Fish Sniffer On Demand Digital Edition Issue 3616 July 21- August 4 2017 | Page 3
Up-To-Date and Published Locally... By Sportsmen... For Sportsmen!
Fishing in the City Map Feature
MADE IN U.S.A
See Page 14
Vol. 36 - ISS.16
Our
35th
Year
Since 1982
July 21 - Aug 4, 2017
“The Magazine for West Coast Sportsmen!”
Bridgeport Fish Enhancement Foundation
Derby Sees Record Turnout!
A
total of 102 participants enjoyed
fishing the Bridgeport Fish En-
hancement Foundation Tour-
nament in Bridgeport, located
in the scenic Eastern Sierra in
Mono County, on June 24.
This was the largest turn-
out of anglers in the history
of the event. In addition,
over 140 people joined the
group at the dinner/raffle.
The foundation has
purchased and planted 1200
pounds of rainbows in the 6
to 9 lb. class this year so far
from Desert Springs Trout
Farm in Summer Lake,
Oregon. They plan to stock
another 400 pounds of these
trophy trout this month.
“We put the tagged trophy
trout in Upper Twin Lake, Lower Twin
Lake, Robinson Creek, and Bridgeport Res-
ervoir said Ken Hoffman, board member of
the Bridgeport Fish Enhancement Foun-
dation. “We plan to stock Big and Little
Virginia Lakes also this month.”
In November and December of 2016,
they stocked 3400 brown trout averaging
half pound each in West Walker, East Walk-
er and Bridgeport Reservoir.
All of the funds for the fish
plants come from donations,
tournaments and dinners. The
annual tournament and dinner is
the main fundraising event for
the group.
The tournament featured
three divisions – men’s, wom-
en’s and children’s - in compe-
tition for the biggest fish and
the heaviest stringer of trout.
Anglers caught the biggest
fish in the event at Bridgeport
Reservoir.
The 23 junior participants re-
ceived their free brand new rod
and reels donated by Berkley.
Each one also received a plaque.
Dylan Duncan won the Junior Divi-
sion Big Fish with a rainbow weighing 2
pounds, 5 ounces. Tommy Morton won the
Junior Division Heavy Stringer weighing 6
pounds, 8 ounces.
Gail Whisnand captured the Wom-
en’s Division Big Fish category by nail-
WHAT’S
HOT
by
Dan Bacher
I
INSIDE
Area Reports
Where...When...How...
Tommy Morgan caught the top stringer of trout,
6 pounds, 8 ounces, in the junior division of the
Bridgeport Fish Enhancement Foundation Touran-
ment on June 24.
Photo by ROSE DELGADO-LIERLY, Bridgeport.
ing a 5 lb. 13 oz. rainbow at Bridgeport
Reservoir. Sabrina Benson captured the
Women’s’ Division Heavy Stringer with 6
pounds, 13 ounces.
Kevin Murdock won the Men’s’
Division Big Fish by catching a 5 lb. 1
oz. rainbow in Bridgeport Reservoir. Ja-
became apparent that electro fishing and
gillnetting would be bandages for the
amputation the lake would really need.
Of course, there were a lot of naysayers
that didn’t think the state should undergo
yet another expensive
treatment of the lake. Those
people were on the wrong
side of history.
If you have ever fished in
a lake where northern pike
are the only gamefish because
they have eaten everything
else, the experience leaves a
lot to be desired. They also
were blind to the threat to
the Sacramento/ San Joaquin
River delta. Had pike ever
established there, we may
really have seen the extirpation of our
endemic salmon and steelhead. I for one
applaud the California Department of
Fish and Wildlife for their hard work
and resolution in eradicating northern
pike.
Fast forward to about 2010 or so.
This is why you should keep a journal,
because I can’t remember the exact
GONE
FISHING
by
Mike
McNeilly
Fish Sniffer Field Editor Mike McNeilly pulled these dan-
dy rainbows out of Lake Davis during a recent outing.
Photo by MIKE MCNEILLY, Fish Sniffer Staff.
PAGE 26-27
FEATURES
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
In the spring we would catch all the
bullhead catfish we wanted, or we’d catch
them until we ran out of bait. I never even
experienced the true halcyon days of the
lake. I never fished it in the 80s and 90s
when robust rainbows in
the 3-6 pound range were
an every-day event. In those
days rainbows to 8 pounds
with full fins and orange
meat were a real possibility.
Davis Lake was truly a blue
ribbon trout fishery on the
national scale.
I first started fishing the
lake in the early 2000s. It
was in the era between the
all-out wars on pike when
the California Department of Fish and
Wildlife dumped Rotenone in the lake to
remove the toothy and invasive predators.
Even after the first unsuccessful
treatment of the jungle plant based
piscicide, the lake was a real jewel of a
fishery. In 2006 I recall catching a whole
lot of rainbows in the 3 pound range.
However, the initial treatment in 1997
did not remove all the pike. By 2007 it
SEE OUR NEW BAJA
ROUNDUP SECTION ON
FRESHWATER REPORTS
Lake Almanor - Lake Berryessa............................4
Bullards Bar/Englebright Lakes - Clear Lake.........7
Collins Lake - Lake Don Pedro.......................... 8-9
Eagle Lake - Los Vaqueros Reservoir............10-11
New Hogan - Rio Vista.................................. 12-13
Rollins Lake - Southern Oregon Roundup..... 16-17
Stampede/Boca Reservoir - West Delta..............18
SALTWATER REPORTS
Berkeley/Emeryville - Half Moon Bay....................22
Monterey Bay - Peninsula Shoreline....................25
DAVIS LAKE RISES FROM THE ASHES
used to really love fishing Davis
Lake. It’s close to my home in Reno.
I could leave my house and be on
an uncrowded lake forested in Ponderosa
Pines in about an hour. It used to have a
lot of really nice rainbow trout in it.
35 Years
Serving
Sportsmen
CONTINUED ON PAGE 10
NOAA Fisheries Approves
Permit To Construct
Delta Tunnels
See Page 19
BAJA ROUNDUP...............................................26-27
BULLETIN BOARD................................................... 4
BILL’S TIPS - Bill Adelman...................................... 17
FISH SNIFFER HOW-TO: Cal Kellogg..................... 8
GO FOR IT: Staff....................................................... 5
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR...................................... 3
MAP FEATURE: Dan Bacher.............................14-15
RV LIVING - Cal Kellogg........................................... 9
SALTWATER JOURNAL ...................20-21,23-24
SALTY TIPS Steve “Hippo” Lau.............................. 26
SPOTLIGHT ON CONSERVATION - Dan Bacher.... 19
WHAT’S HOT SALTWATER - Cal Kellogg.............. 24
STAFF
TACKLE
What We’re Using
Cal Kellogg - fished for S.F.
Bay halibut aboard the Cali-
fornia Dawn using a 7’ Cous-
ins Classic Fiberglass F870-
7 rod teamed with a PENN
lever drag Fathom reel spooled with 65
pound test Yo-Zuri Super Braid in the blue
color. Cal used three way live bait leaders
constructed of 20 lb Yo-Zuri H.D. Carbon
fluorocarbon leader material tipped with
Gamakatsu live bait hooks.
Paul Kneeland - fished
Stampede Reservoir with
Brian Garcia of Colfax in
the Fish Sniffer 21’ Rogue
Jet Coastal. They caught
limits ofKokanee to 14 1/2 inches using a
Lamiglas Fish Sniffer special 7’6” ultra light
graphite downrigger rod with a Abu Garcia
Revo MGX Extreme level wind reel loaded
with 6 lb test Yozuri TopKnot fluorocarbon
line. They trolled pink Paulina Peak spinner
hootchies and Artic Fox kokanee flies behind
silver Arrow Flash dodgers off the Canon
Downriggers 25 to 45 feet deep at 1.2 mph.
Dan Bacher - fished for rain-
bow trout at Spicer Reser-
voir. He used a Berkley Ugly
Stick GX2 6’ 6” medium ac-
tion spinning rod, teamed up
with a Shakespeare GX235
spinning reel filled with 6 lb. test P-Line
CX Premium Flourocarbon Coated Line.
He fished with Berkley chartreuse glitter
and fluorescent orangee PowerBait on #14
gold Eagle Claw hooks rigged with 4 lb. test
Berkley Trilene 100% Fluorocarbon leaders
on sliding sinker set-ups. He also tossed out
1/4 and 1/8 oz. Yakima Bait Rooster Tails in
Brown Trout, Fire Tiger and Rainbow color
patterns.