
By Cal Kellogg
The conditions had gone from great to not so good. The sun was high, the surface chop we’d enjoyed all morning was gone leaving the surface glassy, the bait had completely disappeared and the screen of the sonar unit was clean without a fish in sight.
“Well it doesn’t look too good, but let’s make a pass or two anyway,” asserted Captain Kevin Brock of FishKevinBrock.Com as we inched across the face of Oroville Dam.
As Kevin readied the rods, Wes quipped, “I hope they did a good job repairing the dam, because if they didn’t we’ll be down in Yuba City before we know it!”
We all laughed and then nervously glanced at the hazard markers and construction vehicles jamming the parking lot at the closed Spillway Launch Ramp.
With four rods teamed with white tubes and Sling Blade dodgers working at various depths off the downriggers we trolled off the face of the dam from east to west. We’d been at it for several minutes and were about to give up when a rod on the port side wiggled to life. Kevin slid the rod out of the holder and handed it to Wes. We knew right away that it was a big fish from the way it bulldogged and stayed deep. It didn’t run, but it didn’t give an inch against the strain of Kevin’s Daiwa trolling rod either.
Wes kept the pressure on and presently the fish changed its strategy, surging to the surface and making a series of slashing runs punctuated with some hardcore headshaking. When the big king appeared off the port corner it eluded Kevin’s first attempt with the net, darting off with lightning speed. On his second try Kevin scooped the big chromer and the biggest salmon of the day was in the boat. The king measured 23 inches long and weighed between 3 and 4 pounds.
At that point, we were ready to close shop and head for the ramp.