pcorazao
6/30/2016 8:32:00 AMtyee4me
6/30/2016 9:23:00 AMrmrauscher
6/30/2016 6:16:00 PMMike Carey
6/30/2016 8:21:00 PMFishingTenor
7/1/2016 12:57:00 AMThanks wafisherman20 for showing us how to do it. I will be putting my boat in on Sammamish this Saturday afternoon. Maybe we can meet up then or another day. Your day is a dream for most of us.
wafisherman20
12/12/2016 9:22:00 PMTo start, I assure everyone they are trout. they had been left in the water for a long time post-mortum, so they started to lose their color and turn brown. it is hard to tell in the picture, but all tails had spots, all bodies and spots, they had deep "cuts" under the jaw, and their lips went past their eyes. the fine for keeping a Kokanee in Sammamish is way too high to even risk it, let alone the ethical reasons to simply follow the law.
secondly, that day was a dream day. that was the first time my buddy had fished with me and it could not have been better. Rarely do i ever take this many fish from a body of water. i believe only take what you will eat and luckily we had a great family cookout and fed a whole crowd some delicious fish.
I was shocked when i got my first black crappie in Sammamish. it was a few weeks before this trip when i did. then to smoke them that day, fantastic!
i also advocate for more people to consume/target the perch available in Sammamish. they are delicious and over-populating fast. perch (as many of you probably know) are incredibly predatorial, carnivorous and since they travel in groups (eating quite literally everything), they easily take over massive stretches of prime habitat for bass, crappie, and other fantastic and fun species. with some less perch, more of these species will populate making Sammamish an incredible fishery again.
the Perch also feast on salmon fry. with less perch, maybe Sammamish will eventually have another Salmon season!
lastly, id love to meet each and every one of you on the water/take you out for a day. just send me a message and we can work it out!