The smoke from the forest fires rolled back in on Saturday, and fearing a backcountry hike would give me the equivalent of three-pack-a-day lungs, I called Steve Bertrand, and we opted to fly fish for bigger trout on the lower half of the Upper Sacramento.

Bertrand only seconds away from a 17″ rainbow trout.
Trout populations run in cycles; the last couple years we’ve seen good numbers of bigger fish on the Upper Sacramento River (a little unusual for the Upper Sacramento), but this year, most fly fishermen are catching a lot of small fish.
That’s not bad - little fish grow up to be big fish - and despite a self-centered belief to the contrary, nothing’s ever static in nature.
What Steve and I found downriver wasn’t the big-fish bonanza we’d experienced in prior years - nor the Trico spinner fall that I knew was a long shot, but wanted to fish anyway (Rosenbaeur at Orvis fired up a nice Trico-specific podcast) - but as we know, the lord giveth, and the lord taketh away.
So while Steve caught the 17″ rainbow that should have been mine, I managed to land a nice spotted bass, apparently making this my Year of Species Diversity.

A spotted bass - 11″ of pure dynamite. Really.
I’m sure I’m forgetting something, but that’s ten different species this year, which is already four more than last year (rainbow trout, brown trout, Westslope cutthroat trout, Coastal Cutthroat trout, brook trout, landlocked Atlantic Salmon, lake trout, smallmouth bass, spotted bass, bluegill).
To somebody who travels a lot or fishes saltwater, ten species isn’t much of a body count, but to someone who lives in the mountains - and lacks much in the way of real warmwater fly fishing - it’s a sign that something’s going right.
Sure, a quick trip to Singlebarbed’s selenium-tainted brownlines would up the species count considerably (carp, pikeminnow, largemouth bass, etc), and yes, there are still redbands and steelhead to be had locally, but I’ll get there when I can.
As for the largely ignored spotted bass, they move up into the lower river when the lake warms up, and while they’re not a secret, mentioning them to most fly fishers leads to glazed looks and pointed questions about the evening hatch for trout.
For the record, a spotted bass is far tougher than most rainbow trout, and since they happily eat streamers, you ignore them only if you’ve got a sure thing going elsewhere.
Streamer Heaven
And yes, in addition to the Year of Species Diversity, this is also the Underground’s Year of the Streamer.

Sure it’s funny looking in a Hollywood sort of way, but it catches fish.
Ian Rutter’s spent the better part of a couple years force-feeding me streamer propoganda, and because I’m a slow learner, it wasn’t until the last year that I tumbled for them in any real sense.
This year, pretty much every time I’ve tied on a streamer something interesting has happened, and in a few cases, that “something interesting” was very big and had fins.
(Note to self: Ian’s OK despite his poor taste in southern rock bands.)
For the record, I also landed several rainbow trout, though the bigger specimen I drove all that way for (at $4.59/gallon) didn’t eat a big streamer, but instead came unbuttoned from my black, #20 Yong’s Special midge.

Small and black are beautiful on the Upper Sac.
I managed to hook a couple others in the footlong range on the Yong Special (the Zebra midge is another favorite), which are clearly imitating the blackfly larvae coating some of the rocks.

Blackfly larvae cover some of the Upper Sac’s rocks.

Closeup of above: these are tiny (about #20-#22).
They’re more common on the lower end of the Upper Sacramento, and when you’re down there, it’s hard to miss with a black midge larvae pattern.
And yes, I think it amuses Steve Bertrand that this annual Big Fish Trip is about the only time all year I’ll fish a nymph rig from the moment I hit the water.
I don’t think nymphing is the Official Fly Fishing Technique of the Devil, but I’m not in love with it, citing a lack of grace and an overabundance of stuff that wants to tangle as my excuse. At least that’s my story.
Still - when the flies are small, the split shot count is low, and the trout are big - nymphing can be OK (for absolutes, better visit another blog).
See you on the river, Tom Chandler.

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Guy Davis 08.11.08 at 1:18 pm
Hi Tom,
Really enjoy your blog and read it every day.
I visit Dunsmuir and fish with Steve several times a year starting in April and ending the last of last week of October.
We noticed that there are few mid sized trout on the Upper Sac this year than there were last year.
The following in pic is of a spotted bass that I caught while fishing with Steve last August just before we went to the lower Klamuth to fish with Wally Johnson.
Tom Sorenson 08.11.08 at 1:46 pm
Nice - if it bites and puts up a good fight, it’s worth fishing for, right? Good stuff.
Eric 08.11.08 at 1:57 pm
Tom,
Congratulations on a diverse year and a year of the streamer.
Though I’m still new to this whole thing, streamers are about all I’ve fished with thus far, and my target has primarily been bass, smallmouth specifically.
There is nothing wrong with going trout fishing and either switching tactics or keeping the same tactics and catching bass instead - they fight hard and provide a lot of fun, whether other fish are biting or not.
I won’t pass up the opportunity to fish for trout so I can chase smallmouth, but I can’t say I’d fish for trout if there were smallmouth in the same river.
Have fun, whatever you do, and whatever you catch. Nymphing isn’t bad - when its the winter and its too cold to tie on tiny dry flies.
Eric
Alabama flygirl 08.11.08 at 4:51 pm
I am digging the way that Yongs special midge looks! My husband happens to be tying right now. I am going to slip this recipe in front of him. We are headed back to the Elk this weekend and it looks like a fly those Elk trout would love!
samistopdog 08.11.08 at 8:08 pm
great story and I agree with nine visits to the upper sac already this year …big fish numbers are down somewhat…but who cares?
Total number of fish is way up 47% over last year by my journal records….what really is important? fishing or catching fish?
BTW Tom pictures did not come thru again….sorry
samistopdog
Matt Dunn 08.12.08 at 6:17 am
Spotted bass? Here in southern Indiana the hardcore smallmouth anglers shake them off the hook like so much rock bass/bluegill/long ear sunfish/stone roller/shiner/dace etc.
Michael 08.12.08 at 7:07 am
That bullet head should be on display at the Met. Or are you about to tell us you’re now tying for the Chanel line? ;-)
Darn glad to hear you are giving the zebra midge credit - personally, I worship them (and the Mercury RS2) in a “devilish” sort of way, and hang them from grasshoppers to girlfriends’ (oops, I means Hooters girls) ears.
Tom Chandler 08.12.08 at 2:43 pm
Sam: Fixed?
Matt: You’re going to hell. That’s all we’re saying here (anti-spotted bass-ite)
Michael: Make sport of the streamer, but it did the job. And try the Yong Special midge. Not flashy, but damned effective, and about the fastest fly you’ve ever tied.
I’ve never seen a Hooters girl, so I wouldn’t know. Never.
Kentucky Jim 08.12.08 at 8:12 pm
Beautiful river; beautiful fish; strange streamer.