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CA DELTA REPORT
Updated - 11/29/2006

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Fall action gets the big chill Dan Mathisen Outdoors

Live minnows are bringing anglers some nice stringers  of crappie, and largemouth bass fishing is good along Whiskey Slough Small Shad patterned Crankbaits also fool the bass. The story is much the same in  many areas of Middle river and Italain Slough.

Striped bass in the 20-inch class are available throughout the Delta. Both for trollers and bait dunkers, who try Sandy Beach Regional Park and inside Cache Slough. Vieira's Resort near Isleton reported one 18-pound salmon this week, Woo-Hoo! Salmon season never happened most now are on the Stripers

The story is the same at Hap's Bait in Rio Vista, with two-fish limits being common. Largest striper weighed 15 pounds, with most in the 20-inch to 7-pound range. Mudsuckers are the best bet for the stripers, though plenty of linesides are falling to shad or live jumbo minnows. Seven sturgeon to 55 pounds were logged over the weekend, mostly taken at the Powerlines and Cache Slough. Ghost or grass shrimp get the nod

Striped bass, 4 to 8 pounds, are found in many areas of the Mokelumne River South Fork and from levees near King Island. Shad or live jumbo minnows entice the stripers on the San Joaquin River side. Sturgeon to 60 pounds are active in front of Spindrift Marina, taking shad and ghost shrimp. FishTraps are getting plenty of fish as well

Black Bass action well it's tough for most but there has been a monster caught this week by one of my cleints the day after a guide trip. This one grabbed a popper!

 

 

 

 


Rio Vista -

Bob’s Bait Report www.themasterbaiter.com


Bob’s Bait Report
The weather was very good so far last week with a couple foggy days in the weekend. This is normally good sign for striped bass fishing since most striped bass migrating into Delta channel and actively chasing for baits during the foggy days. The foggy days also mean there is virtually very light wind.
So far there were very good reports about striped bass fishing from Bay Point to Walnut Grove last week with most anglers got there limit striped bass on fresh shad, mud sucker, or grass shrimp.  North of Antioch Bridge was the good spot for striped bass fishing this time. Sherman Island is also very good spot for both striped bass and sturgeon. Along highway 160 from Horse Shoe Bend up to Rio Vista bridge where bank anglers got their limit striped bass on fresh shad or grass shrimp last week. There was also some good size sturgeon above 65” reported in this area last week on grass shrimp. Rio Vista Bridge was the good spot for sturgeon and striped bass fishing this time. Ghost shrimp is the good bait fro sturgeon above Rio Vista Bridge while grass shrimp is the good bait from Rio Vista Bridge to Bay Point.
In San Joaquin from Frank Track, Fall River to Mokelumne River, there were very good size striped bass reported from boat anglers on fresh shad. This area is also good for trolling with Broken Bass Rebel.
The water is still very clear. This is very good for trolling striped bass this time. If you are planning to troll for striped bass in Old Sacramento river, Long Island, Isleton Boat ramp, and Isleton Bridge are the good spots to have more change to get striped bass.
Long holiday weekend is at the corner. Hope you will have the best time with your family and keep on fishing.

 

                                                                                             


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The Wilson Files- Mark Wilson

Dan,

Sunday, November 19, 2006...Another day of trolling for stripers.  Ed Inaba and his gransons Kenny and Brandon, joined me today to troll for stripers.  The bite window was very short, around the early morning's low tide change.  After that it was dead.  We trolled Bombers in shallow water and Yo-Zuris in deeper water.  We had about 25 hits for 2 shaker stripers and 11 keeper stripers to 18 pounds.  Grandson Kenny got the big one.  We quit early with limits of stripers at 18#, 8#, 7#, 6#, 5#, 3#, 3#, and 3#.  Home before dark.  We couldn't see Mt. Diablo today for all of the fog.  That's it.  Good luck.  Catch you later - Mark.

Sacramento Area Report - by Jack Chapman

Information about the CSBA, each of its chapters, upcoming events, a message board and much more are available at the organizations web site, http://www.striper-csba.com/.

no Report

 

 

 

Hook Line And Sinker Report
the Hook in Oakley reports.
Black Bass:

The bass bite had been gaining momentum this past week with lots of fish and some better quality fish being caught. I had reports of bass to 10 lbs. caught with a surprising number of fish in the 4-6 lb. range being reported. The topwater bite had picked up earlier in the week with lots of fish being caught on super spooks and buzzbaits in white patterns on the higher tides across the top of submerged weeds. As the weekend came we saw extremely cold weather. Once that happened the flipping plastics and jigs and throwing rattletrap type baits became effective once again. The flip bite right now is your best bet at getting a lot of quality bites. Flipping senkos, sweet beavers and jigs in watermelon/red, black/blue and junebug has been the ticket for the shallow fish. Working the edges of weed lines, tules and riprap with rat-l-traps and speed trap crankbaits has been very effective for catching numbers of fish. Try either bait in chrome/blue, chartreuse/blue or red craw patterns and work as slow as possible for the best results.

Striped Bass:

The stripers continued on a tear last week with lots of schoolie sized fish being reported. The fish are now readily available from Honker Bay to Stockton but your best concentration will lie between Honker and Franks Tract. The winds off late last week really shut down the west delta but there were still plenty of fish to be caught around Franks Tract and further east that was little more out of the wind. The topwater bite swung into high gear with super spooks and pencil poppers being the bait of choice, color really didn’t seem to matter. As for other lures, rattletraps, hair raiser jigs, stump jumpers and swimbaits will all put fish in the boat right now. Any of the lures in white or chrome patterns will work. On the bait end stick with live for the bigger fish. Mudsuckers, bullheads, minnows and bluegills will all work.

 

 
 

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 1,936,800 acre-feet of water, and is at 80% capacity. The lake is full and beautiful. The lake elevation rose slightly last week, and is at 1,076 ft. above sea level and only 41 ft. from full capacity. Surface water temperatures are approximately 66-68 degrees. Water is stained. There are huge numbers of shad in the main lake, as well as upriver.

Ramp update: All ramps are open.

Gate closure: New shorter winter hours! Gates at New Melones Lake will open at 4 a.m. and close at 10 p.m. every night through the month of October. Beginning in November, gates will open at 4 a.m. and close at 9 p.m.. Some day use and campsite areas will be periodically closed throughout the winter for maintenance.

Trout: a little tougher than it has been, probably due to the changing water conditions as the lake is ready to turn over. We are still seeing nice fat rainbows, but limits are harder to come by. Fishing should pick up again in the next couple of weeks, as water temperature cools. Bank fishing has not turned on yet, but should be awesome once the lake turns over. In the meantime, the streams are still open. Trollers are having good luck during the day trolling for rainbows anywhere from 25 to 60 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 or shad-patterned Apex also produced some limits. Most trollers are not using dodgers or flashers. Many successful trollers are adding scent to their lures. ProCure shad would be a good choice. George Lindsey of Murphys wins Glory Hole Sports’ Big Fish of the Week Contest and a free deli lunch, with a 4.4-pound rainbow that he caught (along with another nice fish) while trolling a nightcrawler 23 feet deep near the dam. John Darroch caught fish weighing 3.6 lbs, 3.4 lbs, and 2.8 lbs while trolling a Cop Car Apex 45-50 feet deep in the main lake. Frank Ambrosoli trolled a silver Needlefish 60 feet deep in the main lake to catch a 3.4 lb ‘bow. Joe Hallett used a red Apex trolled 55 feet deep in the main lake to land a 3.3-pounder. Richard Kowski trolled 45 feet deep with a crawler/spinner combo to land a 3-pounder. Ron Lundsted used a shad-patterned Needlefish near Rose Island with 5 colors of lead core out to land a 2.8-pounder. 6-year old Michael Dunn and 9-year old Tyler Pinckney fished at night under a submersible light. They used Power Bait and fished 60 feet deep over 100 feet of water near the spillway to catch 4 big rainbows weighing up to 3.5-pounds.

Kokanee: Pretty much all done. Fish have moved into creek arms and a few coves, where they attempt to spawn, and eventually complete their life cycle by dying.

Bass: good, mostly for smaller fish. Bass are looking to fatten up for the winter, and are feeding aggressively. Target steep banks upriver and the mouths of creek arms, 30-40 feet deep. Wind the wind comes up, fish the banks and points that the wind blows into- the fish will move shallow to chase the bait that the wind is blowing into the shore. Try drop-shotting shad or bluegill colored worms or grubs, or dragging a Carolina-rigged 4” or 6” worm on a long (3 foot) leader. Reaction-type baits are a good choice when the wind is blowing. Shad imitation crankbaits and Rattletraps, and shad-patterned spinnerbaits are working great. 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. Good luck to all anglers fishing the 2-day B.A.S.S. Pro-Am on Melones this weekend!

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.

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 30-40 ft. depths. As always, fish tight to structure.

 


Lake Pardee

Dropping Like a rock and Closes Sunday October 30th


 

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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