Yaking the Delta

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paddle and flies
Posts: 6
Joined: Wed Dec 31, 1969 7:00 pm
Location: Center of California
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Yaking the Delta

Post by paddle and flies »

Launched from Lundborgs yesterday at about 2;00 pm. The tide was moving out. I didn’t waste any time fishing in front of the marina so I stuck my paddle in the water and didn’t stop paddling till I got past the wall. Not only was the tide outgoing it was also a full moon while not my favorite time to fish I was in a kayak so when they’re not biting I simply enjoy the ride. Beside any time you can fish is a good time to fish. Now if the traffic’s not agreeable my ride to the Delta can be as long as three hours. Once I’m on the water and I see the miles of tules and grass beds a heaven for bass, large mouth and striped …every mile of the drive is worth it.
I paddle and pedaled till I got past the rock and tule wall to the first opening to open water. I made my first cast a little before the old abandon party boat. It was my third cast that the bass ate my chartreuse and yellow Dahlberg. My first bass of the day was about twelve inches of altitude shaped like a football. After that I pedaled along the tules casting to openings and any other promising spots.
After a while the tules got denser and what I though where promising spots and openings was inside the tules!
Image


So…I paddled in among the tules and the tule soup. Picking out what I thought look like an opening in the soup actually it was about a twelve inch diameter hole at best. I did what I thought was an ok under handed swing maybe four different times before it landed in the hole.
Image

Something smacked the Dahlberg right away but it didn’t take. I maintained control and did not yank my fly out of the hole. Now about this time things were getting intense, the tule soup around the hole was moving up and down, just before it erupted like a geyser.
Now I had about ten feet of line out at the most. My 9 wt was bucking like a rodeo bronco, getting bent into the letter U and my tiptop was going in and out of the water. Until I finally saw the bass I was thinking double digit but once I lifted it in to the yak and saw the only thing that was double digit was its length, which was about 14 inches.
After releasing the bass I realized I’d implanted my self in the tules I then had back out the way I was drug in. I paddle on till I saw more holes in the soup back among the tules and then repeated the same scenario two more time with two more fish. I’m now toying with the thought of calling my yak the Tule Rat. After getting my fill of swinging my fly in the tules I paddled out on to open water and som grass beds. Not hard to find in the Delta. As I got to the grass beds I stood up so I could do some scouting. What I saw was large holes among the grass beds and in those holes was tons of bluegill and where they are…bass are. That theory became fact my first cast into one of the holes with another twelve inches of Delta attitude. This scenario…was repeated several more times. All and all despite an outgoing tide and a full moon I’d had one of the best days of fly-fishing from a kayak for bass in my life. Imagee

Well known Delta guide Kevin Doran is right the Delta is the best bass fishery in the world however there is no way I’m going to use a seven wt for that kind of fishing, an eight wt maybe.
Why do I paddle a kayak instead of a float tube or a pontoon? I like seeing where I going, not where I've been.
Rifleman
Posts: 554
Joined: Wed Dec 31, 1969 7:00 pm
Location: Spring Hill FL
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Post by Rifleman »

very nice! Thanks for sharing!

8)
James

"... but home to the bank came he, and the remorseless reel gathered up the thread of his life inch by inch." -Kipling
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