
Flash
Fishing Report www.flashfishing.net
A
bit about Captain Steve, Captain Steve fished the San Francisco
Bay since 1970, when his grandfather would take him out to the
old Berkeley pier. He bought his first boat in 1980 and got his
Captain's license in 1997. He enjoys small groups (no more than
6) and gives personal attention to all. Having 2 young daughters
himself, he is especially patient with children on the boat. Bring
your own equipment or use Steve's top of the line equipment. Steve
has impressive state of the art commercial electronics on the
boat to optimize your fishing experience! And yes, we went to
the same High School, Welcome Capt. Steve!
Just
made the first sturgeon trip of the season.
We started at 12:30 pm.3 fishermen.
Went to to Grizzly bay for the end of the income.
Lost 1 fish using Salmon roe.
During slack tide we moved inside the sand bar and lasted 2 hours.wind!
Moved between the first row of ships and buoy 2.
Sal landed a 59.5" 49 lber using roe in 32' of water.
Water was 64.8 degrees and the fish gave us a great fight.
3 times out of the water.It was at the end of the tide,11:45 pm.
Back home and in bed at 3:45 am.
It is good to be back sturgeon fishing again!
Capt.
Steve
Flash Sportfishing

Now
brings you out of area reports as well

New Melones
in Great Shape for Fat Trout
Water
Conditions: New Melones Lake is currently holding 1,934,200 acre-feet
of water, and is at 80% capacity. The lake is full and beautiful.
The lake elevation dropped slightly last week, and is at 1,046 ft.
above sea level and only 42 ft. from full capacity. Surface water
is cooling off, and is approximately 74-75 degrees. Water is stained.
There are huge numbers of shad in the main lake, as well as upriver.
Ramp
update: All ramps are open
Trout:
Very good, with fat, healthy limits being the norm for both trollers
and anglers who fish at night under lights. Bank fishing has not
turned on yet, but if this cooler weather keeps up, we should start
seeing some nice fish taken from shore. In the meantime, the streams
are still open. Trollers are having good luck during the day trolling
for rainbows from 35 to 55 ft. deep in the main lake, as well as
upriver. Shad-patterned lures seem to be the ticket. Try a Cop Car
or Threadfin Shad Needlefish. Excel Lures have been really bringing
in the limits- try a blue/silver or blue/pink, or a shad-pattern.
Green Apex also produced some limits. Most trollers are not using
dodgers or flashers. Trollers who showed off their limits this week
include 10-year old Spencer Delay of Bakersfield, whose almost 19-pound
limit included trout weighing up to 4 pounds. 4-year old Kristopher
Momyer of Arnold was very proud of his 3.3-pounder. John Darroch
caught rainbows and a 3.1-pound brown trout. Jim Stickney and Joe
Hallett also caught nice rainbows. Monte Smith of Gold Country Sportfishing
took out Don Swank and Ralph Mitchell, and Ken, Dale, and Craig
Clifton. Monte chased big balls of shad and trolled Excel lures
at 35-50 feet deep to find big rainbows up to 3.9-pounds. Night
fishing under submersible lights is still producing trout as well,
using a night crawler and Power Bait combo.
Kokanee:
Pretty much all done. Kokanee have their scales, and are hooked-jawed
and pink. Fish are moving up into creek arms and a few coves, where
they will attempt to spawn, and eventually complete their life cycle
by dying. By November, we are usually seeing kokanee caught by bank
anglers in Angels Creek and Angels Cove. These fish are, for the
most part, not good for eating since their flesh is no longer firm.
Some people swear they are still tasty when prepared in a smoker,
though.
Bass:
fair, mostly for smaller fish. Bass are looking to fatten up for
the winter, and are feeding on shad and crawdads. Target steep banks
upriver and the mouths of creek arms, 30-40 feet deep. Try drop-shotting
shad-patterned worms or grubs, or dragging a Carolina-rigged 4”
or 6” worm on a long (3 foot) leader. Throwing deep-diving
shad imitation crankbaits and Rattletraps will also entice a bite.
Dragging a jig along rocky points in the creek arms, as well as
submerged island-tops near mouths of creeks, may catch you a larger
bass. You may want to try a top-water bait in the early morning.
Catfish:
We are still seeing a surprising number of nice cats. Tuttletown,
Angels Cove, Glory Hole Point, or under the 49 Stevenot Bridge are
all good spots to try for big cats. Use mackerel, anchovies, or
sardines, a sliding sinker, leave your bail open, and be sure your
hooks are sharp. Night fishing is always best for catfish. Mike
Swart of Antelope, Ca, Diane Kiyota of Sacramento, and Pat Martin
of Ione caught some nice cats on mackerel and sardines while fishing
near the spillway/dam area. They had 6 big catfish, weighing from
4.7 pounds all the way up to 8.2-pounds, as well as a bass and a
couple of nice trout. They caught the biggest fish this week, so
they win Glory Hole Sports’ Big Fish of the Week Contest and
a free deli lunch! Richard Wignall of Avery caught a nice 4.7-pounder
near the spillway as well.
Crappie
and bluegill: Slow. Try fishing live minnows or trying to entice
them with jigs in red/white or purple/white. Best spots on the lake
are the south side of the lake near Bear Cove, the back of Coyote
Creek, Black Bart Cove, and in cuts upriver near the Parrotts Ferry
Bridge that have a lot of stand-up trees in them. Fish are moving
deeper, so target 20-30 ft. depths. As always, fish tight to structure

Lake
Pardee
Water
conditions: The Lake water level has leveled off and is the same
as last report, just about 4 to 5 feet below spill. Water temperatures
also remained close to last reports figures. Temperatures measured
76 degrees at the surface and 72 degrees at the 20ft mark. Water
clarity is good to 13 feet.
LATE
BREAKING NEWS—LOU CARSNER A LONG TIME RESIDENT AND AVID CAT
FISH ANGLER LANDED A 45 POUND CAT FRIDAY EVENING IN THE MARINA AREA-WHAT
A MONSTER!!!
Trolling-Continued
ideal Lake conditions, cool mornings, pleasant temperatures, water
like glass and very few boats. Trolling very good recently at the
face of the Dam and around the red buoy in the same vicinity. While
heading there try dropping a line in right outside the Narrows and
anywhere along the East bank to the River Mouth. No need to go too
deep, try 25 to 30 foot trolling depths. The winning combinations
are night crawlers behind blades and flashers for the purists while
others are having good luck with smaller fire tiger spoon shaped
lures behind a dodger.
Kokanee
fishing has been very slow, haven’t heard of any caught in
the last two weeks. This time of the year the Kokanee are usually
losing scales, turning red and moving upriver to spawn.
Bank
fishing-Cooler water temperatures in and around the Recreation Area
are encouraging recent plants to school and hold longer near the
Bridge, the Launch Ramp and Rainbow Point. Early morning or late
afternoon is still the most productive. Watched a double load of
3 to 5 pound Rainbows planted Friday afternoon at the Launch Ramp.
This plant should produce some great memories for lots of Bank Anglers
this weekend. As a rule the bite after the plant is early before
the sun is hard on the water. Newly planted trout can’t resist
silver/blue casting lures and black wooly flies. For the more experienced
and smarter Trout use a sliding sinker rig with a night crawler
or processed bait in rainbow or chartreuse with sparkles Cast out
further and put your bait in the deeper channels 30 to 50 feet off
shore.
Cat
fishing is still good in Rattlesnake Cove, the extreme South End
and the backside of Deer Island. Most popular baits are chicken
livers, chorizo, and sardines or anchovies.
As
of 09/23/05 a total of 56,000 lbs of trout has been planted by Lake
Pardee and the Department of Fish and Game.
Good
Luck---Tight Lines.

Camanche
Bass and Catfish Action Decent
Reports from those who have been visiting Camanche are encouraging
for the Bass anglers. The bass bite continues to be red hot this
week. Lots of 1-4 pound bass are being caught around the rock piles
and cliffs in the Lancha Plana area. Camanche Jack's worms and leeches
in smoke, green, or purple are the colors most often mentioned.
The submerged island tops in the main part of the lake have been
giving up plenty of bass this week. Fish 10-15 feet deep, near deeper
water. Tube baits and deep running crank baits are the ticket here.
The big bass for the week was caught by young Dillon Parrish, of
Elk Grove. He caught an awesome 6.2 pound bass on a minnow, fishing
from shore in the campgrounds at North ShoreI have been fishing
topwater lures, such as Ricos or Lucky Craft Pointer minnows in
Rainbow or orange are taking some good ones as well. Works areas
with wind pushed current around brush and thick grass cover near
the Causeway and dike #1.
Catfish
action has slowed down just a little but still biting. Use Mackerel,
liver or nightcrawlers from 8 to 20 deep after dark. The Camanche
arm and Causeway cove are among the hottest areas to try. Don't
overlook the Trout or Beaver ponds at Southshore for after-dark
Catfish.
Trollers
who are on the water very early, or late, report finding fish from
Hat Island to the Dam, above the old river channel. Now that water
temperatures have topped 81 degrees the fish are very deep during
the day .between 45-65 feet. Needlefish in chartreuse color, and
R-Lures and Ex-Cel lures in green/gold, and blue/gold are reported
as the most successful colors this week. The bait fishing at Dike
3 continues to be great for overnighters using Power Bait, Power
Eggs, or night crawlers, especially when using underwater lights
at night. Anchor in about 50 feet of water, and drop your bait to
the bottom. The Camanche Hypolimnetic Oxygenation System, trade
named the "Speece Cone", has been in operation since the
13th of August. The H.O.S. distributes oxygen to the lower lake
waters at the dam. The southern end of the dam will soon become
the best place to try for Trout as the oxygen-laden water provides
ideal conditions within 30 feet of the surface. The "cone"
usually operates until mid-to-late October to improve the waters
released into the Mokelumne river fish hatchery.
Pennies
on the dollar for fishing rods, reels, baits, lures, and more? You
be the judge!
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