By JIM MATTHEWS
http://www.OutdoorNewsService.com
Trout fishing season at urban waters throughout Southern California is swinging into full gear with plants beginning at most waters in the past few days. Corona Lake in western Riverside County and Hesperia Lake in the High Desert are both in their third weeks of plants and the bite has been very good at both waters.
Irvine Lake in Orange County kicked off its season last Friday after plants of 20,000 pounds of rainbows, brown trout, and brook trout earlier in the week, and all of the San Bernardino County Park Lakes — Yucaipa, Glen Helen, Cucamonga-Guasti, Prado, and Mojave Narrows — have received their first county plants of the season this week (and Yucaipa and Mojave Narrows have already received Department of Fish and Game plants).
The DFG has also started planting most of the major Los Angeles, Orange, and San Diego county urban park lakes last week, and those not getting fish this week are on the schedule for this week. Most of these waters will get DFG fish on a once-every-two-weeks or once-every-three-weeks schedule this fall and winter.
Santa Ana River Lakes, while not officially opening its trout season yet, started getting plants of trout last week in preparation for its big opening event kicking off Nov. 18, when those lakes will be planted four different strains of rainbow trout, including the most big fish and most total poundage of trout ever stocked in this three-lake complex. The plants will include Tailwalkers from Nebraska, Mt. Lassen Super Trout with some topping 20 pounds, Sierra Bows, and Big Bad Reds topping 10 pounds.
In San Diego, Dixon Lake kicked off its trout season with a 1,500-pound plant of Tailwalker rainbows on Wednesday last week, and its 33rd annual Dixon Trout Derby will be Thursday through Sunday this week with another 4,500-pound plant just before that event. Lake Poway kicks off its trout season Friday after a 3,000-pound plant. Lake Jennings received trout each of the past three weeks. And Wohlford LakeÃs trout season will begin on Dec. 10 after a 4,500-pound plant there.
Riverside County started its trout stocking program last week at Rancho Jurupa Park Lake and Lake Skinner with plants both locations. Diamond Valley Lake also received a big load of Mt. Lassen trout last week to augment the population of holdover rainbows and the DFG plant that went in two weeks ago.
Those are just the highlights, but the bottom line is that itÃs time to respool that trout rod with some fresh four-pound test, get some of the hot new floating baits and garlic scent, and sharpen all the barbs on some No. 16 treble hooks. Trout are on the menu.
WILDLIFE ART FESTIVAL NOV 19-20: The 29th annual Wildlife Art Festival will be held Nov. 19-20 at the San Bernardino County Museum. This event is anchored each year by the top entries in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife ServiceÃs federal duck stamp art competition, including the winning design and runners up in the voting. This art work is used on the federal duck stamp the following year.
The federal duck stamp is required to be purchased by all waterfowl hunters in the country and the proceeds from the stamp are the single largest source of funds available for wetland habitat acquisition and conservation. Since the program was implemented in 1934, the duck stamp has raised $770 million to purchase and expand 186 national wildlife refuges across the country.
In addition to the duck stamp art, the festival features the wildlife art of many of the nationÃs top wildlife and nature artists, carvers, and sculptors entries from the junior duck stamp art program, winners of the Tom Bennett ChildrenÃs Art and Environmental competition for Inland Empire students, and hands-on wildlife painting and carving programs for kids.
For more information, call the county museum at 909-307-2669 or log on at http://www.sbcountymuseum.org.