
Steelhead fishing on the upper section of the American River opened on January 1 with clear and cold water conditions and chilly weather, creating tough conditions for the often elusive fish. It wasn’t the worst opener I’ve ever encountered, but it wasn’t a stellar opener like the one in 2002 where just about everybody I talked to caught steelhead.
The American is my home river, the urban gem of a stream where I first started fishing for anadromous fish. I have spent many thousands of hours over the years fishing for the river’s steelhead, salmon, shad, and striped bass. I caught my first-ever steelhead, salmon, shad, and striper while fishing its clear and sometimes crowded waters in the late sixties and seventies.
The section that opened on New Year’s Day is from the U.S. Geological Survey gauging station cable crossing about 300 yards downstream from the Nimbus Hatchery fish rack site to the SMUD power line crossing at the southwest boundary of Ancil Hoffman Park.
Fishing on the opener was tough for most anglers. Bruno Novi of Roseville landed a bright 27 inch steelhead while using a homemade fly below the hatchery on opening day. He was the only angler I saw catch a fish during my venture to the river below the hatchery on January 1.
A number of anglers in drift boats launched at Sailor Bar on the opener, but likewise reported tough fishing like the shore anglers. “We hooked and lost two small steelhead while using Little Cleos on the opener, but we didn’t land any steelies,” said Jerry Lampkin of TNG Motor Sports Guide Service, who fished the stretch from Sailor Bar to Sunrise with two anglers. “We saw a total of 6 steelhead landed by shore anglers and boaters during our drift. Most were hooked by fly fishermen.”
Roland Aspiras, former Fish Sniffer staffer, also reported slow fishing. “I lost a fish possibly in the teens. There was not much other action. The results I heard were mixed. It seems spoons were producing some good results.”