DarkShadow wrote:Glad to see there are survivors, even tho they may be small guys.
I've always wanted to grab the bike and head out there and fish near the Reservoir.
Anybody fished the WF past Cogswell? From maps, it looks like the blue line is there year around.
FIGHTONSC wrote:The area that you speak of I believe is called Devil’s Canyon. Back in the early 70s my father and I attempted to access it off of Route 2 from somewhere around Windy Gap. We got maybe a half mile from the truck before we ran into almost impenetrable poison oak and and steep rocky descent conditions far beyond the capabilities of our Vietnam boots.
My dad is highly allergic to poison oak also, so we decided to head back. Back then, some of the old timers claimed that large rainbows occupied the deep waterfall pools having been planted upstream when Cogswell was being built in the 1930’s. We never got far enough to find out.
With modern technology available now, you can perhaps find a useable trail from Rte 2 down to the creek above the falls. Back then we only could guess with a topo map.
Found this article though which you might find interesting riding in from the West Fork Side:
https://authors.library.caltech.edu/250 ... lowdvl.htm
Regards,
Jeff
DarkShadow wrote:Jeff,
I've gone only a few hundred yards up on that fork right after crossing the dam.
But, the area I'm referring to is heading towards Bobcat Canyon, on the WF proper. It just seems like that area holds much more water than the fork heading north past the dam.
Unfortunately, there is no trail that leads to that area from Cogswell. You'd have to come from the west, and even then, it looks like a trek to where the WF dumps into Cogswell. Looks like Bobcat Canyon would be the spot I'd want to dump into.
We'll see what happens.FIGHTONSC wrote:The area that you speak of I believe is called Devil’s Canyon. Back in the early 70s my father and I attempted to access it off of Route 2 from somewhere around Windy Gap. We got maybe a half mile from the truck before we ran into almost impenetrable poison oak and and steep rocky descent conditions far beyond the capabilities of our Vietnam boots.
My dad is highly allergic to poison oak also, so we decided to head back. Back then, some of the old timers claimed that large rainbows occupied the deep waterfall pools having been planted upstream when Cogswell was being built in the 1930’s. We never got far enough to find out.
With modern technology available now, you can perhaps find a useable trail from Rte 2 down to the creek above the falls. Back then we only could guess with a topo map.
Found this article though which you might find interesting riding in from the West Fork Side:
https://authors.library.caltech.edu/250 ... lowdvl.htm
Regards,
Jeff
Bernard wrote:First off, apologies for my report being sort of bitter sweet but that's southern California trout for you right?
I love how the conversation has morphed into the deeper reaches of the WF. I have visited Devils Canyon numerous times both from the 2 as well as from Cogswell. I'd say my first time there was around 1992. I have also fished the fork further to the west below Red Box gap. During better times, I would get protective and suggest that this conversation be moved to the delicate category but the drought years and the Bobcat fire hammered the heck out of these regions. Historically, as maybe you can sense, they all fished incredibly well and I fondly recall some of the dam keepers boasting of sizable fish from the actual lake. As for the legality of fishing that lake, it seems to depend who you ask but intercepting migrating fish in spring and targeting resident fish is/was always easier for me. Again ... sigh .... during better times. For those still curious, note that the canyon Devils Canyon is actually divided, so to speak, by a waterfall. It represents a migrational barrier for fish coming out of Cogswell. To reach the pool at the base of these falls is an insane amount of work regardless if whether or not you come from above or below. Poison oak is just part of it. Rattlers galore and large mammals busting through the brush are/were part of most treks I have done here. One interesting thing about Cogswell is that unlike the San Gabriel Reservoir, it has no warm water species. It does have a robust population of chubs though. I think this contributed to the … ahem … "healthy" trout in that region. Devils Canyon unlike the other fork further to the west comes out of rougher terrain and a deeper gradient and as a result has deeper pools and more potential to protect fish even during hot and dry spells. The last time I went there was probably 2019 and some of the best pools were heavily silted in. I am afraid to take a look at Cogswell at this point but maybe in the years to come, I will go back up there. I have witnessed fish populations boom and bust almost cyclically and always as a result of a setback such as fire, mudslides, and/or drought .... Should anyone else venture that far report would be so cool. Be it the deep reaches of the SG system or elsewhere, I am cautiously optimistic that these rains will help some local trout populations a little. We know they are tough! Tight lines!
- Bernard
Bernard wrote:First off, apologies for my report being sort of bitter sweet but that's southern California trout for you right?
Bernard wrote:It's a total grind to get there but I think this year we're going to work up to it and who knows?
DarkShadow wrote:Bernard wrote:It's a total grind to get there but I think this year we're going to work up to it and who knows?
So, I confirmed from a little birdy that the road that leads towards what used to be Blue Point was open, and you could drive all the way up until the "Pot Hole Trail Head," which Im not familiar with.
BUT, the recent storms jacked up the road in various spots so now it's closed again.
The road UP to the lake is also jacked up in places and is currently closed.
Good news is, the lake has risen a lot and continues to do so.
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