Fish Sniffer Issue 3915 | Page 22

FRESHWATER 20 June 26, 2020 VOL.39 • ISS. 14 FRESHWATER REPORTS: CONTINUED FROM PG 21 RANCHO SECO RESERVOIR cont. recreation at the reservoir, call the Rocky Mountain Recreation Company at (209) 748-2318. - Dan Bacher REDDING/RED BLUFF Rainbows Rush Plugs And Flies REDDING - Trout fishing on the Sacramento River is red hot between Redding and Red Bluff. The average trout runs about 15 inches and fish over 4 pounds have been common over the past two weeks. “The fishing has been outstanding,” reported Captain Mike Bogue of Mike Bogue’s Guide Service. “I always have bait aboard the boat, but I haven’t used much of it recently because the plug bite has been so good. We are getting both numbers of fish and big fish on Yakima Bait Mag Lip 2.5 plugs. The size and action of these plugs seems to be just about perfect for the trout right now and the rainbows are really slamming them. I’ve been running a lot of silver patterns and they continue to work great,” Bogue continue. “We are really getting excited about the salmon season up here. The fishing in the ocean has been really good, so I’m thinking the river fishing is going to be pretty exciting this year. The river season will get started on July 16. If you want to fish during the opening week of the season, give me a call as spots are starting to fill,” Bogue related. Fly guys working the Sacramento are doing well. There are a lot of bugs coming off. The best offerings over the past week have been stone fly and caddis nymph imitations. Most guys are running 2 or 3 flies on their leaders with the stone fly nymph rigged to drift nearest the bottom. RIO VISTA Trollers Still Bagging Stripers on West Bank RiO VISTA – Most anglers have left the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers with the arrival of summer heat, but there are still plenty of striped bass available for anglers to catch on the west bank of the Sacramento River. “Ron Retzlaff of Orangevale has experienced excellent striped bass fishing on his latest trips on the Delta,” said Craig Newton at Willfish Bait and Tackle. “He and his friend caught 44 keeper stripers and 53 shakers in four days of trolling along the west bank.” “Then on his latest trip he reported 6 keeper stripers and 21 shakers while trolling the same area,” noted Newton. “The big fish of the day weighed 16 pounds. The trolled with Yo-Zuri lures, tipped with white and chartreuse plastic worms.” This is time to target white and channel catfish at night in the Sacramento River from Freeport to Rio Vista with chicken livers, anchovies, sardines, nightcrawlers, mackerel and other baits. You can also catch and release plenty of smallmouth bass in the North Delta sloughs, including Steamboat, Sutter and Miner sloughs. Toss out crawfish crankbaits, crawfish pattern plastics and topwater lures along the riprapped banks early and late in the day. - Dan Bacher ROLLINS/SCOTTS FLAT LAKES Topwater Bassers Enjoy Success COLFAX -“It’s all about the Yo-Zuri Banana Boat walking bait right now. I’ve got one in yellow and pearl and I’m killing the spots and smallies on it at Rollins,” exclaimed Jason Pleece of Meadow Vista. “The best fishing is taking place in the evening once the sun is off the water, but when there is surface chop I’m getting fish on topwater baits all day long. When the sun is high and the surface is glassy crankbaits work best, but they’ve got to be fairly small. The bass are hanging around rocky structure that drops into deep water. I haven’t been doing much trout fishing. I have seen a few guys trolling, but I haven’t seen them catch anything,” disclosed Pleece. The average bass at Rollins runs about 12 inches, but Pleece has caught fish to 2 pounds over the past week. Crowds at the lake are uncharacteristically light, despite the fact that the lake is nearly full. You’ll have to deal with some water skiers, but not nearly as many as you’d normally see. At Scotts Flat smallmouth bass can be taken on topwater baits at first and last light. Plastic worms and 3 inch grubs will draw strikes throughout the day. - Cal Kellogg SAN PABLO RESERVOIR Bank Anglers Find Decent Trout and Catfish Action SAN PABLO – San Pablo Reservoir reopened on Monday June 15 for private boat launching and shoreline fishing, according to Marcella Shoemaker at the Rocky Mountain Recreation Company. “The fishing is fair,” said Marcella. “We are seeing people who haven’t purchased a fishing license in 10 to 15 years.” Business hours are from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Boat and kayak rentals and picnics or group gatherings are not permitted at this time. There will be no playground and no fish cleaning tables available. Since the lake reopened, 4700 pounds of fish total have been planted, including 1200 pounds of catfish, 2500 pounds of CDFW rainbow trout and 1200 pounds of trout from Mount Lassen, including 600 pounds of Lightning Trout. In addition, a plant of 500 pounds of Lighting Trout, 700 pounds of rainbows from Lassen and 1200 pounds of catfish went in on June 27. Boat rentals and picnic areas are still close, no playground, fish cleaning tables closed. No water foundation. “Please be patient with us; we have new safety procedures. Only 4 customers are allowed in the visitor center at a time,” noted Shoemaker. A face mask must be worn in the visitor center no exceptions. 6 ft social distancing must be enforced at all times. “We do not have the same household rule on private boat launching! Boat launching must be staggered, at the ramp” she added. San Pablo is located at 7301 San Pablo Dam Rd, El Sobrante, CA 94803. For more information, contact: (510) 223-1661 SANTA CLARA VALLEY LAKES/SAN LUIS RESERVOIR Uvas and Chesbro Lakes Kick Out Bass and Catfish COYOTE – Shore anglers are catching a mixture of black bass and channel catfish at Uvas and Chesbro lakes. “Fishermen are throwing out drop shot rigs, swimbaits, wacky rigged Senkos and square billed crankbaits,” reported Madison Borgia at Coyote Bait and Tackle. “The largemouths range in size from ½ to 3-1/2 pounds.” Channel catfish are starting to bite cut baits including mackerel, anchovies and chicken liver in the evenings at Uvas Robert helped Captain Chris Ditter wrap up his spring striper season in style when Robert landed this hefty bass on May 25. Photo courtesy of HEADRUSH SPORTFISHING, South Lake Tahoe. and Chesbro. “Most fish go from 4 to 12 pounds, but cats to 20 pounds have been taken,” she advised. Calero, Coyote Lake and Stevens Creek reservoirs, are open to boating again (non-power boating only at Stevens Creek) with a reservation. Boating is limited to single boaters or members of the same household only. Reservations are required 7 days a week for both power and non-power boats. Please visit www.gooutsideandplay. org to book your boating reservation. For crappie and bass, Borgia recommended fishing crappie jigs around the boat launch at Calero. The be bass are hitting the same lures employed at Chesbro and Uvas. Fishing at Coyote has slowed down, now that the lake is being drained by the Santa Clara Water District. Both San Luis Reservoir and the O’Neill Forebay are producing striped bass at this time. “Expect to hook bigger but less fish in main lake and smaller but more numerous fish in the fore bay,” she advised. Shore fishermen should cast out jumbo bloodworms, shad and swimbaits in the main lake and forebay, while boaters should slow troll Atlas rigs and Keitech swimbaits in the main lake The state park is open 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Both day-use parking and the boat launches are open. Campgrounds and the visitor center remain closed. Special events and public gatherings continue to be canceled until further notice. - Dan Bacher SHASTA LAKE Trout & Salmon Provide Thrills REDDING - If you live in or want to travel up to the North Valley, fishing opportunities are widespread. At Whiskeytown the kokanee bite is very good. The Shasta trout bite is getting back on track after a brief slowdown and some big fish are up for grabs. Many of the trout are being caught at 40 to 50 feet down. Big rainbows and browns are feeding on shad and readily take a shad imitation spoon or rolled shad. A variety of different spoons are producing well at Shasta. Half ounce Hum Dingers are a good bet as are ¼ ounce Kastmasters and Krocodiles, large Ex-Cels and large Needlefish. Some anglers are using dodgers, but the best action has been coming on naked shad pattern spoons. Bass action has been fantastic at Shasta for mainly spotted bass, but there are some smallmouths and largemouths in the mix too. The fish are now in a summer pattern. They move up on prominent rock structure early and late. When the sun is high they move offshore. Reaction baits and topwaters work when the fish are up. During the midday hours drop shot rigs are the best choice. Most anglers are getting 20 to 40 fish per day. The kokanee bite at Whiskeytown Reservoir remains very good, with most anglers landing limits of fish in the 15 to 17- inch class. Paulina Peak dodgers and hoochies are working as are Apex Lures teamed with Sling Blade Dodgers or Vance’s dodgers. Pink and orange are good colors early. Break out the subtler colors and drop down in the water column once the sun is on the water. The hot depth range has been 40 to 70 feet. STAMPEDE RESERVOIR Limits of Kokes Reward Downrigger Trollers TRUCKEE – Trollers are catching limits of hard-fighting kokanee salmon at Stampede Reservoir, along with an occasional Lahontan cutthroat. “We had another productive day at Stampede today, catching kokanee to 16”,” said James Netzel at Tight Lines Guide Service. “Depths change according to the time of day. Paulina Peak Tackle’s Peak Performer Dodgers did just as well as the p lites today. The bigger kokanee came on Purple Haze behind a wonderbread Peak Performer Dodger. The cutthroat came on light orange flutter hoochies, The speed was 1.0-1.2 with 50’ setbacks.” On the following trip, Netzel reported: “We got a late start at Stampede today, but we still got kokanee to over 16” plus 1 cutthroat. The bad part about starting late is you got to fish in the heat to get limits, but we got a pretty good wind that kept us cool. It was as a scorching 82 degrees today.” CONTINUED ON PG 22