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  Port Of Sacramento Now Accessible To Anglers Through New Recreation Area

 
By: Dan Bacher
October 13, 2008

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The Port of Sacramento has been a sleeper for anglers interested in catching striped bass, black bass, catfish and other species for years, but the access to the area was problematic. This all changed in November 2007 when the Barge Canal Recreational Access to the Port area was opened.

Located at 2100 Jefferson Boulevard in West Sacramento, the facility allows driveway access at South River Road. The access features an all-weather vehicle parking area, an all-weather walking/biking trail and fishing access along south bank of the Barge Canal.

The barge canal is lined with trees, so anglers fishing during the heat of the summer can take advantage of the shade. The area includes picnic and sitting fixtures, port and environmental resource interpretive panels and trash and recycling receptacles.

Bank accessFor the boater, there is a hand-carry boat ramp. Unfortunately, motorized boats aren’t allowed. To launch a motorized boat, you still have to apply on a waiting list for the Washington Outboard Club. However, the barge canal ramp is just fine if you want fish from a float tube, kayak or other non-motorized boat.

“Only small, hand-carried boats should be launched here for safety reasons,” according to John Sneed, City of West Sacramento Project Manager. “Shore anglers should park at this access and walk to their fishing spot; you can’t park on the levees anymore.”

To local catfish anglers, such as the father-daughter angling team Eursable Moseley of Sacramento and 13-year-old Sara Geigle, the new access area is a great addition to fishing opportunities in the Sacramento metropolitan area.

“We enjoy the solitude while fishing here and we usually catch something,” said Moseley, after Geigle had just caught a scrappy white catfish on August 24.

The port and deep-water channel became famous for the large channel catfish that were caught in the late sixties and early seventies, but the average size of the fish has declined in recent years. The explosion of the catfish population was probably spurred by the influx of food and nutrients that took place when the port was finished in 1963.

Now most of the cats are “eating size” whites in the ½ to 2-pound range, with an occasional larger white or channel catfish. Mackerel, chicken liver, nightcrawlers, minnows, sardines and prepared baits are you best bets for the whiskerfish. The access is only open from dawn until dusk, so you’ll have to fish in the day for the cats.

Bass anglerBass anglers also enjoy fishing the barge canal and deep water channel. “I’ve caught lots of fish in the 1 to 2 pound range, while my largest bass to date measured 23 inches.” said San Chan of Sacramento, who nailed a 2 lb. largemouth in the barge canal across from the port on August 24. “We do best on the fish while Carolina-rigging Senkos. Last year produced excellent fishing; my fishing partner and I bagged up to 5 bass each per trip. However, the action has been slower this year.”

Although spring is the best time for port black bass, these fish can be caught year round off the tules and brush around the barge canal.

Catfish and black bass keep spring and summer anglers busy on the port, but stripers create the most angling excitement of the year in the fall and winter, drawing the largest number of anglers to the port. Striped bass are caught throughout the year, but the port really gets going from November through March when the stripers move into the port to feed on the big schools of shad that congregate here, according to Dennis Phanner at Sacramento Pro Tackle.

“The shad look for a calm backwaters like the port to spawn,” said Phanner “There are times when the shore fishing in the port is so good that I can almost guarantee that an angler who puts in the time will catch stripers.”

Shore anglers experience the top action while drifting jumbo minnows under a bobber or fishing them on a sliding sinker rig. Mudsuckers, butterflied shad, sardine fillets and pileworms, also fished on the bottom with sliding sinker set-ups, are other very productive striper baits.

For the float tuber or boater, a plethora of methods can be used to entice striped bass in the port. “You can plug, spoon, troll or drift minnows when fishing for stripers in the port and Sacramento Deep Water Channel,” said Mark Wilson, striper fishing expert, fishing guide and member of the Washington Outboard Club.

Wilson recommended trolling minnow imitation lures including Mann’s Stretch 15 Lures, Yo-Zuris, Bombers and Rebels, tipped with plastic worms, for the stripers. “Ninety percent of the anglers troll deep, but you can catch fish with both shallow diving and deep diving lures,” said Wilson. “I like to troll at 16 to 20 feet deep at 3 mph or shallow at 7 to 8 feet at 4-1/2 to 5 mph.”

Port of SacramentoAlthough fish up into the thirty-pound class have been caught in the port, most of the fish are in the 8 to 10 pound range or smaller, according to Wilson. “The largest fish you can normally expect to land in the port are 21 to 22 pounds, with fish in the mid-teens considered big ones.”

Spooning with Gibbs Minnows, Horizon Pirk Minnnows, Duh spoons and other lures is highly effective when the water temperature cools down and the shed move into the port en masse. The trick here is to find stripers balled up on schools of shad.

During the high tide, Wilson likes to “plug” with Rat-L-Traps and other crankbaits and swimbaits off the tules off small “creek” inlets in the deep-water channel during the high tide. The fish can be holding as shallow as 1 to 2 feet deep.

Before 9-11, anglers used to fish around the docks of the port for crappie and catfish at night, but this isn’t allowed any more because of security concerns.

The lock system between the Sacramento River and the port used to allow boats – and water – to flow between the port and the main river. However, the City of Sacramento, because of decreasing use and concern over increasing costs, decided to stop operating the locks on a daily basin and the locks no longer remain open. The port is now a dead end slough, with the water coming up through Cache Slough with a higher salinity level on the high tide - and bigger tidal movement -than the Sacramento River in the metropolitan area.

Just about any type of fish that swims in the Sacramento River and Delta can be caught at times in the port. Starry flounder have been caught by anglers bait fishing in the barge canal, according to Phanner. Other fish caught there over the years include white sturgeon, king salmon and steelhead.

Make sure that you look over the latest DFG fresh water sport fishing regulations booklet and supplement to check on the latest regulations because they change every year. A salmon closure is in effect on all Central Valley rivers and their tributaries, including the port, this year, with the exception of November 1 to December 31 fishery on a short section of the Sacramento.  

Port of Sacramento Facts  

History of the Port: In July 1946, the Port construction project was authorized by Congress and signed by President Harry S. Truman. In September 1960, the harbor and turning basin dredging was completed. Final 'clean-up' work on the channel was done in December. On June 29, 1963, with 5,000 spectators waiting to welcome her, the Taipei Victory arrived and the Port was open for business. A three-day event celebrated the Port's dedication. Over 75,000 people attended the festivities, which included dignitaries, parades, navy ships and the Golden Bear cadet training ship. The Port of Sacramento continues to grow in order to serve the needs of California. The Port now supports agriculture and industry throughout Northern California and the world.  

Barge Canal Access: Located at 100 Jefferson Boulevard in West Sacramento. The access features an all-weather vehicle parking area, a hand-carry boat ramp for non-motorized boats, an all-weather walking/biking trail and fishing access along south bank of the Barge Canal. For more information, call the City of West Sacramento Department of Parks and Recreation, 916-617-4620.  

The Washington Outboard Club: is a member oriented fishing club that resides in the Port of Sacramento. Each June, new members are brought into the club to maintain maximum membership at 550.  Membership in the WOC is open to boat owners age 18 and over with a boat not greater than 21 feet in length, and not greater than 3,500 lbs.  in weight. Open meetings are held the second Tuesday of each month, at 7:00pm, at the VFW Hall located at 905 Drever St., West Sacramento. You are invited to attend and if you would like to be put on the waiting list, you may get the appropriate application at that time. You must complete the application at the meeting and return it to the Secretary of the WOC. For more information, go to www.washingtonoutboardclub.org 

Fishing information: Sacramento Pro Tackle (916) 925-0529, Broadway Bait Rod & Gun (916) 448-6338, Fisherman's Warehouse (916) 362-1200 and Freeport Bait Company (916) 665-1935.

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