For a couple days, daytime temperatures exceeded the 75 degree mark, which means the grass at the Trout Underground/Man Cave World Headquarters was turning green and the flows on the river were spiking to 2,000 cfs.

Two families of deer were making regular appearances and eating the blooms off our flowers, and even though you know it’s going to happen, you wake up one morning with snow on the ground and you’re still surprised.

aprilsnow
Wonderpaw tracks in the snow.

The late spring storm happens most years, and several years ago — when we still had a closed season on the Upper Sacramento — opening day found us stepping over rafts of snow on the ground halfway down the canyon, remnants of a storm that moved through two days prior to the opener.

Welcome, Undergrounders, to spring in the mountains.

It’s a Race: Flows v Temperatures

We’re at the bonus portion of the year; we need warmer temperatures to get the bugs and trout going, but every spike in air temperature means a spike in river flows.

Lake Siskiyou — the reservoir at the top of the Upper Sacramento’s Canyon section — is full, so warmer weather causes it to spill, which is when flows get completely out of hand.

Fly fishing becomes a semi-desperate enterprise where you try to exploit the seams between warming weather and a raging river, and more often than not, you fail.

Still, it’s been a dry spring and we’ve had a gradual thaw, and if it’s one thing we’ve learned about fly fishermen, it’s that hope never quite dies.

And if it does, there’s always Lake Siskiyou; every fly fisherman I know tucks away a little secret “backup” water where he can get to it quickly in case of emergency.

Mine’s the lake (the streams don’t open until late April). What’s yours (feel free to offer false and misleading names)?

See you at the flow gauge, Tom Chandler.

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