Lodi News-Sentinel

STOCKTON OUTDOORSMA­N DIES AT 83

- By Dan Bacher Contact Record correspond­ent Dan Bacher at danielbach­er@ fishsniffe­r.com.

“Jolly” Jay Sorensen, longtime conservati­onist, Delta fishing guide, outdoor columnist and Stockton resident, passed away peacefully in his sleep at home age 83 on June 22.

Sorensen was one of two Stockton residents inducted into the California Outdoors Hall of Fame, the other being longtime Stockton Record outdoor columnist and author Pete Ottesen.

After successful­ly beating throat cancer 5 years ago, Sorensen lived with complicati­ons from the radiation therapy that left him unable to take nourishmen­t by mouth. He was in and out of the hospital for the past several months.

The original owner of Jolly’s Bait Shop on Pacific Avenue in Stockton, many considered Sorensen to be the ‘best bait fisherman’ in the San Joaquin River Delta.

Sorensen operated a fishing guide service on the Delta for more than 40 years. He was inducted into the California Outdoor Hall of Fame in Sacramento in January 2018, in a ceremony that I attended with his close friend Dave Hurley, outdoor writer and just retired San Joaquin County school teacher, and many others.

“His last days were surrounded by friends and family along with the opportunit­y to view many of his numerous awards and articles from his bedside,” Hurley said. “He served as a mentor to generation­s of Delta anglers.”

Sorensen was probably most wellknown for founding the California Striped Bass Associatio­n in 1974.

“He was the first to sound the alarm about the deteriorat­ing Delta ecology and fisheries,” said Roger Mammon, president of the CSBA West Delta Chapter and secretary of the Restore the Delta Board. “He no longer saw striped bass spawning in the San Joaquin River as they had for decades.”

The striped bass population began declining after the State Water Project went on line in conjunctio­n with the Federal Central Valley Project.

Sorensen then rallied his fishing friends and founded the California Striped Bass Associatio­n to advocate for restoratio­n of the fishery. The associatio­n expanded and currently has five active chapters. “It is the oldest continuous­ly operating fresh water fishing organizati­on in the state,” Mammon said.

Sorensen guided thousands of people fishing for striped bass and other species on the San Joaquin River, including celebritie­s, sports figures and even politician­s. The nickname “Jolly” came from his penchant for humor and joke telling,

In explaining his reason for the founding of CSBA, Sorensen told Hurley in an interview, “We became very concerned that the huge spawning runs in the San Joaquin River disappeare­d almost overnight in the early ‘70s, since you used to be able to go out on the river at night and watch the small males bumping the females on the surface for acres. The surface of the river was white from all of the milt.”

A lifetime CSBA member and its first president, he remained an active member of the West Delta Chapter based out of Antioch.

Besides fighting for the restoratio­n of striped bass and his beloved Delta, Sorensen was also an outdoor writer. He authored the “Let’s Go Fishing” in the Rio Vista Herald for more than 40 years, as well as writing for other publicatio­ns, including the Fish Sniffer magazine.

In 2015, the Bay/Delta Yachtsman awarded Sorensen the Hal Schell Award.

Sorensen had many memorable sayings. One of the most notable was, “The Delta is my Sistine Chapel. There are no two sunsets alike on the Delta.”

Another saying showed his deep understand­ing of California fish and water politics: “The San Joaquin River flows by gravity for its first 100 miles, but it flows by politics for the remainder of its journey to the ocean.”

For the past 14 years, Sorensen avidly supported Restore the Delta, attended their fundraisin­g events and made generous contributi­ons. He was also a supporting member of the California Sportfishi­ng Protection Alliance and other fishery organizati­ons for many years.

Sorensen was a vocal opponent of the peripheral canal and its later incarnatio­ns, including the California WaterFix and Delta Tunnel, from the very beginning.

A celebratio­n of life is tentativel­y planned for July 25 at a location to be determined in Stockton.

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 ?? CLIFFORD OTO/THE STOCKTON RECORD ?? Fishing guide Jay Sorenson was inducted into the California Outdoors Hall of Fame in January 2018.
CLIFFORD OTO/THE STOCKTON RECORD Fishing guide Jay Sorenson was inducted into the California Outdoors Hall of Fame in January 2018.

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