
There couldn’t be a bigger difference between January 2017 and January 2018 on the American River below Nimbus Dam. Last winter, high flows ranging from 15,000 cfs to 80,000 cfs were raging down the river as record snow and rain hit the river watershed.
This year, on January 1, the Bureau of Reclamation was beginning to ramp down flows from 3,500 cfs to 2,000 cfs after we experienced one of the driest Decembers on record.
By the afternoon of January 1, very few anglers were left fishing the river because of the slow steelhead action.
A crowd of over 50 anglers lined the river below Nimbus Hatchery and at Sailor Bar on the opener this year, arriving in the early morning hours to get their spots on the river.
Dale Isidro of Santa Cruz thought it was going to be a great day when he caught and released a 4 lb. hatchery steelhead while fishing a 2/5 oz. Little Cleo on his third cast below the hatchery. “I missed one other fish and got no other bites,” said Isidro.
His fishing partner, Armin Sladwick of Santa Cruz, also was excited when he hooked and released a 4 lb. wild steelhead on his fourth cast while shore fishing with salmon roe below the hatchery.
“I thought the fish was much bigger by the way it fought,” he stated. “I saw another angler land an 8 lb. steelhead and that was the last steelhead I saw landed, although some fly fishermen hooked and lost a few steelhead.”
Sniffer staffer Roland Aspiras reported “dead slow” fishing on the opener below the hatchery.
“I hooked two steelhead and landed one,” said Aspiras. “I saw only one other hookup in my immediate vicinity.”