Santa Ana River Lakes Night Session | The Fish Sniffer

Santa Ana River Lakes Night Session

Santa Ana River Lakes Night Session

On Wednesday, October 8, I headed back to Orange County’s famous Santa Ana River Lakes, arriving around five o’clock in the evening for the night session. That gave me six hours to see what was biting. The wind was blowing about seven to eight miles per hour, but my one ounce egg sinker on a Carolina rig still had enough weight to cast cleanly into the lake.

I set up on the right side of the lake, just around the corner from the entrance. My buddy Ceaser joined me for his first ever fishing trip, so I had to show him the ropes. Our bait lineup included shrimp with marshmallows, nightcrawlers, and some mackerel that Ceaser had marinated in garlic.

For the first hour or so there was not much action, so I used the time to teach Ceaser how to cast, set up his rigs, and get comfortable with the basics. After about an hour, the calm broke. My rod’s bite indicator went wild, and the rod bent over hard. The fish felt huge. After a five minute fight, I realized the line had wrapped around the rod tip. The moment I tried to fix it, the line snapped and the fish was gone. We were definitely not happy about that.

Even with that loss, the next three hours made up for it. We barely had time to sit down with all the action coming our way. Most of the fish were hitting mackerel, and by the end of the night I had caught my first ever limit at Santa Ana River Lakes.

As for Ceaser, not bad for a rookie. He landed four catfish, including his personal best at eight pounds. I guess beginner’s luck is real after all.

All the action can be seen on YouTube at FishingWithCisco.

Donner Lake: Fishing remains solid across species. Kokanee anglers are still finding fish near the west end around 50 feet deep using small spoons and hoochies. Mackinaw are deeper—50 to 150 feet—taking larger plugs and slow-trolled spoons. Shore anglers are picking up rainbows around China Cove and the west-end ramps with worms, PowerBait, and spinners. The bite is best early and late, before boat traffic increases. Donner continues to be one of the steadiest options in the area.

Boca Reservoir: Fishing remains productive for both bank and boat anglers. Surface temps are in the high 50s, keeping trout active near the dam and west-end creek. Trollers working close to shore are finding rainbows and browns, while shore anglers using worms, eggs, or spoons are doing best in the evenings. Kokanee have fully colored and are now off the bite. The reservoir sits around 75% full, allowing for easy access.

Stampede Reservoir: Trout fishing continues to be steady. Rainbows and browns are showing up along the north shore early and late in the day on worms, lures, and PowerBait. Trollers are connecting with suspended fish 40–60 feet down using spoons or Rapalas. Cooler mornings are bringing trout shallower, making early hours most productive. The kokanee season has wrapped up here for the year.

Prosser Creek Reservoir: The reservoir is fishing well and offering a fun mix of bass and trout. The lake sits around 70% full, with surface temps in the low 60s. Bass are holding in coves and biting plastics, jigs, and crankbaits in 10 feet of water. Trout are suspended 20–40 feet down, with trollers finding success on Rapalas and plugs. Shore anglers near the dam are also connecting with worms, eggs, and PowerBait. While not known for large fish, Prosser offers consistent action and a great mix of species.

Jackson Meadows: The boat ramp remains closed, limiting access to shore fishing only. Trout anglers working the dam area are still finding good action using worms, PowerBait, or small spoons. Despite limited access, fishing remains worthwhile for those willing to make the trek.

  • Mountain Hardware, Truckee

More from Issue 4409

Volume 44 Issue 9 Out Now!

Volume 44 Issue 9 Out Now!

Check out the new issue of The Fish Sniffer Magazine for October 17, 2025.

In this issue of The Fish Sniffer, we celebrate the arrival of Fall. Much cooler temperatures and even some rainfall have occurred, setting the stage for excellent fishing in Northern California. Trout, salmon, bass, panfish, stripers, catfish, and all other species are on the bite to fatten up for the lean winter season.

Check out the articles in this issue, including a full report on the opening week at Pyramid Lake, the Fall Rio Vista Striper Derby, and the 25th Annual Shasta Lake Trout Derby. Learn how to catch more fish and enjoy the great outdoors in Northern California this fall season.

The golden mussel problem continues to impact boaters statewide, causing major boat launch closures and strict new inspection and quarantine rules at several lakes. These rules are beginning to change, and some lakes—like Oroville and Bullards Bar—now allow same-day launches following an inspection. Always check the regulations at any lake before heading out.

All you need to know about fresh and saltwater fishing in Northern California is in the new issue of The Fish Sniffer Magazine!

Don Pedro Lake: Trollers Battle Rainbows and Kings

Don Pedro Lake: Trollers Battle Rainbows and Kings

LA GRANGE - If you want to hook a potluck mixture of rainbow trout, king salmon, and black bass, Don Pedro Lake is the place to go.

“A family that fished with me kept two kings, three rainbows, and three bass that they caught,” said Monte Smith of Gold Country Sportfishing after his most recent trip. “Their total was 17 trout, as they were camping at the lake and had really no use to keep so many fish and released most of the fish.”

“The bass were on a tear today as we had two quadruple hookups and several doubles that kept them busy releasing most of them. What a great trip it was with a great family. We beat the oncoming weather back to the dock,” he observed.

On a previous trip on Don Pedro, Smith said, “The group of five beat them up pretty hard. They lost many, even a really good king just outside the net. The big schools of bass that would come racing through our gear and give everyone a great fight kept them busy at times. These guys were a blast to have onboard and are already figuring another date.”

They landed trout, king salmon, three species of bass, and even a kokanee — next year’s fish, according to Smith.

Smith has been trolling homemade spoons at 40 to 75 feet deep. The rainbows ranged from 1½ to 3 pounds.

“We’ve seen a lot of kings from 2 to 4 pounds this season,” he added. “Next year those fish will be 4 to 6 pounds,” Smith concluded.

Don Pedro Lake is holding 1,551,623 acre-feet of water, 76 percent of capacity and 113 percent of average. The lake level is 789.18 feet elevation.

  • Dan Bacher

Collins Lake: Bass and Catfish Dominate Catches As Trout Plants Set to Begin

Collins Lake: Bass and Catfish Dominate Catches As Trout Plants Set to Begin

OREGON HOUSE – It’s feeling more and more like fall around here — beautiful quiet weekdays and comfortable camping weather. The lake is about 32 ft below spill, which is normal for this time in the irrigation season, and the surface water temperature has cooled down to 70.8 degrees.

While it’s definitely a different feel than “full to the brim,” it has its own beauty, especially when it’s still and glassy, and especially when the only sound is water dripping off your kayak paddles.

This is just about the slowest time of year for trout fishing. Even so, in September, longtime Collins Lake angler Jimmie Trejo and his friend John Hilton managed to bring in more than a limit of trout and a couple of bass to fill out the stringer.

They were trolling white Speedy Shiners out on the main body of the lake, where it took 300 ft of weighted fishing line to get down deep enough for those trout! Jimmie was out on the water again this week and brought in another nice bass weighing 5 pounds from out near the island.

Aside from trout, there is still some good warm-water action. Bass are scattered and you might even get a few unexpected bites while trolling. Or else when you’re fishing for bluegill… Keegan, Brody, and Colson reported catching a 4.5 lb largemouth bass while they were reeling in a bluegill — I’d doubt it EXCEPT… when I was a kid, the exact same thing happened to me and my brother at Collins Lake on the east bank of Elmer’s Cove on a #12 hook with a 4 lb test leader no less.

We had no net, and I remember my brother bear-hugging a big largemouth down in the mud to bring it up on shore. That’s...

Davis Lake: Trout Action Heats Up With Cooler Weather

Davis Lake: Trout Action Heats Up With Cooler Weather

PORTOLA – Trout fishing has improved dramatically on Davis Lake with the cooler weather, according to Cal Kellogg, who reported catching and releasing 17 rainbow trout up to 22 inches on his latest kayak fishing adventure on Lake Davis.

“I hooked all of the fish while trolling at 10 feet with orange Catch America Metal Head lures,” said Kellogg. “The trout were feeding on insects, but I’m not sure what kind. The water at Davis was heavily stained, so using bright-colored lures produced the best success.”

“Abdul Masiri, Catch America CEO, caught 8 fish, including a 23-inch brown, while trolling from his boat the next day,” said Kellogg. “He trolled gold and chartreuse Trigger Spoons by himself at 10 feet deep. Both of us fished with leadcore line.”

Ed Dillard of Dillard Guided Fishing confirmed the hot fishing on the last trolling adventure of his season on Davis. “The trout fishing was great – we hooked 40 fish,” said Dillard. “The red Baby Simon copper red was working at 6 to 10 feet. The fish were 10 to 21 inches long.”

He noted that the boat docks are now out at Camp 5, Lightning Tree, and Honker.

Bank fishing for trout is “pretty good” at Eagle Point, Camp Five, Fairview, Honker, and Catfish Cove, reported Jim Graham at J&J’s Grizzly Store and Campground. Anglers are experiencing the best success using worms and PowerBait in the early morning and evening hours.

Graham said he hasn’t heard any reports from anglers targeting black bass or brown bullhead catfish lately.

On July 23, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife planted 20,000 subcatchable rainbows in the reservoir.

Davis is holding 5,770 acre-feet of water, 79 percent of capacity and 125 percent of average.

  • Dan Bacher

Lake Berryessa: Trollers Lay Into Kokanee and Kings

Lake Berryessa: Trollers Lay Into Kokanee and Kings

SACRAMENTO – Trollers fishing Lake Berryessa are bagging big numbers of kokanee salmon, king salmon, and Eagle Lake–strain trout, while bass fishermen are picking up large numbers of spotted, largemouth, and smallmouth bass.

“After almost a two-week break for vacation, I am back on Berryessa and the limit train rolls on, baby,” said Nate Kelsch of Big Nate’s Guide Service after his latest fishing adventure. “My three-man crew scored limits of big, beautiful kokanee and a couple of nice king salmon by 10:30 a.m.

Epic fishing continues. We used exactly what I had been using before my vacation — Catch America 6-inch Offset Dodgers with Tpex lures from my Kokanee Kit, tipped with Chrome Killer Corn, on the brand new Big Nate’s Signature Trolling Rods — and we batted 1000%. If you use this gear, you will catch fish,” he added.

“The best depths were from 45 ft to 87 ft, chasing marks as I kept my eyes glued to the graph. The fish are a bit lethargic with the full moon, so keeping the presentations in their face is crucial,” he concluded.

Kelsch is now booking potluck trips, catfish trips, and crappie/bass trips on Berryessa.

On one recent fishing adventure at Lake Berryessa, Don Paganelli of Paganelli’s Bass Fishing reported that the “bass bite is still going.”

“The spoon bite was slow starting with only two largemouth, but the dropshot bite was great with 15 fish up to 3 pounds. A little cooler weather is all we need to get the fall bite going,” he forecasted.

However, on the following trip, Paganelli reported slow bass action. “I had a day towards the end of last week during that storm — and the fishing was really slow. That low-pressure system shut the bite off. We ended up with three bass...

Bodega Bay/Tomales Bay: Limits of Rockfish and Lingcod Boated

Bodega Bay/Tomales Bay: Limits of Rockfish and Lingcod Boated

BODEGA BAY – If you like to catch rockfish and big lingcod, it’s hard to beat fishing out of Bodega Bay right now.

Captain Rick Powers of Bodega Bay Sportfishing reported superb fishing for lingcod and rockfish on his bottomfishing adventures off the Sonoma County coast. On his latest trip, Powers reported 28 lingcod up to 17 pounds and 140 rockfish for 14 anglers. “The weather conditions were flat – beautiful weather,” Powers noted.

Anglers are using an array of bars, jigs, swimbaits, and other lures tipped with squid strips to land the lingcod and rockfish.

Willie Vogler at Lawson’s Landing in Dillon Beach confirmed the top-notch rockfishing available off the Sonoma County coast. “Rockfishing is about as good as it gets right now, as all depths are open and the lingcod have moved in closer to shore in order to make more lingcod,” said Vogler. “Go help out a rockfish by catching a lingcod. Heck, get a pair of them. Probably get a few rockfish as well (we can’t help all of them).”

“I had forgotten how good fresh rockcod is. Now I remember. They’re out there and not too far, but a bit farther will be better. Close in has been hit hard. The 120 to 300-foot area has been left alone for a bit, but beware: the forbidden fruit that we call quillback rockfish appear to be quite plentiful, despite their low numbers officially recorded.”

One angler, Gage, checked in with one halibut weighing 19 pounds while using a jig. Another fisherman weighed a halibut going 21 pounds that he caught on live jacksmelt, according to Vogler.

“There has been almost decent halibut fishing this week, although the last few days the bar and, God forbid, Dillon Beach proper have been off-limits due to high surf,” noted...

East Bay Lakes Roundup: Perfect weather, light crowds and decent fishing!

East Bay Lakes Roundup: Perfect weather, light crowds and decent fishing!

ALAMEDA COUNTY – The weather is perfect, school is in, and the crowds are light. Seasonal plants may have ended, but there is still plenty of action to be had.

Lake del Valle – Paul Clouse and Al Hurwitz continue their quest for DV smallies and are starting to see some decent numbers. Last week the pair took a total of 12 fish (one bluegill and 11 smallmouth). The smallies were mostly on the dink side, except for one weighing 2 pounds. The fish were mainly caught on the western shore of the lake opposite Swallow Bay trolling 1/4 oz Panther Martin spinners in a salamander pattern at 16–21 feet below the surface in 20–30-foot water columns at a speed of 2.0–2.4 mph.

Largemouth remain another solid target, with a decent morning and evening bite, and with water temperatures slowly dropping the bite window is stretching longer into the day. Additionally, the fish are moving into deeper water and are a bit easier to target in the cleaner water. Catfish are still more than available, panfish are at about their largest size of the season, and there are still some outliers such as the occasional striper. Weedless plastics, chatterbaits, shallow divers, and spinners will all work for bass.

Cut baits like anchovies and sardines are best for the cats, and worms under a bobber or small jigs should produce both crappie and bluegill. There was a surprise DFW trout taken this week.

A caution advisory for algae remains in effect but has had little effect on the fishing. The water level is good, and water temperatures have been between 75 degrees in the morning and 79 degrees in the afternoon.

Contra Loma – There has been little change to conditions, and the bite remains slow for mostly dink bass. Catfish...

Fisherman’s Wharf/Berkeley: Live Bait Drifters Nail Limits of Stripers

Fisherman’s Wharf/Berkeley: Live Bait Drifters Nail Limits of Stripers

SAN FRANCISCO – Striper fishing continues to be hot on San Francisco Bay, while anglers fishing outside of the Golden Gate are landing limits of rockfish and big numbers of lingcod.

Mike Rescino, Captain of the Lovely Martha, reported limits of stripers on his latest live bait drifting adventure inside San Francisco Bay on October 10. “We caught limits of striped bass again,” said Rescino. “Today was another fantastic half day on the bay! We finished up with 15 limits (30) of quality bass and 7 halibut.”

Out of the Berkeley Marina, Captain James Smith of California Dawn Sportfishing has been fishing the Farallon Islands and the San Mateo County coast with great success for rockfish and lingcod. “We had both boats out today fishing and enjoying the airshow,” said Captain Smith on October 11. “The islands were off the hook again. CD1 had a charter that opted to fish the coast.”

The final count for the California Dawn 2 was 19 limits of lingcod (38) to 26 pounds, 16 limits of striped bass (32), 150 sand abs, 4 rockfish, and 1 halibut. The California Dawn 1 checked in with 18 lingcod for 18 anglers, 114 rockfish, and 2 halibut.

  • Dan Bacher

Folsom Lake: Fishing for Black Bass, Trout and Salmon Should Improve With Cooler Weather

Folsom Lake: Fishing for Black Bass, Trout and Salmon Should Improve With Cooler Weather

FOLSOM – The fishing for king salmon and rainbow trout has been tough on Folsom Lake, but that should all change soon as the surface water temperature cools down and the fish become more active.

“It’s a case of quality over quantity,” said Tom Malley of Get the Net Fishing Guide Service. “There are some nice salmon pushing 6 to 8 pounds on the lake now. We landed one king weighing 4 pounds and lost a bigger fish at the net on Saturday. We hooked and lost a big salmon on Sunday, while my fishing buddy landed one weighing 5 pounds.”

“You’ve got to get out before first light; there’s been a window of about 45 minutes when the fish bite lately. We’ve been trolling with white and green Pro-Trolls and green Jig-Its, both tipped with anchovy fillets. The fish have also been hitting Trigger Spoons,” he advised.

“The depths have varied depending on the day,” he said. “Two weeks ago, we hooked two kings at 35 feet deep while fishing with Trigger Spoons. The key is slow trolling and hitting the drop-offs, as long as you watch out for sunken trees. You need to bounce your weights on the bottom.”

On one trip, Malley reported, “We had a slow morning on Folsom with one chrome-bright six-pound king salmon caught — and on the kid’s birthday, to boot! We caught the fish off Brown’s Ravine at 45 feet, at a speed of 1.8 mph on, believe it or not, a yellow Thomas Buoyant I was using as a cheater spoon. So it was just the kid and the fish.”

For black bass, Don Paganelli of Paganelli’s Bass Fishing Experience recommended fishing Robo Worms on drop-shot rigs in the creek channels leading into the coves at Folsom. “Use your electronics to...

Feather River: Salmon Limits Boated on Open River Section

Feather River: Salmon Limits Boated on Open River Section

YUBA CITY – The salmon season in the section of the Feather River from 200 yards above the Live Oak boat ramp to the Highway 99 bridge remains open through October 31. The bag limit is one Chinook salmon:

https://nrm.dfg.ca.gov/FileHandler.ashx?DocumentID=202686&inline

Rob Reimers of Rustic Rob’s Guide Service has been reporting limits of bright Chinooks on most trips. On his latest trip, he reported two kings in the boat by 10:30 a.m. He has been catching his salmon while anchor fishing with Silvertron spinners out of Boyd’s Pump.

On a previous trip he reported, “Kevin and Wendy came all the way from Hawaii to catch salmon on the Feather River and it didn’t disappoint. They caught their limits along with Gary.”

Brian Willis at Johnson’s Bait and Tackle confirmed the top-notch salmon action. “Justin Mitchell and I have been catching limits of salmon on most of our trips from Star Bend down,” said Willis. “We’ve caught fish ranging from 15 to 30 pounds. All of the fish have been beautiful and bright. We also hooked and lost a steelhead on a Silvertron during a recent trip,” he stated.

Shore anglers are catching some steelhead on the Feather while drifting roe imitations or salmon roe from Live Oak up towards the outlet, Willis noted.

Striper fishing is also on the upswing. “I caught and released two stripers in the 20-pound range while throwing Evergreen Amazon topwater lures below Star Bend,” he added.

Upstream migrating fish totals through the Feather River Fish Monitoring Station between Jan. 1 and Sept. 25, 2025 are:

  • Spring-run Chinook salmon (April 16 through June 30): 17,733

  • Fall-run Chinook salmon (July 1 through present): 4,201

  • Steelhead: 374

Half Moon Bay: Rockfish Offer Steady Action Off San Mateo County Coast

Half Moon Bay: Rockfish Offer Steady Action Off San Mateo County Coast

EL GRANADA – Rockfishing adventures along the San Mateo County Coast continue to yield limits of colorful rockfish, along with some lingcod and an occasional halibut.

“All-depth rockfishing is now allowed off our coastline,” the Half Moon Bay Sportfishing Center reported. “The state and federal fishery management agencies have both approved changes to the rockfishing off our coastline effective September 18, 2025, to no depth restrictions through the end of the year. That means fishing the Deep Reef is in play, as well as fishing as deep or as shallow as we’d like.”

For example, the Queen of Hearts returned to the dock with 210 rockfish and 2 lingcod for 21 anglers on October 11. The boat checked in with 120 rockfish and 5 lingcod for 21 anglers on October 10.

The Center is now taking reservations for Dungeness crab and rockfishing trips beginning on November 1 through the end of the year.

Salmon fishing is closed for the rest of the year as the 7,500 fall harvest guideline has been met. News about a salmon season in 2026 will be discussed in fishery management meetings beginning in February 2026.

“Perch are hitting along the coastline, and squid and anchovies are showing up outside the harbor,” the Center stated. “Folks continue to enjoy catching rock crab off the fishing pier inside the harbor as well as on the jetty. Recreational Dungeness crab season is closed until the first Saturday in November, but the rock crab season is open all year using either hoop nets or snares.”

“If you’re interested in monkeyface eel, there’s loads of them available hidden in the jetty rocks for poke-pole anglers. Striper fishing along the beaches has slowed down, but there are still a few being landed here and there. Halibut have moved in with some...

French Meadows Reservoir: Trolling Shallow Should Produce Top Fall Rainbow Action

French Meadows Reservoir: Trolling Shallow Should Produce Top Fall Rainbow Action

FORESTHILL – Rainbow trout were hitting at French Meadows Reservoir as an early winter storm was getting ready to hit the Sierra Nevada.

“Limit-style rainbow fishing is available to both boaters and shore anglers,” reported Cal Kellogg of fishcalkellogg.com. “On my latest kayak trip to the reservoir I caught and released 16 rainbows to 18 inches. I used a bunch of different baits, but I had my best success while trolling with nightcrawlers 16 to 18 inches behind Mini Willow Leaf dodgers with three colors of leadcore at 1.8 mph.”

“If you plan to shore fish, I recommend rigging up one rod with an inflated nightcrawler about 30 feet off shore and another rod with a nightcrawler under a bobber,” Kellogg advised. “I think the next two to three weeks should yield outstanding trout fishing at French Meadows and other lakes in the High Sierra.”

Klamath River: Higher Flows Should Move More Steelhead Into River

Klamath River: Higher Flows Should Move More Steelhead Into River

SOMES BAR – I have some first-hand info to share today. We sent seven boats out fishing over the last three days covering the Coon Creek to Stuarts Bar areas. In summary, we are seeing very few steelhead.

Here are our actual totals from the seven total boat days: we netted three adult steelhead and three half-pounders, and dozens of smolt were hooked. There were several half-pounder hits on the flies that did not lead to a netted fish.

My personal boat run today with two expert fly fishermen only produced one netted adult (about 4 or 5 pounds) and zero half-pounders. So, there just aren’t many steelhead in this stretch of the mid-Klamath.

However, the general river quality is fishable. Clarity varied over the last three days but averaged about 2–3 feet in depth. River temps are in the mid-60s, and the river is flowing at 1,600 cfs in Orleans. We continued to clean off moss globules from our flies after every other cast.

The typical number of smolt interacted with on each guide day totaled around a dozen to two dozen per boat. The large number of smolt interactions is encouraging as far as potential growth for the future steelhead population, but we are obviously hit hard by the current loss of the half-pounder population and the small numbers of adults.

We have more rain predicted at the end of this week and early next week, so we are hoping that there might be more pods of fish migrating upstream with increasingly cooler water temps.

It has been tiring to fish hard all day with only one or two fish hits, but that’s fishing — so on we go.

The Klamath and Trinity rivers are closed to all take of Chinook salmon this year due to the collapse...

Los Vaqueros Reservoir: Stripers and Catfish Are Hitting Bait

Los Vaqueros Reservoir: Stripers and Catfish Are Hitting Bait

LIVERMORE – Anglers are experiencing top fishing for striped bass and catfish, though the trout fishing should perk up at Los Vaqueros Reservoir as the water cools and fall trout plants begin.

“Fishermen are picking up stripers while fishing from shore and rental boats,” said Carlos Robles at the Los Vaqueros Marina. “Anglers brought in stripers in the 21- to 24-inch range today. One angler also landed a 10 lb. striper. Bait fishing with anchovies is producing the best success.”

South Cove, the pier near the marina, Cowboy Cove, and Howden Cove are among the better spots to target striped bass.

Channel catfish are also hitting around the lake, including off the pier near the marina. Although Robles has seen some catfish in the 8-pound class caught, most are in the 2- to 5-lb. class. The South Cove, Cowboy Cove, and Oak Point are among the better spots to target catfish with anchovies, chicken liver, and nightcrawlers.

“A few trout — not many — are being caught by anglers fishing along the shoreline,” he added. “Most anglers report catching the rainbows on PowerBait.”

Robles expects the trout plants to resume in late October or early November. The water temperature at the marina was 68 to 69 degrees at press time.

If you are interested in renting a boat, the marina recommends calling ahead to check current wind conditions as they are unpredictable and can impact the ability to safely rent boats to visitors. Wind speeds change suddenly, and boat rentals are typically suspended when they exceed 15 mph or when heavy gusts are forecasted. Remember — rental boats are first come, first served. Weekends and some weekdays sell out quickly.

The reservoir is holding 145,000 acre-feet of water. For more information, call (925) 371-2628.

  • Dan Bacher

Monterey Bay: Boats Target Halibut, Lingcod and Bluefin

Monterey Bay: Boats Target Halibut, Lingcod and Bluefin

SANTA CRUZ – While most anglers are focusing on rockfish and lingcod now that all depths are open, a few bluefin tuna are beginning to show in the Monterey Bay region.

Three bluefin tuna caught by local anglers were recently weighed in at Bayside Marine. One angler landed an 87 lb bluefin while trolling a Mad Mack lure. Another fisherman brought in a bluefin while trolling 16 miles out from the harbor.

“There was only one boat looking for bluefin today,” said Todd Fraser of Bayside Marine on October 11. “He caught his fish in the middle of the bay on a Mad Mack.”

“However, the majority of anglers caught a mix of rockfish and lingcod up the Santa Cruz County coast,” said Fraser. “The deep-water rockfishing was also great straight out of the harbor.”

Anglers landed the bottomfish while fishing bars, jigs, swimbaits, shrimp flies, and live bait.

Some quality striped bass were caught near the San Lorenzo River mouth on Lucky Craft lures, Fraser noted. Some big halibut have been weighed in at the store lately. For halibut, Fraser recommended drifting live bait or trolling lures from Four Mile Beach to Davenport.

Charter boats out of Chris’ Fishing Trips in Monterey reported excellent fishing for rockfish on recent outings. The boats are returning with daily limits of rockfish, along with a few lingcod. Anglers are using shrimp flies baited with squid strips, jigs, bars, swimbaits, and other offerings to nail the bottomfish.

The Checkmate returned with limits of rockfish (200) and 7 lingcod for 20 anglers on Saturday, Oct. 11. On the same day, the Caroline tied up at the dock with limits of rockfish (170) and 8 lingcod for 17 anglers. The Checkmate also returned with limits of rockfish (200), including limits of vermilion, and 8 lingcod...

New Melones Lake: Trout Limits Are The Rule

New Melones Lake: Trout Limits Are The Rule

ANGELS CAMP – While kokanee salmon fishing has petered out as the fish go upriver to spawn, fishing for rainbow trout is excellent at New Melones Reservoir, according to Kyle Wise of Headhunter SportFishing.

“I had two new clients out this morning, and despite yesterday’s adverse weather conditions, including winds, lightning, and rain, the morning bite proved to be exceptionally productive,” Wise reported. “They rapidly caught their limit of ten fish by 9:30 a.m. while using Tspoons and Speedy Shiners smeared with Pautzke’s Garlic/Herring Fire Gel, down to a depth of 100 feet.”

After his previous fishing adventure, Wise reported, “I ran another birthday trip, and what a morning our two clients had. Find the bait balls and find fish. We were able to catch limits of trout and a few kokanee, plus a brown to cap the morning off.”

Boaters interested in participating in the seal program can obtain a quarantine seal to attach to their boat and trailer at this time. Please visit the Glory Hole boat launch location between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. to obtain one from a park ranger free of charge, to begin the 30-day quarantine period prior to any future boat launching at New Melones.

For questions about this suspension and the new protocol, contact a New Melones staff member at (209) 459-7290 or visit the New Melones website.

New Melones is holding 1,620,496 acre-feet of water, 68 percent of capacity and 122 percent of average.

  • Dan Bacher

Napa River: Limits of Striped Bass Fall to Trollers

Napa River: Limits of Striped Bass Fall to Trollers

NAPA – If you’d like to troll for stripers on the Napa River from Cuttings Wharf, the bite is going strong on trips with Dennis Grossi of Grossi’s Guide Service.

Dennis continues to get limits of stripers for his clients on each trip. He reports trolling 1-ounce Rat-L-Traps in the sloughs and at the mouth of the sloughs. The last hour of the outgoing tide and the turn to the incoming tide have been best. Dennis noted that the fish have been averaging about 5 pounds.

  • Ken Baccetti, President of the California Striped Bass Association (CSBA), Isleton-Delta Chapter

Rio Vista/Delta: Trollers Hit West Bank of Sacramento for Stripers

Rio Vista/Delta: Trollers Hit West Bank of Sacramento for Stripers

RIO VISTA – The striper bite for trollers in the Delta continues to be productive, according to avid trolling expert Mark Wilson. Mark reports that he and his friends have been trolling in a number of locations until they locate the fish.

They’ve trolled from the West Bank below the Rio Vista Bridge on the outgoing tide to the bottom of the tide using deep-diving Yozuri lures, and on the San Joaquin River from Eddo’s Marina to the Antioch Bridge and into Broad Slough using shallow-running Yozuris on the incoming tide for their best action.

Mark noted that on his last trip he and his friends caught 20 keeper stripers, retaining only their limits. Green or pink-colored Yozuris did the job on this trip.

The bait fishing for stripers has been tough in the Delta. “We ended up with two keeper stripers measuring 20 and 22 inches for two guys on the San Joaquin River while jigging P-Line Lazer Minnows on my latest trip on October 11,” said Cal Kellogg of fishcalkellogg.com. “There were lots of fish marks on the graph, but the stripers wouldn’t hit live bluegill or sardines. We also released two undersized stripers and a 15 lb carp. I think the reason the stripers weren’t hitting the baits was because they were on a reaction bite.”

If you would like more information about the California Striped Bass Association (CSBA), go to www.striper-csba.org. You’ll be able to access all information related to the four CSBA chapters. New members only pay $25, which includes a one-time $5 initiation fee. After the first year of membership, the annual dues are $20. Your membership helps strengthen our mission to protect striped bass and our fisheries. Some chapters will even give you a free gift just for joining.

The Isleton-Delta Chapter gives...

Pardee/Camanche Lakes: Shore Anglers, Rental Boaters Battle Smallmouth and Largemouth Bass

Pardee/Camanche Lakes: Shore Anglers, Rental Boaters Battle Smallmouth and Largemouth Bass

BURSON – Shore anglers and rental boaters are catching big numbers of black bass, particularly smallmouths, at Pardee Lake as the season nears its end on November 9.

Fishing pressure has been light at Pardee, as the ban on launching private craft continues through the end of the season.

“The bass bite has been hot for those going out,” said John Blim at the Pardee Lake Marina. “Guys in rental boats have reported catching up to 30 bass while using topwater lures, spinnerbaits, and plastics. There are lots of quality smallmouths being caught. The biggest fish reported lately was an 8 lb smallmouth caught from shore a month ago.”

While the 8-pound bass is big news, another angler topped the year’s catfish catches with a 25 lb channel cat caught on a nightcrawler from shore in the middle of the day. Anglers also caught two other catfish weighing 10 and 12 pounds this season.

“The catfish action has been best early and late in the day from shore,” said Blim. “All of the big ones are being caught on nightcrawlers.”

The kokanee bite has recently shut down as the fish move upriver to spawn. However, the kokanee bite was hot for anglers going out in rental boats who brought their own downriggers to clamp onto the boats. While the lake has been known for its small kokanee, fish in the 17-inch range were the norm this season, he noted.

Trout fishing from shore has been slow over the past few weeks due to the warm weather, although fishing for holdover rainbows should improve as the water temperature cools with the onset of fall.

Fishing pressure also remains light at Camanche, due to the closure of the lake to private boats including kayaks. However, that should change with the beginning of...

Truckee River: October Caddis Flies Begin Annual Emergence

Truckee River: October Caddis Flies Begin Annual Emergence

TRUCKEE – The Truckee River is seeing typical fall conditions right now. The upper section of the river is low, but thanks to increased releases out of Boca, the canyon section is flowing around 450 CFS — above average. At 100 CFS, the upper section in town is quite low, but still fishable. When flows get that low, dry fly fishing often becomes better.

This is the time of year when the October Caddis begin their yearly emergence — a fun but short-lived window to throw large caddis patterns at trout eager to maximize calories before winter. The October Caddis adults also serve as a great alternative to the waning grasshopper hatch for dry-dropper setups. Pair them with a zebra midge or BWO nymph a couple feet under the caddis and cover lots of water in search of aggressive fish.

For those looking to maximize odds on this tough and technical river, use an indicator or euro rig and get your flies down quickly with no drag. Fall fly selections like stoneflies (Pat’s Rubberlegs), BWOs (Micro Mays), zebra midges, and size 18 perdigons will all work well — provided you get a perfect drift. Worms, eggs, and October Caddis pupa are also great choices for your larger fly.

Streamer fishing has been improving as cooling water temps make trout more aggressive. Olive, white, black, brown, or yellow streamers all have their moments — presentation and water coverage are key. Trout will usually decide whether to strike the first time they see your fly.

Little Truckee River: Currently flowing around 50 CFS, anglers are strongly encouraged to fish elsewhere, especially as the browns begin their annual migration upstream. This is a 100% wild trout fishery dependent on a successful natural spawn. When water is low, fishing pressure can significantly disrupt spawning...

Lake Oroville: Fish Deep for Kings, Rainbows and Spotted Bass

Lake Oroville: Fish Deep for Kings, Rainbows and Spotted Bass

OROVILLE – Anglers are bagging king salmon, rainbow trout, and black bass at Lake Oroville.

“On my last trip, all of the fish were biting, but the king salmon bite is slowing down,” reported Dave Koistinen of DK Guide Service. “The kings were at 85–90 ft, the trout were up around 65 ft, while the bass ranged from 20–60 ft. The fish were caught on a spoon, Cutplug, Glowbug, and white hoochie behind 8” 360 flashers and 8” Slingblades.”

“The surface water temperature was 69 degrees and 54 degrees at 85 feet. Michael Mattia was on the boat,” he concluded.

DWR launched its mandatory invasive mussel inspection program for the Oroville facilities – Lake Oroville, Thermalito Forebay, and Thermalito Afterbay – in May 2025. Inspection and vessel decontamination services remain free. More details about DWR’s mussel inspection program are available at water.ca.gov/mussels.

Launch Ramp Hours:

  • Spillway: Daily, 7:30 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.

  • Bidwell Canyon: Monday–Thursday, 7:30 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.; Friday–Sunday, 7:30 a.m. – 8 p.m.

  • Lime Saddle: Monday–Thursday, 5 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.; Friday–Sunday, 5 a.m. – 8 p.m.

  • Loafer Creek/Loafer Point: Daily, 5 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.

  • Thermalito Afterbay (Monument Hill): Daily, 1.5 hours before sunrise to 1 hour after sunset

Lake Oroville is holding 1,950,678 acre-feet of water, 57 percent of capacity and 103 percent of average. The lake level is 785.95 feet in elevation.

  • Dan Bacher

Truckee Area Lakes: Donner Mackinaw, Prosser Rainbows and Cutthroats Highlight Fall Angling Parade

Truckee Area Lakes: Donner Mackinaw, Prosser Rainbows and Cutthroats Highlight Fall Angling Parade

TRUCKEE –

Donner Lake: Fishing remains solid across species. Kokanee anglers are still finding fish near the west end around 50 feet deep using small spoons and hoochies. Mackinaw are deeper—50 to 150 feet—taking larger plugs and slow-trolled spoons. Shore anglers are picking up rainbows around China Cove and the west-end ramps with worms, PowerBait, and spinners. The bite is best early and late, before boat traffic increases. Donner continues to be one of the steadiest options in the area.

Boca Reservoir: Fishing remains productive for both bank and boat anglers. Surface temps are in the high 50s, keeping trout active near the dam and west-end creek. Trollers working close to shore are finding rainbows and browns, while shore anglers using worms, eggs, or spoons are doing best in the evenings. Kokanee have fully colored and are now off the bite. The reservoir sits around 75% full, allowing for easy access.

Stampede Reservoir: Trout fishing continues to be steady. Rainbows and browns are showing up along the north shore early and late in the day on worms, lures, and PowerBait. Trollers are connecting with suspended fish 40–60 feet down using spoons or Rapalas. Cooler mornings are bringing trout shallower, making early hours most productive. The kokanee season has wrapped up here for the year.

Prosser Creek Reservoir: The reservoir is fishing well and offering a fun mix of bass and trout. The lake sits around 70% full, with surface temps in the low 60s. Bass are holding in coves and biting plastics, jigs, and crankbaits in 10 feet of water. Trout are suspended 20–40 feet down, with trollers finding success on Rapalas and plugs. Shore anglers near the dam are also connecting with worms, eggs, and PowerBait. While not known for large fish, Prosser offers consistent action and a great...

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Jack Naves trolled the West Delta in his North River boat powered by a Yamaha outboard motor October 10-12. He trolled shallow running Magnum Rat-LTrap lures in the 3/4 ounce size and Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow 5-1/4” deep divers to attract striped bass. The lures were run behind Ugly Stick Lite rods with Okuma Cold Water Low Profile Line Counter reels spooled with 25 lb. test Fins 40G braided fishing line.

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Paul Kneeland fished Pyramid Lake with John Brassfield of Trucksmart stores and Brian Garcia of Alta in the Fish Sniffer Rogue Jet 21 Coastal. They caught Lahontan cutthroat trout to 16 1/2 pounds, using an Okuma SST 8’6” light Steelhead Rod with an Okuma Convector line counter reel loaded with 10 lb. test P Line. They trolled 4 inch watermelon Silver Horde and 4 inch Doctor Spoons in “Triple Threat” color and also several colors of Lyman and Silver Horde plugs behind Vance’s Cannonball flashers, trolling off Canon Downriggers at 60 to 90 feet deep and 2.3 mph.

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Dan Bacher fished for largemouth bass at Folsom Lake. He used a Berkley Ugly Stik GX2 6’6” medium action spinning rod, teamed up with a Shakespeare GX235 spinning reel filled with 8 lb. test P-Line CX Premium Fluorocarbon Coated Line. He fished with wacky-rigged 5 inch Yamamoto Senkos in watermelon and green pumpkin/black flake on Gamakatsu Finesse Wide Gap Hooks in #1 and 1/0.

LAKE BERRYESSA

LAKE BERRYESSA

Trollers are catching big numbers of king salmon, kokanee salmon, rainbow trout and black bass. The fish are hitting T-pex lures and other offerings at anywhere from 40 to 100 feet deep.

SAN FRANCISCO BAY

SAN FRANCISCO BAY

Anglers continue to catch limits of stripers, along with some halibut and an occasional white seabass, while drifting live anchovies.

PYRAMID LAKE

PYRAMID LAKE

Fishing has been epic for trollers since opening day on October 1. Anglers are hooking some huge fish, including some in the 13 to 20 lb. range, while using an array of spoons and plugs.

MONTEREY BAY

MONTEREY BAY

Limits of rockfish, along with some lingcod, are the reward for anglers looking for great action. You should use jigs, swimbaits, bars and baited shrimp flies for the bottomfish.

AMERICAN RIVER

AMERICAN RIVER

King salmon are on the bite for experienced anglers. Fishermen can target salmon through October 31 in the stretch of river from the SMUD power line crossing at the southwest boundary of Ancil Hoffman Park downstream to the Jibboom Street Bridge.

NAPA RIVER

NAPA RIVER

Striped bass fishing continues to be excellent on the lower river out of Cuttings Wharf. You should troll with ¾ and 1 ounce Rat-L-Trap chrome and chartreuse lures.

FEATHER RIVER

FEATHER RIVER

The salmon season in the section of the Feather River from 200 yards above the Live Oak boat ramp to Highway 99 bridge remains open through October 31. The bag limit is one Chinook salmon.

LAKE TAHOE

LAKE TAHOE

Mackinaw are holding 50–150 feet deep off the west shore, Cal Neva Hole, and South Lake. Large plugs and jigged minnows are producing solid fish.

FARALLON ISLANDS

FARALLON ISLANDS

Rockfish and lingcod action has been hot. Anglers are nailing limits of rockfish and lingcod while fishing live bait, jigs, swimbaits and other offerings.

SACRAMENTO RIVER

SACRAMENTO RIVER

Anglers trolling with Yo-Zuri lures, tipped with plastic worm tails, are bagging stripers off the West Bank. Drifting live minnows and fishing with cut bait will improve as the water temperatures cool.

NEW MELONES RESERVOIR

NEW MELONES RESERVOIR

Expect the shore fishing for trout to improve as the water temperature cools down and the fish go on the bite. Use inflated nightcrawlers, PowerBait, Kastmasters and an array of lures to entice the rainbows.

UNION RESERVOIR

UNION RESERVOIR

Trout fishing for kayakers and bank anglers should perk up now that cool weather has arrived. Either troll with spinners and spoons or use nightcrawlers and PowerBait from the bank.

FOLSOM LAKE

FOLSOM LAKE

The lake should turn over soon with the arrival of cooler weather. Bank anglers and boaters can both find success with cooling water temperature.

COLLINS LAKE

COLLINS LAKE

Trout plants are expected to begin soon with the onset of colder weather. Troll with Trix Minnows and spinners behind dodgers or bait fish with nightcrawlers and PowerBait.

BODEGA BAY

BODEGA BAY

Expect the surfperch fishing to improve in the coming months as the fish move into the beaches to spawn. Cast out plastic grubs, live shrimp and bloodworms for the fish.

SUISUN BAY

SUISUN BAY

Catch-and-release sturgeon fishing should perk up with the runoff from the early winter storm. Fish salmon roe, lamprey eel and live ghost and grass shrimp for the diamondbacks.