
East Delta
Striper And Salmon Fishing Expected To Improve
by Dave Hurley
Stockton Striped bass are rapidly moving into the San Joaquin side of the California Delta, and the best action is yet to come as the water temperatures continue to cool. The first cold spell and rain of the season will only improve conditions for migrating striped bass and salmon. The inclement weather will contribute to the shad balling up into tighter groupings.
Randy Pringle, the Fishing Instructor, was the tournament director of the Best Bass Tournament’s Tournament of Champions over the weekend out of Russo’s Marina. He said, “We had 192 participants, and the team of Ron Howell and Bob Miller took home the top prize of $20,000 out of the $51,000.00 in prize money distributed. The shad population is thick in the San Joaquin River, and the ima Little Stick in bone or ‘All About Shad’ is on fire. We had 50 keeper stripers out of 132 caught and released on Monday using P-Line Laser Minnow spoons, the Optimum Bubba shad swimbaits, or the Little Stick on topwater. The important thing to do is keep the topwater lure in the strike zone longer. Twitch it and let it sit.”
Numbers of bass are good, but the weights are down with the water temperature needing to drop in order to the reaction bite to improve. Dan Mathisen of Dan’s Delta Outdoors in Oakley said, “There are lots of small stripers in the system, and a big one will run 12 pounds. The bass bite is ‘iffy’, but there is a wakebait bite in moving water along points as well as swim jigs and chatterbaits. The Bobby D’s Golden Shiner spinnerbait is in high demand as it is working when the wind is blowing. There is also an emerging bite on Rat-L-Traps and the Strike King’s Red Eye Shad.”
“There is a topwater bite coming, and I am planning to head out with topwater expert, Tom Amberson, on the coming weekend to check things out,” he noted. Salmon have arrived in force in the Antioch area.