
Lake Chabot, a scenic East Bay Municipal Utility District reservoir situated in the foothills east of San Leandro in the unincorporated area of Castro Valley, is a popular destination for anglers in search of trophy bass, crappie, rainbow trout and even sturgeon, but the lake wasn’t open to fishing and recreation for most of its history.
Built in 1874-75 as a primary drinking water supply for the East Bay, the 315-acre lake was closed to fishing and other recreation for 91 years. The lake finally opened for controlled recreational uses in 1965 after legislation was passed in the 1960s. The lake now serves as a standby emergency water supply.
Lake Chabot features great bank and boat fishing access for rainbow trout, channel catfish, largemouth bass and crappie.
After several years of drought that left many docks out of the water, the lake filled again over the past couple of years with average rainfall in 2016 and record rainfall in 2017. The lake was 90 percent of capacity at press time.
Over the past couple of years, anglers set two new lake records. Ryan Reynolds of San Mateo set a new largemouth bass record for Chabot, catching a 19-pounder, one of the largest bass ever landed in northern California, on October 28, 2016.
Reynolds was fishing with a jig at Alder Point on Lake Chabot at 10 a.m. when he hooked his monster fish. He then released the lunker back into Chabot, one of the lakes that has benefited from habitat projects initiated by former tackle shop owner John Walton and the East Bay Regional Park District over 20 years ago.
This fish obliterated the previous record by two pounds. The previous record largemouth caught at Lake Chabot was reeled in by Louis Vasquez in 2002 and weighed 17 pounds.
Then another record was broken this summer. Francisco Escobar of Castro Valley caught and released a 2.34 lb crappie at Chabot, a