
The line came off the downrigger clip as Les Fernandes of Fish On Charters and I trolled in the morning light at Lake Berryessa. He shouted for me to grab the light trolling rod. I pulled it out of the rod holder and carefully reeled the feisty fish in.
The fish made a few more runs before he netted it and put it into the boat. It was a beautiful, silvery rainbow measuring 15 inches long that looked like a half pounder steelhead. It had perfectly formed tail and fins and was absolutely clean, with none of the copepod parasites that have plagued the fish in some years.
The fish hit a Shasta Tackle Wiggle Hoochie behind a Sling Blade at 30 feet deep off Steele Park. We didn’t hook any other fish, so Les decided to pull up the lines and move to the area off the Big Island.
We caught three more fish and lost one while using Wiggle Hoochies and Micro Hoochies at 30 feet deep.
After the trout stopped biting, we pulled our lines in. As I was bringing in the rod on the starboard side of the stern, I felt some weight.
“I think I have a fish on here,” I told Fernandes. But when I got the fish closer to the boat, I realized it was a fat crappie, not a trout. Les netted the 14-inch crappie and I put it in the ice chest.
On the other rod, Les brought in another crappie about 13-1/2 inches long. I was stoked because I love crappie – and this was the first crappie that I had hooked at Berryessa in nearly 20 years. Amazingly, both fish hit in open water, away from any major structure, over 115 feet of water.
We ended the day trolling in Markley Cove, but didn’t hook anything there.
The fishing wasn’t hot.