
Jolly Jay Sorenson, longtime conservationist, Delta fishing guide, outdoor columnist and Stockton resident, passed away peacefully in his sleep at home at age 83 on June 22, 2020.
Sorenson was one of two Stockton residents inducted into the California Outdoors Hall of Fame, the other being longtime Stockton Record outdoor columnist and author Pete Ottesen.
After successfully beating throat cancer five years ago, Sorensen lived with complications from the radiation therapy that left him unable to take nourishment by mouth. He was in and out of the hospital for the past several months.
The original owner of Jolly's Bait Shop on Pacific Avenue in Stockton, many considered Sorensen to be the best bait fisherman in the San Joaquin River Delta.
Sorensen operated a fishing guide service on the Delta for over 40 years. He was inducted into the California Outdoor Hall of Fame in Sacramento in January 2018, in a ceremony that I attended with his close friend Dave Hurley, outdoor writer and just retired San Joaquin County school teacher, and many others.
His last days were surrounded by friends and family along with the opportunity to view many of his numerous awards and articles from his bedside, said Hurley. He served as a mentor to generations of Delta anglers.
Sorensen was probably most well-known for founding the California Striped Bass Association in 1974.
He was the first to sound the alarm about the deteriorating Delta ecology and fisheries, said Roger Mammon, President of the CSBA West Delta Chapter and Secretary of the Restore the Delta Board. He no longer saw striped bass spawning in the San Joaquin River as.