
By Cal Kellogg
It’s been an interesting and sometimes frustrating late fall and winter fishing season here in Northern California. The fall was prolonged and warm, and the winter has been largely mild and warm. When I look up at the Sierra peaks every morning, I’m surprised by the amount of snow I see because we just haven’t had that sustained push of storms that we often have during the late winter. My other gauge of winter conditions is my woodpile. I heat my house exclusively with wood, and I’d say I’ve used about 30% less wood than I do in an average year. Sometimes in the winter, I’ll keep a fire going for a solid month or more. The longest stretch I’ve had a fire going this winter is something around 10 days or so. Based on this, I’d say that the winter has been significantly warmer than usual in my little piece of the Sierras.
Looking at the precipitation charts for NorCal, it looks like we are sitting at anywhere from 55% to 71% of normal, and we are starting to slide out of what is traditionally the wet season, so I don’t anticipate any big rallies in terms of rain and snowfall.
In the big picture, this isn’t horrible news. We are coming off a couple of solid winters, and most of our lakes and reservoirs are full or will fill in the near future. If this dry trend extends into next winter, we could have some problems, but for now, it doesn’t look like we’ll have any water woes this year.
So how has this mild weather impacted the fishing? All in all, it seems to have tamped down the action, and this is especially true for trout anglers. We haven’t seen that intense late winter bite that we often see at places like Shasta, New Melones, and Folsom. With a few exceptions such as the Oroville king bite and Tahoe mack action, I’d describe trout and salmon fishing as mostly inconsistent so far this year.
For example, Folsom is booting out a few very nice