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Featured Article - Fly Fishing for Striped Bass in the San Francisco Bay/Delta by Mike McKenzie

Fly fishing for Striped Bass in the San Francisco Bay, its associated North Bay estuaries and the Sacramento and San Joaquin River Delta, can present some of the most challenging and thus most rewarding fly fishing one can attempt. The challenge is to figure out what it takes to consistently catch “stripers” throughout a wide and diverse area that ranges from salt water and ocean beaches to fresh water rivers. The rewards are the satisfaction that comes with “figuring some of it out” and catching the hard grabbing, hard fighting striped bass, along with the possibility of landing a record book fly rod fish.
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Featured Fly Tutorial - CDC Biot Caddis by Harry Mason
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Featured Guest Column: Is Fly Fishing Saving Itself... From Itself? Tom Chandler
In some circles, fly fishers are regarded as largely prickish snots with the bearing and arrogance of eighteenth century British Aristocrats – people who apply the adjective "lesser" to any fish outside of trout, and any fisher save those with feathers tied on their line.
It's not true, but it's true enough that a sizable portion of the fishing world believes it.
It doesn't help that fly fishing airs it dirty laundry in public; the nymph guys diss the dry fly purists, the locals whiz on the non-locals, the bamboo contingent slights the graphite guys (pity the fiberglassers caught in the crossfire), and the old farts laugh at the newbies.
Continue reading........
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Featured Article - Big Brown Tactics by Tim Hutchins

Understanding how the behavior of large Browns is different from their more cooperative cousins is key to increasing your chances of finding and hooking these challenging fish. Their attitude is a mix of an aggressive belligerence, ultra selectiveness and shyness. It's these very traits that with a dose of skill and patience can exploited by the angler to overcome these big fishes suspicious and downright paranoid natures.
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Featured Artist, Andy Maurer
My photographs are most simply the product of a compelling desire to express, in visual aesthetic terms, a little of my own particular perspective on the experience of fly-fishing.

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Featured Photo - Warner Lakes Redband by Chris Bell.

Many fly anlgers around the state are participating in the "California Heritage Trout Challenge". By catching six different forms of California native trout from their historic drainages, anlgers can earn their certificate of completion from the CDFG.
This program was created to:
* Increase public awareness about the beauty, diversity, historical significance, and special values of California's native trout and their habitats.
* Build public support and increase public involvement in native trout restoration efforts.
* Promote collaborative efforts with organizations and individuals involved with native trout restoration and management.
* Diversify opportunities to fish for, observe, and enjoy native trout in their historic habitats.
For more information, see CDFG website
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 | DFG Realigns Regional Boundaries To Improve Resource Management |
Troy Swauger, Office of Communications and Education, (916) 654-2096
Kyle Orr, Office of Communications and Education, (916) 651-9130
The Department of Fish and Game (DFG) has refined the boundaries of several of its regions to enhance its ability to manage California’s fish and wildlife resources and better serve the public.
“We have a responsibility as the trustee for California’s fish, wildlife and habitat resources to manage these resources in the most efficient manner possible,” said DFG Director Ryan Broddrick. “By aligning our operations to address broad resource issues while maintaining an emphasis on local concerns, we can more effectively serve the resource and our constituents.”
Effective Jan. 1, the boundary changes allow the San Francisco Bay Delta area to be managed as a single unit, the Bay Delta Region, in order to better focus resources on this area’s critical and complicated needs.
“Our Department is active in the extremely complex arena of managing our state’s limited water resources, which is an issue of particular emphasis within the Bay Delta Region,” Broddrick said.
The new Bay Delta Region, currently headquartered in Napa, includes San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Cruz, Marin, Sonoma, Napa, Solano, Contra Costa, Alameda and Santa Clara counties, plus the delta portions of Sacramento, San Joaquin, and Yolo counties.
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Posted by BenFishin on Saturday, February 17 @ 00:19:16 PST (172 reads)
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 | New Zealand Mud Snails Found At Hot Creek Hatchery |
Potential Impacts for Recreational Sport Fishing In Eastern Sierra
William Cox, DFG Program Manager, (916) 358-2827
Kyle Orr, DFG Office of Communications & Education, (916) 651-9130
The Department of Fish and Game (DFG) will modify trout distribution following the discovery of New Zealand Mud Snails (NZMS) in Hot Creek Hatchery. However, the detection of the invasive aquatic snails in the hatchery located approximately 37 miles north of Bishop is expected to have little impact on the number of trout the DFG stocks in area waters.
“The Governor and the Legislature made a commitment to enhance angling opportunities through the passage of AB 7,” said DFG Director Ryan Broddrick. “The Department, in turn, is committed to meeting its fish-stocking obligations and the detection of New Zealand Mud Snails in Hot Creek Hatchery will not deter us from carrying out that responsibility.”
AB 7 added Section 13007 to the California Fish and Game Code in 2006 and requires DFG to deposit one-third of sport fishing license fees in the Hatchery and Inland Fisheries Fund (HIFF). Beginning July 1, 2006, HIFF funds may be used, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to support DFG programs related to the management, maintenance, and capital improvement of California’s fish hatcheries, the Heritage and Wild Trout Program, and enforcement activities. The fund will also support other activities eligible for revenue generated by sport fishing license fees.
NZMS, which reproduce rapidly and can crowd out native insects that aquatic wildlife depend upon for survival, were found Dec. 29, 2006 in samples collected from the spring that supplies water to the primary production ponds for the hatchery. In 2004, NZMS were found in Hot Creek, 150 yards downstream from the settling ponds.
DFG will allow an estimated 515,000 fish from Hot Creek Hatchery to be planted only into waters that have been surveyed and are NZMS positive, such as the Owens River, Crowley Lake and Pleasant Valley Reservoir. As information supporting less restrictive action becomes available, DFG may allow increased distribution of fish in the area. Surveying area waters for the presence of the snail and for water conditions which may favor or restrict snail establishment is being planned by DFG officials.
“We will be able to use some fish from other hatcheries to help ensure quality recreational sport fishing opportunities in the Eastern Sierra while we carefully address the ramifications of the unfortunate presence of New Zealand Mud Snails in Hot Creek Hatchery,” said William Cox, DFG Program Manager, Fish Production and Distribution.
Officials are also developing strategies to improve the infrastructure and operations to contain the spread of NZMS within and outside of Hot Creek Hatchery.
NZMS are believed to be spread within North America primarily by anglers who fish an infested area, then leave the area without cleaning their waders and other fishing gear. The snails will often get stuck to debris and mud left on waders and can survive for weeks in the moist conditions. When the angler visits a new stream snails can deposit there. NZMS, which can grow as large as one-quarter inch but are often much smaller, are parthenogenic, which means that they are able to start a new population with one snail.
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Posted by BenFishin on Saturday, February 17 @ 00:16:06 PST (183 reads)
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 | Westlands Water District purchases McCloud River property |
Land sale leads to worries over dam
Greg Lucas and Tom Stienstra, Chronicle Staff Writers
Sunday, January 28, 2007
The Fresno-based Westlands Water District -- already the largest agricultural user of Northern California water -- has spent nearly $35 million to purchase 3,000 acres of land on the McCloud River to make it easier to one day raise Shasta Dam.
The land acquired by Westlands would be sold to the federal government and inundated if officials and lawmakers decided to raise the dam.
Located on the property is the private Bollibokka fishing club, built in 1904 by the founders of Hills Brothers Coffee, and 26 Winnemem Wintu Indian villages with burial grounds. The Indians worry that their access to sacred sites could be blocked by Westlands.
"Our purpose in buying the property was only to ensure there would be no additional impediments if the (federal) Bureau of Reclamation concludes it's feasible to raise the dam," said Tom Birmingham, general manager and general counsel for Westlands. The Indians "have conducted cultural activities there. I don't see any reason why they couldn't continue to do that."
Westlands' goal of capturing more water in Lake Shasta would help make more water available to the 600 farmers it serves. Those farmers now, on average, receive only 65 percent of the annual 1.15 million acre-feet they are entitled to under the district's contract with the federal government. Any extra water the district receives could be sold at higher prices to urban users.
An acre-foot is 325,853 gallons -- roughly the annual amount of water used annually by a family of four.
Indians, anglers and environmentalists, who all oppose raising Shasta Dam, decried the sale to Westlands, which was completed Jan. 12, saying a higher dam represents a loss of irreplaceable river.
"It's going to inundate some wonderful, wonderful trout water and some very beautiful natural resources," said Duane Milleman, manager of guide services at the Fly Shop in Redding. "That's scaring a lot of people."
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Posted by BenFishin on Saturday, January 27 @ 22:53:27 PST (414 reads)
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 | DFG Announces Project to Eradicate Northern Pike from Lake Davis |
News Release: For Immediate Release Jan. 23, 2007
DFG Announces Project to Eradicate Northern Pike from Lake Davis
Public Workshop Scheduled in Portola on Feb. 8
Contact:
Steve Martarano, DFG Office of Communications, (916) 654-5866
PORTOLA - After several years of control and containment efforts at Lake Davis, the state formally announced plans Tuesday to eradicate the predatory, non-native northern pike. Department of Fish and Game (DFG) officials will again treat the Plumas County reservoir, which is on U.S. Forest Service (USFS) land, some time after Labor Day weekend (Sept. 4) with CFT Legumine, a new liquid formulation of rotenone, one of the only chemicals licensed to kill fish in California, said DFG Director Ryan Broddrick.
“Today’s announcement culminates nearly eight years of working in partnership with the local community, the Lake Davis Steering Committee, and other government officials to examine every option possible for tackling the pike problem in Lake Davis,” Broddrick said. “It has truly been a remarkable effort, and concluding this plan represents the safest and most effective means, with the fewest environmental and associated economic effects possible, to eliminate the northern pike from the only place they are known to exist in California.”
To explain the DFG and USFS decisions, the agencies have scheduled a public meeting on Feb. 8, 2007, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., at the Feather River Community Arts Center, 216 Commercial St. in Portola.
The USFS will make its decisions later this month about whether to issue a Special Use Permit and two forest closures.
This project has been the subject of review since Sept. 14, 2005, which involved a joint Environmental Impact Report/Environmental Impact Statement by DFG and USFS, and extensive outreach to the local community.
Pike are a non-native, invasive species that have devastated the local fishery and have had a subsequent negative impact on the local economy since 1999, when they reappeared after a controversial pike eradication project in October 1997. Despite control and containment efforts since 2000 - approximately 60,500 pike have been taken from the reservoir since then - the pike population continues to grow. If they escape, pike could cause irreversible ecological and economic harm to other areas of the state, including the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.
The threat of pike escape is increasing, as anglers are catching more pike. Last May, two anglers were found moving live pike during an enforcement checkpoint. In addition, last year small pike were discovered for the first time near the spillway and Lake Davis came within 27 inches of overflowing last winter.
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Posted by BenFishin on Thursday, January 25 @ 00:56:05 PST (323 reads)
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 | 2007 The Fly Fishing Show |
This Fly Fishing Show has been moved from San Rafael to Pleasanton, CA
Where:
Alameda County Fairgrounds
Young California Building
Pleasanton, California
When:
February 23, 24, 25, 2007
Show Hours: Fri 10 – 6; Sat 9 – 5:30;
Sun 9 – 4:30
Admission – Adult: $14 for one day,
$24 for two-day pass, $32 for three-day pass; Children under 12: $2
Door Prize to be given away at this show
Nor-Vise & Automatic Bobbin Kit. “Tie Better Flies - Faster”. A unique, precision engineered tying system developed by a fly tier who was also a professional research engineer. Comes with an instructional DVD.
*The grand door prizes for all the shows are on the Fly Show homepage.
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Posted by BenFishin on Tuesday, January 09 @ 01:30:48 PST (1304 reads)
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 | Popular Sierra Nevada recreation area to get makeover |
By DON THOMPSON, Associated Press Writer
Saturday, November 18, 2006 01 54 PM
(11-18) 13:54 PST SACRAMENTO, (AP) --
A million visitors a year who enjoy one of the Sierra Nevada's most popular recreation areas will soon see improvements under an agreement between land use agencies and two power providers.
Water levels will be left higher in streams, rivers and lakes in the Crystal Basin Recreation Area west of Lake Tahoe, aiding fishermen, boaters, whitewater rafters, fish and other wildlife.
Campers and boaters will see better facilities in an area east of Sacramento that often is crowded to capacity on summer weekends. And hikers will have more trails to get away from the crowds.
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Posted by BenFishin on Saturday, November 18 @ 14:14:38 PST (353 reads)
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 | CalTrout Responds To Siskiyou County/Nestle Draft EIR |
The Siskiyou County Planning Department has released their long-awaited Draft Environmental Impact Report for the planned one-million-square-foot water bottling facility in the town of McCloud. CalTrout and Trout Unlimited have teamed up to provide comments on the report.
Basically they are challenging the report based on the lack of baseline data. It also neglects to address air quality, traffic and noise.
In addition the project description suggests that the amount of water to be used by Nestle is not necessarily capped at 1,600 acre-feet. The DEIR states that MSCD may sell additional spring water to Nestle and Nestle may request that MCSD install groundwater wells on the proposed site for the bottling facility, Nestle may transport bulk spring water from thesprings to other bottling plants in Northern California.
You can read Caltrout and Trout Unlimited's comments on CalTrouts website
here
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Posted by BenFishin on Wednesday, November 15 @ 00:49:24 PST (306 reads)
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 | FlyFishNorCal adds Pro Staff Program |
In our efforts to provide our readers with quality content, we have created a Pro Staff Program in which 6 industry professionals will participate.
We are proud to announce this first years program will include notables Ralph Cutter, Ken Hanley, Jay Murakoshi, Harry Mason, Dennis Papike and Tony Yap. Pro Staffers will provide 2 written articles each and participate in a "Ask the Pro's" column.
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Posted by BenFishin on Sunday, November 05 @ 18:04:28 PST (366 reads)
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 | JUDGE UPHOLDS KLAMATH RESTORATION REQUIREMENTS |
Sacramento, CA – Conservation groups working to restore the Klamath River hailed the ruling issued today by the judge overseeing the trial-type hearing regarding PacifiCorp’s Klamath River dams conducted as part of the hyower project’s relicensing effort.
“The judge affirmed what we have been saying for years – the river is in a lot of pain caused by PacifiCorp’s dams,” said Steve Rothert of American Rivers.
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Posted by BenFishin on Saturday, October 28 @ 13:55:45 PDT (255 reads)
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 | Volunteers Needed for CDFG Study |
As fisheries managers, the California Department of Fish and Game
(CDFG) is tasked with developing and maintaining quality sport fishing
opportunities while balancing the need to protect and monitor the
aquatic resources. Utilizing sport fishing regulations as a management
tool can have a substantial impact on the existing fisheries and, if
used appropriately, can enhance angling opportunities. Currently,
California has various combinations of freshwater fishing regulations on
rivers and lakes that require the use of barbless hooks.
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Posted by BenFishin on Thursday, May 12 @ 22:36:03 PDT (651 reads)
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