
Situated at the edge of the Carson-Iceberg Wilderness, Lake Alpine is one of the most beautiful of the lakes found in the Ebbetts Pass region and Alpine County.
Any time you throw a bait, spinner, or fly into the lake’s usually cold waters you could hook a trophy rainbow, since huge trout up to 9 pounds roam the waters of this reservoir. However, smaller fish make up the majority of the catches, particularly after the California Department of Fish and Wildlife stocks the lake.
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife and the Alpine County Fish and Game Commission both plant Lake Alpine with rainbow trout. While CDFW planters typically weigh a half pound, the Alpine County fish average 2 pounds each and include trophy size fish. The CDFW has historically stocked the lake with 7200 pounds of rainbows from Memorial Day through Labor Day.
On July 15, I attended the annual Lake Alpine Kid's Fishing Day event. Three members of the Alpine County Fish and Game Commission – Stephan Krayk of Bear Valley, Bruno Huff of Markeeville and Donald Connor – were there to help the kids and their parents go fishing and enjoy the morning.
“Before the event, we planted 1,800 pounds of rainbow trout, including 900 pounds of trophy fish 3 pounds and over and 900 catchable trout ranging from 11 inches to 2 pounds,” said Huff, who provided fishing reports on the Carson Pass region for years to the late Tracy Chimenti, former Fish Sniffer staffer. “We had 100 kids attend the free event.”
Fishing was unusually slow, probably due to the heat wave that quickly warmed up the water temperatures on the lake. Only two fish were weighed in during the event.
Thirteen-year-old Cecily Greenberg won the biggest fish award by catching a 20 inch rainbow weighing 2 pounds on PowerBait. Ryan E. landed the