
A few years ago I put a video on YouTube about trout fishing at Folsom Lake. Almost immediately someone commented, “Thanks for burning my spot.”
Really? Folsom Lake? Are you serious? It’s a big widely known reservoir a stone's throw away from the state capital!
While I don’t feel I have a duty to maintain a shroud of secrecy about the bass and trout fishing that occurs at Folsom Lake, the striper fishing along the West Bank of Decker Island or the halibut action that takes place on the Berkeley Flats, there are some destinations that are so small and unique that I do believe putting an X on the map for the thousands of anglers that read my material might have a detrimental effect on them, and that brings us to the fishing trip I took yesterday with Fish Sniffer contributor Tom O’Brien and pro photographer Dylan Meffan.
Tom is a high Sierra hunter, angler, and backpacker. He doesn’t know every part of the Sierras, but the parts he’s familiar with he knows intimately. For a long while Tom had been relating stories about a small high country lake where he’d been catching brook trout.
That in itself isn’t a surprise, since brook trout are fairly widespread in lakes above 6,000 feet in elevation. Of the 1,404 lakes in the Sierras considered to be high country fisheries, 16% of them hold brook trout, while 68% of them boast rainbows and 16% support browns.
What makes Tom’s fishing hole unique is the size of the brook trout. I’ve caught a lot of high Sierra brookies over the years, and the average size of the fish has been around 8 inches in lakes and a teeny 6 inches in streams. The fish in Tom’s lake average about 12 inches and range up to 17!
“I love brook