Advertisement

Plenty of stripers stayed in the Delta this summer

These anglers landed these striped bass while fishing on the Delta with Jeff Soo Hoo of Soo Hoo Sportfishing on Sept. 10, 2022.
These anglers landed these striped bass while fishing on the Delta with Jeff Soo Hoo of Soo Hoo Sportfishing on Sept. 10, 2022.

The striped bass bite on the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta never stopped this summer because the majority of the fish decided to stay in the Delta rather than migrating down to San Pablo and San Francisco bays and then outside the Golden Gate to beaches from San Francisco to Monterey.

“The stripers never left the system this summer,” said Jeff Soo Hoo of Soo Hoo Sportfishing, who returned to Lauritzen Yacht Harbor in early August to fish for stripers after pursuing ocean salmon and bay halibut out of Emeryville Sportfishing Center starting in June. “We caught a few stripers in the flats of San Francisco Bay this summer, but they fish never showed in numbers at spots like the Rockpile in the bay where they normally show.”

Soo Hoo said he has been averaging 25 to 40 fish per trip while drifting live minnows and trolling with plugs on both the San Joaquin and Sacramento rivers.

On his latest trip on Saturday, Sept.17, the four anglers on the boat caught more than 35 stripers. the vast majority of keepers. The anglers kept their limits of stripers and released the rest. The keeper-sized fish ranged from 19-to 27-inches long.

“The fishing was fantastic,” Soo Hoo stated. “We started off the morning by drifting live minnows and then switched over to trolling when we ran out of bait. We trolled deep-diving Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows at 12 to 14 feet deep.”

The color of lure and wormtail trailers didn’t seem to matter, since the fish were hitting all of the rods he put out.

The anglers caught their fish on the San Joaquin River towards Broad Slough and on the Sacramento River from Sherman Lake on up the river. “The fish are stacked up where we have been fishing,” he noted.

Soo Hoo was scheduled to fish on Sunday, but cancelled the trip because the wind arrived earlier than was forecasted.

Interestingly enough, the bellies of the fish that he’s seeing are empty. “There are no crawdads or anything in them,” he noted. “I don’t know why the fish never went down to San Francisco and San Pablo Bays this summer.”

“All of the trips that I’ve made in the Delta out of Lauritzen Yacht Harbor in August have produced fast action. The fish look very healthy, but they are not fat,” he added.

Soo Hoo has been just fishing on weekends, due to lack of interest lately.

He noted that the water temperature on the Delta now is good, ranging from 70 to 74 degrees, and the water color is “ideal.” Information: (925) 899-4045.

Clyde Wands, striper fishing expert, reported “very good” striper fishing on the Delta on the Sacramento River below Collinsville.

“On my latest trip with Ron Burke of Turlock, we caught 20 keepers and 3 shakers, keeping four fish,” said Wands. “Our four largest fish weighed 9, 8, 7 and 6 pounds. We quit at 10:30 a.m., but Mark Wilson and his friend stayed out later and caught 40 fish, keeping their limits and releasing the rest, including a 14 pounder.”

The anglers trolled with Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnows over underwater humps on the bottom of the tide.

Lake Alpine Trout: Lake Alpine has been producing the top trout fishing for anglers in the Ebbetts Pass Region. Both shore anglers and boaters are picking up lots of rainbows, reported Billl Reynolds of Ebbetts Pass Sporting Goods.

The majority of fish are 12 to 14 inches long, but there some 5 to 7 pound fish in the mix. Bank anglers are doing best with Power Bait and nightcrawlers, while trollers are experiencing the top action on Wedding Rings and minnow imitation lures.

Anglers fishing from kayaks and small boats at Spicer Reservoir are bagging beautiful rainbows. The lake level is now below the boat ramp. “A couple buddies reported catching limits of trout from 14 to 16 inches long while trolling Wedding Rings and Apex lures at 30 feet on their latest trip,” said Reynolds. Information: (209) 795-1686.

Golden Gate Rockfish/Lingcod: Rockfish and lingcod continue to produce the most consistent fishing outside of the Golden Gate, while halibut are still hitting in San Francisco Bay. The California Dawn II in Berkeley ended up with 52 lingcod (23 limits plus crew) to 20 pounds, 40 halibut to 15 pounds and 178 rockfish on Sept. 17, while the California Dawn 1 checked in with 17 halibut to 18 pounds. Information: (510) 417-5557.

Contact Stockton Record correspondent Dan Bacher at danielbacher53@gmail.com. 

This article originally appeared on The Record: Stripers remained in the Delta this summer