
Collins Lake
Catfish, Crappie and Trout Lead Late Summer Angling Parade
OREGON HOUSE – Last month was one of the mildest California Julys in recent memory with highs just brushing above the 90s for two or three days mid-month. It’s been a fantastic summer here at Collins Lake.
If you’ve been looking for a time to camp without the crowds, you don’t have to wait till after Labor Day. Reserved weekday occupancy in the third and fourth weeks of August is currently 25% of the same weeks in July. Weekends are still fairly busy but weekdays in August look to be a treat.
The lake is currently about 17′ below spill – normal for this point in the irrigation season. The lake surface temperature is about 79°F.
As we start to see it drop more and more we’re preparing a trout planting schedule – tentatively starting mid-October. In the meantime we’ve seen a few big summer catfish, crappie, redear sunfish and even a limit of trout in July.
Emma, Sara, Toto and Millie took advantage of the beautiful weather and warmer summer water to catch a chunky 10-pound catfish down by the main marina using a worm.
The Usme family caught a pair of catfish with a total weight of 11 pounds around the same place using the same bait… so if you’re looking to catch a catfish, yeah.
Nick, Jason and Rick of Sacramento caught 21 good-sized crappie using a classic crappie bait – minnows! Years ago we used to keep and sell minnows at the Collins Lake store, but now you’ve got to bring your own – apparently it’s well worth the effort!
Amara caught her first fish, a nice redear, on a redworm – great catch, Amara! Declan caught a beautiful lightning trout down below campsite #202.
Finally, Roman and Tim beat the odds, nearly catching a double limit of trout by going a little deeper with PowerBait out in the middle of the lake.
"Trout fishing is still surprisingly good on Collins," reported Cal Kellogg of fishcalkellogg.com. "On my most recent trip, two guys fishing with me landed 7 trout out of 7 hook-ups. The top two fish were a 3 lb. rainbow and a 3 lb. lightning trout."
"Even though there is a lot of shad in the lake, the trout are feeding mainly on plankton, so the meat is very red," Kellogg noted. "The Dipsey Divers are out fishing the downriggers by 3 to 1. The trout hit white Trix Minnows at 40 feet deep."
- Ed Palma