
Spring fever strikes early when you’re a striper angler. By the end of February, the thoughts start running through your mind. Are they going upriver yet? Where are they staging in the delta? Maybe they’re still in the bay. Somebody’s getting them somewhere.
Then, the next phase sets in. The message board checks, Facebook searches, chatting with your neighbor, phone calls, and text messages to fishing buddies begin. “Anybody getting any stripers yet?” You probably have this exact sentence saved in your sent messages. Welcome to springtime!
The spring striper run in Northern California normally spans between March and early June. The exact outcome will depend on weather, water temperatures, dam releases, and any number of other factors. Striped bass typically start staging in the delta in early March. In some years, they migrate up the Sacramento or Feather Rivers to spawn. In other years, the majority of fish stay in the delta to spawn in or near the San Joaquin River between Antioch and Middle River.
Where are they going to show up this year? That’s anybody’s guess, but early indications are that the small males are starting to group up in the San Joaquin River.
On March 19th, I was invited by Jim Brittain on a prospecting trip for spring stripers. Jim is one of the best striper trollers I have ever fished with. Since he doesn’t really fish with bait, the Sacramento River side of the delta was pretty much off limits.
Record rainfall and dam issues have made this year’s water flows much higher than normal. Because of this, the Sacramento River looks like a raging brew of chocolate milk. Although muddy water hinders trolling, I will definitely be out there soon in my own boat soaking some kind of smelly bait like sardines or chicken livers.
For our trolling trip, I met at Jim’s house at five-thirty in the morning. He drove us down the meandering levees of