People from all over the map all converging on access 4 and 5 flogging the water to a froth. Mud all over the place down by the bridge and a pale colored bottom on the tailouts that the fish don't like because they stand out in contrast. And a fresh vibrant crop of poison oak on the trail to the rock garden. Good times.....
I saw a bunch of people at 4 and 5 the week before. Don't know why. It's skinny water and warm weather in low flow conditions. Hopefully the crowds stay there. They can share the hand full of holes there. The rest if the river is wide open.
Access 4 and 5 have been productive for me in previous years. They are relatively spacious and easy to fish. It's also easier to cover a lot of water by walking from 4 to 5 and back again without having to get in the car and drive to a different hole. With that said, I've fished 4 and 5 four times last month and caught precious few fish.
I got to the river at 7:30 yesterday morning and access 4 and 5 were already full of cars. I parked my car on the shoulder about a mile upstream of access 3 where a tail out turns onto fast water...had no luck there. Moved back to access 3 and walked the trail upstream until I found an open spot...nothing, no fish interested in my flies. I left at noon.
No.3 strikes me as the test piece for a good putah fly fisherman. I KNOW the fish are there as I have caught them on my spinning rod, but since I have turned to the long rod it's been no go. They are in that narrow boundary layer in the stream flow but haven't YET figured out a good drift in that narrow zone covered by fast water. I also wonder if they are eating different things there
The past few years have been higher flows. It's still well under average. It's usually above 200 cfs this time of year. Fish are not in their usual spots.
Do you guys think the flows will be upped gradually or will it go from 160 to 500 within a few weeks this year? I personally prefer the higher flows because there are less people and more fish plus the creek has been less than 200 since November.
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I ♥ Putah Creek
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Flows change erratically this time of year. This is the spring transition period from city water use only to City + Agricultural use in the I-80 corridor where 90% of the Berryessa water goes. If it rains, they drop the flows, if no rain they ramp up as needed for Ag. No real rain is on the horizon so you can expect flows to continue to step up. Each time that happens it normally throws the fish off for a few days.
What is throwing the fish off now every day is the silt. Food and cover is buried in mud down to the lower part of Access 3. Fishing will likely be slow until the silt is mobilized by high flows, the fish adjust, but that could take a few months. Its mud so deep in many key areas that it might not be totally washed away this year. Sorry to be a downer, but this is the worst disaster to hit the creek in the 20 years I've been fishing here. Upside is it should slowly get better and recover.
If you look along the edges at deer sign you will see fingerlings-not all (if any) perished. The small redd area at Cold Creek might be a different story.
By the way, good to meet you yesterday and glad you survived our new Warden's scrutiny of your license. If you didn't get a fish, you are not alone. The 4 others I talked to hadn't have any success.