Recreation
OROVILLE, Calif. – The fish ladder at Feather River Hatchery in Oroville will open Friday, Sept. 14, signaling the start of the spawning season on the Feather River.
California Department of Fish and Wildlife hatchery workers will open the gates in the ladder about 8 a.m. and will take more than 3 million spring-run eggs and 12 million fall-run eggs over the next two months in order to produce Chinook salmon for release next spring.
The hatchery is open from sunrise to sunset. Visitors can observe the salmon through the viewing windows and from the observation deck located at the base of the fish barrier dam.
At the main side of the hatchery, visitors can observe CDFW technicians performing the spawning process.
Thousands of schoolchildren tour the Feather River Hatchery each year. For more information about spawning schedules and educational opportunities at the Feather River Hatchery, please call 530-538-2222 or visit www.wildlife.ca.gov/fishing/hatcheries/feather-river .
For information about hatchery tours, please call 530-534-2306.
For more information about California’s fish hatcheries, please visit www.wildlife.ca.gov/fishing/hatcheries.
California Department of Fish and Wildlife hatchery workers will open the gates in the ladder about 8 a.m. and will take more than 3 million spring-run eggs and 12 million fall-run eggs over the next two months in order to produce Chinook salmon for release next spring.
The hatchery is open from sunrise to sunset. Visitors can observe the salmon through the viewing windows and from the observation deck located at the base of the fish barrier dam.
At the main side of the hatchery, visitors can observe CDFW technicians performing the spawning process.
Thousands of schoolchildren tour the Feather River Hatchery each year. For more information about spawning schedules and educational opportunities at the Feather River Hatchery, please call 530-538-2222 or visit www.wildlife.ca.gov/fishing/hatcheries/feather-river .
For information about hatchery tours, please call 530-534-2306.
For more information about California’s fish hatcheries, please visit www.wildlife.ca.gov/fishing/hatcheries.
- Details
- Written by: California Department of Fish and Wildlife
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife wants to remind deer hunters to check for wildfire-related closures before heading to their favorite hunting spots for the general deer season, which is set to open in many parts of the state Saturday, Sept. 15.
Deer season is already underway in California's A and B4 zones along the coast and many coastal deer hunters have had to improvise and find new spots this season as a result of wildfire-related closures that upended hunting plans.
Please visit CDFW's forest fire related closure page for information and resources.
The majority of California's general deer hunting zones - B1, B2, B3, B5, B6, D6 and D7 - open Saturday, Sept. 15, along with premium hunting zones X9a and X9b in Mono and Inyo counties along the eastern Sierra. Several other general deer hunting zones - D3, D4, D5, D8, D9 and D10 open the following week, on Saturday, Sept. 22, as does premium hunting zone X8 in Alpine County.
"California has experienced several very large wildfires this summer, many of which are in popular deer hunting zones," said David Casady, an environmental scientist with CDFW's Deer Program. "Hunting will be challenging this year - particularly in the B zones and the northern parts of the A zone – but the range should respond positively and hunting should be productive in the next three to five years."
California's deer population is generally stable with small year-to-year fluctuations. Current estimates put the population at approximately 533,000 deer statewide. California hunters harvested 29,394 deer in 2017 with an overall hunter success rate of 16 percent.
Hunters are reminded that deer tag reporting is now mandatory - even for hunters who are unsuccessful or those who did not have a chance to hunt at all. CDFW has produced a video on how to properly complete, attach and report your deer tag.
California is phasing-in the use of nonlead ammunition for hunting which will be required for all wildlife harvest beginning July 1, 2019.
While nonlead ammunition is currently not required for hunting deer in California in 2018 outside of the California condor range, if you will be hunting on a CDFW wildlife area or ecological reserve, nonlead ammunition is required. For more information, please see CDFW's nonlead ammunition page.
Additional deer hunting information, including hunt zone descriptions, maps and special hunts, is available at CDFWs deer hunting page.
- Details
- Written by: California Department of Fish and Wildlife





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