
You have to love it when a plan comes together. You look at the tides, look at the weather forecast, and head to the water to see what really happens. In most cases, Mother Nature throws some curveballs into your game plan. This fall, I was able to put my fish planning skills on the line, with both stripers and sturgeon as the intended targets.
I hit the West Delta with RJ Sanchez of Oakland. We had been arranging to go trolling, but I was really onto a hot bait bite, so we decided to change plans.
In fact, I can honestly say that several of my early-November bait fishing trips in 2016 were the best striped bass fishing I have ever seen. There were days where we couldn’t bait our rods up fast enough, with double and even triple hookups on quality stripers to fourteen pounds.
I knew that the red-hot action wouldn’t last, but I was hoping to at least get RJ onto some decent stripers and maybe even a bonus sturgeon if we were lucky. I had a pretty good game plan in the back of my mind, and I was pretty confident that we would get some nice fish.
I met RJ at the launching facility at a quarter to six in the morning. We motored the boat towards a spot between Sherman Island and Pittsburg on the Sacramento River in 22 feet of water. As we anchored, the incoming tide was pushing against the southeast winds, creating rolling swells. The rollers weren’t massive whitecaps like I’ve seen in the past, but they were enough to keep the boat pitching in a mild fashion.
The incoming tide was predicted to go slack around 10:30 am that day. My plan was to fish for sturgeon during the slack tide period, and fish for stripers when we had decent current.
In my experience, bait fishing for stripers from a boat during a slack tide is not very productive. Sometimes, the slow or slack period during the tide