
No fish gets me more excited than steelhead, whether I catch these often-elusive fish on a river or on a reservoir. I love their hard strikes, their unpredictable and often spectacular battles, and the beautiful photo targets they make after you land them, as well as their propensity to take a wide array of baits, lures, and flies.
One of the most unique steelhead fisheries in the state is the landlocked steelhead fishery at the Thermalito Afterbay Outlet. After a couple of years of absence, the landlocked steelhead fishery is back at the afterbay this year.
As several TV and newspaper reporters awaited at the boat ramp at Larkin Avenue, two California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) Feather River Hatchery trucks drove down to the water and stocked the second batch of 49,944 steelhead that day.
The last plant brings the total number of steelhead stocked in the Afterbay this season to over 231,682, according to Penny Crawshaw, hatchery manager 2.
The facility was hoping to release these fish at a catchable size of two to the pound, but the water temperature was too cold to produce the conditions for the fish to grow quickly this winter. The fish ended up being between three and four to the pounds when released.
The landlocked steelhead fishery at the afterbay has been a very popular fishery since it first started in 2007 when the hatchery planted 10,000 juvenile steelhead in the afterbay.
The hatchery workers stocked 181,738 of the put and grow fish, starting at 11 to the pound and finishing at 8 to the pound in January, February, and March. These were followed by the 49,944 put and take steelhead between three and four to the pounds that were stocked on April 4. The remainder of the fish are earmarked for the kid’s fishing derby to be held in Chico this May.
The plants are only made when the hatchery has enough fish in excess of.