Fish Sniffer On Demand Digital Edition Issue 3905 Feb 14-28 | Page 20
18
Feb 14 - 28, 2020
VOL.39 • ISS. 5
Catch & Release Fishing!
Hook More & Bigger Fish With Flies...
Sponsored by Kiene’s Fly Shop
916-483-1222 • www.Kienesflyshop.com
9550 Micron Ave. Suite B • Sacramento, CA
The Mokelumne River’s
Valley Fly Action!
Courtesy of Kiene’s Fly Shop
Below Camanche Lake, the Mokelumne River courses through private agri-
cultural land that has public access at certain intervals.
The tailwater section runs for about eight miles. Most of the best water can
only be accessed by watercraft, but there is a productive wadeable section
adjacent to the boat ramp near the hatchery.
Being that the river is located in the lower elevation foothills, the flow
characteristics are in the form of pools and deep tailouts which is typical of the
other central valley tail-waters.
One of the great things about the Moke is that it runs primarily through
private agricultural land so it gets little fishing pressure and to fish its whole
length you must float it in some sort of watercraft.
The river has a fair number of rainbow trout in the ten to twelve inch range,
and most of them are probably steelhead smolts.
There are a lot of them year round. But when the winter weather warms up
a little in February, the larger adult steelhead arrive on their spawning run,
which is when things get real exciting.
Hooking a six to eight pound fish just fresh from the saltwater is one of the
most exciting experiences in the sport of freshwater fishing.
For most fishermen, pound for pound, steelhead are the strongest fighters
than almost any other fish species that can be caught in fresh water.
Returning steelhead begin entering the system in January and continue until
April when they pair up and begin spawning.
These fish average from twenty to twenty five inches and possess a chrome
sheen when they first arrive. This is one of the best times to float the Moke as
the flows are usually at a manageable 350 cfs and only blow out occasionally
HOW TO
By Cal Kellogg
into the lake’s forage base consisting of
threadfin shad and immature sunfish.
Bank anglers prosper at Collins soaking
floating dough bait and inflated night
crawlers along the western shoreline
from the dam to Elmer’s Cove. Bankies
shouldn’t be afraid to fan cast with a shad
imitating spoon. The rewards can be great.
Boaters do well pulling baitfish colored
spoons and small plugs. Threaded worms,
plastic grubs and baitfish colored hoochies
work well too.
A sleeper approach is to run up the lake,
beach your boat and soak standard baits
off a seldom fished shoreline.
Lake Davis
Plumas County’s Lake Davis was once
heralded as one of the West’s five star
trout fisheries and then a dark cloud in the
form of Northern Pike descended on the
lake.
Someone planted the pike in the lake.
The California DFW, fearing that the pike
would make it into the Feather River and
ultimately the California Delta poisoned
continued from page 5
the lake twice.
The last round of poisoning took place
in 2007 and no pike have been found
since. The spring after the pike were gone,
750,000 pounds of trout were planted into
the lake and Davis has received heavy
planting in the years since.
Today Davis is approaching its old glory
days both in terms
of the number of
rainbows being
caught and the
size of the fish.
Last season hard
charging ‘bows
in the 20 to
27-inch class were
common.
Much of Davis
is shallow and
weedy. Bugs of
various types
dominate the trout
economy making
Terry
Davis a favorite
destination for wading and float tubing
fly anglers. Fly guys score on a variety of
wet flies, with leach and dragon fly larva
imitations being favorites.
Bank bound gear anglers score with
spoons and inflated worms, while trollers
rely on small spoons and trolling flies
worked slowly.
Pheasant, Chukar and Sporting Clays
At Its Finest
• 3 PHEASANTS FOR ...$96
• 8 CHUKARS FOR.......$160
3 Pheasants &
• 12 PHEASANTS FOR $388
100 Sporting Clays
• 3 PHEASANTS + 4 CHUKARS
$130
FOR $170
Raahauge’s 17 Station Sporting Clay Course!
100 Rounds
Memorial Hunt
Sporting Clays
Feb. 22nd & 23rd
Only $36
w G laSS l ur
llo
eS
a
h
Trout • Mackinaw
S
Pheasants $27 Ea
Chukar $15 Ea
Lunch $5 per person
Kokanee • Salmon
Bright, Durable, Unique
BOOK EARLY!
Glass Lures Handmade In Northern California
www.shallowglasslures.com
3810
(530) 386-8064
exceedingly difficult for anglers that
managed to launch a boat.
“What a difference a couple wet
winters have made at Eagle,” related
Bryan Roccucci, a prominent north state
guide. “Late in the season last year we
were seeing rainbow pushing up into the
6-pound range. I’m not going to say the
fishery is back to where it once was, but
it’s become very good again.”
In the spring, Eagle Lake trouters will
prosper while pulling plastic grubs, orange
spoons and flies and threaded ‘crawlers.
If you’re a fly angler, you owe it to
yourself to do some research and pay
Eagle a visit in late October or November.
That’s when huge rainbows move into
very thin water looking to feed. The action
on streamers can be incredible!
Collins Lake
Collins is a central state favorite pulling
in urban anglers from the Bay Area and
rural anglers from places like Grass
Valley, Yuba City and Marysville.
The lake is managed for fishermen.
There are regular private trout plants,
DFW plants and like at Shasta, non-profit
organizations maintain trout pens at
Collins.
Standard DFW planters go into the
net pens within the lake. These fish are
then fed a high protein diet for 9 months
to a year. When they are released they
are beautiful square tails that run 2 to 4
pounds.
Best of all these fish are used to the
conditions in the lake. They are already
chomping on wayward baitfish, so when
they are released they are already dialed
during heavy storms that come in off the Pacific.
As the storms tend to be somewhat less frequent in the spring, you usually have
good water to fish in. The number of fish can increase dramatically right after the
river subsides at the end of a big storm.
The most important bugs that make up the fish cuisine are the caddis & pale
morning duns (summer) and blue wing olives in the cooler months so patterns
representing them are a must regardless of the time of year.
Crawdad imitations aren’t a bad idea either. In the winter and spring, any two fly
set up should include an egg pattern.
In the summer and fall dry flies can be productive so size #16 and #18 Pale
Morning Duns and Blue Wing Olive imitations (after September when the
weather begins to cool off) are productive.
Double nymph rigs with a bead head olive Caddis larva imitation and a #16 or
#18 Pale Morning Dun nymph imitation such as a small bead head Pheasant Tail
or olive Bird’s Nest, cover all of the bases in the spring and summer.
45 Miles North
of Sacramento
1000 Rounds
Sporting Clays Only $320
Company or Corporate shoots
available at reasonable prices!
Pheasant Season Is Now Open,
So Book Early For Best Dates And Rates!
(530) 724-0552
www.lincraahauges.com • traahauge@yahoo.com