Header

Weekly Siskiyou Fun Facts: 2010-04-25

Share

Upper Sac and Klamath are ready for you!

Flows on the Upper Sac also high, 3,000 to 4,000 cfs and will likely remain so as runoff from an above normal snowpack has begun. Some exceptional fish are podded in some of the bigger runs making this one of the best times of year to pick up your best fish of the season; several friends have enjoyed this good fortune in the past few weeks. The Klamath River still has a few spring run steelhead to be had on the swing but with the recent release of steelhead smolts it can be a challenge to get to them. For those so inclined the smolts will attack caddis dries during the hatch and small nymphs most anytime with abandon.  Salmonflies are on the way, so now is the time to schedule a great local guide for this hatch as available dates in late May and June are becoming far and few between.

Share

With The General Trout Season Opener Around the Corner, How’s The Fishing in Siskiyou County?

With many of Siskiyou County’s best fishing rivers due to open on Saturday, we thought we’d offer up the forecasts of a pair of local fly fishermen.

An   Unreal Upper Sacramento River

First, local outfitter Craig Nielsen of Shasta Trout offers up his latest fishing report, which – if you read between the lines – offers a lot of information about how his clients have been clobbering fish on the Upper Sacramento, Lower Sacramento, and Pit River.

His take? The Upper Sacramento is high but fishing well (you have to pick your spots – much of the river’s unfishable). The Pit River is fishing beautifully, but is crowded. And things are looking good for the McCloud and Fall River openers, though access may be an issue on the McCloud.

Meanwhile, local fly fishing blog The Trout Underground offers his typically quirky take on the area’s rivers and fishing prospects here, though we’ve excerpted one small portion for you:

This year – due to an above-normal snowpack in California’s mountains and rainy/snowy spring weather, a lot of rivers will likely be high.

(Note I said “high” and not “unfishably high.” The last time I pronounced the Upper Sac “blown out and unfishable,” someone wrote to say they’d had their best day ever on the river.)

What follows is a loose assemblage of rumors, half-truths, guide promotion and outright lies.

At no time should any of my readers actually believe anything they read in this forecast (I’m a fly fisherman after all), nor change their carefully laid plans based on this information.

(Void where prohibited by law.)

Click here to read his lengthy forecast on river flows, access, what’s hot, and what isn’t.

Enjoy the 2010 trout season!

Share

Weekly Siskiyou Fun Facts: 2010-04-18

  • Shasta Country news Fly Fishing the Upper Sacramento: The Upper Sac is very high from snowmelt and runoff, but it … http://bit.ly/b6ZqHf #
  • Shasta Country news Upper Sac River Rafting & Kayaking: Experience the incredible beauty of the Upper Sacramento r… http://bit.ly/9nvnW2 #
  • Shasta Country news Weekly Siskiyou Fun Facts: 2010-04-11: Shasta Country news Lower Sacramento River Fly Fishing … http://bit.ly/buTedF #
Share

Fly Fishing the Upper Sacramento

The Upper Sac is very high from snowmelt and runoff, but it is flowing clear and is fishable. Dedicated upper Sac anglers can find a few fish to take by concentrating on the deeper, slower moving pockets and pools, but it may be more work than it’s worth until runoff subsides later this spring.

The key to success when fishing high spring water on the upper sac is using plenty of weight to get your flies down, and concentrating on the deeper pools and slower-moving pockets. The fish will try to get away from the heavy currents, and can sometimes be concentrated in certain calmer waters.

Share

Upper Sac River Rafting & Kayaking

Experience the incredible beauty of the Upper Sacramento river Canyon in full spring bloom. Watch fresh flows of creeks and streams that feed water to the thirsty state of California. Challenging without being demanding. Exciting for novices and experienced rafters alike.

Share

Weekly Siskiyou Fun Facts: 2010-04-11

Share

Fly Fishing on the Klamath

FRIENDS FISHING THE KLAMATH

Our longtime good friend Ross joined us to explore a lower drift on the Klamath River he had not yet seen.  We dedicated the day to the swing and loaded up a couple new rods with some new lines which can be an adventure in itself.  Ross has a new twelve and a half foot Scott T2h eight weight that he has tried to match a number of lines to.  On this day he found the sweetheart he was looking for, a 600 grain Rio Skagit that balanced so well with a 10? T14 tip and his own beautiful blue and black  tied Intruder that he swung up a bright chrome springer Steelhead.  Craig sampled some new lines including Rio’s 325 grain short head Skagit Flight on his favorite switch rod, Sage’s Z-Axis six weight eleven footer and found the perfect fit.  It also turned out to fit a bit better than Air Flo’s 360 grain short head Skagit on his Scott twelve and a half foot T2h six weight though he didn’t have as much luck finding willing fish as Ross.

Share

Lower Sacramento River Fly Fishing Trip

by: Shasta Trout
Guide: Graig Nielson, March 31, 2010

Dustin with Trophy Rainbow

The Lower Sacramento was exceptional for the action, numbers of fish as well as the size of the fish we found.  We hooked several trophy fish including a couple that would make a season, let alone your day.  We even landed a couple while the biggest ones got away of course.  One fish was so hot, it freight trained upstream with so much power we thought at first is was a Salmon.  It was not, but was Salmon sized.

Share

Weekly Siskiyou Fun Facts: 2010-04-04

  • Shasta Country news Weekly Siskiyou Fun Facts: 2010-03-28: Shasta Country news Spring Warber Watching: By Bill Tho… http://bit.ly/9wuS0D #
Share