Guided Fly Fishing on Northern
California Lakes
Fly Fishing Keswick Reservoir
Keswick Reservoir is essentially the Lower
Sacramento River... before it becomes the Lower Sacramento
River. This reservoir flows through a wild and scenic river canyon,
where spotting eagles, osprey, bobcat, and deer are all common occurrences,
and the trout are equally wild.
The Rainbow Trout in this portion of the
Sacramento System are all native fish, averaging in the 14-22
inch range. Indeed, fishing on Keswick is often comparable to fishing
on the Lower Sacramento, drifting indicators and weighted nymphs
with the current, although dry fly and streamer fishing options
are often available.
Access on this stretch of water is very
limited; our guides utilize jet boats to motor upstream and
drift back down. Keswick fishes well throughout the year, with the
prime time being the winter, spring, and early summer, from November
through June.
Fly Fishing Iron Canyon Reservoir
Iron Canyon Reservoir is another fishery
that receives very little pressure, and features both stillwater
options and areas with current, more akin to stream fishing. Indicator
nymph fishing predominates the effective techniques throughout the
winter months, and dry flies can be quite productive as well, especially
in the springtime.
The fish in this scenic reservoir are a
mixture of brown and rainbow trout, with an equal mixture
of wild and hatchery fish. This is one of the best places anywhere
to simply hook a lot of fish, with 50+ hookups a likely possibility
any day on the water, and fish averaging 13-24 inches. We generally
fish Iron Canyon out of drift boats, efficiently working the edges
and current seams.
Fly Fishing Lewiston Lake
If Keswick Reservoir marks the true beginnings
of the Lower Sacramento River, so does Lewiston Lake function
as the "headwaters" of the Trinity River. Lewiston is
essentially a holding channel between Trinity Lake and Lewiston
Dam; as it meanders peacefully through weed-lined channels, it often
bears remarkable resemblance to a spring creek.
Fly fishing on Lewiston Lake is a great
deal like fishing some of the bigger spring creeks of the west,
such as Fall River or Silver Creek. Anglers on Lewiston Lake
often find themselves sight-casting to large trout, usually casting
light tippets (5X and 6X) with small flies (#18-22), with a variety
of techniques, from indicator nymphing to small dry flies.
Lewiston Lake is a true trophy trout fishery,
and one of the best places anywhere to hook and land trout in the
4-6 pound range, and trout up to 12 pounds are landed each year.
Lewiston is open year-round, but prime time on the lake runs in
the winter time, from November through April. July, August, and
September can also be productive.
Fly Fishing Lake McCumber
Lake McCumber is one of our favorite dry fly Stillwater fly fisheries in the late winter and early spring. Our guides wait each winter for the lake’s ice to clear, knowing that as soon as they can get their drift boats into the lake the fishing will most likely be great. Lake McCumber is stuffed with rainbow and brown trout, and although they don’t generally grow large (average fish are 10-14 inches) they are plentiful and often respond aggressively to dry flies. On the rare days where they don’t look to the surface to feed, McCumber’s rainbow and brown trout will readily eat streamers fished on intermediate lines, or nymphs and midge pupae suspended under small indicators.
Fly Fishing Baum Lake
Located near Hat Creek outside of the town
of Burney, Baum Lake is a "spring creek lake,"
meandering through weedy channels in a beautiful, open valley. It
is a truly great winter fishery, from November through April, with
high numbers of Rainbow and Brown Trout ranging from 12 inches to
8 or 9 pounds. All manner of techniques work on this beautiful lake,
from indicator nymphing to small dry flies to streamers.
Motors are absolutely not allowed on Baum Lake, so it is also a
quiet, peaceful winter-time experience. Our guides generally use
their drift boats on the lake, drifting in the soft current and
casting along the edges of the weed beds. |