MERCED, CALIFORNIA FLY FISHING CLUBI am a member of the MERCED FLY FISHING CLUB, whose general meeting is the 4th Tuesday of the month at 7:00 p.m. at the CITI BANK at 1840 M Street (corner of 19th and M), Merced, California. The club does not meet during the months of June, July, August, and
December, since most members are either out fishing somewhere or celebrating at home with their families.
Click on the Merced Flyfishing Club web page at MercedFlyfishingClub.
In the picture at the right Wade Meiers and I are manning a table during a fly tying demonstration at the Merced Mall. Club members do a variety of activities in order to publicize the sport of fly fishing and give instructions on how to get started. The club also works on a Free Fish Day for disabled young people out at Lake Yosemite, as well as working with the schools in the area on trout-hatching programs. We also do conservation activities, like picking up the trash along the banks of the lower Merced River and fighting to keep the upper Merced River a wild and scenic waterway.
Once a year in June on the free fishing day, the Merced Flyfishing Club assists the Merced County Recreation Department and the State Fish and Game Department in the Handicapped Fishing Day. About a hundred children and adults fish at Scout Island on Lake Yosemite, just outside of Merced, and they have a wonderful time, catching 5 fish and having them cleaned so they can take them home. The picture on the left is of the Calaveras Fish Farm employee planting rainbow trout, and the picture on the right is of Bill Knapp, a member of the Merced FlyFishing Club, helping a handicapped person land and save the trout. (Thanks to Robert McGinnis for these pictures.)
The club's home river is the Merced River, but these days the lower river below Crocker-Huffman Dam is without many decent game fish, although it has plenty of rough fish. The picture of me on the right was at a time when the river was the home of rainbow trout.
The upper river from Yosemite National Park downstream to Bryceburg is mostly trout fishing and below Bryceburg is mostly smallmouth bass fishing although you might find either trout or smallmouth in either section.
The river within the boundaries of Yosemite National Park has both Brown and Rainbow trout, as well as rough fish. From the Happy Isles footbridge (Mariposa County) downstream to the western boundry of Yosemite National Park at El Portal, the season is the last Saturday in April through November 15. Only artificial lures with barbless hooks may be used, and the limit is 0 Rainbows and 5 Brown trout. This picture of the Merced River was taken by J.R. Dunster, who loves Yosemite and who has an excellent web site accessed by clicking Yosemite Photos and Art.
From the boundry of Yosemite National Park at El Portal downstream to the Foresta Bridge, the Merced River is open all year, with artificial lures and barbless hooks. 0 Rainbows may be taken and 5 Brown trout. From Foresta Bridge downstream to Lake McClure, rainbow trout are planted regularly, and anglers can fish with bait or artificial lures; in this section the season for the last Saturday in April through November 15 is 5 trout, and the season for November 16 through the Friday preceding the last Saturday in April is 2 trout. The most prominent flies in the river are Caddis flies, but there are also Stoneflies and Mayflies, too.
In Merced County, from Crocker-Huffman Dam downstream to the Schaffer bridge on Montpelier Road, the season is January 1 through October 15, with artificial lures and barbless hooks, and the limit is 0 trout and salmon. From the Schaffer bridge on Montpelier Road downstream to the mouth, the season is January 1 through October 15, and bait may be used, but check for the special regulations for the April 1 through fourth Saturday in May period.
DO YOU HAVE QUESTIONS ABOUT FISHING IN CENTRAL CALIFORNIA AND ESPECIALLY YOSEMITE?
A good source for information is a member of our Merced Flyfishing Club, and a certified Yosemite Park fishing guide (and a good one) Tim Hutchins. His web site is Here, and his email is Tim@yosemiteflyfishing.net. If you have questions about fishing the Merced River or fishing in the area around Yosemite National Park, why don't you contact him. He is much more knowledgeable than I am about conditions and where to fish.
Another excellent source of information and also a member of our Merced Fly Fishing Club, Steve Beck, has written an informative guide to trout fishing in Yosemite National Park. He covers all the main geographical areas of the park, and includes maps and pictures for illustration. He has written a second book on fishing the John Muir Trail, and both books are accurate guides if you like to fish in the Sierras. You can contact Steve at sbeck@elite.net. If you have questions about fishing in the Yosemite Park area, please contact Steve. He knows more about conditions and places to fish in that area than anyone is our club.
A guide service for the lower Merced River is Tim Bermingham's fly fishing guide service. He features jet boat, drift boat, and wading expeditions also on a variety of streams other than the Merced. His web site is
here.
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If you want to check out the stream flows of the Merced River, click HERE. |