Brown trout are usually thought of as the main quarry of solitary trollers who spend many hours working Rapalas, Rebels and other big lures along the shoreline of Sierra Nevada lakes. But browns, including some big trophy ones, can also be caught by anglers fishing the high elevation lakes of the mountains on summer and fall afternoons.
Chris Hammond of Diversified Marine Products in Sacramento showed me how this is done several years ago when Chris, his son, Justin, and I went on a bank fishing adventure to French Meadows Reservoir, accessed by a long, grueling ride. "The key for browns is to fish the afternoon when the wind stirs up the insects, minnows and other forage," said Hammond.
We got there in the morning, mainly because both of us had evening meetings to go to. However, we caught only one trout, a measly planter rainbow, by 2 p.m. The wind came up and suddenly the brown trout bite caught on fire.
Chris tossed out an inflated nightcrawler as the wind kicked up and hooked a quality brown of 14 inches. He landed another before I hooked a fish, another scrappy, beautifully colored brown. However, we both had to leave just as the bite was breaking loose.