
One young angler after another hooked catfish on the pleasant June afternoon at Hagen Community Park in Rancho Cordova. Three-year-old Nolan Moua and his dad, Chris Moua, of Sacramento teamed up to catch a robust channel catfish just after I arrived at the park, stocked that morning with 1500 pounds of channel cats through the California Department of Fish and Wildlife’s Fishing in the City program. They hooked the fish while soaking shrimp. Jackson Trafican landed two catfish while using shrimp as he was assisted by Krista Schugt of Woodland.
Finally, 15 year-old Bryce Bowler caught two cats right in a row fishing shrimp, both of which his father netted. Other boys and girls there also landed the prized channel cats on the late spring afternoon. Meanwhile, Richard Muñoz, who became the coordinator of the program in October 2017 after the program’s founding coordinator, Joe Ferreira, retired, walked around the lake, sharing fishing tips and stories with anglers and the parents and guardians. This program, now in its twenty-sixth year in the Sacramento area, is the best and most needed project that the Department has ever initiated, in my opinion.
Created to improve angling opportunities for the growing urban population in the nation’s most populous and most diverse state, much of the success of the program was due to the hard work, persistence, and good nature of Joe Ferreira, the coordinator of the Program in Sacramento since it started up at Southside Park in the summer of 1993. When introduced to Sacramento and Southern California in 1993, novices and veteran anglers welcomed it alike. Up until that time, young anglers generally were introduced to fishing by their parents and guardians, grandparents, other relatives, and friends. If you didn’t have parents or friends that were experienced anglers, you were often out of luck.
The program has been offering fishing clinics, free rod and reel rentals, and stocking rainbow trout and channel catfish ponds in close to home ponds in the Sacramento and Stockton area.