FishwithJD

The web's best fishing magazine

  • Start Here
  • Guided Trips With JD
  • Catch Steelhead
  • Store
  • JD’s Gear
    • Steelhead
    • Kokanee
    • River Salmon Trolling
    • Plug Fishing for Salmon
    • Light Tackle Surf Perch
  • Techniques
    • Bass
    • Boats & Boating
    • Cooking
    • Fly Fishing
    • Salmon
    • Saltwater
    • Shad
    • Steelhead
    • Stripers
    • Sturgeon
    • Trout & Kokanee

Snagging Tips??

November 5, 2008 By JD 1 Comment

JD,

My brother and I were recently fishing here in Colorado, looking mainly for trout, but also for kokanee. At one of the reservoirs, we saw quiet a few people snagging, and bringing up a lot of fish! We found a couple of snagging hooks on some line left there, so we tried it out, but no luck! We thought we were doing it right, and we know the fish were there. I was wondering if maybe someone could give me a few pointers on the basic techniques of snagging.

–Bridget

Well, sorry to say I’m not going to be of much help for ya there! I know there are a bunch of out-of-work Sacramento Valley salmon snaggers that could probably offer some tips, though!

Filed Under: uncategorized

Are you frigging kidding? A 37-pound steelhead!

November 3, 2008 By JD Leave a Comment

37-pound steelhead!

All I can say about Nick English’s incredible 37-pound fly-caught steelhead from the Kispiox River is…um…well…ah….I’M NOT WORTHY! I’M NOT WORTHY!

Read the whole account of the leviathan @ www.sweatywaders.com

Filed Under: Trophy Room Tagged With: british columbia, fly fishing, kispiox river

Autumn Catfishing

November 2, 2008 By JD Leave a Comment

Perhaps the best time of the year to catch catfish…a lot of catfish…is in the fall, immediately after the first rains of the season. Here in California, we just got our first shot of precipitation in 6 months and that means it’s time to get out there and enjoy some red hot action. But you don’t have to live on the West Coast to take advantage of this situation! This method works anywhere you get some wet stuff after an extended period of dry weather.

Clear Lake Catfish

Aquatic Smorgasbord

The trick to fishing cats in rivers — and especially lakes — right after a rain is to target the mouths of tributary streams. After a long, dry summer, a big rain will wash all sorts of yummy critters — crawfish, worms, crickets, grass hoppers, minnows, lizards, freshwater clams, salamanders, etc — down creek channels and into the main water body.

The biggest influx of food occurs on the first 2 days after a rain and cats move in quickly to gobble up the buffet of protein. Often, it’s easy to figure out where to fish — just look for the plume of dirty water and fish the edges. Initially, the cats will hang on the leading edge of the dark water but will move right into the creek mouth once the velocity of the current tapers off.

Spinning Rod Catfish

Baiting Up

One of the real beauties of this style of fishing is you really can’t go too wrong when it comes time to choosing a bait. Since the fish are in an opportunistic mode and feeding on a wide range of morsels, they’re not at all picky. Just the opposite, in fact, so you’re golden if you go with nightcrawlers, chicken live, clams or mackerel to name a few. Nightcrawlers are about as natural a bait as you can go with, though I’d opt for something a little more stinky if you’re fishing in really muddy water.

After the first rain, you’ll typically have a pretty limited window of opportunity to catch fish on an individual creek. White catfish will pile into a tributary plume just after it starts flowing, they will move just as quickly onto the next one once the food stops washing in. So, it pays to jump around until you find a creek that’s still holding fish.

Filed Under: Techniques Tagged With: autumn, catfish, catfishing tips, live bait

80+ lb. salmon carcass found!

November 1, 2008 By JD 27 Comments

Giant King Salmon
This mammoth, record-class king salmon was found dead on Oct. 30 in Battle Creek, a major tributary to Northern California’s Sacramento River by a crew of biologists surveying the creek for spawners.

“The length of this giant was 1290 mm (50.7 inches!) and I can’t remember the massive girth, but a weight calculator gave an estimate of 85 pounds!” says Matt Johnson, of the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission, who sent to photo in to be entered in our Smoker of the Year Contest. “Some lucky dog might have broken the state record had there been a season this year!”
Click here to read more…

Filed Under: Best of FishwithJD, Featured Tagged With: giant fish, huge salmon, record king salmon, sacramento river, Salmon

OR’s Chetco River closure extended to Nov. 30

October 29, 2008 By JD 4 Comments

Chetco River King Salmon.jpg

To protect Chinook salmon in the low flows of Oregon’s Chetco River, the Oregon Depratment of Fish & Wildlife has extended a fishing ban for most of the river until Nov. 30.

Here’s what the ODFW has to say…
Click here to read more…

Filed Under: uncategorized Tagged With: chetco river, oregon, salmon closure, salmon fishing

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 93
  • 94
  • 95
  • 96
  • 97
  • …
  • 130
  • Next Page »
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

JD’s Top Gear Picks

  • Steelhead
  • Kokanee
  • River Salmon Trolling
  • Plug Fishing for Salmon
  • Light Tackle Surf Perch

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Copyright © 2025 Richey Sportfishing