
The final couple of weeks of the 2017 salmon season produced surprisingly good fishing for late fall Chinook salmon in the Sacramento River in the Jelly’s Ferry and Red Bluff areas. This was also a great time for those targeting steelhead, as a record run of sea-run rainbows returned to the Coleman National Fish Hatchery.
The fall Chinook salmon run at the hatchery fell 6 million short of producing the annual goal of 12 million juvenile salmon needed to provide mitigation for the spawning habitat blocked by the construction of Shasta Dam.
The king salmon season on the Sacramento, American, and Feather rivers ended on Saturday, December 16, and will not resume next year until July 16.
This year, we saw probably the best late-fall salmon season in years, said Robert Weese of Northern California Guide Service. There were a lot of salmon showing, and the weather conditions allowed us to fish.
I fished with Weese and four anglers – Richard Keffer, Roger Rondeau, Kerie Keffer, and Garry Keffer – on Thursday, December 14. We hooked eight fish, landing three salmon to 15 pounds and one steelhead. We fished both sardine-wrapped plugs and salmon roe in the Barge Hole.
We launched in the pre-dawn darkness at the Jellys Ferry access on the Sacramento. Although it was in the mid-thirties, there was no ice or frost on the boat or the ground, and we made our way upriver. We were the only boat that apparently launched at the ramp that morning.
When we arrived upriver at the Barge Hole, several other boats were fishing. We started off the day fishing Flatfish with sardine wrappers. Richard started the day off right by hooking a big salmon on the lure, but it came off right near the boat. Kerrie followed up by hooking a jack that she also got right next to the boat, but it came off.
Finally, Richard