
We dream of big wild brown trout lurking in high Sierra lakes, chrome bright king salmon slamming baits outside the Golden Gate and acrobatic steelhead surging up storm swollen coastal rivers.
While California offers anglers chances at some very iconic species of fish in some of the world’s most inspiring backdrops, in a lot of ways it’s planted rainbow trout that drive fishing in northern and central California.
That’s right, planted rainbows…day in day out all year long if you did a tally of all the anglers on the water, you’d find that a large percentage of them if not the majority of them have their sights set on planted ‘bows.
To understand the significance of planted trout, you need look no further than the success of PowerBait. Berkley has sold millions of jars of their colorful dough to anglers that want nothing more than a metal stringer sporting a limit of freshly planted government trout.
The fact of the matter is, that if there aren’t planter rainbows in lakes like Rollins Lake there isn’t much to catch in them save for smallish spotted bass and a few big wary browns. Jason Pleece of Meadow Vista recounted to me in a recent conversation.
He went on to say, Rollins used to be planted several times a year. Now I can’t remember the last time we had a plant. I know that there is a trout shortage at the DFW, but when I look at the trout planting data on the DFW website I get confused. If you look at the plants, most of them are taking place in southern California, why are we being excluded up north?
Pleece’s comments rattled around in my head for a while and ultimately prompted me to seek out someone at the DFW that could shed some light on the state’s trout stocking program.
When I first reached out to the department I figured I’d end up speaking