
Los Vaqueros Reservoir, a Contra Costa Water District reservoir that receives its water from the Delta, reopened on Saturday, September 26 to fishing after being closed in August because of a fire in the watershed. Anglers can again pursue rainbow trout, striped bass, channel catfish, largemouth bass, and other species at the popular recreation area, but fishing for catfish and striped bass offers fishermen the best chance of success at this time.
The reservoir, located near Brentwood 46 miles from Stockton via Highway 4, first opened to fishing in September 2001. I was one of the first anglers to ever fish the lake, along with Larry Ward, then the President of United Anglers of California.
Ward caught the first fish, a 20-inch rainbow that was bright and shiny like a steelhead, on a Kastmaster lure. I then proceeded to catch my limit of rainbows to 20 inches while tossing out Kastmasters and soaking PowerBait.
Since then, the water district has raised the dam and expanded the lake once and is now planning to conduct another dam-raising project. The proposed project will include a regional intertie, improved pump stations, and pipelines, and could increase the reservoir’s capacity up to 275,000 acre-feet. The proposed project builds upon the first phase of expansion from 100,000 to 160,000 acre-feet funded by the Contra Costa Water District and completed in 2012.
“Los Vaqueros is one of the projects being evaluated in the context of a broader Bay Area effort to work collaboratively as a region to improve water supply reliability,” according to the Contra Costa Water District. “Expansion of Los Vaqueros Reservoir improves Bay Area water supply reliability and water quality while protecting Delta fisheries and providing additional Delta ecosystem benefits.”
Fishing has been really good for striped bass and catfish at Los Vaqueros since it reopened, reported Jeff Jackson at the Los Vaqueros Marina.