
Lush green hills, a brim full lake, lots of big trout, tons of family fun, great camaraderie and a huge crowd were just a few of the highlights when the Norcal Trout Anglers Challenge tournament tour visited Collins Lake on April 9.
By California standards, Collins Lake isn’t large, featuring 1,600 surface acres and 12.5 miles of shoreline, yet despite its modest size, the lake is widely known as one of the north state’s premier trout fishing destinations.
Heavily stocked, thousands of rainbow trout are released into Collins Lake annually. A good percentage of these trout are in the 1.5 to 3 pound class, but there are also a great many trophy size fish that range from 4 to 8 pounds.
Indeed, trout flow into Collins Lake from all directions. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife stocks the lake with catchables. For each plant the lake receives from the DFW, the Collins Lake Recreation Area funds an average of three plants consisting of higher quality trout from private hatcheries. And then there are the “pen fish.”
The recreation area in partnership with volunteers, non-profit organizations, and the DFW operates a trophy trout pen-rearing project. As a result of the high volume of high quality feed the pen trout receive, many of them grow from catchable 10 inchers to quality square tail battlers that weigh 3 to 4 pounds in less than a year.
Hooking into one of these pen fish is more like hooking into a wild steelhead than your typically round tail, pan size truck trout. This is because the fish are completely acclimated to the lake prior to being released. While they enjoy a diet of commercially produced trout food, they also get to sample the natural forage in the lake. Once free of the pens, these rainbows are ready to feed and prosper in the open waters of the lake.
With all these trout swimming around and with Collins at full capacity for the first time in three years, everyone was expecting a