
SACRAMENTO – Trollers fishing Lake Berryessa are bagging big numbers of kokanee salmon, king salmon, and Eagle Lake–strain trout, while bass fishermen are picking up large numbers of spotted, largemouth, and smallmouth bass.
“After almost a two-week break for vacation, I am back on Berryessa and the limit train rolls on, baby,” said Nate Kelsch of Big Nate’s Guide Service after his latest fishing adventure. “My three-man crew scored limits of big, beautiful kokanee and a couple of nice king salmon by 10:30 a.m.
Epic fishing continues. We used exactly what I had been using before my vacation — Catch America 6-inch Offset Dodgers with Tpex lures from my Kokanee Kit, tipped with Chrome Killer Corn, on the brand new Big Nate’s Signature Trolling Rods — and we batted 1000%. If you use this gear, you will catch fish,” he added.
“The best depths were from 45 ft to 87 ft, chasing marks as I kept my eyes glued to the graph. The fish are a bit lethargic with the full moon, so keeping the presentations in their face is crucial,” he concluded.
Kelsch is now booking potluck trips, catfish trips, and crappie/bass trips on Berryessa.
On one recent fishing adventure at Lake Berryessa, Don Paganelli of Paganelli’s Bass Fishing reported that the “bass bite is still going.”
“The spoon bite was slow starting with only two largemouth, but the dropshot bite was great with 15 fish up to 3 pounds. A little cooler weather is all we need to get the fall bite going,” he forecasted.
However, on the following trip, Paganelli reported slow bass action. “I had a day towards the end of last week during that storm — and the fishing was really slow. That low-pressure system shut the bite off. We ended up with three bass total. We were dropshotting Robo Worms in the Aaron’s Magic color at 25 feet deep in the main body of the lake. The bite should get much better with the steady weather,” said Paganelli.
Reclamation now requires all boats launching at Lake Berryessa to participate in a seal program to prevent the spread of invasive golden mussels. All vessels wishing to launch at Lake Berryessa will be inspected, according to the Bureau of Reclamation:
A red quarantine seal will be applied for 30 days, during which the vessel will not be permitted to launch. Vessels that have finished the 30-day quarantine may return to the lake and have the seal removed by authorized staff and will be allowed to launch.
For questions about this new protocol and vessel decontamination, contact BOR-Berryessa@usbr.gov.
Lake Berryessa is holding 1,358,787 acre-feet of water, 85 percent of capacity and 118 percent of average.
- Dan Bacher