Ted Fay Fly Shop June Report
Bob Grace
6/1/2026 Ted Fay Fly Shop Report
Greetings from the oldest operating fly shop in California, located in the heart of Northern California’s fabled trout-filled rivers!
Lately at the shop, the banter has been veering towards things of a metaphysical nature. Bob got a singing bowl for his retirement and the shop now has that peaceful, dawning-of-Aquarius vibe that one would expect from a business at the foot of ethereal Mount Shasta. Bob loves to play it, all you have to do is ask him.
June is one of those months with so much to offer that the main problem is trying to make a decision of where to fish and what to fish for. The rivers are ripe for dry flies, the bass are in the shallows gorging themselves, the hexagenia hatch will close it off…essentially hungry fish are everywhere. Last weekend I was bringing a 15-16 inch rainbow to shore when a monster of a pikeminnow came up and grabbed it mid-section, took off with it and then swallowed it headfirst, leaving only its tail sticking out of its maw. I fought it for a bit and then it spit it out. No fooling! My wife saw it! Get out there and have some fun!
Tip: Fly line has memory, so if it’s been sitting in the reel for a bit, it will come out spiraled which leads to poor casting, more challenging hook sets, and just doesn’t look pretty. On a warm day, set your hook in a tree branch or fence and then walk out your reel until you reach the backing. Pull it tight and leave that way in the sun for 10-15 minutes. As it is stretching, get some Mucilin and coat your entire fly line. This will help preserve your line, clean it, keep it afloat, give you a smoother and longer cast and help with a better presentation.
Upcoming Events:
Dunsmuir Railroad Days (June 12–14, 2026): The town's biggest celebration of the year featuring a parade, live music, vendors, and historical displays at the ballpark and downtown. Look out for shows at local spots like the Dunsmuir Brewery Works and Bee Kind Bakery.
Fly Tying Social Hour June 13th from 4-7pm at Ted Fay Fly Shop
THE REPORT
Upper Sacramento River
Water Temp: 54 degrees at Cantara
River Flows at Delta: 570 CFS and dropping
The Golden Stones are starting to show! There is still a smattering of Salmon Flies about. Dry dropper is very effective this time of year (think Chubby with a Brush Hog). The dry fly fishing is better in the mornings and evenings. Fish can be caught mid-day, but when the sun hits, they’re seeking deeper and shadier spots. Switch to nymphing and fish deep. Towards the evening, the fish spread out to feed. Pale Duns and Caddis have been hatching. Use a Light Cahill or other PMD pattern in size 12-14 to imitate the duns and a EC Caddis in size 14-16 for the Caddis. According to Bob and Corey, yellow humpies have also been effective
Nymphs
Tungsten Bead Black Stone
Golden Stones
Little Amigos #16-18
Golden Stones
Blowtorch #12-16
Duracells #14-16
Purple Perdigon #16-18
Brush Hog #12
Dries
Parachute Adams #14-18
Light Cahills #14-16
EC Caddis #14-16
Mosquito #16-18
Salmon Flies
Stimulators
Chubby Chernobyls
Yellow Humpies #12-16
McCloud River
Water Temp: Upper 40s
River Flows Below McCloud Dam: 188 CFS
The McCloud has been busy and that is to be expected this time of the year. When the Golden Stones are hatching, even the most wary fish often lose their restraint and take a well presented fly. If you're willing, or able, to get deep in there, you can find seclusion on the McCloud even on busy weekends. Once again, dry fly fishing is better in the morning and evenings. Tight line nymphing or indicator set-ups work best during mid-day. Make sure you're getting your nymph close to the bottom. Remember, before wading into a hole, try fishing the pockets close to shore. The McCloud has a tendency to hold fish in places not fished by most fisherfolks. For dries: small Caddis, Pale Duns and Yellow Sallies are in the mix as well.
Remember, barbless hooks only on the McCloud. Beware rattlesnakes and poison oak.
Nymphs
Tung Tied Nymphs
S&M Nymphs
Bruised Baetis
Dark Lords #12-16
Little Amigos #16-18
Brush Hogs
Golden Stones
Tungsten Bead Black Stone
Dries:
Parachute Adams #12-16
Mosquito #16-18
Light Cahills
EC Caddis #14-16
BWOs #18
Golden Chubby Chernobyl
Yellow or Orange Stimulators
Lake Siskiyou
Water Temp: Mid to upper 60s
The smallmouth bass bite has been wide open. Find any kind of structure and fish will be there. Use an intermediate line, making quick, jerky and erratic strips, pause and then continue. A large, bright clouser style streamer works great. Using a loop knot will give your streamer a more life-like presentation. Fishing Caddis dries in the shallows also works great. There are a lot of smaller bass in this lake, but bass in the 2-4 pound range are not uncommon. 5-6 pounders are in there!.
The trout fishing has been fairly consistent as well. Using a floating or intermediate line, small wooly buggers, micro leeches, zirdles, swimming zug bugs or damsel nymphs are effective. Fish to rising fish with flying ants, mayfly emergers and half-sunken Natural Birdsnests size 16-18. Put a little bit of floatant on your Birdsnest so that it rides in the surface film. I often fish a 2 dry fly set up, using 5x or 6x with a flying ant and a birdnest or mayfly emerger trailing behind.
Current flows: https://www.tedfay.com/forecasts-flows
- Report by Michael Kielich
What we keep coming back to the Upper Sac for.
A Sacramento Sucker
A high-country, small stream jewel! Fishing an ant on a 3 wt.
A Golden romance