
With the Sacramento Valley in the middle of a triple-digit heatwave, I was looking for a way to get out of the heat. It just so happened that I had been in conversation with Captain James Netzel of Tight Lines Guide Service and when he told me that the kokanee were on the bite at Stampede Reservoir, it was just the opportunity that I was looking for. I have known James for a few years now, having fished river salmon with him and in talking with him at the Sacramento ISE Show over the winter.
So on June 25, I made the drive up the hill with my friend and kokanee fan, Ian Rigler of Sacramento. We met Captain James before sunrise at the boat ramp and after exchanging pleasantries we were quickly aboard his spacious fully rigged 22' Boulton Pro Sea Skiff and ready to start trolling.
As a novice kokanee angler, I listened with serious intent as Captain James instructed, "When you get a fish, if it doesn't pop off the downrigger, thumb the spool and lift up, you don't have to jerk, just a steady pull. As soon as it pops off, reel like crazy to take up the slack, once you get contact with the fish, then just slow your reeling down. Just slowly reel and keep the rod up and let it do the work. In kokanee fishing, if you lose only fifty percent of the fish you hook, you are doing good. Some days you don't lose any and some days you lose twice as many as you catch. If you catch them in the corner of the mouth, you got that fish. If the fish is caught in the bottom of the jaw, it is so thin down there."
![Ian Rigler (left) of Sacramento and Captain James Netzel display two limits of feisty Stampede Reservoir kokanee.](http://fishsniffer.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Gone-Fishing-2_web1.jpg