
Coleman National Fish Hatchery releases steelhead kelts into the Sacramento River below the Bend Bridge.
Fred Myer, the California Department of Fish and Game fishery biologist for many years on the American River, used to say that steelhead often do well in years that salmon don’t and vice versa.
That was definitely the case when the Coleman National Fish Hatchery saw a record high steelhead run and record low fall Chinook salmon run in the fall of 2017.
Coleman Fish Hatchery staff released a total of 5,000 steelhead kelts in late March into the Sacramento River at the Bend Bridge boat ramp over a three-day period. The fish released into the river were those that survived out of the 10,612 fish that returned to the facility on Battle Creek.
The fish averaged about 17-1/2 inches each, according to Brett Galean Project Leader, Coleman National Fish Hatchery, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. “We released 2,000 fish the first two days, Thursday and Friday, and then the remaining thousand the next day,” said Galean.
Galean said this is the fourteenth year of releasing these fish. “Typically, we see around 2,000 kelts released in October through end of February. We only spawn the fish in January and February. We try to take half from early returning fish that arrive from October to December and then the next batch that arrive from January through the end of February,” he said.
After spawning the fish, they put them in a large outside pond where they are reconditioned before being released into Battle Creek. Typically, 75 percent of the fish die, said Galean.
“When we recondition them, we feed them floating pelted fish feed and salmon eggs to get their