
Caples Lake, an El Dorado Irrigation District managed reservoir in Alpine County, is one of my favorite lakes to fish in the Sierra Nevada because of both its majestic alpine scenery and fine trout fishing. The lake currently hosts brown, rainbow, brook, and mackinaw trout, although rainbows are the most populous species.
Caples features 620 surface acres and is situated at approximately 7,820 feet above sea level when the lake is full. It is located off Highway 88, the Carson Pass Highway, about 17 miles south of Lake Tahoe.
My latest trip to the lake on June 20 shows why I like fishing at Caples so much. I didn’t see many people fishing on the lake - just a few at the spillway when I arrived there at 4:30 p.m.
I drove to the dam where I have a spot that almost always produces fish. I set up a Power Bait rod and then started casting another rod with a 2/5 ounce Little Cleo. Within a short time, I had battled five scrappy trout, keeping three rainbows for the table.
What was even better was that since I was there late in the day, I was the only fisher in that area. I didn’t see any other anglers as far as I could see, other than a couple of guys trolling for several minutes near my fishing spot.
After fishing, I went over to the Caples Lake Resort to talk to Joe Voss, the son of long-time owner John Voss, who passed away in 2016.
One of the last times I visited with John was when I caught a limit of holdover brown, brook, and rainbow trout while fishing from shore nearly a decade ago.
The CDFW planted 2,000 pounds of rainbows at the lake in late May 2018 – and great fishing for the season continued from there.