Spring is perhaps the best time of the year to be young and alive (or in my case, middle-aged and still breathing, though shallowly at times), but let’s be blunt; it can get a little capricious.

Saturday I wasn’t exactly surrounded by big fish feeding with abandon, but there was enough trout eating the March Browns that I hooked a couple?

A good day on the water? Or an April Fools setup by trout hungry for revenge?

Uhh, That Second Choice

Chris Raine, Mike Lucia and myself drove to the site of Saturday’s visit, unfortunately finding several cars and at least one guide on the stretch.

Our fallback produced a very light March Brown hatch, a very light BWO hatch, and zero rising fish.

The joke’s on me.

I even fished a Hare’s Ear soft hackle but found no takers.

Right now, nymphing will bring you fish, and I’ve heard news of a couple locals repeatedly pounding the hell out of a large pod of pre-spawn fish (a report that conjures visions of buffalo being shot from trains)


My 8.5′ Phillipson Power-Pakt. Gorgeous, though in need of a little epoxy.

In honor of my ongoing Phillipson Rod company stories (Part I & Part II) I brought a refinished 8.5′ 5wt Phillipson Power-Pakt, a gorgeous rod that casts even better than it looks.

Sadly, I pulled a ferrule while taking it apart (after 60 years, I guess it’s understandable if the glue dries out), but it’s at Chris’ shop right now, and I expect to have it in hand for more adventures real soon.

What’s in store for the Upper Sacramento?

Flows right now are unseasonably low, and in the hatch department, I get a sense of an engine that’s sputtering and chugging, but not quite ready to start.

Forecast is for largely sunny days but temperatures in the low-to-mid 60s, so we’re not going to see a big surge of runoff this week.

Will the hatches take hold? Or will the trout engineer yet another April Fools for anglers?

Stay tuned. See you on the river, Tom Chandler.

[tags]fly fishing, upper sac, upper sacramento river, phillipson[/tags]