Fly Fishing Traditions



Fly Fishing Traditions Blog and Website
"It's about Life & Fly Fishing"

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Lower Yuba River Fishing Report 01-14-11


The Knothead


I was fortunate enough to get all my honey do's done and sneak out and fish the Lower Yuba again yesterday. That's sort of the way fishing works if you're not a real "Trout Bum". You've got to collect enough "Brownie Points" to get out. That's the way it works for me anyway.

So, I made it down to the river yesterday and fished with Mike and Todd Williams. The day started with a low overcast and was pretty cold. There wasn't any precipitation to speak of just sort of a high fog. The river was still running at 3,000 cfs. and has cleared a bit more from last time. The water has turned to a blue shade, more blue than green on the edges with visibility of 4 or 5 feet. We floated the river and the further you go down the clarity got better.

The fishing was so so, I had a few fish to hand and had caught them when we had hiked up stream and wade fished. I was sticking to what worked earlier in the week with a Natural Roe Troutbead, different Skwala Stone Nymphs, and red Copper Johns. I was primarily indicator nymphing with lighter weight to avoid farming sticks. Whenever I would add more shot I'd hook a stick, and I'm talking trophy sticks, willows with whole root wads, I could have brought home quite a collection. So, I resorted to lighter weight and and some tight line nymphing.

As far as bugs goes, bad news and some good news. When fishing, I saw maybe half a dozen bugs, all mayflies, which in a days fishing is not so good. On the bright side, when we stopped for lunch at about 1:30, the full sun had come out for about an hour or more and we were sitting along the riverside in the cobble and the Skwalas started crawling around us. Not a huge number, but probably a dozen or so. I hadn't seen any in the drift though. While we were sitting and checking the bugs out, a big splash happened in the eddy pool in front of us. A Skwala rise if I ever heard one. So, maybe Skwala time is going to be happening pretty soon.

We ran into a couple of fishing buddies later, one was Ralph Wood, who said that he'd picked up two fish on Skwala dries. More thoughts to chew on. If we get continued warmer weather, get ready, it's coming.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Lower Yuba Fishing Report 01/11/11



I headed down to the Lower Yuba today with Frank Rinella with the intention of following our normal routine and floating about 2 1/2 miles of the river. I dropped Zack off at school, my daily routine, and we met in town at the coffee shop, showed Frank an updated slide show I'm working on about the Lower Yuba, drank a cup of coffee and waited for the temperatures to warm up a bit.

That's sort of what I like about this time of year, there's really no hurry to get down to the river, you can take your time, meet your buddies, sit around for a bit, drink some coffee, have a bagel, and shoot the bull about whatever comes to mind. Oh yeah, time to head out.

We got down to the river at about 10:00, dumped the boat in the river, took care of the shuttle, rigged up our rods and we were ready to go. I should say Frank rigged his up. I'm always a little hesitant to tie on the flies I'm going to start with until I get a feel for the days conditions, bugs, clarity etc. Superstitious or smart?

The river was running at about 3,000 cfs and was still a predominant green color. The clarity had improved from last weeks trip and the visibility was about 3 to 4 feet. Now we're talking. It seems that for the Lower Yuba to really start to fish, this is what you need, a minimum of that 3' to 4' visibility. When fishing in the spring after the run-off in Montana, this is what the guides all are waiting for. That doesn't mean they don't fish with less visibility, it's just they get more optimistic at 3' to 4'. So that's what was going through my mind, optimism.

Once I pushed off, got on the oars and got into the main flow, it looked like I had 6 inches, that's how deceptive the color is when it's running that glacier green color. Not only is the main current big and pushy, the clarity is at the edges and at the soft water. I thought to myself, "No problem, it's going to be an edge water day again, focus on the edges and soft water, wherever you have that 3' to 4' of clarity. Choose where you want to speed your time wisely". And so we did.

At Frank's suggestion we crossed the river, parked the boat and decided to hike upstream and walk/wade fish the the edges, pools, and tailouts up stream. I thought, "Now that's a great idea, less time at the oars, take a nice hike, fish some good looking edge water, let's go".

It was pretty clear once we walked upstream and had a good look at the river, where to fish. The clarity was 3 to 4 feet as long as the water moved at about fast walking pace or less. This is the water that we focused on as we hiked and fished up stream. We stayed in ankle deep to 1 foot deep water and methodically fished the water from about 8 feet off the bank out to about maybe 20 feet at the most. We found willing, healthy fish in these areas. Most were smaller fish in the range of 10" to 14" but we managed to hook a couple big brothers and sisters and Frank got one to hand.

When it came to fly selection, I started off with a rigg I was fishing last week. That is, I went right to the spot where I lost my 1st rigg last week, and pulled up the branch that I thought snagged it and there it was, all three flies. This was possible because the flows have dropped about 2,000 cfs from last week. We got a good laugh about that. So I started with a Rubber Legs that was brownish green, a San Juan Worm and a Skwala Stone fly nymph. The San Juan and the Rubberlegs caught fish. A big meal and a bright red worm, get the picture.

I believe Frank rigged with a Troutbead, a stonefly and Red Copper John size 14. What he switched up to I'm not sure as we were fishing most of the time about 100 feet apart or more. I can tell you that when we discussed it later, the majority of the fish he caught were on the troutbead (natural roe), the San Juan Worm (red) or the Red Copper John. Hmmm, that's red, red, and more red for Frank.






My luck was with a Red Copper John, a troutbead and the Rubberlegs. So in my humble opinion, as we saw one Skwala all day which was about 5o feet from the water and two rising trout all day, I'd say all the fish we caught, hooked and didn't land or long distance released, were sitting in the soft edge water were they could see, out of the heavy currents so they didn't have to expend a lot of energy and were eating opportunistically at what they recognized as food, Eggs, Worms, and Stoneflies. In addition these were flies that they actually could see. Makes sense to me, anyway.

So my thoughts are, in the next month or so, I believe that this will be a successful strategy. That is if you, head down to the river, if the river is running at 3,000 cfs and if the visibility is about 3 to 4 feet. Thing is, it could all change next week. As the water clarity improves, other bug patterns will come into play, and so will the Skwalas, I hope. So, as you can see, it's an ever changing game. Look, watch and observe.

A couple of other notes. Remember the Skwala we found about 50 feet from the water? It was a female with eggs, the abdomen was more of a brownish/yellow olive and the thorax was way more yellow with just a hint of green. This backs up our friend, Norm's theory, keep the thorax and head yellow. I'm headed back to the vise so when the Skwalas really come out, I can test this theory out.

The other note is that we ran into a DFG team, doing the trout study of the radio tagged fish, (I believe they said that they have radio tagged about 250 fish to date). The one worker we met said they were picking up a lot of signals from tagged fish on the river and he was clearly up beat. He indicated that this was all good data and good news. In what way, I'm not really clear, except that they he said there are fish in different spots up and down the river from below Daguerre Point Dam all the way up to the narrows, scattered and in different spots in the system. When I asked where, he just smiled!



Get out there and give it a go. It's better than sitting around home and definitely better than working!

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Happy New Year - Welcome to 2011

Happy New Year to everyone out there!

I've been busy here at home for the holidays, nursing Zack back to health after he had 4 wisdom teeth pulled and 6 baby teeth. That's a bunch. I've cleaned up the World Headquarters of Fly Fishing Traditions, organized the fly tying materials and been tying new Skwala patterns. I've got about 4 prototype Skwala Dries, and a new and improved Skwala Nymph. I've purchased about every rubberleg material out there so I've got a bunch to test out. Hopefully the Lower Yuba will lower to fishable levels and the Skwala will be out soon, I can't wait.

So what's in store for 2011 here at Fly Fishing Traditions. Quite a bit.

Fly Fishing Traditions New Website

I've been working on a new FFT website for over 6 months and it's just about ready to launch. It will probably be live by next weekend. The website will still be accessed at www.flyfishingtraditions.com


The FFT Blog will be alive and well and will have it's own page on the new website. The FFT Blog is the heart and soul of the new website and it will carry on as usual. The new FFT website is sort of the "Best of the FFT Blog".

Fly Fishing Traditions New Website Features

The new website will have information gathered from the blog and new features such as;

  • Bugs - There is a "Bugs" Page that gives the inside scoop on all the bugs that live on the Lower Yuba River. Their habitat, entomology, techniques for presenting your bug imitations and recommended patterns and pattern recipes.


  • Lower Yuba River Hatch Chart - I have put together a page with a "Lower Yuba River Hatch Chart", that will tell you when and where you'll find the bugs on the river, along with specific patterns to "Match the Hatch", It will give you a quick look version of presentation techniques.


  • Techniques Page - There is a "Techniques" page that has all of the worthy technique articles from the blog in one place so they will be easy to access. The articles will cover, "Musings of the Big Kahuna", Techniques, Fly Casting Tips, Drift Boat 101, and Nuts & Bolts. A ton of useful information and easy to navigate.


  • Photo Gallery - There is a "Gallery" page with photos of friends, family and fishing destinations. There is a Video Page with worthy videos. (This page is still a work in progress, as far as the worthy goes).


  • Classes and Clinics - There's a "Classes and Clinics" page that will give information of 2011 offerings, which will include a full day "Floating Fly Fishing Clinic" on the Lower Yuba River. There will be basic fly fishing courses, entomology classes and Drift Boat 101 for those people who want to learn the ins and outs of rowing a drift boat or for those that just need a little boost of confidence.


  • Guiding - And last but not least I'm offering guided trips on the Lower Yuba River, the Feather River and the Lower Sacramento River.
All and all this will be a pretty exciting year for myself and Fly Fishing Traditions. I'll let everybody know when the site goes live.

So, Welcome 2011, and Happy New Year to everyone.

Best Wishes, Clay