The stork reservoir

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the stork reservoir under the sun

Located at 50 km in the north of Strasbourg, in Seltz the stork reservoir is reserved for flyfishing. (see the very detailed map) Its pure water (it is the ground water of Alsace, the biggest of west Europe), the quality of his fishes, the convenient laying out, combine to bring this place on the top of the flyfishing areas in Alsace. The fishery, of 2.5 ha, is made up of 2 ponds. They go down to a depth of 10 meters. All flyfishing techniques are allowed (dry flies, nymphs, streamer, wet flies), with a maximum of 3 flies. Barbless hooks only.

The fish you will find in Seltz are mainly trouts: really big rainbow, brown and aguabonitas (the yellows), some chars, an other species like carps, tenchs, roachs, perchs, pikes (big ones). A nice pikeperch has been caught in 1999.

to the map of the reservoir in Seltz 67)

to the rules for the saison

About the daily fishing licences

  • It exist a daily licence for 30 euros , that allows you to keep one trout of more than 30 cm
  • It exist also a daily licence for 15 euros ,that allows a yougman (under 18), to fish with no kill rules. The yougman must be accompained by an adult.

The cards are available for the day in front of the club house, on the distributor (payment only with cash: 20, 10 , 5 euros and pieces of 1 or 2 euros)

News for march 2024

The water level is high in the beginning of march. the trouts begin to come closer the shore. Beautiful emotions are always there.

Fish immersions: On 05 march 2024, 300 kg rainbow trouts with an average weight of 1,3 kg came in the reservoir .

Warning: I would like to remind everyone that trout + 2 kg are to be put back into the water, as much as possible, to allow the greatest number of fishermen to have “big emotions”.

NB: It is also reminded to all fishermen that fishing is allowed 1/2 hour before sunrise and ends 1/2 hour after sunset.

My last flyfishing session in Seltz

The reservoir on 30 october 2023 .

On October 30, 2023, I went to the storkreservoir in Seltz, where I met my friend André for the pleasure of a day of fishing. The weather was gray all day, with a fresh N/E wind rippling the surface. Given the weather conditions (east wind, atmospheric pressure dropping suddenly) and the lack of trout activity, we alternated streamer fishing and knitted nymph fishing, dry fishing being excluded given the lack of surface activity.

By using an intermediate line and knitting my flies, alternating models and colors, I finally managed to hit five trout defending themselves ardently. The flies that got me the bites were the targeted “reservoir” nymphs and wets from the C.B.FKollection: HNC-1, DBR and CRF-1.

The discussions between us and a friendly German fisherman we met at the water’s edge and at the club house which sheltered us for a delicious warm picnic contributed to making us appreciate this autumn outing to the Seltz reservoir, where the rain arrived in force at 4 p.m.

a nice rainbow trout, caught with a HNC-1
low water level
autumn colors on the reservoir

Rules for the storckreservoir

flyfishing in the stork reservoir
  • Fishing at the stork reservoir in Seltz (Bas-Rhin-Alsace-France) is reserved for artificial fly fishing. Fishing with a “buldo” is prohibited.
  • he wading is prohibited to ensure safety of users
  • Initiate with any food is forbidden.
  • All fly fishing techniques are allowed, with a maximum of one rod fishing: dry fly, nymph, streamer, wet flies (with a train of flies up to 3), with requirement to use barbless hooks, or having the barb crushed .
  • The landing net is recommended.
  • The minimal size of salmonids is 30 cm. Non retained fish must be relaxed carefully, and after reoxygenation
  • Warning: Trouts + 2 kg are to be put back into the water, as much as possible, to allow the greatest number of fishermen to catch one.
  • Fishing will be allowed every day from 2023, September the 23 from 8 hour am until the official time in the evening (1 hour after sunset), until 30 June 2024.

Two categories of daily fishing licenses will be issued:

  1. A card of € 30 , allowing the conservation of 1 trout
  2. A card of € 15 , for those under 18 years, only with “no kill” practising.

Caution: It is imperative that a minor is being accompanied by an adult.

Fishing card completed by the holder with the fish size you eventualy keep, should be deposited in the mailbox forthis purpose (on the wall of the club house, next to the parking).

  • Fishing for carp and pike will also be allowed to fly fishermen. Nevertheless, if it is advisable to keep the pike, carp must imperatively be returned to the water!
  • Specific prohibitions can be displayed. Please refer to the bulletin board on the wall of the club house, which is installed near the automatic day tickets distributor.

Violators of this rules will be excluded from the site, and can no longer claim a fishing license for the year.

a happy flyfisherman with a really big trout from the stork reservoir in Seltz

The trout in Alsace

The brown trout

The brown trout (Salmo Truta Fario) is the native fish par excellence in the Vosges Massif and Piedmont, where most of the rivers in Alsace flow.

Still well present in the upstream part of the alsatian rivers, the future of the trout is nevertheless quite uncertain, in Alsace as in all the European regions of average altitude. Populations are in fact threatened with extinction because of a multitude of dangers: accidental or (and) chronic pollution, predation of cormorants and other more or less natural predators, climate warming leading to a decrease in Oxygen dissolved in water, an essential parameter in the survival of the species, decreased caches (river and stream recalibration), food competition related to the decline in natural food, particularly Insects (insecticides, pesticides)

Already since the years 2000 it is obvious that only upstream streams, to simplify portions above 400 meters above sea level, still contain a more or less natural population of brown trouts in alsatian streams. Even on the Schirmeck no-kill course, located at 350 m above sea level, the chub come to mingle with the population of trout, however consistent. On the occasion of an electric fishery carried out in 2003 on the no-kill course of Muhlbach on Bruche, the fishing federation had already shown that the biomass was more important in white fish (chub, daces and barbers) than in brown trout.

Breeding of the species continues, between December and February, upstream of most of the basin head streams. Although sometimes anarchic rearing has disconsolate the wild strain, efforts have been made for several years by the departmental federation and the Basin Management Committee to safeguard the natural strains. Thus the Federation of Bas-Rhin has set up since the years 2005 a plan of reintroduction of brown trout from the so-called Baerembach strain, the name of a creek of the northern Vosges whose genomes appeared to be the least polluted by the trout rearing from Numerous European farms with various but rarely alsatian strains.

If, at the end of the twentieth century, the fishintroducing was practised, it must be recognized, in an anarchic manner, the establishment of the basin committees and the professionalisation of the fishing federations currently allows to honour most often in Alsace a patrimonial management, whose effects, in natural quality of trout, is already felt in many alsatian rivers, such as the Doller, the Thur, the Bruche, the Mossig, the Fecht, or even the lauter.

In Alsace you will sometimes find very large trout in the old Rhine or the Rhine floodway canal, which regularly hosts large trouts, including reformed spawners of the federal fish farm in Obenheim. Elsewhere, the size average of the brown trout is not very important, the alsatian rivers being sandstone or granitic rather than limestone, but their fighting and vivacity will delight you.

Brown trout is an omnivorous and highly opportunistic fish for its food. It is on the other hand a suspicious nature and does not allow itself to be easily approached. Sunny days are generally less good for fishing than covered and rainy days, as the brownie is is lucifuge.

If there are many fishing techniques for trout, it is flyfishing that is certainly the most exciting. It is also the most regularly sought-after species of fly fishermen. It allows the practice of all our techniques, because it occasionally comes to rise on the surface to take a dry fly, will be tempted by a nymph drifting over the current, fetch angrily a streamer nervously stripped or even pick a wet fly passing to her Range, in the frenzy of a spring hatch.

In view of the threats evoked previously that affect the populations of brown trout, I invite each responsible flyfisherman to take the minimum of these fish and to increase in personal capacity the minimum size of catch, often officially to 23 or 25cm, still far too low to allow the most beautiful spawners to perpetuate the species.

Murg male Fario trout in Black Forest (Germany)

Rainbow trout

Rainbow trout (Onchorynchus Mykiss) is not a native fish in Alsace. However, its location has been very real for about fifty years.

A rainbow trout caught in the river

It is obviously very present in pond, lake or reservoir, like the stork reservoir in Seltz, where the larger specimens allow fly fishermen to capture a trophy fish.

Rainbow trout are also found in most of the upper lakes of the alsatian Vosges, such as the trout lake (or Forlet) where they often coexist with the brown trout.


But it is also present in our rivers. Rainbow trout, known as “portion trout”, have long been dispatched for the opening of trout fishing in 1 ° category, and it is still so in some fishing associations. Some survivors of the high fishing pressure of the first days of the opening are occasionally able to adapt to their new environment for long months or even years, and then offer us a pleasant sport fishing.

Breeding fingerlings of higher quality strains have also occasionally been set in several alsatian rivers and very beautiful fish have thus managed to acclimatize on certain specific posts of these rivers. I still remember the capture in 2012, of a very beautiful rainbow trout, visibly becoming wild, who had taken my little nymph on the no-kill course of Muhlbach on Bruche.

Less demanding on the level of dissolved oxygen in water than its European cousin, rainbow trout of American origin is also an omnivorous and opportunistic fish. Because it is more regularly active to feed than borwn trout, which spends many hours in its cache, rainbow trout is particularly interesting for the fly fisherman.

Just as with the brown trout, and contrary to what many fishermen advocate, I think it’s good to release the rainbow trout under 30 cm that you could catch in the river. Because if the big rainbow can be predatory small brown trout, this is not the case of the smallest and these fish offer a nice sport fishing.

Rainbow trout with very white dress