
The landlocked king salmon fishery at Oroville has been a popular and exciting fishery at Lake Oroville since 2013, but the fishing took a back seat last year to unfolding events at Oroville Dam that resulted in the evacuation of nearly 200,000 residents of Butte, Yuba and Sutter counties on one hour notice when Department of Water Resources and local law enforcement officials announced that a failure of the auxiliary spillway was imminent after the spillway began eroding.
The giant hole caused by erosion in the primary spillway and then the erosion and damage to the emergency spillway that spurred the evacuation, followed by the release of 100,000 cfs down the primary spillway, also created the need for two rescue operations of salmon and steelhead by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife and the California Department of Water Resources.
Since then, the shabby construction of the spillways that resulted in the evacuation, the failure of state and federal officials to heed the advice of environmental groups regarding safety concerns at the dam, the ensuing investigations and the ongoing construction at the dam has been a front-page topic of local, state, nation and international media since February of 2018.
The good news is that the Chinook salmon fishery is back in force this spring as construction activities continue at the dam. Anglers can no longer launch at the spillway, but boat launching is in full swing at the Bidwell Canyon launch ramp, as I found when I fished with Rob Reimers of Rustic Rob’s Guide Service on Saturday, May 19, on a beautiful and mild spring day.
Several days earlier, Reimers had done a scouting trip on the reservoir and caught 15 salmon in a couple of hours while trolling Brad’s Kokanee Cut Plugs behind dodgers, keeping five.