AnglerBob
01-20-2009, 12:15 AM
I began the day originally intending to fish Cucamonga-Guasti park, a place I used to fish in the 70s with my Dad. I haven’t been back since as it’s a long drive and there are closer, better options, but I wanted to see what it was like out there now. Turns out mostly unchanged, although there’s a small subdivision and a Starbucks across the street—but surprisingly, lots of empty fields remain. When I got there though, I was greeted with the sorry news that the stocking truck did not show up Thursday as expected. “It might come today, though,” the gate gal offered. Reluctantly, I forked over my $12.00 and set up shop on the bank, with a surprising number of fellow anglers for a weekday. When an hour had elapsed and nobody had caught a fish, I could pretty well guess the lake—little more than a pond, really—had been fished out some time ago.
http://fishingnetwork.net/forum4/picture.php?albumid=158&pictureid=1264
At this point, I decided to cut my losses, head East to the 15 and down to Corona lake, figuring it would be about 35 minutes in good traffic. It turned out to be a good decision, I think. I arrived at the gate around 9:40, and the lady said fishing had been good, with one hot angler in particular scoring on Gulp eggs jigged in some manner. After shelling out for the Gulp eggs and nightcrawlers, I set up on the bank near the white buoy per her suggestion. Although it looked like a good spot, nice and deep, there was no action for me or anyone else in the vicinity. I blamed the slowness on the heat, which I figured had probably warmed up the water pretty well by now, and wished I’d arrived earlier.
http://fishingnetwork.net/forum4/picture.php?albumid=158&pictureid=1268
I noticed, though, it looked pretty crowded closer to the dam and wondered if they were doing better there. When a few folks cleared out of that area around 11:30, I headed over there between two parties that were both doing well. Almost immediately, I got a small trout on a 1/2 nightcrawler. A second fish, a bit larger (a bit over a pound, perhaps) followed shortly thereafter on the same rig. I was surprised that this spot worked so well, because it was shallower and sunnier than the spot I fished earlier. However, the fishermen to my left were wading out several feet and found the answer: small baitfish, shad perhaps, were sunning themselves in the shallows and the hungry trout were lurking nearby. I made a shorter cast and picked up a third fish, about a pound.
http://fishingnetwork.net/forum4/picture.php?albumid=158&pictureid=1265
http://fishingnetwork.net/forum4/picture.php?albumid=158&pictureid=1266
About an hour later, I hooked into something I will never know. It happened while I was retrieving, which makes me think I might have snagged it. I thought it was a snag at first, but then it moved, and took out line. The guy on my left thought I was hooked up with him, and I was, but that clearly wasn’t the whole story: we weren’t at opposite angles to each other, and my line was peeling off in the opposite direction. Whatever it was, it wasn’t a Tailwalker; it was low and slow, massive and unmoveable. After several minutes, it abruptly came unhooked, and that was that. The consensus on the bank was that it was probably a large catfish. Didn’t want a catfish anyway, but that was pretty exciting!
After that, the action slowed, but the guys on my right (towards the launch ramp) started getting hit pretty good. They limited out and left. I asked if I could take their spot and they said another party had come to claim it, who would be camping overnight. However, since I was leaving soon, we fished the spot together for a bit—I got one more bite on rainbow PB and that was it. Left at 3:15 with the three fish. I don’t usually keep trout, but Corona doesn’t permit catch and release, so I cleaned these fish for the Mini Chief smoker. None of these fish was a revered Nebraska Tailwalker, unfortunately; just garden-variety silver Frankenfish.
http://fishingnetwork.net/forum4/picture.php?albumid=158&pictureid=1267
Not a bad day considering the change in plan. Corona has a nice rural feel to it, although right off a giant superhighway. One minor drawback with the place: staff is not as friendly or helpful as Irvine. The older lady was pleasant enough, but the two men were surly and somewhat unfriendly. Not really a big deal, but when you charge $22.00 for a day’s fishing, it might be nice to be treated like a customer.
For anyone planing to hit this lake, I’d recommend getting there early for a choice shore spot, or bringing/renting a boat. I had all my bites on N/C and rainbow PB with no added attractants at all. Also, very short leaders.
Gulp eggs didn’t do a dang thing.
http://fishingnetwork.net/forum4/picture.php?albumid=158&pictureid=1264
At this point, I decided to cut my losses, head East to the 15 and down to Corona lake, figuring it would be about 35 minutes in good traffic. It turned out to be a good decision, I think. I arrived at the gate around 9:40, and the lady said fishing had been good, with one hot angler in particular scoring on Gulp eggs jigged in some manner. After shelling out for the Gulp eggs and nightcrawlers, I set up on the bank near the white buoy per her suggestion. Although it looked like a good spot, nice and deep, there was no action for me or anyone else in the vicinity. I blamed the slowness on the heat, which I figured had probably warmed up the water pretty well by now, and wished I’d arrived earlier.
http://fishingnetwork.net/forum4/picture.php?albumid=158&pictureid=1268
I noticed, though, it looked pretty crowded closer to the dam and wondered if they were doing better there. When a few folks cleared out of that area around 11:30, I headed over there between two parties that were both doing well. Almost immediately, I got a small trout on a 1/2 nightcrawler. A second fish, a bit larger (a bit over a pound, perhaps) followed shortly thereafter on the same rig. I was surprised that this spot worked so well, because it was shallower and sunnier than the spot I fished earlier. However, the fishermen to my left were wading out several feet and found the answer: small baitfish, shad perhaps, were sunning themselves in the shallows and the hungry trout were lurking nearby. I made a shorter cast and picked up a third fish, about a pound.
http://fishingnetwork.net/forum4/picture.php?albumid=158&pictureid=1265
http://fishingnetwork.net/forum4/picture.php?albumid=158&pictureid=1266
About an hour later, I hooked into something I will never know. It happened while I was retrieving, which makes me think I might have snagged it. I thought it was a snag at first, but then it moved, and took out line. The guy on my left thought I was hooked up with him, and I was, but that clearly wasn’t the whole story: we weren’t at opposite angles to each other, and my line was peeling off in the opposite direction. Whatever it was, it wasn’t a Tailwalker; it was low and slow, massive and unmoveable. After several minutes, it abruptly came unhooked, and that was that. The consensus on the bank was that it was probably a large catfish. Didn’t want a catfish anyway, but that was pretty exciting!
After that, the action slowed, but the guys on my right (towards the launch ramp) started getting hit pretty good. They limited out and left. I asked if I could take their spot and they said another party had come to claim it, who would be camping overnight. However, since I was leaving soon, we fished the spot together for a bit—I got one more bite on rainbow PB and that was it. Left at 3:15 with the three fish. I don’t usually keep trout, but Corona doesn’t permit catch and release, so I cleaned these fish for the Mini Chief smoker. None of these fish was a revered Nebraska Tailwalker, unfortunately; just garden-variety silver Frankenfish.
http://fishingnetwork.net/forum4/picture.php?albumid=158&pictureid=1267
Not a bad day considering the change in plan. Corona has a nice rural feel to it, although right off a giant superhighway. One minor drawback with the place: staff is not as friendly or helpful as Irvine. The older lady was pleasant enough, but the two men were surly and somewhat unfriendly. Not really a big deal, but when you charge $22.00 for a day’s fishing, it might be nice to be treated like a customer.
For anyone planing to hit this lake, I’d recommend getting there early for a choice shore spot, or bringing/renting a boat. I had all my bites on N/C and rainbow PB with no added attractants at all. Also, very short leaders.
Gulp eggs didn’t do a dang thing.