Recreation
KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – Join Park Aide Kitty Doherty and retired State Park Ranger Val Nixon on Saturday, July 20, at 7:30 p.m. for a fun and exciting Campfire Program by Nixon titled “Cats, Cats, and more Cats!”
The hour-long program will be held at the Education Pavilion at Clear Lake State Park.
Visitors are encouraged to bring their own lawn chairs and maybe even some bug spray if desired. Rain will cancel the program.
Clear Lake State Park is located at 5300 Soda Bay Road in Kelseyville.
Admission to the park is free to those attending the program.
Anyone having special needs should contact Clear Lake State Park staff Monday through Friday at 707-279-4293.
For further information on California State Parks go to www.parks.ca.gov .
The hour-long program will be held at the Education Pavilion at Clear Lake State Park.
Visitors are encouraged to bring their own lawn chairs and maybe even some bug spray if desired. Rain will cancel the program.
Clear Lake State Park is located at 5300 Soda Bay Road in Kelseyville.
Admission to the park is free to those attending the program.
Anyone having special needs should contact Clear Lake State Park staff Monday through Friday at 707-279-4293.
For further information on California State Parks go to www.parks.ca.gov .
- Details
- Written by: Elizabeth Larson
The recreational Chinook Salmon fishery will open on portions of the Klamath and Trinity rivers on July 1, as per emergency fishing regulations that have been adopted and approved by the California Fish and Game Commission and the state Office of Administrative Law.
The spring Chinook Salmon fishery will be open from July 1 through Aug. 14 on the lower Klamath River (downstream of the Highway 96 bridge at Weitchpec) and from July 1 through Aug. 31 on the Trinity River (upstream of the confluence of the South Fork).
The daily bag limit has been set at one Chinook Salmon (no size restrictions), and the possession limit is set at two Chinook Salmon.
The fall Chinook fishery will open Aug. 15 in the Klamath River and Sept. 1 in the Trinity river. The basin in-river quota is 7,637 adult Chinook Salmon for 2019. Regulations will remain the same as in 2018 with a two-fish daily bag limit, with no more than one fish over 22 inches (such as one adult and one jack). The possession limit remains the same at six fish, with no more than three fish over 22 inches (effectively three daily bag limits).
The in-river recreational adult fall Chinook quota is divided among four sectors in the Klamath River Basin:
KLAMATH RIVER
1. 3,500 feet downstream of Iron Gate Dam downstream to the Highway 96 bridge - 1,298 fish.
2. Highway 96 bridge downstream to the mouth of the Klamath River - 3,819 fish.
There is a sub-area closure at the mouth of the Klamath River when 15 percent of the Klamath Basin allocation has been harvested - 1,145 fish harvested below the Highway 101 bridge triggers this closure.
TRINITY RIVER
3. Old Lewiston Bridge to Highway 299 West bridge at Cedar Flat - 1,260 fish
4. Denny Road bridge downstream to the confluence with the Klamath River - 1,260 fish.
Please see the 2019-2020 California Freshwater Sportfishing Regulations and 2019-2020 California Supplement Sport Fishing Regulations for more information.
Additionally, anglers can obtain information on Klamath Basin regulations and fall Chinook quota updates by calling the Klamath-Trinity fishing hotline at 800-564-6479.
The spring Chinook Salmon fishery will be open from July 1 through Aug. 14 on the lower Klamath River (downstream of the Highway 96 bridge at Weitchpec) and from July 1 through Aug. 31 on the Trinity River (upstream of the confluence of the South Fork).
The daily bag limit has been set at one Chinook Salmon (no size restrictions), and the possession limit is set at two Chinook Salmon.
The fall Chinook fishery will open Aug. 15 in the Klamath River and Sept. 1 in the Trinity river. The basin in-river quota is 7,637 adult Chinook Salmon for 2019. Regulations will remain the same as in 2018 with a two-fish daily bag limit, with no more than one fish over 22 inches (such as one adult and one jack). The possession limit remains the same at six fish, with no more than three fish over 22 inches (effectively three daily bag limits).
The in-river recreational adult fall Chinook quota is divided among four sectors in the Klamath River Basin:
KLAMATH RIVER
1. 3,500 feet downstream of Iron Gate Dam downstream to the Highway 96 bridge - 1,298 fish.
2. Highway 96 bridge downstream to the mouth of the Klamath River - 3,819 fish.
There is a sub-area closure at the mouth of the Klamath River when 15 percent of the Klamath Basin allocation has been harvested - 1,145 fish harvested below the Highway 101 bridge triggers this closure.
TRINITY RIVER
3. Old Lewiston Bridge to Highway 299 West bridge at Cedar Flat - 1,260 fish
4. Denny Road bridge downstream to the confluence with the Klamath River - 1,260 fish.
Please see the 2019-2020 California Freshwater Sportfishing Regulations and 2019-2020 California Supplement Sport Fishing Regulations for more information.
Additionally, anglers can obtain information on Klamath Basin regulations and fall Chinook quota updates by calling the Klamath-Trinity fishing hotline at 800-564-6479.
- Details
- Written by: California Department of Fish and Wildlife





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