
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 rainbow trout plants at the reservoir.
Lake Camanche Recreation Company reported, “The air is cooling, the water is shifting, and you know what that means: trout season is almost here! Get your rods ready, because some of the best fishing of the year is just around the corner.”
The boat ramps at Camanche remain closed through the end of 2025 for launching outside watercraft, although shore fishing, mussel-free rental boats, and camping are still available.
Due to the spread of the golden mussel recently discovered in Northern California, the East Bay Municipal Utility District (EBMUD) will keep boat launches closed to private vessels for the 2025 season. “This decision eliminates one of the primary ways that mussels spread, helping EBMUD keep its commitment to protect the environment and the public water system on behalf of its 1.4 million customers in the East Bay,” the agency said in a press release.
- Dan Bacher