
As long as there isn't too much snow to access the lake, or if the lake isn’t frozen over, Lake Almanor is one of California's best winter trout fisheries. I've had stellar days of fishing with morning temperatures in the low double digits.
My little 12' Lowe Johnboat actually banged its way through the chunks of ice floating on the surface. Large schools of pond smelt were suspended in open water as thousands of Western Grebes wintering on the lake dove to fill their bellies.
Almanor is one of my favorite lakes to fish when the weather gets cold. As you might expect, the boat pressure is light. What may surprise anglers is that the fish bite really well in the winter. When the surface temperature is a measly 39 degrees, the trout actually feed aggressively at this big reservoir.
There are three ways to target these mid winter trout. The first way is to toss bait from the bank. I've seen some local yokels around that stake out their favorite bank fishing spots, and the guys routinely pull out some really nice browns and rainbows.
The hot bait is an inflated crawler. I don't suspect that these guys are catching a whole lot of fish, yet the fish they are catching are some brutes. Five to seven pound browns are a legitimate possibility for patient and cold hardy anglers soaking inflated night crawlers.
The other two methods are both trolling methods, but they are vastly different. The first method is to pull bright chrome/black back minnow plugs at a quick pace. I like F-11 Rapalas or Yo-Zuri Pin Minnows.
I don't troll them quite as quick as I would in the summer, spring or fall. I just like to go fast enough to get the plug wiggling a little. Twisting the throttle often results in strikes.
Once again, keep in mind that these fish don't want the plug going 4.5 MPH; instead, just keep it wiggling. The strike usually isn't a