Utah Fish Report
Sacramento River Fish Report for 11-9-2011
Sacramento River Fish Report for 11-9-2011
The Lower Sac is flowing at 7,000 cubic feet per second with no scheduled changes
Sacramento River - CA
by The Fly Shop
11-9-2011
Website
Current River Conditions:
Excellent Blue Wing Olive hatches over the past two days! Rising fish are out there, but anglers have to look along the edges of the river where the water is shallow and smooth. Spot a rising rainbow, throw a #16 BWO dry and hang on! Over all, reports have been mostly good with a few reports of the bite tapering off late in the day. Some really big rainbows are being caught! Greg Dean has been doing well! He's been finding steelhead on the Lower Sac on #12 Bird's Nest!!
Click here for up to date Lower Sacramento flow
The Fly Shop's ? Tips:
Fishing a long, 9' leader tapered to 3x (the second fly can be attached using 4X) with a big indicator and an SSG split shot will get the flies down to the fish. If you are wading the river and not in a drift boat, add another AAA or even a second SSG to your rig. The sooner the flies get to the bottom of the river, the more time you spend "fishing". Look for the first of the fall-run Chinooks setting up in shallow water, fanning the rivers gravel and preparing for the Autumn spawn. Trout are always near the spawning salmon.
Bridge News:
All of the construction projects have finished their in-river work, so there are no longer hazards in the river at any of the bridges, and there are no longer flow-related boating restrictions anywhere on the river. Yeah!
River Fact:
How did the Sacramento River get it's name? In 1808, Spanish explorer Gabriel Moraga, on a journey to find suitable sites for the construction of missions, became the first foreigner to see the river clearly. Judging its huge breadth and power he named it Rio de good Sacramentos, or "River of the Blessed Sacrament".
Flies:
Dries:
• Mercer's Missing Link #14-16
• Parachute Profile Spinner BWO
• Norman's Loop Wing BWO
• D&D Cripple-Any!
• E/C Caddis Tan or Olive
Nymphs/Wet Flies:
• Glass Tail Caddis Pupa
• Pat's Rubberlegs #4-8
• Eng Thing #16
• Black Zebra Midge #16-18
• GB Flashback Olive PT #16-18
• CB Birds Nest #12-16
• S&M #16-18 (Any Color)
• Pseudo May #18 Olive
• Red Micro Mayfly #16-18
• Cinnamon BH Poopah #12-14
• Skip Nymph #16
Streamers/Leeches:
• Muddler Minnow #10
• Freshwater Clouser Olive/White
Eggs:
• MC Redd Reaper Peachy King
• Micro Spawn Salmon Egg
• Single Eggs (Any)
• Surreal Eggs (Any)
• Boles Bazookas (Any)
Excellent Blue Wing Olive hatches over the past two days! Rising fish are out there, but anglers have to look along the edges of the river where the water is shallow and smooth. Spot a rising rainbow, throw a #16 BWO dry and hang on! Over all, reports have been mostly good with a few reports of the bite tapering off late in the day. Some really big rainbows are being caught! Greg Dean has been doing well! He's been finding steelhead on the Lower Sac on #12 Bird's Nest!!
Click here for up to date Lower Sacramento flow
The Fly Shop's ? Tips:
Fishing a long, 9' leader tapered to 3x (the second fly can be attached using 4X) with a big indicator and an SSG split shot will get the flies down to the fish. If you are wading the river and not in a drift boat, add another AAA or even a second SSG to your rig. The sooner the flies get to the bottom of the river, the more time you spend "fishing". Look for the first of the fall-run Chinooks setting up in shallow water, fanning the rivers gravel and preparing for the Autumn spawn. Trout are always near the spawning salmon.
Bridge News:
All of the construction projects have finished their in-river work, so there are no longer hazards in the river at any of the bridges, and there are no longer flow-related boating restrictions anywhere on the river. Yeah!
River Fact:
How did the Sacramento River get it's name? In 1808, Spanish explorer Gabriel Moraga, on a journey to find suitable sites for the construction of missions, became the first foreigner to see the river clearly. Judging its huge breadth and power he named it Rio de good Sacramentos, or "River of the Blessed Sacrament".
Flies:
Dries:
• Mercer's Missing Link #14-16
• Parachute Profile Spinner BWO
• Norman's Loop Wing BWO
• D&D Cripple-Any!
• E/C Caddis Tan or Olive
Nymphs/Wet Flies:
• Glass Tail Caddis Pupa
• Pat's Rubberlegs #4-8
• Eng Thing #16
• Black Zebra Midge #16-18
• GB Flashback Olive PT #16-18
• CB Birds Nest #12-16
• S&M #16-18 (Any Color)
• Pseudo May #18 Olive
• Red Micro Mayfly #16-18
• Cinnamon BH Poopah #12-14
• Skip Nymph #16
Streamers/Leeches:
• Muddler Minnow #10
• Freshwater Clouser Olive/White
Eggs:
• MC Redd Reaper Peachy King
• Micro Spawn Salmon Egg
• Single Eggs (Any)
• Surreal Eggs (Any)
• Boles Bazookas (Any)
More Reports
It's a great time of year to fly fish the Upper Sac!
Sacramento River11-8-2011
Current River Conditions: Water conditions are great, wade friendly and the fishing has been good. You should be able to...... Read More
The Fly Shop Reports
for Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011Sacramento River: The Lower Sac Fly Fishing is top notch during the Salmon Run
Sacramento River: Rainbows feeding on October Caddis during late afternoons on the Upper Sac near Dunsmuir
Trinity River: Steelhead are in the Trinity, a great time for Fly Fishermen
Klamath River - Upper - CA: It's Steelhead time on the Klamath, a great time for Fly Fishermen
Pit River: Streamers, Nymphing & Caddis are the flies of choice on the Pit River at this time of year
McCloud River: The Fall Run Browns are active in the McCloud River
Fall River: Fall River Fishing Closes Nov. 15, so get out there while the fishing's good
Hat Creek: Hatches on Hat Creek are small green mayflies and midges, makes for good Fly Fishing
Iron Canyon Reservoir: You can virtually fly fish at Iron Canyon Reservoir by yourself
Manzanita Lake: This is a great time to go fly fishing at Manzanita Lake
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