To help San Francisco Bay Area anglers
enjoy quality time with family members out of doors, the Department of
Fish and Game (DFG) will provide Bay Area lakes with something many
anglers don’t see enough of: larger and more plentiful fish.With
special funding from the Sportfish Restoration Fund, DFG will plant
roughly 8,000 fish, an increased amount of 1-pound and trophy-sized,
between 1- to 3-pound, rainbow trout at 20 Bay Area fishing sites.
“This increase in stocking, which the Department synchronizes to work
with holiday family-oriented events, is in addition to the regular
stocking these lakes receive from DFG or the local park agencies,” said
Ethan Rotman, DFG’s Fishing in the City coordinator in the San Francisco
Bay Area.
Rotman said the following lakes would receive special supplemental
fish plants the last two weeks of December.
• In the East Bay: 1-pound trout will be planted in Contra Loma
Reservoir in Antioch, Lake Elizabeth in Fremont, Shadow Cliffs in
Pleasanton, Hidden Valley Lake in Martinez, Dover Pond in Fairfield,
Hilltop Lake in Richmond, Heather Farms Pond in Walnut Creek, and Don
Castro Reservoir in Hayward. Trophy trout will be planted in Lakeshore
Park in Newark, Lake Temescal in Oakland, and Solano County’s Lake
Chabot.
• In the South Bay: 1-pound trout will be planted in Vasona in Los
Gatos, and Spring Valley Pond in Milpitas; a combination of 1-pound
trout and trophy trout will be planted in Lake Cunningham and Cottonwood
Lake, both in San Jose.
• In the San Francisco, Marin, and Sonoma areas: 1-pound trout will
be planted in Scottsdale Pond in Novato; trophy trout will be planted in
Lake Merced in San Francisco and Marin County’s Bon Tempe Reservoir; and
a combination of the two will be planted in Lake Ralphine in Santa Rosa.
Anglers interested in receiving maps of where to fish in Alameda,
Contra Costa or Santa Clara counties, or in receiving a booklet on
fishing the Central Coast Region of California, should call (415)
892-0460, or (707) 944-5506.
Since 1995, DFG’s Fishing in the City Program has worked to improve
fishing opportunities close to where people live and work. The
Department has accomplished this though increased stocking, habitat
improvement projects, learn-to-fish clinics, and rod loaner sites in
urbanized areas.
DFG supports the Fishing in the City program through the Sportfish
Restoration Fund, a federal excise tax on the sale of fishing tackle and
motorboat fuel. The fund helps improve fishing and boating
opportunities. The California fishing operation is now the largest
program of its kind in the country, serving eight California regions and
expanding to serve rural audiences.
“The strength of the program lies in its ability to build
partnerships with local communities,” Rotman said. “The Department works
with local schools, service clubs, park agencies, lake managers and just
about anyone else interested in kids, fishing and clean water.”
For information on how to bring Fishing in the City to your
community, call the program at (415) 892-0460, or visit the DFG Web site
at www.dfg.ca.gov.
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