
Lake Shasta: The State’s Premier Rainbow Reservoir
As I sit here at my desk looking out the window, I’m preparing to go on the road to Lake Almanor and Butt Valley Reservoir in search of trophy fall trout from Hobie kayak. When I get back from Plumas County I’m going to spend a week or so hunting for deer and bears and then I’ll be back on the water searching for big trout once again. The question is where? Thinking about this question provided the catalyst for this article. With so many fine trout fisheries dotting the state, sometimes it’s tough to settle on a destination. There are a long list of spots that I might fish in the coming weeks and months and then there are the “MUST FISH” destinations that I absolutely have to visit. I’ve come up with a quartet of fisheries dotting northern and central California that I’ll be visiting in the not so distant future. Perhaps review my notes on these fisheries will inspire you to visit one or more of them. If you see a guy on the water in a kayak with a yellow lab, that’s probably me.
Lake Shasta is truly a magnificent fishery. It sets a high standard against which all other California lakes are measured. The lake is enormous in size, impounding water from the Sacramento, McCloud and Pit Rivers. The waters of the lake support a massive forage base in the form of threadfin shad. The biomass of rainbow trout that reside in the lake, both in the form of planted and naturally spawned fish, is staggering. The average rainbow caught at Shasta ranges anywhere from 12 to 16 inches. Fish ranging up to 20 inches and 3 plus pounds are common, but rainbows larger than that are a rare commodity. This means that fishing for rainbows at Shasta is more of a numbers game rather than a trophy hunt.
While you can catch rainbows at Shasta during any month of the year, the fall is a special time on the big