Hook sharpness aside, I am really stunned by the number of bites you got yesterday! I went fishing for first light yesterday starting at the canal, then fisherman's corner, then peach park until 3pm, not a single bites. Tried floating beads, spoons, jigs. All with no success. I thought the water condition yesterday was not fishable. Well, now it looks like the problem is me needing more skills.
He didn't say he was fishing Chilliwack/Vedder...
Your skills will come. The key to water conditions like we had over the weekend is to fish different water and use different approaches than you would if the water was lower or clearer. I suggest you can't float fish the same water that you did last week. With the increased flows and lower vis, the fish simply don't have the ability/time to see your presentation. Over time you will develop your preferred high water areas to fish. Areas that are OK when water is clearer and lower, can become a fishy refuge from the current when the water is higher.
Not to kiss and tell or brag, but to illustrate my point, on Saturday when the vis was ~18" I intentionally fished a pocket of water off the main channel. I was fishing an area that is good holding water in lower/clearer conditions, and although it was my first time there at this water height, I fully expected fish to be in there given the high water. It took a while to figure it out, but a unweighted Colorado, cast out and left to sink, then a slooow retrieve was the ticket. Hooked 7 landed 6.
So I fished water that was a refuge for fish from the high water, I took advantage of the slow current to fish a presentation that I could keep in the zone, and in their faces, for as long as possible, and I fished something with flash and thump that would get their attention in the low vis .
Water conditions were tough, it doesn't always come together like it did, I was pleasantly surprised, and l learned a couple of things that made me go "Hmmm..." that I will file away for next time when faced with similar conditions.