
Stampede Reservoir, situated on the Little Truckee River northeast of the city of Truckee on the east slope of the Sierra Nevada, hosts a diverse array of fish species ranging from Lahontan cutthroat trout to smallmouth bass, but the kokanee salmon that thrive in this reservoir draw the most anglers every year.
Stampede is notable in my angling career for being the coldest place I have ever fished. In December of 2011, Ernie Marlan, Fish Sniffer staffer, and I fished with Rick Kennedy, then the owner of Tight Lines Guide Service, for mackinaw. As we drove to the reservoir after exiting Interstate 80 at the Hirschdale Road exit, the temperature gauge dropped to 1 degree below zero.
It wasn’t much warmer at the lake. We launched the boat on an ice-coated ramp as the steady wind kicked up waves. The reservoir wasn’t iced over yet because of the persistent wind, but I remember the spray instantly freezing on the windshield as we went across the lake.
Fishing was tough; we hooked four mackinaws, but each one came off. Only the heated cabin prevented us from shivering in the icy cold.
On June 21, I fished the lake again at a time when northern California was faced with record heat rather than record cold. This time I fished with James Netzel, who bought Tight Lines Guide Service in 2013. Netzel has been experiencing a great year for kokanee at Stampede.
We were both glad to escape the brutal heat wave of the Sacramento area to enjoy the much more pleasant Sierra weather. The temperature at the lake was a cool 44 degrees when we launched the boat.
I first fished Stampede in 1990 when the reservoir was renowned for its huge kokanee averaging 2 pounds each. Since that time, the size of Stampede kokanee has bounced up and down.