and a sculpin pattern that the fish seem to love to hate.

Luckily the river wasn’t too crowded and I was able to fish the current where I had caught a few stripers before during the shad run. Over an hour and a half of covering as much water as I could upstream and downstream, casting close and far, and stripping fast and slow yielded one little striped bass that threw the hook after I landed it. I guess I’m doing something right?

The next area I fished was very riffly more ideal for trout. Sorry the stripers are in a different part of the river. After covering this piece of water as quickly as I could, I fished the opposite side where the river formed more of a bay. Striper Bay. An erratically fast retrieve with a sculpin pattern finally hooked something and it feels big. The fish jumped into the air and I couldn’t tell if I saw a brown or white hue. Crap. Please don’t be a pike-minnow!

Once I got the fish close enough I saw that it was a fattie smallmouth. This is the biggest smallmouth I’ve caught so far; 16” and probably around 2-3 pounds.

Fattie Smallmouth

The sun was set and I was starting to lose light but I finally found the fish. My next few casts I performed the same retrieve and found what I was looking for, a striped bass. Though not a very big one, it felt pretty good on my switch rod pulling some line during its runs. The night ended with 3 striped bass hooked and landed with a bonus smallmouth. Not bad for a striper noob.

Striped Bassin Evening

The following evening I went at again. The excitement of finding and catching a few local striped bass was far too good to just let up. Now that I know where they were it was game time.

I woke up at 6am in the morning to the bright beating sun in hopes of catching a few morning stripers. It turns out that they don’t like to play during the day, at least where I found them yesterday. After fishing for over 4 hours covering every single stretch of water I could get to, I couldn’t find them. It must be an evening thing.

Striped Dinks

After a full day, I left the apartment and was on the river at 7pm. This time I brought my 6WT to up the fighting fun. The river was void of other anglers leaving me with Striper Bay all to myself. After throwing a few casts, wham! my first striped bass of the day. The next few fish I landed where dinks and by the time I landed my third fish the sun was set. It was time to start heading home so I started to wade back to my car covering water as I went. Nothing was biting. Well so much for catching a decent-size fish tonight. But then to my surprise it happened!

About 15” of Stripes

A great way to end the night.

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