November 15 used to feel like the beginning of the end of the world.
The general trout season on the Upper Sacramento closed(along with most the other rivers in the state). For half the year, we were left to stare at a river we couldn’t fish (for what appeared to be no good reason).
For a few of us, the closing day gathering at Wayne and Myrna’s was more a wake than a party.
This was off limits during the winter. Now you’re free to freeze your ass off.
That was until Chris Raine spearheaded a drive to open the river to year-round angling, and now November 15 comes and goes like almost any other day (though if your home water was the McCloud, you probably feel differently).
The season opener also went the way of the homing pigeon, and though I was happy to see that wretchedly timed day die a quick death (the season always opened the day after the river blew out), I admit to missing the gradual, nervous buildup and all the anticipation.
Then again, if I really missed it, I could go stand in a closed river and not fish it. Since that hasn’t happened, I think I’m probably just being nostalgic.
Before the Upper Sac was opened year-round, what happened on the Upper Sac in winter tended to stay on the Upper Sac in winter, and like Las Vegas, you knew interesting things were going on, but you didn’t know exactly what they were.
More than a few times I’d take a walk along a high bank, and see trout eating BWOs in the kind of hard-clear water you only experience in the dead of winter.
Today, we have some idea what’s happening, though it’s a little like teenagers discussing sex; there are significant gaps in the knowledge base, and lot of guesswork and fantasy is involved.
What’s apparent is that the BWO hatches come and go with maddening irregularity. Three winters ago the hatches were regular and thick; the last two winters have been far more sporadic.
Midges? I was expecting serious midge hatches, and yet I’m still largely waiting. Damn.
A CDC BWO cripple, freshly dusted.
I’ve fished the river a couple times this last week, and not once did the hatch come off like I’d hoped. Nor did the fish rise like I so desperately wanted.
I managed a few grabs on the BWOs, but I’m pretty sure I’d have done a lot better on the big October Caddis dry. That’s on tap for my next trip, and naturally, I’ll let you know.
In the meantime, I wanted to share some important information — the kind of information that sets the Trout Underground apart from all those other fly fishing sites, which only offer you “How to Catch Fish” advice.
Here at the Underground, we go one step further by dispensing with irritating “how-to” advice, and moving right into “Where to Catch Big Trout” information. Behold:
A really, really big fish sometimes eats bugs only 1.5 feet from that small white rock barely poking its head out of the water.
There you go. Once again, no need to thank us. See you on the open-for-winter-fishing river, Tom Chandler.






{ 15 comments… read them below or add one }
I was able to zero in on that exact rock with Google Maps. Send me an envelope full of unmarked Euros or that fish gets whacked with a frog gigging trident.
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I say we open up the McCloud year round as well. Stop and think about all the benefits:
* Tow companies come out ahead.
* Tire shops come out ahead.
* Hotels & Motels come out ahead. Although, I for one would love to camp at Ah-di-na and have to walk 10 feet instead of 50 feet to reach the river. Not too mention the balmy temperatures.
* Guides could charge extra for Extreme fishing.
Its win-win!
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Good for you winter fishers. I have a feeling that winter on the upper Sac would seem like March fishing here in Montana.
Winter fishing here is a combination of fishing, hockey, ice climbing, and tobogganing not to mention the art of trying to stay warm which leads one into all kinds of uncharted territory…
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Pete: Sadly for you, I lied.
Loon: These rural towns gotta make money one way or another…
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Speaking of rural towns making money, does anyone know of a car/truck rental up in Mt. Shasta or McCloud or Dunsmuir for getting to Ah-di-nah? Or is Redding airport the closest place for that?
That road to ah-di-nah was a bit rough on our 2-wheel-drive sedan, you know, the thing I need to live and work. Bigger rigs were passing us and I was getting quite jealous about how many more seconds they would have on the river. Of course, if I just moved to the area, then I would probably have that bigger rig, and I wouldn’t be so worried about those precious fishing seconds anyway.
And if anyone up in the Siskiyous with a truck wants to drive a Berkeley special of a Volvo for a day or two next spring, then by all means, give me a holler.
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Will: No rentals in Shasta or Dunsmuir. Think it’s either Redding or Yreka. Look at the bright side — driving a Volvo means you can afford to fish somewhere outside the city block.
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Tom,
Besides the upper Sac and the Truckee, what other rivers in Cal are open year round? Fished the Truckee Sunday and got blown out. If I didn’t know better, I’d say that it was barren.
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Guido: Two that I know of are Hot creek and the lower Owens. Then you have all the anadronymous rivers, the klammath, the trinity, the feather, the lower sac, putah creek, plus all of Butte county unless stated otherwise.
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Guido: Check the regulations, but I believe parts of the Pit River are also year-round.
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Tom/Pete/Will,
In the spirit of how-to’s I put together a little how-to myself “How to really fish the Mac,” summed up in 2 nifty photos:
http://zanfx.com/mac/
Pete- please provide the lat & long of this spot. Note the tail & fin ;-)
Will- I don’t think you’re alone not driving a 4WD monster down there.
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TC this is especially for you
1st the spot in the picture is the mouth of xxx xxxx creek not shown on most maps etc.
2nd please dont spread the word of our low land wonder open year rd.its an amazing beauty now in the Fall, especially near the dam.
3rd the TRuckee is fickle, even for us guides
4th the Canoe hat has been on many journeys. most recently to Donner lake with my 7 yr old, last weeken. some beautifull brook trout in xxxxx creek COLD!. Currnetly the hat is with me shading my eye, pool side in Palm Springs, with kids and my LT wife Liz
See YOU on in low lands.
TC email me and I will guide you on my creek.
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Visiting from the white River in Ark. Looking to check out northern CA. Trout fishing. Here only this week end. What do you suggect? The Upper Sac? Location?
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What kind of fishing do you want? The Lower Sac offers much bigger fish, albeit in a more industrial setting. And it’s best fished from a drift or pontoon boat.
Both the Upper Sac and Pit Rivers are open, and I’d fish the upper half of the Upper Sac. Stop by the Ted Fay Fly shop in Dunsmuir (downtown — you can’t miss it) and buy one of the streamtime access maps.
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Very nice pics. Cool river. Wanna go fishing that river some day.
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Kalastus: We’re only a couple thousand miles away… 8-)
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