
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.
Last spring produced some of the best king salmon and rainbow trout fishing at Folsom Lake in memory.