
Frenchman Lake, located in Plumas County in the northeastern portion of the Plumas National Forest, features top-notch fishing for rainbow trout year-round and for brown bullhead catfish in the spring, summer, and fall.
The lake’s fishery is similar to that of Spicer Reservoir, located in the North Fork of the Stanislaus River watershed, in that both reservoirs feature beautiful, square-tailed rainbow trout grown out from fingerlings planted by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.
Bank anglers bag the rainbows and brown bullheads by bait fishing around the reservoir, while boaters land rainbows by trolling spinners, spoons, flies, and nightcrawlers behind dodgers and flashers.
A 1,580 surface acre reservoir created in 1961 that sits at an elevation of 5,588 feet above sea level, Frenchman is situated on the Middle Fork Feather River watershed. The California Department of Water Resources owns and operates the dams.
The reservoir is operated by the State Water Project to regulate Little Last Chance Creek for irrigation purposes in the Sierra Valley and to enhance recreation opportunities.
“The recreational fishery established at Frenchman Lake is primarily comprised of rainbow trout (RT) and brown bullhead (BB),” said Amber Mouser, CDFW Environmental Scientist, in the General Fish Survey 2016 conducted on April 14, 2017.
In addition to the trout and catfish fishery at Frenchman, Last Chance Creek below the dam, a tailwater fishery with cold water flows year-round, provides good fishing for wild brown and rainbow trout. Fly fishermen and spinning gear enthusiasts nail the fish on an array of flies, spinners, and bait.
Frenchman Lake became the focus of much local, state, and national media coverage when it became infested with non-native Northern pike in the late 1980s. The fish, a popular fish