
Scenic Rucker Lake offers largemouth bass, green sunfish and brown bullhead catfish for bank and boat anglers.
I tossed out the Senko into the rocks near the dam as the sun began to set over the conifers of the Sierra Nevada skyline. Before the lure hit the bottom, I felt sudden pressure on the line, set the hook and a fat 14 inch largemouth leaped out of the water. I battled the scrapper right up to the shore, pulled the hook out and released it back into the water.
Before it turned dark, I caught and released two more fat, healthy largemouths while using Texas-rigged 5-inch Senkos in watermelon/green pumpkin.
As a bonus, I had the lake to myself on this early September evening. I was fishing at Rucker Lake, one of the highest elevation lakes where you can catch good numbers of largemouth bass in California.
Rucker Lake and its neighbor, Fuller Lake, are located at similar elevations and feature comparable conifer-studded northern Sierra Nevada scenery, but their fisheries couldn’t be more different.
Fuller, situated at 5341 feet above sea level in the Yuba Gap region, is a popular cold water fishery supplied from a canal from Bowman Lake. The lake offers top-notch rainbow and brown trout fishing in the spring, summer and fall for bank fishermen, float tubers and boaters. Even during the heat of the Sierra summer, the surface water temperatures are relatively cold.
Just a little over a mile away, Rucker Lake, situated at 5499.5 feet in elevation in a Sierra meadow, is a shallow, warm water lake supplied with water from Rucker Creek that drains Blue Lake. Its weed-lined waters feature not just a large population of scrappy largemouth bass, but brown bullhead catfish and green sunfish.
Both Fuller and Rucker are natural lakes whose water levels were raised when PG&E constructed dams on them in 1970-71. Both