
Fly Fishing For Steelhead On The American River
Water temperatures are beginning to rise alongside the current as runoff and more water are released in the Lower American River. Over the past couple of weeks, I have continued to spend countless hours chasing steelhead from the numerous access points located in Sacramento and Rancho Cordova that flow into the American River. With such an amazing urban fishery right at our fingertips, I encourage everyone to get out and explore this amazing stretch of water. With huge chrome steelhead swimming close enough to see, it can be hard to figure out what you need to do in order to hook up with one of these amazing fish, and that is exactly the type of challenge that lights a fire in my stomach strong enough to get me up early before the sun, in the pouring rain and gusty wind, throwing varieties of flies drifting through rough patches of water.
With my many years of fly fishing for trout that ultimately built up my fly fishing foundation, the transition to steelhead fly fishing has been quite the learning curve. Sometimes it might seem like you have to be fishing on just the right day, in the just-right spot, with the right gear and flies to land a steelhead on a fly rod or just a lot of luck. I beg to differ. It is no doubt a challenging task but it shouldn’t be a daunting one. And for some reason, the challenge is what keeps bringing me back and I’m sure other anglers that enjoy fishing for steelhead will say the same.
Being primarily a shore angler that has certain target spots along the river, another fire was lit when I began to fly fish from a drift boat along the American. It is an amazing experience to have an elevated view into the bluish and green currents that I had never been able to fully appreciate standing in waist-deep water. Never have I had such a clear view of my swing, which is a shame because there's a special kind of pleasure in watching a fly swim through fishy-looking water. Only then did I realize when you're waist-deep you don't see how a fish acted before it ate or what precisely about your swing prompted the fish to chase in the first place, all of the small details that help refine your ability to get