
When the salmon season is closed on the ocean and Central Valley rivers, anglers still have the chance to hook both planted fall Chinook salmon and wild naturally-spawned fish on Folsom Reservoir, Sacramento’s backyard salmon and trout lake.
Within ten minutes of putting the rod in the water on Folsom Lake on January 25, the rod tip began to dance and the fish pulled the line off the downrigger. I grabbed the rod and fought the fish to the edge of the boat, where Jerry Lampkin of TNG Motor Sports Guide Service netted it.
The fish was a fat 12 inch Chinook, silvery and shiny. Lampkin released the fish back into Folsom’s clear and cold water. Not long after that, we landed another small but scrappy Chinook and released it also.
While the morning began with great expectations, that was the last fish landed that morning, although we did lose one other fish. We got off the water before noon while enjoying a beautiful, sunny morning on Folsom.
We trolled that morning with a variety of offerings, including a white/purple stripe Rapala on a top line and blue/chrome Speedy Shiners, GVF Speedo lures and homemade white hoochie/spinner blade combos at 20, 30 and 40 feet deep behind Cannon downriggers. We also trolled nightcrawlers behind dodgers at different depths. We caught the two fish in the North Fork, but also trolled in the South Fork.
Three days before our trip, Lampkin and Jim Palmus from Lincoln landed three rainbows to 17 inches and two kings in the 12 inch range while trolling chrome/blue Speedy Shiners in the North Fork at 20 feet deep.