Fall bass fishing in the majority of our local lakes this year has been mediocre at best and many lakes that are normally quite productive were downright stingy when it came to giving up a limit of bass.
Many anglers have speculated as to why fall fishing on so many of our local lakes has been so tough for the last couple years, but no one has come up with a concrete answer. All you have to do is read any of the tournament results from Don Pedro, New Melones, Berryessa or Camanche during the months of September, October and even November and the weights are extremely low and limits very tough to come by.
Well, that finally appears to be changing now that we have our first storm under our belts and temperatures are topping out in the mid to upper 60's. While the few bodies of water that have been productive over the past couple months remain so, the other less productive lakes are finally beginning to kick out bigger and better numbers of fish.
I recently made a trip to Lake Amador with Paul Cunningham of Sacramento and was pleasantly surprised by the amount of fish we caught. Amador has definitely been on the stubborn side this summer and fall, kicking out an average of 3 to 10 fish on most of the trips I've made.
Cunningham and I hit the water around 3:00 in the afternoon and immediately began catching fish on Bill Norman crankbaits and a Castaic gizzard shad. By 5:30, we had boated 11 fish to 3-1/2 pounds and the bite held steady for us until we left just before midnight. Total fish count for the trip was 21 fish, a couple more just over 3 pounds, and several quality fish in the 2 to 2-3/4 pound mark. This was our best trip since late spring, and a sure sign that the fall bite is finally kicking into gear.