
Fall striper fishing on the West Delta is one of my favorite fisheries in California. In between bouts of north wind, calm reigns over the waters, and we get to experience the delta at its finest.
On October 8, I planned a trip to the West Delta with Andre Fontenot of San Bruno. Andre and I have mutual friends, but we have never been able to connect for a fishing trip until now. Andre was curious about my method for catching striped bass, so I told him we would be using circle hooks.
After launching the boat and trolling for a short period of time, we anchored in 24 feet of water on the Sacramento River between Sherman Island and Pittsburg. We got our lines out and immediately started getting bites from sub-legal stripers. The next bite on my rod seemed out of place compared to the taps we had been experiencing.
My rod tip slowly dipped down about six inches and stayed loaded up. The rod tip continued to bob up and down a few inches at a time, never letting up. “Big fish” I said in a whisper tone.
Andre was probably thinking I was nuts since the rod wasn’t pegged to the water. In my experience, I’ve learned that the smooth, constant bites are usually from bigger fish. As the rod continued to dip, I started reeling at a moderate pace with the rod still in the holder. The rod loaded up, and I said, “Fish on!”
The pressure let up, and I thought I lost the fish for a moment, but then I felt the pressure again and pulled the rod out of the holder. “It’s a keeper, get the net,” I relayed to Andre. The fish made its way to the port side of the boat before making a blistering run way out to the side. “I bet it’s a sturgeon,” I said as the fish continued to peel line off the reel.