
I had just landed a nice kokanee and was trying to get my line back in the water. "Kirby…right there" I uttered while pointing to his rod. I dropped my rod to grab the net, only to see a rod tip shaking on the opposite side of the boat. "Gary, your outside rod!" I exclaimed.
The next few minutes were a blur of pumping rods and nets flying in every direction. When the dust had settled, all six rods laid in a tangled heap across the back of the boat. Although the boat trolled onward, no fishing lines were in the water. We couldn’t get corn on our hooks fast enough. The sun still hadn’t crested the eastern peak, but a glowing smoky haze laid silently over the water. Kokanee pandemonium had broken out on Stampede Reservoir.
Each year, it seems like one body of water rises to the top as the best kokanee fishery in Northern California. Lake Berryessa held the title for a number of years, only to be knocked off by the drought and the sudden resurgence of Whiskeytown Lake. Last summer at the Whiskeytown Kokanee Power derby, I proclaimed it was the best kokanee fishing I had ever seen.
Whiskeytown fished great this year and has the current edge on other lakes as far as average size. However, I have NEVER seen anything like the kokanee fishing this year at Stampede Reservoir.
Let me provide some examples. During my first trip this year on August 4 with Kirby Desha and Gary Ledbetter, we limited out for the three of us in 45 minutes flat. Our limits included three fish over sixteen inches.
Next up was on August 7, when we fished the three of us plus Kirby’s father-in-law Willie Brusin. We were off the water with 20 fish in the cooler by 7:20 am. There were a few smaller fish mixed in, but for the most part we were averaging solid fifteen inchers.