
BURSON – While known best for its bass fishing, the Mother Lode’s Lake Camanche is a quality rainbow trout fishery targeted by shore and boat anglers throughout the year.
The early summer and late fall, especially at a time of record fires and record heat, is generally not the top time to target trout at Camanche, but Robbie Dunham of Koke Machine Guide Service decided to try the lake anyway.
On Friday, Sept. 4, Dunham and Dianne Stockton found surprisingly good trout fishing on a scout trip to Lake Camanche, a popular EBMUD reservoir.
“We launched out of the North Shore Marina as I always do,” he said. “I told her it might be a boat ride or we might catch some fish. I had no expectations that we would do as well as we did.”
The two anglers caught a total of 10 rainbows, each taking home their five fish limit, by noon. The largest fish weighed 4 lbs., while the majority were in the 2 lb. range.
“We caught the fish all over the lake from the North Shore Marina to the dam — we covered a lot of ground. We used Speedy Shiners around 40 feet deep to catch the fish,” Dunham said.
Lake Camanche, located on the Mokelumne River in the low, rolling Sierra Nevada foothills northeast of Lodi, features good shore and bank fishing for trout during the fall, winter, and spring months, but it can be fickle at times.
“You can go fishing all morning on the lake and leave at noon without a bite,” said Bob Simms, host of the KFBK Outdoor Show. “Then the anglers in the boat that arrives at the ramp at noon will catch their limits by 2:30 pm.”
As the weather cools and fall trout plants begin, trout fishing should shift into high gear at Camanche.
Since regular rainbow trout plants began in 1989, the East Bay Municipal Utility District water supply reservoir has become known throughout the north state as an outstanding