
My wife Gena has caught a lot of big fish, including 100 pound tuna, 30 pound yellowtail, a 40 plus pound striper and a huge jack crevalle that was within a pound of the world record.
The one fish that she really wants to catch that has eluded her is a big trout. She isn’t particular whether it’s a rainbow or a brown, but she has made clear mackinaw don’t count.
For Gena "big" is 8 pounds. She’s gotten a few rainbows around 5 pounds and her biggest overall trout so far was a 6 pound silver color phase brown that she caught at the mouth of the McCloud River Arm on Lake Shasta. That husky brown smashed a Silver Horde salmon spoon trolled beneath a big bait ball.
Last week, Gena’s hunt for a trophy trout was elevated to a whole new level when she finally hit the water with Captain Bryan Roccucci of Big Daddy’s Guide Service. She has known for a long time that Lake Almanor is full of big browns and rainbows and that fish in the 8 pound class are not uncommon at the Plumas County impoundment.
A couple years ago she decided that she really wanted to fish the lake with Roccucci, but it can be tough to get a date on Bryan’s boat during Almanor’s early spring trophy season that typically takes place in March and early April.
This year when I dropped into Bryan’s booth at the January Sacramento ISE show I asked about a date and he revealed a couple openings in early April. Bryan penciled in our names and April 2 was officially the date when Gena would attempt to trade punches with a Lake Almanor monster!
Gena and I along with our Labrador Lucy arrived in Chester on the shores of Lake Almanor the afternoon before our trip with Bryan. After checking into our hotel, we decided to go exploring around the lake and give Lucy a chance to run off some energy.
We ended up at