
By Cal Kellogg
Lake Almanor is at once inspiring and frustrating. To be sure, the trout that dreams are made of swim the waters of Almanor, but they don’t come easy! Back before the present dam was completed in 1927, centuries old meadows dotted with springs covered the valley that now makes up the bottom of Lake Almanor. It’s the rich soils of those meadows that drives the food chain at the north state trout factory. The reservoir boasts both a prolific amount of aquatic insect life and a huge biomass of Japanese pond smelt. The nutrient rich lake waters make for a vast reserve of plankton that the pond smelt eagerly gobble up. The result is that Almanor’s browns and rainbows are never far from their next meal and they respond by growing to massive proportions.
“It’s no big secret that Almanor has browns that run up to over 10 pounds, but a lot of folks overlook the size of the lake’s rainbows. I have an Almanor rainbow on my wall that weighed over 10 pounds,” exclaimed Bryan Roccucci of Big Daddy’s Guide Service.
Roccucci is perhaps the most knowledgeable and successful angler fishing Almanor at this time, but even he admits that successfully catching trout at the lake is far from a slam dunk. Almanor fishes hard, has been my mantra for years and I stand by that. The lake is full of trout and many of them are huge, but they can be exceedingly difficult to hook. To illustrate this, I’ve been fishing the lake for many years and I’ve yet to land a five fish limit there. For me there are lots of other destinations that give up far more fish than Almanor, but it’s the size of the fish in Almanor that keeps me going back. A big brown would be groovy, but the fish that really has fueled my imagination for years is a legit 8 to 10 pound wild rainbow. I’m not talking about a big hatchery fatty that gets dumped into a lake.