Nevada Fish Report
Pit River Fish Report for 6-21-2012
Pit River Fish Report for 6-21-2012
The Pit is fishing great with good water condition
Pit River - CA (Modoc County)
by The Fly Shop
6-21-2012
Website
The Pit River consists of a series of dams and reservoirs that stretch for some 30 miles from Lake Britton to Shasta Lake.
Current River Conditions: The Pit is fishing great! Water conditions are good and there's plenty of fishable water.
We expect the Pit to produce good fishing all summer long!
Bring the wading staff! We highly recommend wearing a PFD (Personal Floatation Device) too. The Pit River is a demanding river to wade thanks to slippery, bowling-ball like boulders and rocks. Keeps the crowds down!
UPDATE:
Expect 30 minute delays on HWY 299 from 12 miles to 5 miles west of Montgomery Creek due to road maintenance work.
The Fly Shop's ? Tips: Under a medium sized indicator, fish a #6-8 Pat's rubber Legs through the day. Suspend a #16 black Micro-Mayfly underneath. A dry-dropper rig comprised of a Salmon fly adult and a #16 red copper john can be a great choice for all day action. #14-18 Pheasant Tail Nymphs should be in every fly box. fishing near sunset is a great plan. Have your #6 Orange Stimulators ready.
Be ready for supremely tough wading conditions when fishing the Pit. Flat ground DOES NOT exist here! A wading staff really makes a difference for every angler who fishes here. Pack some dry clothes, snake kit and don't forget to dry out your fly-box at the end of the day! The Pit River rainbows will eat all day most of the time. These feisty fish can be found holding in fast bubbly water and in slower, smooth flowing water as well. High-stick and short line nymphing techniques are the key to finding the biggest rainbows on this river. Have plenty of BB, AAA and SSG split shot in your vest pocket. Feed lots of line and go for long drag free drifts, using an indicator and suspending flies 3 - 6 feet deep, in the long smooth glides between boulders and broken riffles. An there is no shortage of boulders, riffles, runs and pockets.
River Fact:
The Pit, the Klamath and the Columbia are the only three rivers in the U.S. that cross the Cascade Range.
Water Flows:
• Pit #3 Flows
• Pit #4 Flows
• Pit #5 Flows
Suggested Fly Patterns:
Dry Flies:
• Quigley's Stacker Stone
• TFS Li'l Yellow Stone Dry
• Brook's Hedlite Sally
• Matt's Stoneflies #6-8
• The Thing From Uranus #4-8
• Grillo's Sideshow Bob - Stone
• Elk Hair Caddis - Tan #12-16
• Yellow Stimulator - #8-16
• Orange Stimulators #6
• Mayfly Cripples - #12-16
Nymphs/Wet Flies:
• Deceptive Cray
• Mercer's CB Little Yellow Stones
• Little Sloan's
• CB Black Bird's Nest - #10-16
• Sexy Souka - #6
• GB Black A.P. - #10-12
• Micro Mayflies - #14-18
• Red Copper Johns - #16-18
• Zebra John - #16-18
• Pat's Brown Rubberleg - #6-8
• GB Half-Flashback PT - #12-20
• Pheasant Tail Nymphs #14-18
• Amber Wing Prince - #14-18
• GB Bird's Nest #10-16
Streamers/Leeches:
• Beaded Lite Brite Bugger - #6
• Zack's Swimming Leech - #8
Fly Fishing Gear:
• The Fly Shop's ? Landing Nets
• Pit River Hardwood Wading Staff
• Simms ? Headwater Stockingfoot Waders
Current River Conditions: The Pit is fishing great! Water conditions are good and there's plenty of fishable water.
We expect the Pit to produce good fishing all summer long!
Bring the wading staff! We highly recommend wearing a PFD (Personal Floatation Device) too. The Pit River is a demanding river to wade thanks to slippery, bowling-ball like boulders and rocks. Keeps the crowds down!
UPDATE:
Expect 30 minute delays on HWY 299 from 12 miles to 5 miles west of Montgomery Creek due to road maintenance work.
The Fly Shop's ? Tips: Under a medium sized indicator, fish a #6-8 Pat's rubber Legs through the day. Suspend a #16 black Micro-Mayfly underneath. A dry-dropper rig comprised of a Salmon fly adult and a #16 red copper john can be a great choice for all day action. #14-18 Pheasant Tail Nymphs should be in every fly box. fishing near sunset is a great plan. Have your #6 Orange Stimulators ready.
Be ready for supremely tough wading conditions when fishing the Pit. Flat ground DOES NOT exist here! A wading staff really makes a difference for every angler who fishes here. Pack some dry clothes, snake kit and don't forget to dry out your fly-box at the end of the day! The Pit River rainbows will eat all day most of the time. These feisty fish can be found holding in fast bubbly water and in slower, smooth flowing water as well. High-stick and short line nymphing techniques are the key to finding the biggest rainbows on this river. Have plenty of BB, AAA and SSG split shot in your vest pocket. Feed lots of line and go for long drag free drifts, using an indicator and suspending flies 3 - 6 feet deep, in the long smooth glides between boulders and broken riffles. An there is no shortage of boulders, riffles, runs and pockets.
River Fact:
The Pit, the Klamath and the Columbia are the only three rivers in the U.S. that cross the Cascade Range.
Water Flows:
• Pit #3 Flows
• Pit #4 Flows
• Pit #5 Flows
Suggested Fly Patterns:
Dry Flies:
• Quigley's Stacker Stone
• TFS Li'l Yellow Stone Dry
• Brook's Hedlite Sally
• Matt's Stoneflies #6-8
• The Thing From Uranus #4-8
• Grillo's Sideshow Bob - Stone
• Elk Hair Caddis - Tan #12-16
• Yellow Stimulator - #8-16
• Orange Stimulators #6
• Mayfly Cripples - #12-16
Nymphs/Wet Flies:
• Deceptive Cray
• Mercer's CB Little Yellow Stones
• Little Sloan's
• CB Black Bird's Nest - #10-16
• Sexy Souka - #6
• GB Black A.P. - #10-12
• Micro Mayflies - #14-18
• Red Copper Johns - #16-18
• Zebra John - #16-18
• Pat's Brown Rubberleg - #6-8
• GB Half-Flashback PT - #12-20
• Pheasant Tail Nymphs #14-18
• Amber Wing Prince - #14-18
• GB Bird's Nest #10-16
Streamers/Leeches:
• Beaded Lite Brite Bugger - #6
• Zack's Swimming Leech - #8
Fly Fishing Gear:
• The Fly Shop's ? Landing Nets
• Pit River Hardwood Wading Staff
• Simms ? Headwater Stockingfoot Waders
More Reports
The Fly Shop Reports
for Thursday, June 21st, 2012Hat Creek: Hat Creek represents the quintessential chess game of spring creek fly fishing for wary trout.
Klamath River - Upper - CA: The Salmon Flies have come & gone on the Klamath, consequently there is nothing exciting to report
Sacramento River: The flows are fluctuating on the Lower "Sac", which makes fishing tougher
The Fly Shop Reports
for Wednesday, June 6th, 2012Iron Canyon Reservoir: The fishing is good at Iron Canyon Reservoir
Keswick Reservoir: The rainbows in Keswick have made the fishing great
McCumber Reservoir: Damsel Flies & Callibaetis hatches are producing action packed fishing on McCumber Reservoir
Lewiston Lake: Lewiston is producing good fishing & is should only get better
Manzanita Lake: The Callibaetis hatch is on at Manzanita Lake and the 'bows & browns are on the feed
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