
I felt a fish grab the plastic grub I had just thrown near the shoreline rocks in the early morning shadows at Jackson Meadows Reservoir. I set the hook and felt the surge of a good-sized fish as it struggled to free itself of the hook.
After it made a couple of runs towards the bottom, I slowly worked the fish toward the boat. I saw the brown and reddish colors of a trout, thinking it was a colorful male rainbow.
However, once Brett Brady of Bare Bones Guide Service got it in the net, I realized it was a Lahontan cutthroat similar to those I had fished for in Pyramid Lake back in October. It measured 22 inches long.
"That's on the lower end of the size of the cutthroats we've caught lately," he said. "These fish go up to 5 pounds."
It was one of two cutthroats we hooked the lake that day; the other fish I lost right at the boat.
Located on the Middle Fork of the Yuba River in Nevada County at 6040 feet above sea level, Jackson Meadows is known for its robust and abundant rainbow trout and its wary browns, but it also features bonus Lahontan cutthroat, as I discovered that day.
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) now plants both catchable and fingerling rainbows and fingerlings in this forage-rich reservoir located in a former mountain meadow.
In 2014, the CDFW stocked 50,000 rainbow trout fingerlings, 20,000 catchable rainbows (about 10,000 pounds), and 22,700 fingerling browns, according to Kyle Murphy, CDFW environmental scientist.
In 2015, the Department stocked 31,000 rainbow trout fingerlings, 8600 catchable rainbows (about 2500 pounds) and 22,000 brown trout fingerlings.
"At least over the past 15 years, we don’t"