
OREGON HOUSE – It’s feeling more and more like fall around here — beautiful quiet weekdays and comfortable camping weather. The lake is about 32 ft below spill, which is normal for this time in the irrigation season, and the surface water temperature has cooled down to 70.8 degrees.
While it’s definitely a different feel than “full to the brim,” it has its own beauty, especially when it’s still and glassy, and especially when the only sound is water dripping off your kayak paddles.
This is just about the slowest time of year for trout fishing. Even so, in September, longtime Collins Lake angler Jimmie Trejo and his friend John Hilton managed to bring in more than a limit of trout and a couple of bass to fill out the stringer.
They were trolling white Speedy Shiners out on the main body of the lake, where it took 300 ft of weighted fishing line to get down deep enough for those trout! Jimmie was out on the water again this week and brought in another nice bass weighing 5 pounds from out near the island.
Aside from trout, there is still some good warm-water action. Bass are scattered and you might even get a few unexpected bites while trolling. Or else when you’re fishing for bluegill… Keegan, Brody, and Colson reported catching a 4.5 lb largemouth bass while they were reeling in a bluegill — I’d doubt it EXCEPT… when I was a kid, the exact same thing happened to me and my brother at Collins Lake on the east bank of Elmer’s Cove on a #12 hook with a 4 lb test leader no less.
We had no net, and I remember my brother bear-hugging a big largemouth down in the mud to bring it up on shore. That’s quite a catch, gentlemen, and a story you can tell for years to come!
The biggest catfish I’ve seen in the last couple of months came from Hopkins, who caught it down by the dam. That lunker weighed in at 7.2 lbs! Great catch!
Finally, we have Brayden, Sawyer, Jax, and Dylan, who brought in two big catfish weighing in at 6.5 lbs and 7 lbs — and a bonus crappie. Nice catch!
As the lake continues to cool, we look forward to a great trout planting season. Our schedule (subject to change, conditions permitting, yada yada…) is currently to have a trout plant every week from the second half of October through the first week in May.
In the meantime, don’t let this weather go to waste — get out and enjoy fall in the California foothills!
- Ed Palma