Dobbins The first two significant storm systems have swept through California, but action at Bullards Bar remains tough for most.
"Worms continue to be the better bet for anglers working rocky structure at Bullards Bar," said Daniel at Emerald Cove Marina. "Most anglers will see decent numbers of spotted bass; while trout anglers should seek out colder water, until we get a good bit of rain to get the tributaries flowing."
"Skippers Cove Marina was pretty productive this past week," reported Trina at Skippers Cove Marina. "Limits of pan-sized trout have come in for anglers tossing PowerBait in the marina area. The largest trout was about fourteen inches."
Bullards Bar is at 38% capacity, Englebright stands at 92% of capacity.
Livermore - At an unusually packed Board of Directors hearing the night of Wednesday, March 16, Alameda County Water District Zone 7, a State Water Project contractor, rejected a request to vote in support of Governor Jerry Brown's Delta Tunnels project, according to a Restore the Delta news release.
Board members noted the lack of key information including environmental impacts, costs, and the willingness of agricultural contractors to pay their share, Restore the Delta said.
Joan Buchanan, President of Restore the Delta said, “I appreciate the board’s willingness to listen and delay its decision until all the impacts and costs are known. It was the prudent and responsible action for the residents and ratepayers they represent.”
Speaker after speaker in the packed Board room expressed concerns about the irreparable environmental damage additional freshwater diversions from the Delta would cause and the need to rush to support the Delta Tunnels prior to the release of the Environmental Impact Report and the cost impact on local water users. Many also questioned why Zone 7 should state its support when no other federal or state water contractor has gone on record, Restore the Delta said.
Local taxpayer groups were also there in support of the letter from the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association delivered that day. The Association's letter outlined in precise detail the legal reasons that the Board could not pledge property taxes to help pay for the tunnels without a vote of the electorate.
Jonas Minton from the Planning and Conservation League reminded the Board members of their fiduciary duty to their ratepayers and bondholders to conduct full due diligence before acting.
After three hours of hearing, the Board voted overwhelmingly to await the final Environmental Impact Report, Record of Decision, and complete financial analysis before considering its position. Those documents are...
By Fish Sniffer Staff10/24/2015
MSJ Guide Service has been consistently finding schoolie sized fish on the Feather River.
Another great day on the Feather River. Both clients Reno and Rueben had their limits of striped bass by 9:30 am. We decided to hang out longer so the Captain could get his two fish too. If you would like to get in on this early striped bass action, get a hold of me by phone or message me through Facebook. Things are just getting started.
Over 250 anglers participated in the NorCal Trout Angler Challenge Tour event at Lake Amador, hosted by Angler’s Press and the Fish Sniffer magazine, on Saturday, March 18.
The lake was in prime shape for trout fishing, with the lake full and going over the spillway and the Mother Lode foothills surrounding the lake displaying verdant green colors resulting from the winter rains. Anglers caught big rainbows from both boat and shore while enjoying the warm and sunny weather.
Lon Garland won first place in the adult division by bagging a 5.95 lb. rainbow. He was fishing in his boat with Ryan Baird and Matt Tomchick, all from Loomis.
"We only landed 3 fish while trolling Rapalas at 25 feet deep," said Garland. "It was the first time that I’ve ever fished Lake Amador. In addition to the three fish we boated, we also lost another trout.
"We thought we were going to get skunked until we hooked our first fish, the big one, after several hours of fishing," he noted.
Adam Papini, a shore angler, won second place with a 5.84 lb. fish that he hooked around 1:30 pm. "I hooked the fish while fishing off the spillway a few minutes ago," he excitedly told me as he brought the still-wriggling trout to the certified scale for Vince Harris of Angler’s Press to weigh.
The third through tenth place winners were (3) Mike Hart, 5.42; (4) Tom Wolfenburger, 4.82; (5) Mark Sepelyak, 4.58; (6) James Townley 4.57; (7) Jesse Trejo Sr., 4.43; (8) David Tabuchi, 4.23; (9) Brandon Wu, 4.19; and (10) Paul Costa, 4.06.
The participants weighed 94 fish in the adult division, with the smallest fish weighing .81 pounds. To qualify for the top 50 adult winners, you had to catch a 1.72 lb. rainbow.
Just a year after the massive Refugio Oil Spill fouled the pristine waters off the Santa Barbara Coast, a leak in an oil pipeline in Hall Canyon in Ventura County was reported at 5:30 a.m. on Thursday, June 23. As many as 700 barrels of crude oil — 29,400 gallons — have been spilled.
The company responsible for the Ventura oil spill, Crimson Pipeline, has a decade-long history of oil spills in California. Spills like this one are becoming increasingly common in a state where Big Oil has captured the regulatory apparatus — and the oil industry is the most powerful corporate lobby.
Fortunately, Ventura County Firefighters halted the oil from flowing towards the ocean, according to Ventura County Fire Department spokesman Mike Lindbery.
“The forward oil flow progress has been stopped,” said Lindbery. “There is no environmental threat to ocean and no evacuations in the area.”
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife Office of Spill Prevention and Response confirmed that no oiled wildlife have been observed or reported — and no oil has reached the ocean or other water from the pipeline spill.
The agency said the oil from the spill has been isolated in Hall Canyon. “There is no oil in the storm drain. Vacuum trucks are collecting the oil,” the CDFW stated.
A multi-agency response has been established to manage cleanup operations in the area impacted by the spill, according to the CDFW in a follow-up statement on June 24. Cleanup crews, including 98 responders and five vacuum trucks, remain on-scene containing and recovering the oil. Air monitoring is being continually conducted to assure safety of responders and residents in the area.
The cause of the spill is currently under investigation. “The unified command response will be independent of that investigation and includes representatives from the...
The Coalition for a Sustainable Delta, bankrolled by agribusiness tycoon Stewart Resnick, submitted a new petition to the California Fish and Game Commission to raise the bag limit and reduce the size limit on striped bass in an attempt to reduce their population. They have also included black bass as a so-called “predator” in their petition.
The Coalition is supported by various agribusiness, water agency, and corporate interests, including the California Chamber of Commerce, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, San Joaquin Tributaries Authority, Southern California Water Committee, State Water Contractors, Western Growers Association, California Farm Bureau Federation, Northern California Water Association, and Kern County Water Agency.
When these water contractors last tried to reduce striped bass through lower size limits and higher bag limits, anglers successfully defeated their proposal with strong attendance at a Fish and Game Commission meeting in February 2012. This effort was supported by Fish Sniffer Editor Cal Kellogg and others who organized over 450 anglers for a meeting in Rio Vista in November 2011.
A spokesperson for the Coalition, Michael Boccadoro, stated that the purpose of the petition is to help preserve Sacramento River Chinook salmon and Delta smelt.
"California families, businesses and farms have sacrificed during this drought to provide water to help preserve salmon and smelt," Boccadoro said. "Modifying size and bag limits for striped bass is an important step to better protect and begin restoring these endangered species. More needs to be done to halt the continuing declines."
The proposed changes would increase the bag limits and decrease the size limits for black bass and striped bass in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and rivers tributary to the Delta.
The black bass size limit would decrease from 12 inches to 8 inches, and the daily bag limit would increase from 5 fish...
Trout fishing continues to be the top story at New Melones with the opportunity for a large rainbow in the 3- to 5-pound range. There are signs that the deep trolling action is starting to slow down, and the bait and rainbows appear to be moving higher in the water column after the past two weekends of rain and runoff. The cold 55-degree water remains at 100 feet in depth, but trollers have to be very cautious when working in deep water in the main river channel upriver from the Glory Hole Marina and the Highway 49 Bridge due to submerged trees grabbing gear.
John Liechty of Glory Hole Sports in Angels Camp said that the recent rainfall, shorter days, and cooler weather have brought the lake temperature down to the low 60s, and generally the lake will start to turnover once the surface temperature reaches 56 degrees. He expects this to happen during the middle of November depending on weather conditions. Trolling anglers have been catching some large 3 to 5-pound rainbow trout while trolling over deep water, and as the surface temperature cools, these fish will move up in the water column.
Michael Nelson and Rod Smith caught a very hefty five fish limit. Their largest weighed 3 pounds, 6 ounces, and all five fish combined weight exceeded 15 pounds. Mario Lopez landed a 4-pound, 5-ounce rainbow trout while trolling a shad patterned Apex in 105 feet of water.
Gary Burns of Take It to The Limit Guide Service said that the rainbows are still deep from 98 to 110 feet, but very soon they should start working their way up to the surface as the weather cools. His best action has been in the main lake from the dam to the spillway at 2.4 mph with Cop-Car...
Trout are offering the top action at Los Vaqueros. Mt Lassen has made two plants of 1200 pounds of rainbow trout so far in 2017, boosting the trout fishing success.
“In addition to trout, we are still seeing stripers and catfish being caught,” said Brian Demmunik of the Los Vaqueros Marina.
Los Vaqueros Road, which runs from the South Entrance gate near Livermore to the Marina, was closed for three days, but is now open.
The reservoir is currently storing 128,500 acre-feet of water, 80 percent of capacity. Pumping resumed on Friday and will continue through the month. The water temperature remains 58 to 59 degrees. Water clarity is now fair.
“Fishing for trout continues to be good,” said Demmunik. “They are being caught in South Cove and Oak Point as well as Peninsula Cove. The baits of choice for shore anglers are garlic-scented Powerbaits, nightcrawlers and Kastmaster lures.”
“With boats, we are hearing reports of fish being caught in Cowboy and Peninsula Coves. A 5.52 pound trout was caught in Howden Cove on a Rapala. Fish are still coming out of South Cove and from past the Rock Wall,” he noted.
“Shakers are the main action with striped bass. We are still seeing many undersized fish being caught for every keeper. From shore, cut anchovies or shad are the baits of choice,” he noted.
“Catfish are hit or miss with fish being reported out of Cowboy and South Coves. For those wishing to target catfish, nightcrawlers and chicken liver are the top baits,” he added.
Chabot
Lake Chabot is filling back up, said Stan Wong of the Lake Chabot Fishing Outfitters. “The rain this past couple of days has muddied up the lake quite a bit. With a few nice days, it should clear right back up....
Three hundred people from throughout the Monterey Bay area and beyond participated in the 13th Annual Sand Crab Classic Surf Perch Derby, a benefit for the Monterey Bay Salmon and Trout Project, on Saturday, March 11.
The derby featured both the biggest perch ever taken during the event and the biggest fish of any kind, a striped bass, during the tournament.
"We hold this event every year on the second Saturday in March," said Mike Baxter of the Let’s Go Fishing Radio, the co-organizer of the event with Allen Bushnell, also from the Let’s Go Fishing Radio. "The fishing was overall good during this classic. The weather was also sunny and calm with a high tide in the morning."
Whereas people have come all of the way from as far north as Crescent City and as far south as Ventura to fish the event, Taylorsville, California was the furthest anybody came this time.
Jeremy Peck won the GrandMaster prize with his 3.4 lb. barred perch measuring 16 inches long while fishing shrimp "between Santa Cruz and Monterey." That was the largest perch of any kind taken in the event.
He reported very good fishing during the classic, catching 10 other barred perch - his limit - off the beach as well.
Ron Martin landed this year’s "Most Exotic Catch," a 17.2 lb. striped bass, the biggest fish of any kind ever weighed in during the event’s history. Martin is a longtime Sand Crab Classic supporter.
He was fishing for perch off of Manresa Beach with a #4 hook and a plastic grub on 10 lb. test line when he hooked the striper. It took him a good 10 to 15 minutes to get the beast to the sand.
That wasn’t the only striped bass weighed in for the "most exotic"...
The deal made between the Jerry Brown and Donald Trump administrations to fast-track the construction of the Governor’s Delta Tunnels project is becoming more apparent every day.
On July 28, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, under the helm of Director Chuck Bonham, issued an incidental take permit for the construction and operation of California WaterFix in compliance with Section 2081(b) of the California Endangered Species Act.
The mission of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife is to manage California's diverse fish, wildlife, and plant resources, and the habitats upon which they depend, for their ecological values and for their use and enjoyment by the public.
However, in an apparent violation of its mission, the permit allows the project to kill state-listed species, including Sacramento River spring and winter-run Chinook salmon, Central Valley steelhead, Delta and longfin smelt, and other fish species, during the construction and operation of the two massive 35 mile long tunnels under the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.
Issuance of this permit represents another significant milestone in the WaterFix planning process, according to the announcement on the California WaterFix website. As described in the permit application, WaterFix will implement measures for construction and operation of the project to fully mitigate the impacts of any incidental take of state-listed species, and will provide additional protection through real-time operation of the facilities in a manner that avoids and minimizes incidental take.
Representatives of fishing, conservation, and environmental justice groups were reviewing the over-200 page document at this time.
A number of the staff and attorneys of various organizations are examining the documents for the possibility of litigation, said Bill Jennings, Executive Director of the California Sportfishing Protection Alliance.
A number of issues with the incidental take permit and related documents are apparent after a quick look at...
Stockton, CA -- Delta tunnels opposition researchers have discovered a draft analysis dated September 15, 2017 of CA WaterFix costs completed by the Kern County Water Agency posted at the Wheeler Ridge-Maricopa Water Storage District.
This recent Kern County analysis provides a comprehensive review of how expensive the Delta tunnels project would be for Kern County farmers, and elucidates more realistic cost numbers for State Water Project Contractors than those touted by Metropolitan Water District.
Researchers found that:
Total WaterFix costs are estimated at $32.1 billion to $41.4 billion over 50 years; however, Kern County Water Agency only looked at interest rates of 3.55% or 3.88%. Higher interest rates would result in significantly higher total costs. These costs do not include potential cost overruns.
Computations in 2033 dollars show that dividing the maximum capital costs by the average water supply yield results in an estimated cost range of $888 per acre-foot of water to $1427 per acre-foot of water for Kern County Water Agency water users. Using 2017 dollars, the price is discounted to $553 to $889 per acre-foot.
Kern's total costs range from $4.9 billion to $7 billion, and annual costs range from $153.9 million to $247.5 million.
Restore the Delta executive director Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla noted, "Water this costly would cut deeply into profit margins for smaller farms within the Kern County Water Agency service area, and even the profits of big industrial farms like Stewart Resnick's Paramount Farms. It is feasible that the real end-goal is for urban ratepayers within the Kern service area and Metropolitan Water District to subsidize the project, or that Kern County Water Agency could resell a portion of water back to Metropolitan Water District to make enough revenue to cover bond repayment."
Prior to Westlands Water District's withdrawal from California...
State Auditor Reveals DWR Broke the Law in Delta Tunnels Planning
The recent audit by the California State Auditor has uncovered significant legal violations by the Department of Water Resources (DWR) during the planning phase of the controversial Delta Tunnels project. The findings indicate that DWR failed to comply with various state laws intended to protect water resources and public interest.
Key points from the audit include:
DWR did not fully consider the environmental impacts of the Delta Tunnels project, which is intended to increase water supply reliability.
The agency neglected to engage in necessary public consultations, limiting transparency and stakeholder involvement.
Budget overruns and mismanagement were reported, raising concerns about the effective use of taxpayer funds.
The Delta Tunnels project, aiming to re-engineer the water conveyance system in California, has faced criticism from environmental groups and local communities. The revelations from the audit have prompted calls for increased oversight and accountability regarding large-scale infrastructure projects affecting California's water supply.
Moving forward, it remains crucial for DWR to address these findings and ensure compliance with existing laws to maintain public trust and safeguard California's natural resources.
Showing the enormous power of the oil industry in California despite the state’s green image, every bill except one opposed by the powerful oil industry has failed to make it out of the state legislature this year and during the 2015-2016 session.
The latest victim of intense lobbying by Big Oil is Senate Bill 188, a bill authored by Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara) to prohibit new pipelines or other infrastructure needed to support new federal oil and gas development.
Senator Jackson introduced SB 188 in response to President Donald Trump’s recent executive order opening the door to expanded offshore oil and gas drilling in federal waters off the California coast.
The oil industry killed that bill, Senator Jackson told the Sacramento Bee on September 1. They are far too powerful.
The defeat of the bill is a big victory in Sacramento for the oil industry and the Trump administration. The Western States Petroleum Association, the California Independent Petroleum Association, the California Chamber of Commerce and California Manufacturers & Technology Association spent big money lobbying to defeat the legislation, as well as pass the oil industry's wish list cap-and-trade bill, AB 398.
A long list of environmental, consumer, fishing and indigenous groups supported the legislation, including the California Coastkeeper Alliance, Environmental Defense Center, Defenders of Wildlife, Food and Water Watch, Friends of the Earth, Seventh Generation Advisors, Sierra Club California, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations and Wishtoyo Chumash Foundation.
The Committee on Appropriations, chaired by Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher, D-San Diego, held the bill in suspension during their hearing on Friday, September 1. Gonzalez Fletcher’s Office declined to comment on the bill in response to a phone call and email.
Before the bill died in Appropriations, the bill passed through the Assembly Natural Resources Committee by a vote of...
In a statement released Wednesday afternoon, Interior said its position had not changed.
"While the Department of the Interior shares the goals of the state of California to deliver water with more certainty, eliminating risks to the California water supply, and improving the environment, at this time, the Department under the current state proposal does not expect to participate in the construction or funding of the CA WaterFix. The Department and Reclamation will continue to work with the state and stakeholders as the project is further developed," the department said.
place as drastically as they do underwater. Water can filter certain wavelengths of light, affecting how colors appear. For instance, red light tends to diminish quickly in deeper water, while blues and greens penetrate more effectively.
This means that the visibility of a lure's color can change depending on water clarity and depth. In clear water, lighter colors may stand out better, while in murky conditions, brighter or more fluorescent colors could make a bigger impact.
Additionally, fish may also associate certain colors with specific prey. Over time, if they have experienced positive encounters with a given color, they may be more likely to bite lures of that color.
Ultimately, the best approach is to experiment with different colors and pay attention to what works during different conditions. The effectiveness of a color can also depend on the location and time of year, making adaptability key for anglers seeking success on the water.
While there may not be one definitive answer regarding the importance of lure color, understanding the underwater environment and being willing to try different approaches can significantly enhance fishing success.
Here in the Northern California foothills fall is in the air. We’ve had a bit of rain, nighttime temperatures are dipping and if you look at the ridges the leaves on the hardwoods have gone from green to brown and soon they’ll be bright yellow.
On the trout fishing front, it won’t be long before handsome holdover rainbows and reclusive browns that spent the summer feeding in deep water migrate back into shallow water making themselves ideal targets for both topline trollers and bank anglers.
I really enjoy targeting trout during the fall. The fish are typically ready strikers and the fishing pressure at most destinations is light. Over the years I’ve compiled a short list of go to trout techniques that typically produce solid results during the fall and early winter. Let’s take a closer look…
Sep’s Strike Master Dodger Teamed With A Worm Or Fly
Sep’s Strike Master dodgers fill an important spot in my trout trolling arsenal. They are the dodger I reach for when I want some attraction, but don’t want all the vibration and flash created by a standard size herring dodger.
Sep’s Strike Masters are oval shaped and measure 2.5 by 3 inches. They work well when trolled from 1 to 1.5 miles per hour. When I’m fishing in higher elevation lakes during the fall the trout are typically pretty aggressive, but they can be spooky at times so I like the subtle action Strike Masters offer.
Typically when fishing a lake like Caples or French Meadows, I’ll run a threaded mini-crawler about 12 to 14 inches behind either a brass/chrome or watermelon colored Strike Master. High elevation trout earn their living gobbling up aquatic insects and they seem to have a real sweet tooth for worms.
Rancho Cordova The salmon ladder at Nimbus Hatchery in Rancho Cordova opened Monday, Nov. 2, signaling the start of the spawning season on the American River.
California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) hatchery workers opened the gates in the ladder at 9:30 a.m. and may take more than a half-million eggs during the first week alone in an effort to ensure the successful spawning of the returning fall-run Chinook salmon.
California is entering what may be a fifth year of unprecedented drought. Because of current river conditions, salmon are returning later in the year than typical. Overall, the fall-run Chinook salmon return numbers are lower than normal. CDFW seeks to match historic hatchery production goals this year, but that may not be possible given the conditions.
Drought conditions may affect the number of salmon returning to the river to spawn, but hatchery workers will continue to collect eggs throughout the fall with a goal of producing four million salmon fry, said CDFW Program Manager Dr. Bill Cox. We are working closely with other federal and state agencies to release cold water into the river system to give salmon the best chance to get up river to the hatchery.
The three major state-run hatcheries in the Central Valley – the Nimbus Hatchery in Sacramento County, and hatcheries on the Feather River in Butte County and the Mokelumne River in San Joaquin County – will take approximately 24 million eggs over the next two months in order to produce Chinook salmon for release next spring.
Once the young salmon reach 2 to 4 inches in length, one-quarter of the stock will be marked and implanted with coded wire tags prior to release. CDFW biologists use the information from the tags to chart the salmon’s survival, catch and return rates.
Not much has changed at Lake Berryessa over the past couple of weeks – the bass bite continues to rage and the trout and salmon fishing remains slow.
“For the better fish, we’re working drop shot rigs and Blade Runner spoons from 30 to 50 feet deep,” said Don Paganelli of Paganelli’s Bass Fishing Experience. “The fish are feeding heavily on the threadfin shad now.”
On his latest guided fishing adventure, Paganelli and his client caught and released 15 bass. “Our largest fish included a largemouth pushing 5 pounds, a 3-1/2 lb. smallmouth and a spotted bass going about 4 pounds,” said Paganelli.
They concentrated on the main body north and south of Big Island. “The surface temperature is still in the high sixties and we need cooler days and nights to cool the temperature down for us to see more variety, including rainbow trout and crappie, in the catches,” he noted.
When the lake finally turns over, bank anglers can expect to nail rainbow trout and king salmon while tossing out minnows and nightcrawlers under bobbers in the lake’s coves.
Stockton Water hyacinth remains the story in the San Joaquin as the floating green menace continues to plague area boaters. Extensive mats of hyacinth have forced the closure of the City of Stockton’s launch ramps at Buckley Cove and Louis Park, leaving only Morelli Park as the only viable launch in the area.
Alex Breitler of the Stockton Record said, “The alien weed stretches from bank-to-bank across Buckley Cove near the west end of March Lane, and has engulfed all of the docks there. Two neighboring marinas are socked in as well.”
Freezing temperatures are needed to kill the hyacinth, and so far into November, the temperatures have remained very warm, allowing the hyacinth to grow.
The recent winds have cleared some of the bank areas in the southern part of the Delta, and Brandon Gallegos of H and R Bait said, “The Whiskey Slough Road side of the slough was cleared out by the wind which pushed the hyacinth up on the opposite bank, and stripers in the 21 to 24-inch range have been landed with live mudsuckers or fresh shad. In the main San Joaquin River, stripers in the 17 to 23-inch range are taken on the same baits in the clearer areas.”
“The Tracy Oasis is a good location for redear sunfish or largemouth bass, but striper fishermen need to drift live mudsuckers due to the hyacinth,” he tipped.
Further west, Randy Pringle, the Fishing Instructor, said, “We have been catching and releasing up to 70 stripers throwing the ima Big Stick or Little Stick for topwater while working below the surface with the Optima Double AA Bubba Shad or 2-oz. P-Line Laser Minnows in chartreuse/silver or blue silver.”
Their larger fish have come in the shallows with swimbaits, but the schools are thick in the San...
The first fall trophy trout plant, weighing a total of 1,800 lbs, arrived at Collins Lake on October 23. The load included 25% trophy sized trout and 75% catchable ones, reported Kathy Hess of Collins Lake Resort.
"Our lake level is low but now stabilized," said Hess. "The water will no longer be released. All we need is rain to start filling us up again; all of the long term forecasts say we should expect a wet winter."
A 5 lb. 8 oz. bass was caught by Stetson Stokes of Chico. Stetson was trolling a Rapala type lure on the east side just south of the islands.
Noah LaPointe of Auburn was shore fishing near the dam with PowerBait when he hooked a 6 lb. 12 oz. catfish.
"Prohbat Palma had a great couple of fishing days, bringing home a limit of bass on the first day," said Hess. "He fished from a boat near the islands and the biggest one on his stringer was close to three pounds. The next day he caught one bass and one catfish on PowerBait."
"Come on out this weekend and enjoy the great weather and great trout fishing. Don’t forget to stop in at the store and have your photo taken or, better yet, take one on your phone and send it to kathy@collinslake.com so I can use it my next report," she added.
If you want to fish in solitude, you can definitely find it now at Folsom Lake. The lake is at its lowest level in history, holding only 151,089 acre feet of water, 15 percent of capacity. The lake level is 353.67 feet in elevation, 112.33 feet below.
While few anglers have been fishing the lake, shore fishermen willing to do some hiking should find improving rainbow trout and king salmon action off the shore at Granite Bay and Browns Ravine as the water cools down and the lake turns over. Fish PowerBait and inflated nightcrawlers on sliding sinker rigs or minnows and worms under bobbers.
The guys who reported catching black bass while trolling with crankbaits a couple of weeks ago aren’t talking now. They were hooking a lot of fish, mostly spotted and smallmouth bass to 4 pounds, while fishing at 10 to 15 feet deep with Strike King and Timber Tiger medium diving crankbaits and similar lures.
While all concrete ramps on Folsom Lake are currently closed due to the low lake level, the two anglers were carefully launching their boats from shore. The lake must be above elevation 369' before the Granite Bay ramp will return to operation.
Pittsburg While sturgeon anglers had been marking sturgeon in the West Delta throughout the fall, the fish just recently started hitting in a major way. As of press time outstanding sturgeon fishing is now raging in the Pittsburg area.
The sturgeon fishing has gotten really good recently, related Captain David Hammond of Delta Pro Fishing. We’ve had keeper sturgeon on our last three trips along with lots of shaker action. Roe has been the hot bait in the Pittsburg area. While targeting sturgeon this past week we also picked up a 21 pound striper.
Speaking of bass fishing, the striper bite remains a little inconsistent. Some days we troll up limits and other days we struggle a bit and end up with near limits. I think the striper action is really going to get exciting once the water temperature drops a bit more, added Hammond.
Captain Steve Mitchell of Hook’d Up Sportfishing has also been enjoying very good sturgeon fishing in Suisun Bay. On his most recent trip his clients got a keeper sturgeon and a pair of oversize fish. The oversize fish hit at the same time. They had several other bites on the trip, but no other fish were hooked. The day before Steve’s anglers got a pair of keepers, 4 shakers and a keeper striper.
Oroville: You need a 4-wheel drive vehicle to launch at both the spillway and Bidwell Canyon launch ramps, but the wide-open bass fishing available on Lake Oroville definitely makes it worthwhile.
“Fishing is really good now,” said Brent Cline at Oroville Outdoors. “Boaters are hooking and releasing 50 to 60 fish during a trip. Most of the fish are spotted bass in the 12 to 15 inch range, but two 7 lb. largemouths were also reported lately.”
“You can pretty much use any method you want to use to catch fish,” he emphasized. “You can throw top water lures such as Zara Spooks and Ricos. You can toss out worms and Senkos in bait fish patterns. And you can cast tubes and jigs in green pumpkin patterns all over the lake.”
King salmon fishing has also improved with the cooler water. Boaters are trolling hoochies, tipped with anchovy strips, behind dodgers at 40 to 50 feet deep to catch fish averaging 3 to 4 pounds, according to Cline. The best areas are the dam, spillway and Green Bridge.
“Bass fishing in the Thermalito Afterbay was good last week when the water temperature was warmer, but it is slower this week with the cooler water,” said Cline. “Anglers have been doing best on largemouths from 2 to 4 pounds while flipping jigs in the tules and fishing Senkos, crankbaits and spinnerbaits.”
Lake Oroville was holding 1,023,835 acre-feet of water, 29 percent of capacity and 48 percent of average, at press time. The water level is 667.57 feet above sea level.
(Ione) The big news at Lake Amador is that the long awaited trout plants have started – and shore anglers are hooking fish averaging 1 to 2-1/2 pounds.
"We planted 3500 pounds on Thursday, October 22 and another plant of 3,000 pounds on November 5," reported Lee Lockhart at Lake Amador Resort.
"Two anglers limited out while fishing off the docks with pink and white Power Eggs on the bottom today," he stated. "Yesterday a guy limited out on trout while using pink Power Worms off the docks."
Shore fishermen are also employing orange PowerBait and orange Kastmasters to entice the trout. Trollers should troll Rapalas or nightcrawlers behind flashers at 15 feet deep.
Bass fishermen are few and far between. Lockhart recommended throwing top water lures off the main points in the mornings and evenings.
The water level is 46 feet from full and the surface water temperature is 69 to 70 degrees and dropping.
Camanche
(Burson) Anglers fishing at Lake Camanche this fall have reported some superb fishing for crappie and catfish.
Ty and his son Beau brought in a nice bunch of 36 crappie weighing a total of 29.4 lbs. "Ty was fishing down the Narrows with a jig," according to Terry Willard at the Camanche Recreation Company. "This makes Ty the winner of this week's Lake Camanche Monster Fish T-Shirt!"
"Cats are hot," she added. "Henry Barner of Concord was fishing nightcrawlers off the north shore peninsula when he bagged a stringer of five catfish weighing a total of 36.76 pounds. The biggest two fish weighed 12.52 and 11.32 pounds."
The lake management will begin planting rainbow trout in the South Trout Pond and at the North Shore and South Shore any day now as the water cools down.
A lazy crowd of people were sauntering down Main Street in Rio Vista on a balmy October afternoon. I emerged from the waterfront holding a large fish. The crowd started to stir as I walked up to the Rio Vista Bass Derby weigh-in table.
A woman quizzically asked, “What kind of fish is that?“ It’s a salmon”, I replied. It struck me as kind of funny that somebody wouldn’t know the difference between a striped bass and a salmon.
Then again, not everybody has been trying to figure out how to catch them for as long as I have. And why in the heck was I bringing a salmon to a striper derby anyway?
I’ve been on a quest to catch river salmon for as long as I can remember. I’m not the only one who becomes salmon-obsessed during the fall months. Have you ever taken an October drive down Highway 160 between Sacramento and Rio Vista? If so, you know that hordes of salmon seekers line the shores and choke the waterways to no end.
It doesn’t really make a lot of sense. Aside from producing great smoked salmon, the table quality of river salmon is fair at best. The musty flavor is hard to mask and doesn’t compare to the meat of a freshly caught ocean salmon. Although they get big and put up a decent fight, river salmon don’t pack the same punch as equally sized striped bass.
So why do we chase them? For me, it’s the lure of mystery. There is nothing more exciting than trolling for several hours only to hear the staccato ‘zzz-zzz-zzz’ of your clicker going off. Is it another ten pounder? Or maybe it’s the next state record, eclipsing the 88 pound king caught in 1979.
Traditionally mid-November marks the high water mark for Delta striper fishing. This is the time of the year when the bulk of the striper population is holding in the west Delta. Since the water temperature is typically in the middle to upper 50’s at this time of the year, the stripers are biters cooperating equally as well with bait anglers, trollers and pluggers.
While the Delta is one of northern and central California’s most important fisheries, I meet anglers every year that have never fished the Delta. They would love to get out on the brown water in search of stripers, but with 1,200 plus miles of waterway to explore and multiple fishing techniques in play, they simply don’t know where to begin. Maybe I can help!
For the beginning angler, I recommend starting out with bait fishing so that you can focus on the basics of finding fish and putting them into the boat. Remember success leads to more success.
Trolling and plugging, while fun and effective, add the complexities of moving boats, moving lures and depth control. Let’s say for example you’re trolling shallow running plugs. Your speed is perfect. Your lure color and model are exactly right and there are stripers in the area, but instead of staying in water that is 6 to 8 feet deep, you spend your time in water that is 10 to 12 feet deep. You are going to get few strikes because your lures are running above the strike zone of the fish.
With bait fishing, once you locate some bass presentation and strike execution are much easier than when trolling or plugging. Let’s get started!
A good Delta bait fishing rig consists of a 7 foot conventional rod capable of handling sinkers up to 3 ounces, teamed with a high...
Most anglers start off their day by checking out weather reports or just looking outside; do I go or not? Just remember that when you look outside and your neighbor’s tree is blowing over, it might not be a bad thing at this time of the year.
Wind in the winter is a whole different ballgame. It just makes it unbearable to fish at times. However, wind in the fall and summer can make the fishing red-hot! You just have to believe in one thing, the wind is your friend.
You can’t change Mother Nature, you’ve got to go with it. For example, if you are a weightless worm fisherman, you are going to have to adjust.
The key to how the wind affects the action is water temperature. At 70 degrees or higher, fish need to eat a lot. So even though the weather may not be to your liking, the fish are still eating. Speaking for myself, I want to feed them!
Let’s talk about the different kinds of wind. Let’s set the table for your day on the delta. The water temperature is in the 70’s; of course it is windy, but is it a cold wind and white caps? Most likely, throughout the night the water temperature dropped, so it will be hard to get a morning topwater bite; not impossible, but tough.
My selections in this case are subsurface baits with a couple of modifications. The first bait I’d turn to is a crankbait. A couple baits come to mind. I need baits with a big wobble, the more commotion, the better. Strike Kings 4S in a crawdad or bluegill pattern and Ima’s Shaker also in a crawdad or bluegill pattern.
Cranking the bait down and ticking the structure with a stop and go retrieve...
Stockton striped bass remain the top species in the San Joaquin River, but the encroachment of water hyacinth continues to plague boaters in the East Delta.
Water hyacinth has clogged up all of the boat ramps in the Stockton area, with Ladd’s Marina, Louis Park, and the Morelli Boat Launch all loaded with the aquatic vegetation. The section from the Interstate 5 Bridge to Weber Point in Stockton is choked with hyacinth, and freezing temperatures are necessary to cause the weeds to die off and sink. As a result, East Delta boaters are heading further west to launch, and the Lazy M Marina and River’s End have become more popular in the past few weeks.
Brandon Gallegos of H and R Bait said, “Stripers in the 12 to 13-pound range have been caught near the Highway 4 Bridge on the Old River, and there have also been limits of stripers in the 24 to 26-inch range on the Bacon Island Road side of the Middle River near the Bullfrog Marina. Bluegill are biting like crazy, and we sold out of 20 dozen red worms over the weekend with the best fishing off of Whiskey Slough, off of Inland Drive, and near the Tracy Oasis.”
“Discovery Bay is starting to come into play for striped bass, and there have been some good reports in the area. Crappie are showing up near Turner Cut on mini crawlers under a bobber near the docks,” said Gallegos.
Chris Lauritzen of Lauritzen’s Yacht Harbor in Oakley said, “As far as I am concerned, False River is open to all boat traffic. Watch out if there are still buoys in False River alerting boaters to the construction site. For the past month or so, the Ross Island Dredge number 8 has been working on either the...
Rancho Cordova Nimbus Fish Hatchery workers have counted a total of 2,765 Chinook salmon, including 789 jacks and jills (two-year-old fish), at the facility since the salmon ladder opened Monday, Nov. 2.
Considering the low flows of 500 cfs, this return is surprisingly good. Last year at this time the hatchery had counted approximately 2,950 salmon, including 350 adults.
The other good news is that the water temperature on the river has cooled down 5 to 7 degrees over one week.
“The water temperature has gone down to 55 to 57 degrees, depending on which gauge you go by,” said Gary Novak, hatchery manager. “That’s phenomenal; last year the water temperature didn’t cool down to this temperature until the middle of November.”
The hatchery has spawned salmon three times to date. Novak noted that many of the fish at the facility are still “green,” not ready for spawning yet.
The 300,000 juvenile steelhead that will be released into the river system next February have also returned to the hatchery, after spending the summer at the Feather River Fish Hatchery in Oroville, due to high water temperatures at Nimbus.
The weather is finally cooling down and the fall largemouth bite has started on Clear Lake, reported Dave Brabec of Clear Lake Outdoors.
The water temperatures are now around 60 degrees. It was foggy and frozen this morning.
Guys are catching bass on both the north and south ends of the lake. The Alabama rig bite has started and you can catch fish on shallow and deep crankbaits, said Brabec.
The LV 500 bite has been good and will continue to be through March, he tipped. The jig bite is slowing down. We just got a shipment of minnows and they are bigger than they have been; that bite is just starting to get good. The fall/winter is when big fish are caught here.
Catfish action remains good, with anglers fishing mackerel, chicken livers and live jumbo minnows in deep water off Shag Rock, Konotyee and other areas.
Brisk fall fishing is available at Los Vaqueros Reservoir, where anglers fishing from both shore and rental boats are bagging rainbow trout, catfish, striped bass and largemouth bass.
"Fishing for trout continues to be fair with the mixed weather we have had lately," said Brian Demmunik at Los Vaqueros Reservoir. "The rainbows are being caught in South Cove and Oak Point as well as around the lake. The baits of choice for shore anglers are garlic-scented PowerBaits, nightcrawlers or Kastmasters."
Trolling is popular with anglers using Rapalas and other lures in the coves. "A number of limits came out of Howden Cove this week," Demmunik stated.
Fall trout plants are in full swing. Mount Lassen Hatchery planted 1,000 pounds of rainbows and the CDFW stocked 1,000 pounds of trout on Thursday, November 12.
"With the recent rains, the shoreline is slippery – please be careful and watch your footing," he advised.
Chomuam Loth experienced top-notch catfish action when he landed 8 fish weighing a total of 44.49 pounds, topped by an 8.49 pound cat, along with seven more weighing an additional 36 pounds. He was soaking nightcrawlers in Howden Cove.
Bert Palmon of Fremont caught and released a 5.5 pound largemouth bass while tossing out a swimbait from a rental boat.
Night fishing is back every Saturday during November. Every Saturday this month the lake will be staying open until 8 p.m. for night fishing.
"Shakers are still the main action with striped bass," noted Demmunik. "We are still seeing 15-20 undersized fish being caught for every keeper. There have been more boils reported in Cowboy and Howden coves as well as Peninsula Cove, but anglers are having difficulties enticing the fish to bite with swimbaits and other lures. From shore, cut anchovies or shad are the top...
(Sacramento) After a flurry of solid salmon action two weeks ago, fishing in the metropolitan area has died down, at least until more late fall-run Chinooks show on the Sacramento River.
The water temperature has cooled down to 55 degrees, but fishing yesterday was tough for us, on the river from Miller Park to Garcia Bend, said James Netzel of Tight Lines Guide Service. We couldn’t get them to bite. The water was clear and when fishing was good two weeks ago, the water was colored from dredging at Miller Park.
We did have a great trip last Friday when the four anglers fishing with me hooked three salmon in 20 minutes, said Netzel. The fish were bright kings ranging from 13 to 18 pounds. We trolled with glow nose Brad’s Killer Fish and Kwikfish for our fish. After the sun came out, we didn’t hook any more salmon.
Tim Boggs of Elkhorn Outdoor Sports also reported slow fishing. We went out for a couple of hours on the river from Garcia Bend to the Sacramento Yacht Club and then down to Freeport, he said. We only saw 3 salmon caught by anglers in 30 boats up and down the river.
Anglers are catching a few salmon here and there from shore and boat in the Sacramento area, said Jimmy Perez of Broadway Bait Rod & Gun. However, we haven’t weighed in any fish in the shop over the past couple of weeks.
With the temporary closure of the Dungeness crab season, rockfish and lingcod are filling the bill for the time being.
A big swell and heavy winds over the weekend of November 13 put the lingcod off the bite, but rockfish counts remained solid for party and private boats. When the seas were calm earlier in the week, bonito were abundant for trollers working offshore.
The Queen of Hearts scored 30 limits of rockfish in the big sea on Saturday with the Riptide returning with 12 limits and a lingcod, according to Sherri Ingles of Half Moon Bay Sport Fishing. The ling counts were limited by the 9 to 12 foot swell, which results in the groundfish hunkering down to the reefs.
Captain Tom Mattusch of the Huli Cat took out a Becoming an Outdoor Woman charter on Saturday, November 14, and the participants were treated to limits of rockfish off Martin’s Beach and Tunitas Creek with a number of school fish in the mix.
James Nguyen of Dockside Bait was searching for bluefin tuna during the week but didn’t find any tuna. They did find an excellent bonito bite with several fish over 10 pounds and ranging from 27 to 28 inches.
They were trolling Mexican Flag zukers, and they had as many as five on at one time. He said, “We had to go way out to 400 feet in depth to find 59 degree water, but once we hit the warm water, it was on.”
Lake Amador has come up 3 feet so far from the latest storm – and another storm had arrived at press time. The lake is currently 44 feet from full – and rising as you read this.
Trout plants are in full swing. “We planted 3500 pounds of rainbows on October 22, 3500 pounds on November 5 and 1200 pounds on November 12,” said Debbie Grayson at the Lake Amador Resort.
Bank anglers and float tubers are experiencing the best action while tossing out PowerBait, Power Worms, nightcrawlers and Kastmasters now; the trollers haven’t showed in force yet. The dam, spillway and docks are the hot spots.
Jim English of Cameron Park bagged a limit of rainbows averaging 2 pounds each while fishing pink and green Power Worms from the docks. Another angler reported catching a 3-1/2 lb. rainbow, according to Grayson.
“One girl showed me a photo of an 8 lb. largemouth, her largest ever, that she caught and released on the lake,” added Grayson.
Camanche
The long awaited rainbow trout plants have finally arrived at Lake Camanche!
“A whopping 4,500 lbs of Mt. Lassen Trout have been planted, including 2,000 lbs in the pond and 1,250 lbs in the lake on each shore,” according to Terry Willard at the Camanche Recreation Company.
Bank anglers should employ PowerBait, Power Eggs, Pautzke salmon eggs, nightcrawlers, jigs, spoons and spinners in the South Trout Pond and off the North and South Shores. Boaters should troll with spoons, spinners and worms behind dodgers and flashers.
Dustin Peck of Manteca caught the biggest catfish of the year to date – and the largest fish of any kind this year at Camanche – when he landed a monster 26.39 lb. catfish from the trout pond.
South Lake Tahoe morning temperatures are chilly, crowds are light and the mackinaw are biting consistently. In short, this is a perfect time to visit Lake Tahoe for a limit of late fall lake trout.
For example, the team at Tahoe Sportfishing has been putting their clients on easy limits of mackinaw that mainly fall into the 3 to 6 pound class. Minnows teamed with flashers have been the top offering for the Tahoe Sportfishing fleet.
Gene St. Denis of Blue Ribbon Charters has also been trolling up limits of mackinaw. Gene’s fish also average 3 to 6 pounds, but he’s been getting a few fish in the teens too.
Gene is fishing a variety of different locations with both rigged minnows teamed with dodgers and medium size Flatfish.
Mickey Daniels of Mickey’s Big Mack Charters has been successfully trolling Carnelian Bay. Mickey starts out trolling quickly in shallow water before slowing down and working progressively deeper. His clients are hooking macks running up to 8 pounds.
Mickey has been using a variety of offerings including Kok-A-Nuts teamed with Sling Blade dodgers and Sting King lures.
When I received word from Captain Manuel Saldana Jr. of MSJ Guide Service that he was catching salmon on the Feather River, I was eager to join him and try my luck. I met up with Captain Manuel and his long time fishing partner Brian Crittendon at the Yuba City Boat Ramp.
With me was my fishing buddy Ian Rigler of Sacramento. Now that cooler weather has finally arrived in Northern California, water temps have fallen and are more in line with traditional seasonal norms, a welcome relief to salmon anglers. As previously noted, low water levels in the state's primary water supply reservoirs have limited the amount of water available for downstream release.
Saldana warned me that I would be amazed at how skinny the river would be and that it would make for one exciting boat ride. The water levels were so low that he used his kicker motor to safely maneuver through several extremely shallow sections of the river.
“This is the lowest I have ever seen the river,” explained Saldana. “In a matter of a ten day period I know of at least three boats that ran aground. Any angler trying to navigate the Feather needs to exercise good judgment and extreme caution.”
Following a short run, Saldana carefully positioned his Fish Rite jet near the Fifth Street Bridge. Just the day before, the area had played host to a nice group of fish. Saldana informed us that our plan of attack would be to up troll plugs to compensate for the lack of current.
After several drifts through the hole and no takers, it was evident that a move was in order. Captain Manuel started up the jet and made a short run upriver to a new location where he skillfully positioned the boat into...
Chester Exciting late fall trout fishing is underway at Lake Almanor. On one hand, if you visit the lake right now, you’re not going to hook a bunch of fish. However, the fish you hook will be quality rainbows and browns that start at 3 pounds and top out at over 5.
The late fall trout season is underway at Lake Almanor. The water temperature is now in the lower 50’s and we’ve had some snow,” said Bryan Roccucci of Big Daddy’s Guide Service. “The fishing hasn’t changed a whole lot in the past two weeks. I’m still trolling hardware quickly along the west shore. The trout are in the top 10 feet and that’s where I keep my lures. Spoons like Speedy Shiners and similar models are working in a range of different colors including gold, silver, red and even black.”
The trout we have been hooking are good size. The average is over 3 pounds and we are seeing high 4’s and low 5’s daily. Most of the fish are rainbows at this time,” Roccucci reported.
Shore anglers working near canyon dam and off Rocky Point are hooking rainbows in the 2 to 4 pound class on a mix of PowerBait and worms. The typical bank outing yields 1 to 3 fish.
Redding The salmon bite isn’t red hot for Sacramento River anglers, but the fishing is productive for anglers that put in their time. In addition to the salmon, there are good numbers of steelhead in the system.
“We’ve been getting 1 to 3 salmon per trip,” said Robert Weese of Northern California Guide Service. “Most of those fish run 15 to 30 pounds and are a mix of chromers and dark fish. There have been some much larger fish around. For example, we brought a 42 pounder in last week.”
“My anglers have been hooking quite a few steelhead in recent days. The steelhead average 3 to 6 pounds, but fish up to and beyond 10 are showing,” added Weese.
Kirk Portocarrero of SacRiverGuide.Com also reported fair to good salmon action.
“We’ve had some decent rain and we were hoping that would pull fish upstream in a major way, but that hasn’t happened,” said Portocarrero. “We are averaging 2 to 3 salmon per trip. Some of them are chromers, but we are seeing our share of dark fish too. Whether or not we’ll see a solid push of fresh fish prior to the end of the season is anyone’s guess. I hope it happens. I’d love to end the season with a bang.”
All in all, fishing is excellent as far as East Bay saltwater anglers are concerned. Outside the Golden Gate the lingcod and rockfish action is red hot. Inside, anglers drifting with live anchovies and live mackerel are rounding up some impressive halibut.
As of press time, there was no word when the delayed crab season would get underway, but most folks expect the season to kick off in the next three weeks or so.
Out of the Berkeley Marina, relief skipper Captain Chris Smith of California Dawn Sportfishing has been making regular runs out to the Farallon Islands. Limits and near limits of lingcod and limits of rockfish have been the rule on these live bait adventures.
On one recent trip, an angler hooked a mako shark and fought the fish for an extended period of time. Ultimately the fish was lost near the boat as Chris and crew prepared to gaff it.
Out of Emeryville, the story is much the same with both the Sea Wolf and New Huck Finn making regular forays out to the island. Heavy sacks have been the result. Limits of rockfish are a daily occurrence, while lingcod scores range from a fish per rod to near limits.
For example, on a recent trip the New Huck Finn racked up 27 limits of rockfish and added 67 lings to 18 pounds.
An exciting shot of late season halibut action is taking place at Angel Island. Drifters and trollers are both hooking fish. Mackerel has been the best bait, since there is a huge abundance of mackerel both inside and outside the bay.
Most of the halibut being caught average about 10 pounds, but fish to 35 pounds have been reported.
Bodega Bay What do Sonoma County saltwater anglers really want? That’s easy they want crab combos! On the up side, the rockfish and lingcod bite along the north coast is really good. Of course the downside is that the crab season remains closed, due to domoic acid found in the crabs, until further notice, although most agree that we’ll see crabs hitting the deck off Bodega and elsewhere within a month.
Captain Tim Wong of Norcal Sportfishing Adventures has been putting his client on very good rockfish and lingcod action. For example his last trip yielded full limits of rockfish and lingcod for 6 anglers. The lings ranged up to 15 pounds.
Captain Rick Powers of the Bodega Bay Sportfishing Center and the New Sea Angler is anxiously awaiting the belated crab opener. Rick is one of the guys that pioneered the concept of crab and rockfish combo fishing and he can’t wait to get started with this fall’s crab season.
Despite rough conditions in recent days, Rick’s clients have been putting the wood to both rockfish and lingcod.
On his most recent trip, Powers headed out with 21 anglers aboard and ended up at Fort Ross. The result was full limits of rockfish and 36 lingcod to 22 pounds.
Sacramento River Salmon fishing was great this year and the season is not over yet. Salmon season closes on Dec. 16, 2015 this year. Greg and Connie Salmon fished with me last week and were able to hook and land 2 king Salmon, one was a 25 lbs. dime bright hen and the other was a 15 lbs. Male. The Salmon are hitting plugs early in the morning then switching to Roe after the sun comes up. They also landed 4 Steelhead on their trip that were about 20 inches long. There are a lot of Steelhead in the river right now. What are they biting on? Flys, plugs or bugs. We practice catch and release on the Sacramento River. A camera is a must have on every trip.
Salmon fishermen, book your trip early for the best available day.
Stockton Striped bass remain king in the San Joaquin side of the Delta with the water temperatures reaching optimum temperatures. Bait fishermen are finding the best action in the cold water, although there has been a window for swimbaits on specific tides.
Captain Stan Koenigsberger of Quetzal Adventures out of Bethel Island put Alex Harris on a 15-pound striper on frozen shad on the outgoing tide in False River, and young Harris released the fish after a measurement and photograph. Koenigsberger said, "We had a 21 fish day with 10 of the stripers of legal size."
Dan Mathisen of Dan’s Delta Outdoors in Oakley said, "The striper bite is not slowing down, but those tossing swimbaits or plugs will need to adjust their depths as the fish are holding from 6 to 12 feet instead of 4 to 6 feet."
The action with the Optimum 5-inch Bad Bubba Shad swimbait is leading Mathisen to state, "We are still cracking them as my wife and I routinely catch and release between 25 and 30 fish to 12 pounds with most of the stripers in the 4 to 6-pound range."
The action has been best in the north/south sloughs to avoid the massive islands of hyacinth, and Broad Slough and Three Mile meet this description.
The water hyacinth in the Stockton area is starting to curl up and show some shades of brown from the recent cold spell, but it hasn’t been cold enough despite Sunday’s record 25-degree low temperature to kill off the heavy hyacinth growth.
Brandon Gallegos of H and R Bait in Stockton said, "It’s still more green than brown out there on the San Joaquin; but there have been some clearer areas in the east and south Delta. Stripers in the 5 to 6-pound range have been taken...
South Lake Tahoe “Every fall when the big lake trout finish spawning in deep water they move shallow to feed. We've been waiting for this annual migration and my buddy Robert Varik has found a wave of pig mackinaw moving in. He's been out every day this week with fish over ten pounds every trip,” exclaimed Mark Wiza.
“I was lucky enough to join him recently for a couple sessions in the 12 foot boat he keeps in the Tahoe Keys, and in two trips I've caught and released a thirteen pounder as well as netting two fish over ten pounds for Rob. This morning we caught eight lakers total, had double hookups three times, and we each got one over ten pounds,” disclosed Wiza.
“Average fish size has been great as well, with lots of five to eight pounders in the mix! We've been using shallow water lead core trolling techniques; Lyman Lures have been the top producers and all of my fish were caught on this great trolling plug,” Wiza added.
The team at Tahoe Sportfishing is finding success while working at the lake’s south end. Limits and near limits have been the rule. The top tempter has been minnows teamed with flashers.
Mickey Daniels of Mickey’s Big Mack Charters has been successfully trolling Carnelian Bay. Mickey starts out trolling quickly in shallow water before slowing down and working progressively deeper. His clients are hooking macks running up to 8 pounds.
(Sacramento) In spite of cold storms that haven’t translated into much runoff into the Sacramento River to date, sturgeon fishing is surprisingly good from Prospect Slough to the Sacramento River below Freeport.
“We sold out of ghost shrimp in 6 hours after our shipment arrived,” said Tim Boggs of Elkhorn Outdoors. “Jesse, a local fisherman, said the anglers in the 30 boats that he saw fishing in Prospect Slough on Saturday all reported hooking fish, releasing shakers or oversized fish or catching keepers.”
“Terry McClure also reported catching a 52 inch sturgeon while fishing shad for stripers in Sherman Lake,” said Boggs.
James Netzel of Tight Lines Guide Service reported great salmon action in the Sacramento River out of the Sacramento Yacht Harbor while using a method new to the Sacramento – trolling with Brad’s Cut Plugs filled with tuna behind Pro-Troll dodgers.
“We have caught over 20 salmon over the past week,” he noted. “We landed 3 chrome-bright salmon to 12 pounds in just one hour this morning. The two people fishing with me yesterday landed their limits of kings to 12 pounds. Earlier in the week, anglers bagged kings in the 15 to 22 lb. range.”
“Anglers have reported limits of salmon up to 35 pounds while fishing below Sherwood Harbor over the past couple of days,” confirmed Will Pfingst of Broadway Bait Rod & Gun. “On my last trip on a kayak in the Liberty Island area, I caught and released stripers measuring 29, 30 and 25 inches while fishing crankbaits and top water lures.”
People have been telling me to write an article about fishing knots for years, but until now I’ve resisted. Why now?
Honestly I’ve wanted to present my notes on knots to the readers of the Fish Sniffer for a long time, but I haven’t pulled the trigger because doing the illustrations for knots is tough to pull off.
Well, I’ve come up with a solution. I’ll talk about the merits of several knots, but I won’t use knot-tying illustrations. I figure that most of the folks reading this have Internet access. If so, you can find video illustrations of all the knots I’m going to discuss. If not you can still pick up an old fashion printed knot guide and follow the step-by-step photos.
So let’s talk knots. I’ve spent a lot of time on the water by myself and I’ve fished with some very talented anglers over the years. I’ve tried a bunch of different knots and I’ve seen lots of different knots in action. Some knots are super simple and some are super complicated. Some knots aren’t very reliable and some are highly reliable.
When I talk about knot reliability I’m referring to the knot’s breaking strength in relation to the breaking strength of the line. If you are spooled up with 20 pound line, but using a knot that breaks at 50% of the line strength you are essentially using 10 pound line. That’s bad!
Ideally you want to be using a knot that breaks as close as possible to the strength of the line itself. Of course there is some variability in play based on the type of fishing and technique you’re using.
While knot strength is important it’s only part of the knot equation for me. Simplicity is important too. A super complex knot might...
Troy Fletcher, a visionary leader of the Yurok Tribe, passed away of a heart attack on Friday night, November 20.
I first met Troy nearly 20 years ago at a Fish and Game Commission hearing when he was the director of the Yurok Fisheries Program. From that first time I talked to Troy, I watched him play the key leadership role in building bridges between the Tribe and commercial fishermen, recreational anglers, environmentalists, farmers, other tribes and federal and state government officials who were often in conflict with one another.
Troy, who became the Executive Director of the Tribe, was one of the rare people who could truly see the big picture of fishery and environmental restoration - and what was necessary to restore the Klamath Basin and Pacific fisheries.
He told me several times at protests and meetings, "Fishermen will always fight over the fish. Our goal is to see that there are more fish that we can fight over."
He also talked to me a number of times about his vision of the way to accomplish restoration of the Klamath and other fisheries - by forming blue collar task forces rather than the Blue Ribbon Task Forces dominated by corporate interests and political appointees that oversaw the MLPA Initiative, BDCP and other environmental processes. Troy said these blue collar panels would be comprised only of those whose hands touch the water - farmers, recreational anglers, commercial fishermen and tribal gatherers and fishermen.
Troy, along with Ron Reed of the Karuk Tribe, spoke at rallies and meetings in solidarity with recreational anglers and commercial fishermen fighting to bring back salmon on the Klamath, Sacramento and other watersheds - and fighting to defend their fishing rights.
While Troy was a bridge builder, he also stood firm when the Tribe's sovereign...
Rainbow trout and striped bass offer the most consistent fishing at Los Vaqueros Reservoir, but it was a big catfish that took big fish honors over the past couple of weeks.
Sok Chea from San Ramon landed a trophy 15.45 lb. channel cat while soaking an anchovy in Cowboy Cove. “For those wishing to target catfish, an anchovy is usually the best choice of bait with chicken liver being your second best bet,” said Brian Demmunik of the Los Vaqueros Marina.
Big rainbow honors go to David Maruyama from Los Altos, who landed a 7 lb. beauty. Kris Newell topped the bass catches by catching and releasing a 4.70 lb. largemouth on a semi rainy day, November 24.
“Fishing for trout continues to be good with all the trout plants and cooler water temperatures,” said Demunnik. “They are being caught in South Cove and Oak Point as well as all around the lake. The baits of choice are garlic scented PowerBaits, nightcrawlers or Kastmasters.”
“Mt. Lassen planted 2000 pounds on Thursday, November 19 and another 1000s pound on Monday, November 23,” he noted. “We will be planting again next week. With the plants, trout fishing has gotten better with more limits being caught from all around the reservoir.”
Trollers are doing best using Rapalas in fire tiger and rainbow trout patterns in the coves.
Shakers – undersized fish – continue to dominate the striped bass scene with anglers having to work for every keeper over 18 inches that they land. Shore and pier fishing is best with cut anchovies or shad.
“How fast things can change in only two weeks!” exclaimed Kathy Hess of the Collins Lake Resort. “Trout ‘catching’ is definitely speeding up to an all time high this week.”
Cory, Paul and Vasile all limited out on trout while fishing from the shoreline near the ramp at the dam using PowerBait and lures, according to Hess. Their big fish weighed 6 pounds, 2 ounces. Tony Troncale of Lodi also hooked a 6 lb. rainbow and a 4 lb. trout by the dam on PowerBait.
Sandy Settles from Rio Linda also landed a limit of rainbows by trolling worms in the channel. Ryan Barella from Windsor trolled near the dam and hooked two nice trout, topped by a 3 lb. 8 oz. beauty.
Little Chevy Luna reported catching a limit of rainbows, topped by a 3 lb. 12 oz. fish while fishing with worms.
Members from the Slow Trollers Fishing Club of Yuba City have caught some great fish these past couple of weeks. Jim Chausee topped his stringer with a 4 lb. 1 oz. trout, Manny Castro with a 4 lb. 6 oz. rainbow, and Tom Pickett with a 3 lb. 11 oz. trout. All were caught on Rapala-type lures.
Vietnam Vet, Ken Smith, caught a glorious 4 lb. rainbow measuring 22″ long. He used PowerBait from shore below the store.
“Hansen and his son Robert worked tirelessly on their new boat project for three months that they brought up to Collins Lake to test. That boat was very good to them; besides keeping them afloat, it also helped them catch a half-dozen dozen bass weighing up to 4 pounds, 10 ounces,” she added.
Anglers are still catching and releasing good numbers of black bass at Lake Berryessa, although the bite has tapered off with the chilly weather. Don Paganelli of Paganelli’s Bass Fishing Experience reported the top action on spoons and drop shot rigs.
“We caught three fish on spoons and the other dozen fish on drop shot rigs in 25 to 30 feet of water on my last trip to Berryessa,” said Paganelli. “We drop shotted with Robo Worms in Aaron’s Magic with a chartreuse tail and Morning Dawn with a chartreuse tail off points. We spooned with 1-3/4oz Blade Runner spoons in Morning Dawn.”
“This cold snap will have most lakes turned over and the shad will start to ball up and move deeper. I have been working the main body looking for fish along sharp drops next to points,” he tipped.
Their two biggest fish were smallmouths to 2-1/2 pounds. In addition, they also bagged largemouth and spotted bass.
“We didn’t see any surface activity to indicate the trout and salmon are feeding on shad, ” he added.
For rainbow trout and king salmon, shore anglers should fish minnows and nightcrawlers under bobbers in the lake’s coves.
Lake Chabot, a pretty reservoir nestled in the tree-studded foothills east of San Leandro in the unincorporated area of Castro Valley, is now a popular location for anglers to pursue largemouth bass, rainbow trout and channel catfish, but it wasn’t always that way.
Built in 1874-75 as a primary drinking water supply for the East Bay, the 315-acre lake was closed to fishing and other recreation for most of its history, 91 years. The lake finally opened for controlled recreational uses in 1965 after legislation was passed in the 1960s. The lake now serves as a standby emergency water supply.
This past year has been an interesting one due to the prolonged drought that has brought the lake level down to very low levels, according to Joe Sullivan, Acting Fisheries Program Manager for the East Bay Regional Park District.
The low water levels and the toxic blue-green algae blooms that occurred at Lake Chabot this summer definitely had an impact on park attendance. Because of this, the park district reduced their fish plants during the very warm summer months.
The good news is that the largemouth bass and other naturally reproducing fisheries appear not to be affected by the toxic algae and low water level.
I haven't had a chance to analyze our annual monitoring data that we collected this past spring and summer, but a first glance shows that fish numbers are staying pretty steady compared to previous years, said Joe Sullivan of the East Bay Regional Park District.
We even had a largemouth bass caught a couple of months ago that was just shy of a lake record, and there's a lot of other monster bass out there, he said. Now that the weather has cooled and we've received some rain, we are back in full swing with...
The fresh-run salmon ripped the line off the reel as I grabbed the long rod and struggled to keep up with the fish on the icy late November morning.
James Netzel of Tight Lines Guide Service reeled in the line on the other rod so it wouldn’t tangle with the hooked fish. The fish kept running and running and I did my best to keep the line tight so the fish wouldn’t get off.
Finally, I started to gain line on the salmon as I worked it closer to the boat.
“Don’t tighten the drag,” Netzel cautioned. “I’ve set the drag light because a light drag works best with the Cut Plug set-up we’re using.”
When I got the silvery fish next to the boat, it went berserk, making several fast, short runs before I was able to lift the fish’s head up and Netzel was able to net it.
It was a very chunky and ocean-bright late fall-run Chinook weighing 17 pounds, our first of the day. “The meat inside this buck will be a bright orange,” Netzel noted.
We were trolling on the Sacramento River in the Garcia Bend area of Sacramento, only several miles from the political bedlam of the State Capitol. In spite of all the problems that our salmon fisheries encounter because of the mismanagement by the state and federal governments, I was reminded that we are truly lucky to still be fishing for salmon in the heart of a major metropolitan area.
If it weren’t for tireless folks like the late Zeke Grader, Executive Director of the Pacific Coast of Fisherman’s Associations (PCFFA) and the late Troy Fletcher, Executive Director of the Yurok Tribe, there wouldn’t probably be any salmon left to catch in California’s river and ocean waters.
If you want to catch a limit of both lingcod and rockfish, you don’t have much time left this year, since the season closes on December 31. The Kahuna continues to see great action on both species as the season enters its final stretch.
The 22 anglers aboard the Kahuna on Sunday, November 29, landed 66 lingcod, 12 copper rockfish, 175 assorted rockfish, and 33 vermilion rockfish, according to Carol Jones of Kahuna Sportfishing.
The two previous adventures produced top-notch fishing also. A trip by 24 anglers on November 22 returned with 72 lingcod, 28 bocaccio, 35 vermilion rockfish, 146 rockfish, 72 lingcod and 31 copper rockfish. A trip by 22 people on November 21 produced 66 lingcod, 41 vermilion rockfish, 154 rockfish, and 25 copper rockfish.
Chris Arcoleo of Chris’s Fishing Trips in Monterey confirmed the superb lingcod action off the Monterey County coast, with all three boats reporting limits of lingcod on Sunday, November 29. The lingcod are hitting small mackerel running about the size of large anchovies.
The Check Mate checked in with 21 limits of lings and half limits of rockfish, the Caroline boated limits of lings and half limits of rockfish and the Star of Monterey returned with 16 limits of lings and limits of rockfish.
Great weather continued today near Franklin Point and Davenport for rockfish, said Todd Fraser of Bayside Marine in Santa Cruz. The surf fishing has improved with the last few storms making nice sandbars. The perch are biting ghost shrimp and Camo Gulp Worms.
The water temperature has cooled down and most of the pelagic species, including bonito and bluefin tuna, have moved further offshore, Fraser added.
Oroville - The Feather River Fish Hatchery staff has finished spawning fall-run Chinook salmon for this season. The facility has trapped approximately 18,000 salmon, including both adults and jacks and jills, compared to 23,000 fish last season.
"We were really worried at first because the salmon were just trickling in, not showing in the big numbers we normally see. However, we have taken enough eyed eggs, 11 -1/2 million, to produce our goal of 8 million smolts," said Anna Kastener, hatchery manager.
"The fish were really healthy, although they appeared to be smaller than normal," she noted. "We saw a lot of jacks and jills this season."
She hasn’t seen many steelhead show at the facility to date, but it’s still early for the steelies.
Steelhead fishing is improving for anglers on the Feather River from Gridley on up to the Highway 162 Bridge. "Bank anglers and boaters are hooking steelies in the 3 to 5 pound range while using Glo Bugs, roe and nightcrawlers," reported Bob Boucke of Johnson’s Bait and Tackle in Yuba City.
The river above the Live Oak Boat ramp closed to salmon fishing on October 15, though it remains open for fishing for striped bass, steelhead and other species, Boucke advised.
Colfax With continuing cool weather the trout action at both Rollins Lake and Scotts Flat Reservoir is picking up. Most of the trout being caught are browns and there has been zero planting on behalf of the DFW.
“Usually at this time of the year, both Rollins and Scotts Flat are kicking out good numbers of planted rainbows, but that isn’t the case this year,” reported Jason Pleece of Meadow Vista. “There is a hatchery trout shortage in Northern California and we just aren’t seeing the rainbow plants we’ve had in previous years. As a result the only available trout are holdover and wild fish.”
“I fished both Rollins and Scotts last week and caught fish on both trips while working from my kayak. At Scotts, I caught a 13 inch brown trout and 3 smallmouth bass to 2.5 pounds while trolling a broken back perch pattern Rapala,” said Pleece.
“At Rollins, I got two browns to 16 inches and a beautiful 14 inch squaretail rainbow that must have moved into the lake from the Bear River. I trolled my way up the Bear River Arm pulling both spinners and minnow plugs for zero strikes. Once I hit the current I dropped down several hundred yards and started still fishing with worms. I got one brown off the bottom using a sliding sinker rig. The other two fish grabbed worms suspended 6 feet under a clear bobber,” related Pleece.
“I released all the trout I caught this week. With no trout plants in sight, I think it’s important to conserve the trout we have,” Pleece asserted.
It’s late fall and that means it’s prime time for fishing the Delta for stripers and sturgeon. Fishing for both sturgeon and bass has been good and the bite is expected to hold up throughout the month of December, although heavy rain and associated run off could end the party early.
Sturgeon fishing is finally heating up in the lower Delta from Sherman Lake to Suisun Bay. The last 3 trips we've had keepers of 44, 51 and 59.5 inches, related Captain David Hammond of Delta Pro Fishing. The 59.5 was an impressive heavy bodied fish.
We had a big oversize 90 incher come to the boat this week too. Everyone aboard got to fight that fish for a while, including the captain, Hammond exclaimed.
The best sturgeon baits right now are salmon roe and eel. Bait anglers are also doing well on stripers. There are lots of bass spread out all the way from Martinez to Liberty Island. There are lots of shakers out there, but if you sort through them there are some big fish in the mix too. Shad, sardines and mudsuckers have all been working well.
Captain Steve Mitchell of Hook’d Up Sportfishing has been chasing sturgeon out of the Pittsburg Marina and has been doing well on a mix of shakers, keepers and oversize fish.
Steve is using a variety of baits, but roe has been working the best.
East Bay: The bad news is that crab season has yet to open. The good news is that the latest testing indicates a drop-off in the level of toxins found in the crab, so an opener is expected in the near future. The best news is that the bottomfish action for both rockfish and lingcod has been wide open at the Farallons when the weather cooperates.
Captain James Smith of California Dawn Sportfishing in Berkeley hasn’t been running every day, but when the boat does head out to the Farallon Islands, limits of rockfish and limits to near limits of lingcod have been the result.
In Emeryville, the story is much the same. Anglers want the crab season to kick off so they can enjoy some outstanding crab and bottomfish combination trips.
In the short term, boats like the New Salmon Queen, New Huck Finn, and Sea Wolf have been pushing out to the islands for limits of rockfish and near limits of lingcod up to and beyond 20 pounds.
The rockfish season in the Golden Gate region is slated to run until December 31, so there is plenty of time to get out and top off your freezer with tasty fillets.
Trout trollers like to troll with spoons and plugs. These baits allow you to cover water quickly and when the trout are in an aggressive mood they can be quite deadly.
On the other hand, when the trout are inactive and lethargic slowing down can pay big dividends and this is when a slow troll with a soft plastic grub can save the day. Grubs look life-like and are impressionistic of the forage trout actually eat. Just as importantly they feel like natural bait when a trout nips at them.
Rigging grubs is super simple. Take a piece of 8 pound test fluorocarbon leader material and tip it with a No. 6 or 8 bait holder or mosquito hook. Insert the tip of the hook into the tip of the grub and then slide the grub over the bend of the hook and pop the hook point out near where the grub’s tail attaches to the body. When you are finished the grub should be straight on the hook shank.
I often fish my grubs without dodgers or flashers for a super natural presentation, but in some situations teaming grubs with blades works well.
No matter how straight you get the grub on the hook it’s going to spin as you troll it. For this reason you’ll want to link the leader to your main line via a bead chain trolling swivel to prevent line twist.
When trolling grubs, you’ll get the most action when trolling from 1 to 1.5 miles per hour.
Grubs come in a long list of colors and color combinations. In lakes where trout eat a lot of bugs, earth tones tend to work best, while baitfish colors work well in lakes where the trout earn a living gobbling down pond smelt and threadfin.
Once known primarily as a trout and kokanee salmon fishery, Bullards Bar has become legendary for the world record class spotted bass that lurk in its clear waters.
Paul Bailey, a Kelseyville bass fishing guide, caught a potential new world and state record spotted bass weighing 11.4 pounds, but he opted to release the fish rather than kill it on November 29, the Sunday after Thanksgiving.
“It weighed 11.4 pounds on one digital scale, 11.5 on another and 11.7 pounds on another,” he said. “We tried to get ahold of a CDFW biologist to examine it, but only one person was working on Thanksgiving weekend.”
“We could have transported the fish 75 miles to the nearest town, Oroville and weighed it on a certified scale,” he said. “However, the bass wouldn’t have survived in the live well during the trip to and from Oroville.”
Tim Little of Kelseyville set a new world and California state record for spotted bass when he landed a 10.38 lb. fish at Bullards Bar this January.
Then Louis Ferrante shattered Little’s record by catching an 11 lb. 3 oz spotted bass on February 21, 2015. The fish measured 31 inches long and 20.5 inches in girth, according to the CDFW.
Rio Linda Salmon season on the Sacramento River closed on December 16, so anglers are now focusing on sturgeon fishing in the Delta and below Freeport.
One customer, Jim, reported that the sturgeon fishing was hot on their latest trip to Montezuma Slough, said Tim Boggs of Elkhorn Outdoors. Three anglers successfully battled 6 fish, including two oversized, two undersized and two keepers. They were fishing with salmon roe on the anchor.
A few sturgeon are also starting to show in the Sacramento River below Freeport, reported Will Pfingst at Broadway Bait Rod & Gun in Sacramento. Anglers are enticing the diamondbacks with lamprey eel, ghost shrimp, pileworms, and other baits.
Skyler Fulster from the shop has reported catching and releasing stripers, just barely keepers, while throwing Super Spooks at Liberty Island, said Pfingst.
Greg Settles and his fishing partner landed two bright Chinook salmon weighing 17.5 and 15 pounds before the salmon closure. They were using Kwikfish on the Sacramento in the Knights Landing area.
On one of his last fishing trips out of the Sacramento Yacht Harbor before the season closed, James Netzel of Tight Lines Guide Service reported one 17 lb. king for two anglers. The fish hit a Brad’s Super Bait Cut Plug lure on the Sacramento River.
Twitch, twitch…tug, twitch, twitch, I gently picked up the Cousins tackle spinning rod and opened the bail on the Abu Garcia Cardinal. The trout were a bit sluggish, so I wanted to give the fish plenty of slack.
Seconds went by and nothing happened, but then the fish came back and coils of line started flipping off the reel, slowly at first and then faster.
I snapped the bail closed, allowed the line to tighten and set the hook. The rainbow might have been a bit lethargic when mouthing the ball of Zeke’s Sierra Gold, but it came to life with the sting of the hook and put up a spirited fight.
With my 14 inch rainbow on the stringer, I quickly got the rod back into the water and Gene Rush and I settled in to await the next bite.
It was December 2 and we were fishing at Collins Lake, one of my favorite trout fishing destinations whether I’m fishing bait from the bank or trolling from a boat. In truth while we were bait fishing, we weren’t on the bank. Instead we were situated a few feet offshore on the Collins Lake fishing and rental boat dock. It provided an awesome platform to operate from and we didn’t even get any mud on our shoes!
When I picked Gene up in Foresthill the streets were wet from rain and we were a little worried that we were going to get dumped on, but we didn’t encounter any rain during our trip. Instead the conditions were just about perfect. The overcast skies made for a low light level and with zero breeze the lake’s surface was calm and mirror like.
As I rigged a pair of spinning rods for bait soaking, Gene walked the dock and made casts...
Plastic worms are the most versatile bait available to the bass angler because they exploit the most fundamental weaknesses of the bass. Black bass are opportunistic predators that look for easy to capture, easy to swallow meals and nothing short of live bait fills the bill as well as a well-presented plastic worm.
Add to that the fact that once a bass commits and sucks in a worm it has a realistic feel that encourages the fish to hold on and it starts to become clear why worms have been a top producer for so long. Let’s take a closer look at some worm fishing tackle and techniques.
When I first started bass fishing, I quickly accumulated a massive selection of worms in a myriad of colors as most worm anglers do. More recently as my fishing success has improved the total number of worms I carry has actually decreased. Based on research done at the Berkley fishing laboratories, color is the least important factor in whether a bass will strike given bait running a distant third behind action and profile. Based on my field observations, I heartily agree.
At this point I carry worms that range from 4 to 8 inches in length in both flutter tail and straight tail configurations. In the smaller sizes I learn toward baitfish imitating translucent hues such as light blue, smoke and clear flake. Most of my larger worm arsenal is composed of darker more crawfish like colors such as watermelon, motor oil and black.
I think it is important for the individual angler to experiment and determine which colors work best for them. This will ensure that they have confidence in the baits they are throwing and as we all know a bait you have confidence in catches more fish, because you...
There are two kinds of anglers residing in northern California, those that have landed a sturgeon and those that should land a sturgeon.
With good sturgeon action now underway in the West Delta this is a perfect time to contemplate how to catch sturgeon during the late fall and winter months.
Consistently successful sturgeon anglers are the ones that effectively blend patience, skill, execution and plain unadulterated luck. Back in the old days, it was said that an aspiring sturgeon angler could plan on putting in an average of 100 hours on the water before that first elusive keeper was landed. These days with modern electronics and a more widespread and thorough understanding of sturgeon behavior, the amount of time it takes an angler to land a keeper is significantly shorter...Usually.
One of your greatest resources for finding sturgeon is your delta map. When you unfold the map to look for potential sturgeon fishing spots, you are looking for several different features. The first thing you want to locate are deep holes. Sturgeon tend to keg up in deep areas.
Of course the term deep hole is relative. In a slough that averages 10 feet deep a hole that is 20 feet deep is deep. Conversely out on the main Sacramento where much of the water averages 20 to 30 feet deep, water that is 40 or more feet deep constitutes a deep spot.
Now the sturgeon you find holding along the bottom of deep holes often won’t be feeding, but deep areas do attract and concentrate sturgeon and that is important. Since, when those fish become active and move out of the hole to eat, you can put yourself in a position to ambush them.
The areas where I’ve had the most luck hooking sturgeon are the flat, relatively...
Reno The fishing at Pyramid Lake isn't on fire, but it has been consistent. For anglers willing to put in their time, big fish are the reward at the end of the line.
Don’t expect to catch a lot of fish, but any time you have a line in the water at this amazing lake, you have a shot at a trout that may exceed twenty-five pounds.
Local trophy trout expert Brad Stout related a great shore fishing expedition during gale force winds on an early December outing. In a recent conversation with Brad, this writer insinuated that Pyramid has been a little slow.
Brad contended back with, “I had a great trip the other day. The wind was howling. I couldn’t hardly cast thirty feet, but it didn’t matter. The fish were so close in. I landed 16 fish in 3 hours. None of them were huge; the biggest may have been 8 pounds. They were mostly Pilots with green tags in their backs.”
This just proves that good things can happen for persistent and determined anglers.
Pyramid Lake legend Jeff Morris has been mixing it up alternating between shore and boat trips. On a recent trip, Jeff put his buddy Todd on Todd’s new personal best Cutthroat. Todd’s fish was 33 inches and weighed in just a little over 15 pounds. Todd caught the fish while slowly dragging a Flatfish on the lake’s south end.
Napa Now that the water at Lake Berryessa has turned over, rainbow trout fishing is picking up.
Boaters are hooking rainbows in the 12 to 15 inch range while drifting minnows east of the Big Island and in the narrows, said Jack at Sweeney’s Sports. The king and kokanee salmon fishing remains slow. There aren’t many trollers fishing the lake now.
Shore anglers should find their best trout action while drifting minnows and nightcrawlers around the old bridge past Cappell Cove.
The black bass fishing is still pretty good, although it is not as good as it was a few weeks ago, reported Jack. Boaters are doing best running around from spot to spot, following schools of shad. Your best bet is to use drop shot rigs where the shad and bass are concentrated, including in open water, at 30 to 40 feet deep.
Rock and clay bluffs in the Putah Creek arm are also producing some spotted and smallmouth bass, along with some largemouths, he added. My buddy and I caught around two dozen largemouths on our latest trip in Putah Creek while dropping Bladerunner Spoons in morning dawn.
Expect to hook bass in the 2 to 3 pound range, along with some bigger fish, at Berryessa this month.
Clearlake Oaks Night fishing for hefty largemouth bass continues to be great at Clear Lake, as evidenced by the latest trip there by Larry Hemphill, fishing guide.
“Yes, it is midnight, but I am still slightly wired,” said Hemphill. “Mike Sperbeck and I got back from Clear Lake about an hour ago and we are very pleased with another 30 lb 11 oz limit! We ended up with two 30"s in a row - which is harder to do these days!”
They caught several bass up to 5 lbs before dark while enjoying a solid jig bite. After dark, they landed another 5.48 and one well over 6 lbs.
“Then Mike caught his first ever swim jig fish, 6 lbs even, using a D&M Piranha bait,” Hemphill noted. “We were just about to leave one of our favorite areas, but decided to make one more pass.
“I had a good hit, but not that exciting - until I set the hook! Wow - what a powerful bass - all 8.57 pounds of her! No wonder my right shoulder is a bit sore now! And we beat the rain,” he recalled.
“I thought the jig bite would pick up with the cooler water, and it did,” he divulged. “I am still using my brown/orange Rodstrainer jig w/ Yamamoto grub trailer.”
“Again, we saw lots of bait, but most of it has moved off-shore, which should be no surprise. We saw some down to 30 feet. Our bass seemed to be spread out too - from 10 to 28 feet deep,” he added.
The water temperature was 53-56 degrees and the water clarity was stained, with a 2 to 4 foot visibility.
Los Vaqueros (Byron) Fall is ending with solid trout, catfish, and striped bass fishing at Los Vaqueros Reservoir.
“With recent plants, trout fishing has improved with more limits being caught from all around the reservoir,” reported Brian Demmunik of the Los Vaqueros Marina. “They are being caught in South Cove and Oak Point as well as all around the lake. Mt. Lassen stocked 2000 pounds of trout on December 7. We will be planting again the week of December 14.”
Shore anglers are doing best with garlic scented PowerBaits, nightcrawlers, or Kastmasters. Out of South Cove and from around Oak Point, trout average a pound and a half but range to over 5 lbs. Trolling is employing Rapalas and other lures in the coves.
“Shakers are still the main action with striped bass,” said Demmunik. “We are still seeing many undersized fish being caught for every keeper. From shore, cut anchovies or shad is the bait of choice.”
Stripers need to be 18 inches or more to be legal. Please continue releasing the small fish as quickly and carefully as possible,” he tipped.
Catfish continue to be caught here and there but with the cooler water they are becoming more difficult to catch. For those wishing to target catfish, anchovy and chicken liver are the best choices of bait.
“Most anglers are focused on stripers or trout, although there have been many sightings near the boat dock and adjacent fishing pier. Senkos have been seen catching some nice fish in that area,” he stated.
The water level is currently at 86,600 acre feet. The water temperature has dropped to 59-60 degrees.
Shadow Cliffs (Pleasanton) Anglers fishing bait on Shadow Cliffs are nailing both rainbow trout and channel catfish, in spite of the recent cold snap.
If you like to catch big, bold rainbow trout, now’s the time to hit Lake Amador.
The lake management planted 3,500 pounds of rainbows in October, 5,800 pounds in November and 2,400 pounds in December to date.
“We are planting fish every Thursday,” said Kathy Isaac of the Lake Amador Resort. “The fish range in size from 2 to 12 pounds.”
Shore fishing with PowerBait, PowerEggs, nightcrawlers, spoons and spinners remains the top-producing method. The best areas to target are the spillway, dam and boat docks.
“Most anglers are concentrating on the trout, so I haven’t received any reports on bass, crappie, bluegill or catfish action lately,” she added.
The Lake Amador Trout Derby will run through March 6. Anglers entered in the derby who catch tagged fish can redeem the tags for an array of prizes ranging from jars of PowerBait, to two nights of camping, to cash prizes up to $200. A total of 300 tagged fish will be planted.
The one time entry fee is $7.00, good for the length of the derby. On the derby’s final day, two anglers will win grand prizes of $500 each, selected in a random drawing of those who landed tagged fish in the event. To win, you must be present on the last day of the derby.
The lake is currently 47 feet from full. The launch ramp is still pavement and has one dock in the water.
Camanche
If you like to catch big, bold rainbow trout, now’s the time to hit Lake Camanche.
Oroville Boaters launching their boats with 4-wheel drive vehicles at either the spillway or Bidwell Canyon launch ramps are experiencing top-notch spotted bass action at Lake Oroville, but don’t expect to hook any trophy fish.
The fishing is still good, but it’s hard to get fish of any size,” said Brent Cline of Oroville Outdoors. “Most anglers are using finesse techniques, including using worms, tubes and jigs.”
“My fishing buddy and I caught and released 30 bass on our latest trip on the lake,” reported Cline. “The biggest fish weighed 2 pounds and most of the fish were in the 1 to 1-1/2 lb. range. We fished with jigs and tubes in the main body and Middle Fork at 10 to 30 feet deep.”
Few anglers are targeting the king salmon. Your best bet is to troll hoochies, tipped with anchovy strips, behind Sling Dodgers. Bass anglers are reporting catching a few salmon up to 4 pounds while drop shotting with Robo Worms.
“Fishing pressure is light on largemouth bass in the Thermalito Afterbay,” he added.
Lake Oroville was holding 913.014 acre-feet of water, 26 percent of capacity and 42 percent of average, at press time. The water level is 650.17 feet above sea level.
Pittsburg The winter bite is on and both sturgeon and stripers are being caught by anglers slinging bait throughout Suisun Bay and the West Delta.
The sturgeon fishing has been pretty good for me, related Captain Chris Smith of Captain Hook Sportfishing headquartered in Martinez. With no crabbing going on I decided to move my boat up to Martinez early this year and I’m glad I made the move. On our first trip we got two keepers, 2 shakers and an oversize fish. On our next trip we lost a keeper, boated a keeper and caught some stripers too.
Eel has been the hot bait for me. I think there are fish scattered all over Suisun Bay, but I haven’t been running very far. We’ve been finding plenty of action just above the Benicia Bridge, added Smith.
Captain David Hammond of Delta Pro Fishing and Captain Steve Mitchell of Hook’d Up Sportfishing have also been enjoying sturgeon fishing success while working Suisun Bay with a combination of salmon roe and eel.
I’ve been a little under the weather recently, so I haven’t been out in a day or two. The deep water sturgeon bite is over now, but the medium deep to shallow water bite is underway. You’ve got to use caution in those areas right now, since there are lots of duck hunters out there and you don’t want to crowd them, said Hammond.
Fish Sniffer reader Todd Frasier and his sons Evan and Todd Jr. headed out for a day of striper fishing and ended up with limits.
We got into a pretty good bite in Montezuma Slough, related Frasier. We ended up with 6 bass that ranged from 5 to 11 pounds. All of the fish came on either filleted shad or sardine fillets during the outgoing...
Redding The 2015 river salmon season officially closed on December 16. Fishing during the final week of the season was fair and steady for a mix of mainly dark fish in the 15 to 30 pound class.
Now that salmon season is a memory, Sacramento River anglers are turning their attention to wild rainbow trout and steelhead fishing.
Kirk Portocarrero of SacRiverGuide.Com describes the trout fishing as excellent at this time with anglers picking up as many as 30 fish per trip. There are decent numbers of steelhead mixed in with the trout, so you never know what your next hook-up might produce.
Portocarrero is fishing the stretch from Bonneyview to Jelly’s Ferry. Both egg patterns and mayfly nymph imitations are drawing strikes for fly anglers.
Conventional tackle anglers are drifting with glo bugs, beads and Pautzke Salmon eggs. When the trout are feeling aggressive, back trolling small crankbaits like Wiggle Warts and Flatfish is a great approach.
As of press time, the river was running at 4,250 cfs and was low and clear, but a major storm is on the way that threatens to blow the river out for a few days.
Toxin levels in northern California crabs are approaching the acceptable range and anglers are hopeful that the season will open soon. The rockfish and lingcod bite outside the Golden Gate remains excellent both at the Farallon Island and along the Marin County coastline.
We continue doing what we’ve been doing, basically getting limits of rockfish and limits to near limits of lings either at the islands or up along the north coast, related California Dawn relief skipper Chris Smith. The quality is there. The rockfish are chunky and we are seeing plenty of double digit lings. The problem has been a general lack of interest. Crowds have been light. Folks want crabs. Until crabbing opens I think it’s going to be slow going in terms of angler interest.
The story is much the same for skippers operating out of the Emeryville Sportfishing Center. Rockfish and lingcod action is excellent when they can put together enough anglers to justify taking a trip.
On the New Salmon Queen’s most recent trip the 16 anglers aboard brought up full limits of rockfish and 35 lings to 25 pounds.
Imagine trophy striper fishing on the Sacramento River on a cold winter morning. You make a cast near a tree that happens to be in the middle of the river. The 8 inch Savage Gear Glide Bait barely hits the water and there’s a huge explosion on the surface of the water.
I was fishing with Brett Brady of Barebones Guide Service and I yelled over to him that this was a huge fish. At that point both of us started to act like two little kids that had never caught a fish before. There was pure excitement because this is the trophy sized fish that we were hoping to have a chance to catch.
Big fish are smart and this fish was no exception. After the fish realized it was hooked, it made a run for the tree. There was no turning this fish around. The fish was hooked right next to the tree and it didn’t have far to go before it swam underneath it and was on the opposite side from where I had initially hooked it.
I could feel my line rubbing against the tree as the fish made its way down river. Soon, my line was wrapped around the tree and it was impossible to reel in my line. We were only fishing in about 6 feet of water. I tried to free my line for several minutes, at times, laying on my belly on the boat, but to no avail.
It was at that time that Brett came up with a brilliant idea. Brett maneuvered the boat to the free side of the line and attempted to catch my line with line from another rod and reel. Eventually he caught it. Then I wondered what we were going to do with it. He told...
HR 2898, an agribusiness-backed “drought relief” bill that would strip environmental protections for Central Valley salmon and steelhead and Delta smelt, is back for the third time, according to an action alert from Restore the Delta (RTD).
Senator Dianne Feinstein appears ready to sign off on HR 2898, after negotiations with San Joaquin Valley House Congressmen who want to over pump the San Francisco Bay-Delta Estuary, the group said Friday.
“Californians have not seen the federal drought bill,” said RTD. “We need to make sure it does not harm our Delta estuary, which is on the verge of collapse in this extreme drought. Senator Barbara Boxer says she will NOT sign off on any bill that weakens existing federal protections.”
RTD urges people to call Senator Boxer ASAP at (202) 224-3553.
Tell this to Senator Boxer: “Senator Boxer, you promised us an open and transparent process in drought bill (HR 2898) negotiations. Northern Californians haven't seen the drought bill, now in its final stages, and we haven't been given the opportunity to comment on it yet. It’s our region that will take the environmental and economic impact of this bill. Please slow down the bill process, do not allow passage of this drought bill that has not been vetted in the light of day. We have a right to know how HR 2898 will impact the estuary, the fisheries, our farms, our home, and the source of our livelihood -- fresh water flows.”
On December 11, Senator Dianne Feinstein released this statement that shows her apparent willingness to sign off on the bill.
Even during a drought, Englebright Lake is always full. That means that you will have no problem launching a boat at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reservoir that sits at an elevation of 527 feet on the Yuba River off Hwy 20 just west of Penn Valley.
Not only does Englebright offer easy access to anglers during the drought, but it holds a wide variety of rainbow trout, brown trout, kokanee salmon, bluegill and largemouth, spotted, and smallmouth bass. Trout fishing is good year-round at Englebright since the lake benefits from the cold water released from the bottom of Bullards Bar Reservoir.
However, it’s the stringers of big rainbows up to 10 pounds that have attracted the most angling attention in recent years, due to the efforts of Lisa and Nick Rogers, owners of the Skippers Cove Marina.
The pen project began in 2010 after the Rogers had purchased the Skippers Cove Marina and realized that trout weren’t being stocked in the reservoir due to a biological assessment of lakes and streams required of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, according to the terms of the settlement of a lawsuit filed by environmental NGOs.
They realized they needed to put fish back in the lake and put Englebright on the map of fishing destinations – and the pen program was a good way to improve the fishery. They built four floating pens, each 8 feet wide by 12 feet long, by 12 feet deep, and put them in the marina.
Winter is a time of great promise for trout anglers because it’s at this time of the year that the trout come to the surface and often move into near shore areas. This is the time of the season when you can troll all day without using your downriggers, because most of the trout will be found in the top 15 feet of the water column.
Typically, when trolling for winter trout, I like to rig up with spoons and plugs that allow me to keep moving quickly. This approach is generally pretty effective, but as with all fishing strategies it doesn’t work all the time.
When the water is super cold or stained, or both, fast trolling may not pay dividends. If the trout are sluggish or if visibility is limited, a slow finesse presentation might be required to draw strikes. Here are some of my favorite finesse presentations for lethargic winter rainbows.
Threaded Worms
When targeting cold water trout that are playing hard to get, I have not found anything as effective as a threaded night crawler. To rig a threaded night crawler, I start off by snelling a No. 6 bait holder hook on the end of a 36 inch 10 pound test fluorocarbon leader.
Next, I take out a night crawler and slide it onto my worm threader. If you’ve never seen a worm threader, it is a simple wooden handle with an 8 inch section of fine diameter metal tube imbedded in it. The tip of the tube is cut off on a sharp angle.
Once I have the ‘crawler impaled on the threader, I slide it down to the handle. After that, I place the hook tip in the end of the tube and pull it down tight by gripping the leader against the...
It’s been a tough bite these past few weeks fishing at the California Aqueduct. I was able to land several stripers using a planar board paired with a SpeedLure jerkbait. I was trolling about 10 feet from the canal wall.
Typically, this time of year stripers will relate closer to the bottom. On a recent trip, I noticed stripers were feeding off the remaining scattered baitfish swimming near the surface. The planar board kept my lure right in the strike zone for these feeding stripers. They slammed the lures as I was walking down the paved road. Most strikes came from stretches with change in the current such as bends in the aqueduct.
Casting lures near bridges worked for me as well. Being higher in elevation allowed me to see how these stripers were reacting to my lure. You can tell they’re less active as they glide up to inspect your lure from the depths. Occasionally, you’ll get one hungry enough to slap the lure and hook into it. Most bites came right next to the canal wall, just two feet from the edge. They’re really honing in on the locations of these bait fish.
Water visibility is slightly stained in most areas. Water is flowing in most parts of the aqueduct and best time to catch fish are early mornings and late afternoons.
California’s longest concrete river, an oasis for anglers living in the Central Valley.
My legs began to cramp up as I made another 20 yard dash along the road. My body couldn’t keep up with the excitement running through my mind. Splash after splash, I could see the silverside minnows leaping into the air escaping the predators from below. I was chasing striper boils along the California Aqueduct.
The California Aqueduct is a 444 mile long canal managed by the Department of Water Resources. It gets its water from the California Delta. The California Aqueduct begins its journey near Tracy and funnels down a concrete river to the LA area. The Aqueduct is about 110 feet wide at its widest width and 32 feet at its deepest depth. The width and depth varies with each region along the California Aqueduct.
The most sought after fish are striped bass. They are the most abundant species found in this water system. There is also a healthy population of black bass, catfish and carp that anglers target. Several species of panfish such as bluegills, crappie, perch and redear thrive here as well.
In the late spring to early fall, the canal walls are cluttered with a healthy population of silver side minnows. Predatory fish also feed on sculpins and shad that populate the region. The delta smelt make a home here as well.
There have been unconfirmed reports of anglers hooking into giant sized fish, only to find out when they reel it in, that it’s a sturgeon. A steel head was recently caught and confirmed by two DFW officers as the angler reeled it in. This canal is full of surprises.
The fish here can grow to great proportions. In recent weeks, we’ve seen stripers in the 35 inch to 42 inch...
Rancho Cordova The number of steelhead showing now at Nimbus Fish Hatchery has improved greatly from last season, in spite of continuing low releases of 500 cfs from Nimbus Dam.
This year is much different from last season, when a total of only 154 steelhead were trapped from December through mid-March.
In contrast, the hatchery has trapped over 148 steelhead to date as of December 22. Last season only 10 steelhead had been trapped by December 29.
“There are lots of steelhead in the hatchery now,” said Gary Novak, Nimbus Fish Hatchery manager. “I’m floored.”
The hatchery has spawned a total of 27 pairs to date compared with only 31 pairs all of the last season.
“The males are above average size and the females are also large,” he said, leading to speculation that some of the steelhead may have stayed out in the ocean for an extra year and have come up the river as 4-year-olds.
“We won’t know for sure until scale samples of the steelhead are analyzed. Most steelhead return to spawn as three-year-olds on the American River.
The number of eggs taken from the fish to date is 198,278. That’s more than total for the entire season last year, 192,278 eggs.
“We averaged about 6,000 eggs per female last season,” he said. “This year we’re seeing over 7,000 eggs per fish.”
However, to put the current steelhead run in perspective, banner years for steelhead on the American have seen up to 2,000 adult steelhead counted by this time of year.
The numbers of fall-run Chinook salmon, including jacks and jills (two-year-old fish) showing at the hatchery are now also above those trapped last year. The facility has trapped 9,716 salmon, including 7,326 adults and 2,390 jacks and jills this season.
Folsom Reservoir is finally beginning to fill from winter storms, with the lake going from a record low 14 percent of capacity to 22 percent over the past two weeks.
The lake is currently holding 215,516 acre feet of water, up from a record low of 135,000 acre feet. The lake level is 370.57 feet in elevation, 95.43 feet below maximum pool.
In two days, Folsom rose 55,000 acre feet, with inflows going up to 20,000 cfs and climbing, according to the Bureau of Reclamation. The lake has risen nearly 20 feet in the past couple of weeks.
The Low Water Ramp at Granite Bay is now in operation. The Hobie Cove Ramp at Brown's Ravine will operate at elevation 380, according to the Folsom Lake Marina.
Fishing reports from the lake have been sparse, due to the storms that have hit the region and the low water level. However, rainbow trout and king salmon fishing should be picking up. For the best success, fish inflated nightcrawlers and minnows under bobbers or PowerBait on sliding sinker rigs.
There is no doubt that a variety of different rod, reel and line combinations will work for trout trolling. I’ve spent decades trolling for trout and the gear I use has changed quite a bit.
Early on I used spinning gear, now I seldom do. For a while I used light to ultra light gear. That was fun, but I lacked the power I needed for big fish. These days I’ve settled on what I consider to be the ultimate trolling set up.
It’s a compromise between being light enough to enjoy the fight of average size fish and heavy enough to land trophy caliber fish when I hook them. Check out the accompanying video as I break down the rig I use.
(Napa) While anglers aren’t reporting catching the big numbers of black bass they were over a month ago, boaters have hooked some lunker largemouths.
“A lot of big bass have been hooked lately,” said Trevor Maudru at Sweeney’s Sports Store. “One angler caught and released a 13 pounder in a tournament and others have landed largemouths over 10 pounds.”
“The larger fish have hit big swimbaits and umbrella rigs,” he advised. “Some of the fish are shallow, but most are found around 30 feet deep. One of the better areas to try is the North Fork of Putah Creek.”
For numbers of bass, your best bet is to use Robo Worms and other plastics drop shot rigs where the shad and bass are concentrated, including in open water, at 30 to 40 feet deep. A mixture of largemouth, spotted and smallmouth bass are on tap.
The rainbow trout bite has tapered off. Your best bet from a boat is to drift live minnows east of the Big Island and Narrows. Shore anglers should find their best trout action while drifting minnows and nightcrawlers around the old bridge past Cappell Cove. The king salmon and kokanee salmon fishing remains very slow.
Water levels are good at both Rollins Reservoir and Scotts Flat Reservoir and fishing pressure has been light. Cold water has resulted in sluggish, uncooperative bass at both lakes and the lack of recent trout plants has made for slow trout fishing.
Right now if you travel to Rollins or Scotts Flat to target trout you likely won’t have much action, but if you do hook a trout it will likely be a quality fish, reported Jason Pleece of Meadow Vista.
I’ve fished both lakes over the past week. At Scotts I spent time trolling and drifting with bait. On that trip I didn’t get any action at all. At Rollins Lake I spent 7 hours trolling from my kayak and ended up catching a single 22 inch brown trout. I tried a variety of minnow plugs for zero strikes early in the day. I got the brown in open water near the power lines on a threaded crawler pulled behind a chrome and brass Sep’s Strike Master dodger. That fish hit right around noon, but it was overcast on the day of my trip, disclosed Pleece.
I’ve been fishing Rollins for over 15 years and this has been the worst cold weather trout season I’ve seen. The lack of plants by the DFW has been devastating. There are no pansize rainbows to be had and the brown trout fishing hasn’t been as good as it usually is either. I think that the introduction of planter rainbows into the lake actually stimulates the brown trout bite, added Pleece.
The Fish Sniffer staff can’t wait to get back over to Dunnigan to visit Linc Raahauge’s Pheasant, Chukar and Sporting Clays Club. Raahauge’s offers the finest looking game birds you’ll find at any bird hunting club and it’s surprisingly inexpensive to spend a day hunting at this outstanding facility.
Linc Raahauge’s Pheasant, Chukar and Sporting Clays Club is owned and operated by Donna Raahauge.
Raahauge’s consists of 2,400 acres spread across both flat fields and rolling hills. On crisp blue sky mornings the golden hills and cackling pheasants lull you into a sense that you might actually be visiting the much-storied pheasant hunting grounds in the Dakotas rather than California’s Sacramento Valley!
On January 9, I’ll be hosting an exciting bird shoot at Raahauge’s for Fish Sniffer supporters. I’ll be bringing out a bunch of prizes and Donna will be offering special event pricing along with a BBQ lunch.
If you’d like more information about the hunt or if you have any questions about any aspect of the Raahauge’s operation visit Raahauge’s on the web or give Donna Raahauge a call at (530) 724-0552.
The Progressive San Francisco Boat Show is slated to run from January 15 to 18 at Pier 48 and McCovey Cove at AT&T Park. This is northern California’s only complete boat show. Whether you’ve been yearning for a yacht, coveting a family cruiser, or anxious to dive into the exciting and healthy world of paddle sports, now is the time to make that dream a reality.
This year's show features an expanded selection of boats for every lifestyle and activity displayed both on land and in water, and dozens of booths showcasing the newest nautical gear, gadgets, and accessories. There’s no better place to buy. Take the free Cable Car Shuttle for easy and comfortable transportation between Pier 48 and McCovey Cove.
Not in the market to buy a boat? The show is the perfect place to sample the boating lifestyle. Head to Try It Cove to test drive kayaks, stand up paddleboards, and other water sports. Take a sailing lesson without leaving dry land aboard the Sailing Simulator, or test your boating skills on the United States Power Squadrons Boating Skills Virtual Trainer.
If you currently own a boat you won't want to miss the free boat and motor maintenance seminars at Fred’s Shed Interactive Learning Center.
The S.F. Boat Show’s seminar program is loaded with educational and entertaining programs hosted by experts who will share practical advice, expert opinions, and information on a wide variety of topics, including sail and power, anchoring, green boating, insurance and finance, sportfishing in the Bay Area, and more.
If you really want to kick your boating skills up a notch, take an on-water workshop for practical training at the helm. Discover Boating’s Hands-On Skills Training offers a number of powerboating and sailing workshops at the show, taught by certified professional instructors.
In the latest scandal to plague the administration of Governor Jerry Brown, the Public Accountability Initiative on December 17 revealed that Brown's sister, Kathleen, was paid $188,380 in 2014 and $267,865 in 2013 to serve on the board of Sempra Energy.
That's the company responsible for the devastating Porter Ranch Gas Leak in Southern California, called the worst in the state’s history by Time magazine.
The leak began October 23 and continued to foul the air as Brown posed as a climate leader and green governor at the Paris Climate Talks. It is currently releasing 36,000 kilograms of methane per hour, leading MSNBC to describe the gas leak as a catastrophe not seen since the BP Oil Spill.
It has forced nearly 2,000 families to leave the area, caused the federal government to implement a no-fly zone, and led Los Angeles County to declare a state of emergency, according to the Public Accountability Initiative report. It has also resulted in a lawsuit by Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer alleging public nuisance.
This gas leak is just one of many environmental disasters that the Brown administration has presided over. While Brown pretends to be a climate leader and green governor, he has overseen water policies that have brought Sacramento River winter-run Chinook salmon, Delta and longfin smelt, green sturgeon and a host of other species to the edge of extinction. His administration in 2011 presided over record water exports out of the California Delta and the killing of millions of Sacramento splittail, an imperiled native minnow, and other species at the Delta pumps.
Meanwhile, Brown promotes the construction of the most environmentally devastating public works project in California history, the Delta tunnels; supports the expansion of fracking and other extreme oil drilling techniques in California; and backs destructive carbon trading...
(Berkeley) The end of the rockfish season is seen by many as the end of the saltwater fishing season. This year the season ended on a somber note with crab fishing closed and rough seas that kept both charter and private boats in port.
As of press time there was zero action aboard East Bay charter boats save for much needed maintenance. Sturgeon fishing has yet to ignite in the south bay. If and when it does there will surely be some charter boats willing to chase them. Likewise if crab season does get into gear there will certainly be some charter operators targeting them.
In review the 2015 season was a memorable one for East Bay charter boat anglers. All the usual species were on hand at one point or another during the season including rockfish, lings, stripes, salmon, halibut and sharks.
Warmer than usual water conditions also brought a lot of exotics into our waters during the late summer and fall, including bonito and clouds of mackerel.
If you had to point to one or two highlights for the season, one would have to be the incredible striper action that took place both inside and beyond the bay as huge schools of bass rampaged on clouds of anchovies.
The other bite that really stands out was the lingcod bite. The average keeper lingcod caught wasn’t large at 6 to 7 pounds, but they were incredibly plentiful. Lots of charter boats scored limits and near limits of lings daily from July right on into the fall.
There were some big lings in the mix too. The highlight of this reporter’s season was bagging a 30 plus pound lingcod off Point Reyes in August!
Winter has begun at Los Vaqueros Reservoir, where rainbow and striped bass are both active.
The reservoir is currently holding 85,500-acre feet of water, just over half-full. The water temperature is at 55-56 degrees and the water clarity is good.
Fishing for trout continues to be good with all the trout plants and cooler water temperatures, said Brian Demmunik of the Los Vaqueros Marina. They are being caught in South Cove and Oak Point as well as all around the lake.
The baits of choice for shore anglers is garlic scented PowerBaits, nightcrawlers or Kastmasters, said Demmunik. Trout average a pound and a half but range to over 5 lbs. Before Christmas, there were two 1000-pound plants from Mt Lassen and one 1000 lb CDFW plant. With the plants, trout fishing has improved with more limits being caught from all around the reservoir.
Trolling is popular with anglers using Rapalas and other lures from rental boats in the coves. Limits are continuing to show up out of Cox and Howden coves.
Shakers are still the main action with striped bass, said Demmunik. We are still seeing many undersized fish being caught for every keeper. From shore, cut anchovies or shad are the baits of choice. Stripers need to be 18 inches or more to be legal.
Catfish continue to be caught here and there but with the cooler water, they are becoming more difficult to catch. For those wishing to target catfish, anchovy and chicken liver are the best choices of bait.
In a media teleconference on January 7, three Brown administration officials claimed that no money in the $122.6 billion General Fund budget for 2016-17 unveiled by Governor Jerry Brown would be used to implement the Delta Tunnels under the California Water Fix.
In response to a reporter’s question about whether any budget money would be used for the Delta Tunnels, John Laird, California Natural Resources Secretary, said that California Eco Restore has been separated from the California Water Fix, the conveyance plan.
Mark Cowin, Director of the California Department of Water Resources (DWR), affirmed that there is no money in the budget to advance the study of the California Water Fix or tunnels. He stated that those activities are funded entirely by the state and federal water project contractors that benefit from the project.
Chuck Bonham, California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) Director, noted that money allocated from the state’s cap-and-trade program would be used to restore wetlands through the California Eco Restore program. He emphasized that this program has nothing to do with the proposal to modernize conveyance infrastructure.
However, Restore the Delta (RTD) disagreed strongly with the administration officials' contentions that no budget money would be used to fund the controversial conveyance project. They pointed out the budget does include $3.6 million for the Delta Tunnels.
Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, Executive Director of Restore the Delta (RTD), stated that the money would come out of the General Fund to the Delta Stewardship Council and is intended to incorporate the Delta Water Tunnels conveyance project into the Delta Plan.
She explained that the Delta Plan was originally written for the incorporation of the Bay Delta Conservation Plan (BDCP), which failed to meet Federal guidelines for water quality and fishery standards. The new plan for the Delta Tunnels has already received...
As Delta smelt, longfin smelt and other fish species continued to plummet to record low population levels in 2015, Governor Jerry Brown forged ahead with his salmon-killing plan to build the Delta Tunnels.
In 2016, the long battle to stop Delta Tunnels, renamed the California WaterFix last year, has moved to a new venue, as Alex Breitler reported in The Stockton Record.
On January 5, Restore the Delta and numerous coalition partners filed either formal protests or notices of intent to make formal statements with the State Water Resources Control Board to oppose permitting to change the point of water diversion in the Sacramento River to allow for Delta Tunnels to be built, according to a news release from Restore the Delta.
"Farmers, fishermen, business, environmental, community and environmental justice leaders from throughout the region and the state recognize that the impacts of diverting the Sacramento River from the north end of the Bay-Delta estuary via the tunnels will wreak havoc on fish, wildlife, farming, business and public health needs and industries within the estuary,” said Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, RTD executive director. “Our intent is through science, economics, and law to put a stop to the Delta tunnels once and for all.”
Groups filing notices include African American Chamber of Commerce, San Joaquin County, Asian Pacific Self Development and Residential Association, Braceros Del Delta, Assemblymember Joan Buchanan (ret), Café Coop, California Sportfishing Protection Alliance, California Striped Bass Association, California Student Sustainability Coalition, California Water Impact Network, Central Valley Asian Chamber of Commerce, Delta Chamber of Commerce, Delta Fly Fishers, Earth Law Center, Assemblymember Susan Eggman, and Environmental Justice.
State officials originally pledged to conduct a regional review of the so-called marine protected areas created under the controversial Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA) Initiative every five years, but they have now reversed course and plan to do the reviews only once every 10 years.
George Osborn of the California Sportfishing League spoke at the California Fish and Game Commission meeting in December to challenge this change in plans.
“As anglers know, the State of California designated over 800 square miles of the Pacific Ocean off limits to recreational fishing - in large part due to overfishing by the commercial fishing industry,” according to Osborn. “However, the State said these marine protected areas would be temporary and after five years, they would conduct a regional review to determine when they open to recreational angling once again.”
“Well.. that was then. Now, they want to extend this review process out another 5 years! Why? They don't have the money,” he said.
In objecting to this move, Osborn asked, "When can recreational anglers again drop a line into an area now closed?"
“That’s not what the fishermen were told when the marine protected areas were adopted by the Commission,” added Osborn. “They are very disappointed in this change of plans.”
The Commission voted to notice the Master Plan for the February meeting, when it will be discussed. Then the Commission will act upon the plan in April.
“I’ve been told personally by commissioners who are no longer on the commission and commissioners still on the commission that they couldn’t wait for the day to show the fishermen that the MPAs have worked and closed areas could be opened again to recreational anglers,” he stated.
Osborn believes that this latest action confirms the suspicion of anglers during the process that once the marine...
The traditional opening day of steelhead season on the American River below Nimbus Fish Hatchery, January 1, was by no means great, but it was a lot better than last season when very few fish were caught. The releases from Nimbus Dam were only 500 cfs, the lowest it has ever been on any opener that I can recall.
For Bruno Novi, who caught a 7 lb. steelhead, it was a good day of fishing. “I got down to the river below Nimbus Hatchery at 8:30 am and hooked the fish right away after another angler left the spot,” said Novi, a dedicated steelhead fisherman.
He used a homemade black fly, under a float, to catch the fish, a hatchery female that he kept and put on the stringer.
While I was down at the river for a couple of hours, I saw several other fish hooked up, including one dark fish that was released and a bright wild steelhead that was also released.
While I was taking photos of Bruno’s fish, another avid angler hooked and lost a big steelhead. “You should have seen the big steelhead that we hooked in the Basin on December 17 and 18,” he noted.
I counted around 30 anglers from below the hatchery to Sailor Bar, when I arrived at the river at 9:30 am, although I figure a lot of anglers had already left.
The key to success in the low water was light line – as light as 6 lb. test - and small baits, spinners and other offerings.
I saw two anglers in one drift boat fishing the Sailor Bar riffle, but did not see them hook up any fish while I was there.
My fishing buddy, Rodney Fagundes, who I have fished with many openers together in his drift...
The kick-off event for the 2016 NorCal Trout Angler's Challenge is less than a month away, as San Pablo Dam will again be the site of this year’s season opener on Saturday, February 6.
Last year’s NorCal Trout Anglers Challenge Championship at Collins Lake saw trout angler Gary McCune take home the overall championship with a 7-plus pound rainbow, and angler Cory Harms winning a spot in the top ten draw and taking home the Klamath both motor and trailer package.
As the new season begins on Feb 6th at San Pablo Dam, all stats and tales of glory will be set to zero, as everyone participating will have a chance at winning cash, prizes, and a shot at participating in the year-end tournament of champions event.
For those who have never fished an NTAC event or don’t know what the NTAC is all about, here’s the scoop:
The NTAC is what we call the “every man’s” or “every family’s” trout fishing event. Each event offers cash prizes, gear, and other goodies, and the entry fees are low. If you pre-register, adults only pay $20 to participate, and kids under 15 are free. If you wait until game day to register, it will still only cost an adult $25 and a junior angler $5.
As if those prizes weren’t exciting enough, the NTAC season will end with a Tournament of Champions shootout where the overall winner will take home a new fishing boat complete with motor and trailer. The top 25 youth finishers and the top 50 adult finishers from each of the 5 regular season tournaments will be invited to participate in the end of season TOC for a chance at the boat and other cash prizes.
Angler’s Press recognizes the financial challenges that many anglers face these days,...
That’s right - loose lips sink ships! Big fish eat little fish and trout, be they browns, brookies or ‘bows living in streams, lakes or reservoirs, all gobble minnows with gusto. But let’s keep this information between you and me or everyone and their brother will be casting and pulling plugs and scoring big trout. And after all, we want those hook-jawed, slob-gutted minnow munchers for ourselves, right?
At this point, you probably think I’m talking about ripping big minnow plugs like size 13 and 18 floating Rapalas. While fast trolling big baits like these is a tried and true approach for hooking trophy size fish, that’s not what I’m focusing on. Fishing these magnum size plugs for trout is a bit like sturgeon fishing; the hookup and fights are awesome, but the waiting time between bites can be long and tedious.
What we want to consider are smaller minnow plugs and crankbaits that will catch trout of all sizes. Plugs in the one to three inch range are small enough to tempt pan-size trout, but when you come across a big girl, these plugs are substantial enough that she just won’t be able to pass them up.
It wasn’t long ago that John Merwin in the pages of Outdoor Life rated minnow plugs third in the list of all time best trout lures, and if Outdoor Life says something, it must be true!
In all seriousness, I don’t think any trout angler, whether they fish streams or lakes from the bank or from a boat, should be without a selection of minnow plugs, but they are only part of the story when it comes to trout plugs.
Short thick-bodied bass fishing style crankbaits and boomerang shaped plugs like Kwikfish and Flatfish should also be part of the well-heeled trouter’s...
(Byron) Los Vaqueros Reservoir anglers celebrated the first two weeks of the New Year with solid rainbow trout and striped bass fishing, reported Brian Demmunik of the Los Vaqueros Marina.
Three larger trout - 7.3, 7.4 and 6.88 pounders - were caught last week, said Demmunik. Two were taken from South Cove on PowerBait and the last was caught on a Rapala in Howden Cove.
Fishing for trout continues to be good with all the trout plants and cooler water temperatures, said Demmunik. They are being caught in South Cove and Oak Point as well as all around the lake. The baits of choice for shore anglers are garlic-scented PowerBaits, nightcrawlers or Kastmasters. Trolling is popular with anglers using Rapalas and other lures in the coves.
There was a 1,000 lb Lassen plant on Wednesday, December 30. There will be another 1,000 lb Lassen plant the week of January 4. With the plants, trout fishing is better with more limits caught from all around the reservoir.
Most striped bass being hooked now are undersized, under 18 inches. From shore, cut anchovies or shad are the top baits, said Demmunik. We are still seeing many undersized fish being caught for every keeper.
Most anglers were focused on stripers or trout although there have been many sightings of largemouths near the boat dock and adjacent fishing pier, he said. Senkos have been seen catching some nice fish in that area.
The water level is currently at 84,500 acre feet. The water level is dropping due to use. The water temperature is 54-55 degrees.
The next monthly fishing clinic will be held at the Marina Saturday, Feb. 6 at 9 a.m. Learn everything you've wanted to know about lake fishing.
Fishing topics rotate on a monthly basis and may be tailored...
Sacramento black bass are available for anglers willing to use winter tactics in the rising waters of Folsom Lake. The lake has risen from a record low of 14 percent of capacity to 26 percent over the past month.
Fish Sniffer staffer Wes Ward and Greg Phelan recently fished Folsom Lake for bass targeting deep rock piles with spoons.
The lake is currently holding 255,225 acre feet of water, up from a record low of 135,000 acre feet. The lake level is 378.86 feet in elevation, 87.14 feet below maximum pool.
Expect to find the spotted bass from 12 to 15 feet deep, advised Craig Kamikawa at Fisherman’s Warehouse. They were holding at 3 to 5 feet deep, but have stayed where they were as the water rose.
If I was going to fish there, said Kamikawa, I would drop shot with 4 inch leeches or Robo Worms or Pro Gold/Delta Red Pro Worms. Most of the fish are spotted bass in the 1-1/2 to 3 lb. range, with some largemouths mixed in.
No trout or king salmon reports were available at press time. However, bank anglers interested in hooking rainbows and kings should fish minnows or nightcrawlers under bobbers or on sliding sinker rigs in the Five Percent, Granite Bay and Browns Ravine areas.
The Low Water Ramp at Granite Bay is now in operation. The Hobie Cove Ramp at Brown's Ravine will operate at elevation 380, according to the Folsom Lake Marina.
If you want to earn the best incentives at the Sacramento ISE Show, stop by the Fish Sniffer booth. Our incentives come with a subscription to the Fish Sniffer, the hardest hitting, most in-depth fishing magazine on the West Coast.
What do we have to offer? I’ll assume that since you are reading this, you already know that the Fish Sniffer is published every other week, 26 times a year, and that we cover both the freshwater and saltwater fishing scenes here in California and beyond. We provide a long list of location-specific fishing reports in addition to fishing features, map features, how-to articles, conservation articles, and product reviews.
All this is a given and you can get it all by buying a subscription over the phone, through the mail, or online. You can even buy the magazine one issue at a time over the counter at one of our hundreds of retail outlets. Yet if you buy your subscription at this year’s ISE Show, you’ll get all this great information, plus you’ll share in all the great incentives that we give away with subscriptions purchased at the show.
This year, as always, we’ve got a bunch of fishing rods to give away to our supporters, and as anyone that has stopped by our ISE booth will certainly attest, our rods are not the low-end bargain basement models that some outfits pass out.
We’ll be supplying our subscribers with saltwater and freshwater rods from a variety of different manufacturers such as Diawa and Penn. Kokanee rods are always a big hit with our subscribers. This year we’ll be offering Vance Staplin Signature Series kokanee and trout trolling rods from Vance’s Tackle.
Do you need fishing line? With a subscription to the Fish Sniffer, you’ll receive a filler spool of premium...
the comments submitted during a brief public review period.
C-WIN, CSPA, and AquAlliance urge the public to recognize the dangers of HR 4366 and its implications for California’s water resources and environment. They call for transparency and accountability in water management practices, emphasizing the need for sustainable solutions that do not exacerbate existing environmental issues. The groups are committed to advocating for equitable water policies that prioritize the health of ecosystems and communities over corporate interests.
In his State of the State Address at the State Capitol in Sacramento on Thursday, Governor Jerry Brown promoted building reliable conveyance and building storage to supposedly achieve the goal of providing a reliable water supply for the state's residents.
“One of the bright spots in our contentious politics is the joining together of both parties and the people themselves to secure passage of Proposition 1, the Water Bond,” said Brown. “That, together with our California Water Action Plan, establishes a solid program to deal with the drought and the longer-term challenge of using our water wisely.”
“Our goal must be to preserve California’s natural beauty and ensure a vibrant economy – on our farms, in our cities and for all the people who live here. There is no magic bullet but a series of actions must be taken. We have to recharge our aquifers, manage the groundwater, recycle, capture stormwater, build storage and reliable conveyance, improve efficiency everywhere, invest in new technologies – including desalination – and all the while recognize that there are some limits,” he stated.
He also uttered some of the achieving balance between conflicting parties rhetoric that he has become known for, all while he continues to serve the interests of the corporate agribusiness, Big Oil, Big Timber and other corporate interests through his anti-environmental water policies that have brought Central Valley steelhead and salmon, Delta and longfin smelt, Sacramento splittail, green sturgeon and other fish species to the brink of extinction under his administration.
“Achieving balance between all the conflicting interests is not easy but I pledge to you that I will listen and work patiently to achieve results that will stand the test of time," Brown claimed. “Water goes to the heart of what California is and what it has been over centuries....
I wrote an article exposing the flaws of the controversial Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA) Initiative for the Sacramento News and Review in 2009. Unfortunately, none of the fundamental problems with the process pinpointed in this and other articles have ever been resolved in the 6-1/2 years since I wrote the piece.
First, the marine protected areas created under the MLPA Initiative still fail to protect the ocean from pollution, fracking, oil drilling, oil spills, military testing, corporate aquaculture and all human impacts other than sustainable fishing and gathering.
Second, the state still fails to acknowledge the fishing and gathering rights of the Yurok Tribe, the largest Indian Tribe in California, and other Tribes in State Marine Reserves. Tribal fishing and gathering is only allowed in the State Marine Conservation Areas created under the privately funded process.
Third, the terminally flawed science and false assumptions of the process have never been addressed – nor has a long-needed investigation of the role of a convicted embezzler, Ron LeValley, in creating the initiative’s “science” ever been conducted. LeValley, who served a 10 month federal prison sentence for conspiracy to embezzle over $830,000 from the Yurok Tribe, co-chaired the MLPA Initiative "Science" Advisory Team for the North Coast.
Fourth, the state failed to appoint any Tribal scientists to the Science Advisory Teams that oversaw the Initiative’s “science.”
Fifth, the long overdue investigation of what Catherine Reheis-Boyd, President of the Western States Petroleum Association, knew about the offshore fracking taking place in Southern California waters while she chaired the MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force for the South Coast has never been initiated.
More recently, state officials, who had originally planned to conduct a regional review of the so-called “marine protected areas” created under the MLPA Initiative every five years, have now reversed course and...
Fishermen can expect to catch a variety of rockfish and lingcod throughout the year, with the best opportunities typically found in the spring and fall. The waters off the Big Sur coast are rich with nutrients, attracting a diverse range of marine life that makes for an exciting fishing experience.
Catch and release is encouraged to maintain these thriving fish populations, and anglers should be mindful of size and bag limits to ensure sustainable fishing practices. Local charters provide excellent access to prime fishing spots, and many offer the services of knowledgeable guides to help maximize your experience.
Fishing along this breathtaking coastline not only provides memorable moments on the water but also the chance to take in the stunning landscapes that surround you. From coastal cliffs to crashing waves, the natural beauty of the Monterey County Coast enhances every fishing trip.
As you plan your fishing adventure, consider the weather, tides, and local regulations to ensure a successful outing. Whether you're an experienced angler or a beginner, the Big Sur coast is a remarkable destination for those looking to enjoy a day of fishing while surrounded by some of California's most iconic scenery.
I must receive hundreds of e-mails and phone calls from anglers all over the world living in the USA, Africa, Japan, Europe, Canada, Mexico and elsewhere asking what types of baits I use for catching big bass.
This is a BIG subject for many anglers and I usually answer these inquiries suggesting a few different baits that will predominately perform for them catching bigger bass than they have caught before, especially when most of them explain what baits they are already using to catch bass. This is the easy part.
But next, they want to know how to present these certain baits around the many different structures in the many unfamiliar bodies of water that contain current, different water colors (stained, semi-stained, muddy, and crystal clear), vegetation, water depths, rocky areas, brush, cliff drops, and on and on. Yes, they seem to hit me with about every scenario an angler would come up against on any body of water.
In this article I hope to help some of the anglers that might be wondering the same things all these other anglers are asking about. One of the first things you need to know or at least understand is that you will have slow days on any body of water at just about any given time. This means that just because you may learn different patterns and techniques for catching big bass that will work great for you one day don't necessarily mean that they will work the same the next. This could happen for many different reasons, but mostly because of the changing daily conditions such as rain, wind, clouds, pressure fronts, clear sky situations and water temperature fluctuations.
I teach a 3-Day bass fishing school, which is located in upstate New York on Lake Champlain and Lake George. These...
Fish species ranging from endangered Delta Smelt to Striped Bass continued to plummet to record low population levels in 2015 in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, according to the annual fall survey report released on December 18 by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.
Only 6 Delta smelt, an endangered species that once numbered in the millions and was the most abundant fish in the Delta, were collected at the index stations in the estuary this fall. The 2015 index, a relative number of abundance, is the lowest in history, said Sara Finstad, an environmental scientist for the CDFW’s Bay Delta Region.
The Delta Smelt, a 2 to 3 inch fish found only in the San Francisco Bay-Delta Estuary, is an indicator species that demonstrates the health of the Delta, an estuary that has been dramatically impacted by water exports to corporate agribusiness interests and Southern California water agencies during the record drought, along with other factors including increasing water toxicity and invasive species.
The Fall Midwater Trawl Survey, used to index the fall abundance of pelagic fishes most years since 1967, conducts monthly surveys from September through December. The 2015 sampling season was completed on December 11.
In September, the only Delta Smelt collected were from index stations in the lower Sacramento River. In October the only Delta smelt collected came from a non-index station in the Sacramento Deep Water Shipping Channel.
In November, no Delta Smelt were collected and in December, the only Delta Smelt collected were from index stations in Montezuma Slough and the lower Sacramento River, according to Finstad.
The population of striped bass, a popular gamefish, has also declined to record low levels. The 2015 abundance index is the second lowest in history. Only 42 age 0 striped bass were recorded at the survey...
The NorCal Trout Anglers Challenge tour will kick off the 2015 season at San Pablo Reservoir on February 14.
The event, set in one of the premier fisheries of northern California, will offer trout anglers of all ages and skill levels a great opportunity to catch some quality fish and win some outstanding prizes.
Two divisions will be available, both kids and adults, with all anglers being allowed to compete from either the shore or from a boat. Great cash and prizes will be paid out at the end of this event.
Pre-event adult division entry fee is just $20, $25 if paid the day of the event, with kids 15 and under receiving free entry. Kids signing up the day of the event are $5.
Lots of vendors, music, food and fishing fun will be available, so get your entry in today for the NorCal Trout Anglers Challenge.
For more information on rules and to sign up, visit www.anglerspress.com or call 916-768-0938.
The San Pablo Reservoir Recreation Area offers many exciting outdoor activities including fishing, boating, picnicking, kayaking and hiking. The reservoir is located off San Pablo Dam Road between Orinda and El Sobrante.
The lake is stocked regularly with rainbow trout and channel catfish. Largemouth and spotted bass, crappie, redear sunfish, bluegill and even a sleeper population of white sturgeon are available also. The visitor center offers fishing licenses for sale and a wide array of bait and tackle.
Their friendly and knowledgeable staff are available to assist you with all your needs.
If you’ve ever attended a NorCal Trout Anglers Challenge event, you know that a lot of tackle and bait is given away. Without the tour’s robust sponsor list these special giveaways wouldn’t be possible.
Fisherman’s Warehouse is on board and will undoubtedly push a bunch baits, lures and gear down the line to NTAC participants.
The folks at the Pautzke Bait Company supply NTAC anglers with a ton of bait in the form of floating Fire Bait and their tried and true Green Label Eggs, Orange Deluxe Eggs and Yellow Jacket eggs.
Berkley has come on board with PowerBait, rods, reels and fishing line, while Thomas Lures, Sep’s Pro Fishing, Magic Products, Acme Tackle, Silver Horde and Dick Nite Spoons have provided an array of lures, dodgers and more.
Yakima Bait has stepped forward and is providing all manner of baits including tried and true Flatfish that have been killing trout for decades.
Atlas-Mike’s is providing an array of Zekes Floating Bait, scented salmon eggs and deadly scents.
Pro-Cure Bait Scents is also a part of the NTAC team in 2016, so you’ll be seeing Super Gel and other products at events this season.
When it’s time to purchase gear, please remember these manufacturers that have stepped forward to promote the great sport of trout fishing across northern and central California.
During the winter and early spring months, bank anglers often compete with boaters and at times surpass boaters' success when it comes to tempting strikes from reservoir trout.
Trout tend to gravitate to the shoreline during the cold months, putting them on a collision course with the offerings of bank anglers. At times, boaters struggle to hook these fish simply because they cannot effectively work the near shore areas that hold the majority of the fish.
With these facts in mind, let’s take a look at the best options for bank anglers fishing the February 14 NTAC event at San Pablo Reservoir.
When bank fishing, you'll be doing a lot of casting. This makes spinning tackle the best choice. Since you'll generally be using weights that range from an eighth of an ounce to a half ounce, a light to medium light rod is a good all-around choice.
In terms of reels, the first requirement is a smooth drag. At times, 4-pound leader material is required to draw strikes. When fighting good-sized trout on line that light, you don't want the drag to stick at all when the fish runs. If it does, the leader will likely snap. The reel should also have a high gear ratio. The gear ratio refers to the number of times the line is wrapped around the spool for each revolution of the reel handle. At times, trout will run straight toward you at the hookset. When that happens, a high gear ratio allows you to keep pace with the fish, preventing slack from forming in the line. A 5 to 1 ratio is ideal.
Targeting trout holding near the bottom, trout spend a lot of time holding near the bottom. As a result, the basic bait fishing set up is the sliding sinker rig....
Hearing board action falls short of community demands to shut down Aliso Canyon Storage Facility
Three groups - Save Porter Ranch, the Sierra Club and Food & Water Watch - on Saturday, January 23 released a joint statement accusing the South Coast Air Quality Management District Hearing Board (AQMD) of making a decision regarding the SoCalGas Leak that fails to adequately protect residents of Porter Ranch and other surrounding communities.
The gas blowout that continues as I write this is considered by many to be the worst disaster of its kind since the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010. The leak detected on October 23, caused by well integrity failure, is only the most recent of many such leaks caused in California by aging infrastructure — and just one of the many environmental disasters that have ravaged California under the Brown and Schwarzenegger administrations.
Over the past few months, thousands of residents have been displaced and sickened by the fumes that contain carcinogens including benzene and toluene. The gas leak has emitted methane at a rate of 50,000 kilograms per hour, equivalent to 25 percent of the state’s total emissions of this heat-trapping gas, according to the groups. The leak has forced more than 12,000 residents to relocate and 1,800 more households are waiting for relocation assistance.
After three weeks of hearings and deliberation, AQMD issued a Stipulated Order for Abatement, but residents and local elected officials say the order, which does not require the permanent closure of the Aliso Canyon Storage Facility, falls short of what’s necessary to protect public health. The order also appears to contradict Governor Jerry Brown’s Executive Order to protect public safety, according to the news release.
Gov. Brown’s order, issued January 6, requires state agencies to protect public...
Sacramento – On the day after Governor Jerry Brown once again touted his Delta Tunnels Plan as a solution to California's water problems in his State of the State address, Assemblymember Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) announced the introduction of legislation to block the Governor’s controversial project unless it is approved by California voters on a statewide ballot.
“An enormous amount of time and energy has been wasted rebranding and repackaging the same old Peripheral Canal plan that voters rejected decades ago,” Eggman said. “It’s tragic that despite our ongoing drought, this flawed plan is being forced on us without any true debate even though it will not add one drop of water to California’s supply, but it will raise the water rates and potentially property taxes of millions of Californians.”
The California voters overwhelmingly defeated a measure to build the earlier version of the project, the Peripheral Canal, in November 1982. Jerry Brown opposes a public vote on the tunnels, as Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger did before him.
Eggman said the new bill will require approval via ballot initiative for any infrastructure project that conveys water directly from a diversion point in the Sacramento River to pumping facilities of the State Water Project or the federal Central Valley Project south of the Delta.
“In 2012, the Governor was committed to asking the voters to approve a substantial tax increase. I’m hopeful he will be just as committed to seeking voter approval before embarking on a project that will cost tens of billions of dollars and greatly impact the Delta region,” Eggman said.
Senator Lois Wolk (D-Davis), a recognized leader on state water policy issues who has represented the Delta region in the State Legislature for 13 years, joined Eggman in announcing the introduction of the bill.
Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, Executive Director of Restore the Delta (RTD), and Bill Jennings, Executive Director of the California Sportfishing Protection Alliance (CSPA), will appear at the Stockton City Townhall with environmental activist Erin Brockovich today, February 1, at 6 PM to discuss the relationship between Delta management, the Delta tunnels project and water quality for municipal use.
The event will be held at the Atherton Auditorium, San Joaquin Delta College, 5151 Pacific Ave, Stockton, California 95207.
Other panelists include Stockton Mayor Anthony Silva and water treatment expert Robert W. Bowcock from the Integrated Resource Management, Inc. Stockton Vice Mayor Christina Fugazi will present information from the City of Stockton.
The event takes place at a critical time for the Delta, the state’s fisheries and the public trust. The mismanagement of Central Valley reservoirs and the Delta during the record drought by the Brown and Obama administrations has brought Delta smelt, longfin smelt, winter and spring-run Chinook salmon, Central Valley steelhead and other fish species closer to extinction.
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation and California Department of Water Resources systematically emptied Folsom, Oroville, Shasta and Trinity reservoirs to export water to corporate agribusiness interests growing almonds and other water-intensive crops on drainage-impaired land on the west side of the San Joaquin Valley, as well as to oil companies, now conducting fracking and other extreme oil extraction methods in Kern County, and Southern California water agencies. The outdated Delta water plan of the State Water Resources Control Board currently allows half of the Delta flows to be exported for Big Ag, according to RTD.
To sign or share RTD’s petition to update Delta water quality standards, go to https://www.change.org/p/blumenfeld-jared-epa-gov-tell-epa-new-bay-delta-water-quality-standards-urgently-needed
According to Wikipedia, Erin Brockovich-Ellis (born June 22, 1960) is an American legal clerk and environmental activist, who, despite the lack of a formal...
Folsom Lake, the Sacramento metropolitan area’s backyard landlocked king salmon, rainbow trout and black bass fishery, reached its lowest-ever water level in November 2015 when it plunged down to only 140,523 acre feet of water, 14 percent of capacity.
That surpasses the previous low water level of 140,600 acre feet reached in November 1977.
However, over the past two months the runoff from the long-anticipated El Niño storms in the American River watershed has improved water conditions at the reservoir dramatically. As of February 2, the reservoir is holding 545,444 acre feet of water, 56 percent of capacity and 107 percent of average.
The lake level has risen to 422.11 in elevation, 43.09 feet from maximum pool. That's over 73 feet in the past two months.
Just to be clear, the record low level that the reservoir reached in the fall of 2015 was just not because of drought – it was because of the abysmal management of the reservoir during the drought by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation in conjunction with the California Department of Water Resources.
During the past three years of drought, the Bureau and DWR systematically emptied Trinity, Shasta, Oroville and Folsom reservoirs to provide water to corporate agribusiness interests expanding their almond tree acreage, Southern California water agencies, and oil companies conducting water-polluting fracking and other extreme oil extraction methods in Kern County.
Fishing for salmon, bass and trout has been slow for the past month, due to cold, muddy water conditions, but it should get going strong after the water level stabilizes this spring and the water clears up. The rising water is expected to bring a lot of forage and nutrients into the reservoir, providing great conditions this winter and spring for king salmon, rainbow trout and black bass.
Fishing during the dead of winter can be challenging. Sure there are some good bites available, for example steelhead are hitting in several different rivers and lakes like Shasta and Berryessa are booting out good numbers of bass. Yet overall, fishing is fairly slow at most destinations and fishing pressure is light.
This being the case, I figure this is a good time to toss out a few winter fishing tips that might just help you put a few fish on the stringer if you do decide to hit the water in the coming days and weeks.
Trout When The Water Is Cold And Stained
When it comes to bank fishing for trout, the two most popular baits to employ are either commercially prepared dough or worms. Of course dough baits are naturally buoyant. Worms tend to sink slightly slower than the proverbial rock, so you’ll have to take steps to make your worms float.
Worm floatation can be accomplished by teaming your worm with a marshmallow or injecting your worm with air using a worm blower or hypodermic needle. In most cases I prefer to float my worms with an injection of air because this makes for a more natural looking offering.
Commercial worm blowers are basically plastic bottles that have a needle attached. My only complaint about these worm blowers is that the needle is usually thick. This punches a big hole in the worm allowing a good portion of the air injected into the worm to escape. A hypodermic needle does a better job, but they are difficult to get. Farm supply stores are the best source for hypodermics that I’ve found.
I firmly believe that a worm gives me two distinct advantages over dough baits. First of all, experience has demonstrated that worms provide me with...
On Wednesday of our Alaska fishing adventure, we drove a little longer in order to catch our fish. We left the lodge at around 4 a.m. and arrived in Seward approximately 2 hours later.
We launched out of Resurrection Bay and took a 40 mile boat ride to the Gulf of Alaska. We saw a couple of Orcas on our ride out, passed several Glaciers including Exit Glacier which goes all the way to the water, and saw an island filled with sea lions.
Once we arrived at our first fishing spot, the captain demonstrated the fishing technique, how to play the fish and then put the first rod in the rod holder. Literally within 30 seconds, the rod barreled over and the first silver salmon was hooked.
The first drift took about 20-25 minutes where we had multiple hook ups with 5 fish landed but many others lost. Within that time, we were already at half our limit. We fished in approximately 220-240 feet of water, mooching for salmon with 3 oz. with a hoochie and piece of herring. With five anglers in the boat, we were fortunate to catch our 10 fish limit with no problems.
Once we limited out with salmon, we went on to rockfishing and lingcod. In Alaska, the rockfish and lingcod limit is 4 fish per person. We limited out on rock fish with some quality sized fish weighing in about 8 pounds, including one very large yelloweye which was somewhere in the range of 20 pounds.
The rockfish fishing was so good that when we were fishing for lingcod and bringing the jig out of the water there were two underneath it. It was pretty amazing to see. The lingcod were caught on 16 oz. lead heads and a curly tail, while the...
Most Delta anglers are migrating to the Sacramento River with increased chances for sturgeon and striped bass success. The incoming flows should help in pushing out the dying water hyacinth, and a good flush is just what is required for the health of the San Joaquin River.
Dan Mathisen of Dan’s Delta Outdoors in Oakley said, “In Discovery Bay, the bite is improving as water temperatures stabilize in the 50’s. Slow-rolling spinnerbaits or jigs along the ledges near flats or drop-shotting 6 or 7-inch worms in the clearer water are working for largemouth bass with a few stripers taken on Optima’s Bad Bubba Shad swimbaits.”
“In Frank’s Tract, Bobby D’s spinnerbaits, swim jigs, or Six Sense ripbaits are good options in the warming water. For sturgeon, there have been a few shaker sturgeon with the occasional keeper in the Antioch area around the Antioch Bridge, Broad Slough and New York Slough. A few stripers are taken on frozen shad, anchovies, or sardines in many areas with most bank fishermen working the Antioch Fishing Pier or along Sherman Island Road,” said Mathisen.
Steve Santucci of Santucci’s Fly Fishing Guide Service said, “Fishing was pretty nice when the weather cooperated this week. We found some nice chunky stripers today that were very aggressive as they were chasing the fly to the boat and hitting it on the drop. Fishing is going to be really good as the water temperatures were 52 degrees in the early morning and hit 55 degrees by the end of the day.”
Despite the reductions in pumping from the south Delta, the currents have not increased on the river.
As we headed out Wednesday January 20 with rare dry skies, flat calm weather and primo tides, Norm Perry assumed his usual spot on the port bow. Norm travels the world in his quest for fishing adventure and knew these tides were special.
From the ferocious hordes of bluegill and crappie that keep Lake Berryessa swimmers at bay to the ravenous under size striped bass of the Napa River, Norm has seen it all.
For further proof of Norm’s fishing prowess one need look no further than just above the trophy covered mantle of his home where a massive rainbow trout that fell prey to a pink marshmallow at the Cow Palace Boat Show is on display for all to admire.
Yet, in spite of this worldly pursuit of action and adventure, sturgeon have remained elusive to Norm.
As Deck Dog Mike lowered the anchor in Hot Spot Number One (Sonoma Creek) Norm eased his Walmart Walleye Whacker rod and Zebco Sturgeon Spanker reel from its protective case.