
Lake Berryessa
Catfish, Salmon and Bass Highlight Early Fall Catches
SACRAMENTO – Cal Kellogg of fishcalkellogg.com reported experiencing the “most interesting trip I’ve ever had on Lake Berryessa” while fishing with Nate Kelsch from Big Nate’s Guide Service. Their target was lunker catfish – and they caught those, as well as a smallmouth and largemouth bass.
“We went into a cove and marked what we thought were channel catfish,” said Kellogg. “The fish were exploding on bait that jumped onto the shoreline to flee the big predators.”
“Over 40 feet of water, we put squid and anchovies on our hooks. Kelsch hooked and landed a channel cat over 20 pounds at 15 feet below the surface. We missed another fish and I then I hooked and landed a catfish weighing about 12 pounds,” Kellogg continued.
“We also caught and released a 3 lb. smallmouth on an anchovy and a 3-1/2 lb. largemouth on a whole squid,” noted Kellogg. “There didn’t appear to be any small catfish there – there were only huge marks on the fish finder.”
The kokanee, king salmon and rainbow trout action at Berryessa is also going strong.
On his latest trolling adventure, Nate Kelsch reported, “Today I had the pleasure of taking Dave, Amy and Lyle out on Berryessa for a potluck trip and they absolutely smashed the donkeys, scoring the largest kokanee that I’ve seen since 2021, big king salmon and some beautiful trout. What a day! These potluck trips are a blast as I try to get you a nice combo of what this amazing fishery as to offer.”
“I can’t preach enough about the Tackle that we are using, which is all available in my Kokanee Kit from Catch America!!! These 6 in Offset Dodgers. Tpex lures and Uncle Larry’s Spinners, tipped with Chrome Killer Corn, are unstoppable on all species! We fished from 40 ft to 95 ft and had success at all depths at speeds from .8 to 1.5 mph.”
Kelsch is now booking potluck trips, catfish trips and crappie/bass trips on Berryessa.
Black bass fishing continues to be solid at Berryessa. “There were a lot of firsts this week on Berryessa,” said Don Paganelli of Paganelli’s Bass Fishing after his most recent guide trip. “Two anglers caught their first top water bass and first dropshot bass. I am sure they will be trying these the next time they go out. The spoon bite is just about to start; it should be a great fall bite.”
Reclamation now requires all boats launching at Lake Berryessa to participate in a seal program to prevent the spread of invasive golden mussels. All vessels wishing to launch at Lake Berryessa will be inspected, according to the Bureau of Reclamation:
A red quarantine seal will be applied for 30 days during which the vessel will not be permitted to launch. Vessels that have finished the 30-day quarantine may return to the lake and have the seal removed by authorized staff and will be allowed to launch.
For questions about this new protocol and vessel decontamination, contact BOR-Berryessa@usbr.gov.
Lake Berryessa is holding 1,382,092 acre feet of water, 86 percent of capacity and 117 percent of average.
- Dan Bacher