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Almost a repeat of my last report, wet, overcast, light breeze, cool temps all conditions I thought were going make for a banner day fishing and expected limits in the boat by noon. Not.
Launched at 7:50, gear out, well one rig, at 8:10, hooked up on that one just as I was dropping the fly in the water on the second rig. First fish in the boat at 8:15! Re-set that rig, sent it on its way, then got the other 3 in the water. Bang! Another one hit the leaded line rig, but didn't stick. Then a hit on a long line mono rig, and it didn't stick either. And that was the story for a couple hours. We had so many "drivebys" I lost count, and by 11:30 when I anticipated us having limits, or nearly so, we only had 5. Debbie and I tied with 2 rainbows each and her with a bonus, a nice little silver about 13 1/2".
Decided to hit a spot that has been kind to us in the past and one we haven't fished for quite some time, so we left Sterling Point and headed to Split Rock. Pulled in, fired the kicker, set the speed, let the line out and before I could even get another rod out of the holder it was fish on! Short fight, quick scoop, and in the cooler. Again, I thought this will be a quick way to complete our limits, and again it wasn't. More drivebys, over and over.
I finally found a hole where they were holding and could guarantee a fish on every time I passed through that spot. Once I got that dialed in, we hooked up every time through. Getting them to the net was another story. Perseverance paid off, and we put the final 4 in the cooler in less than 45 minutes with Debbie hooking a very healthy 2lb 13oz carryover that went 19 3/4".
I used lots of gear today, and started with some flies from fellow WALaker Dave Browning. His orange "Kekeda" fly accounted for the first fish in the boat yesterday and another when we could get them to stay on. Not a fault of the fly, same held true for the myriad of patterns I tried, and there were many, yesterday. I started with bright colors of orange and Dave's version of perch. No bites on the perch, but the orange put 2 in the cooler. I tried pink, orange, orange and black, plain 'ol muddler minnow, and the results were the same, they got hit but didn't stick.
After moving to Split Rock, I went back to the Frisky Jenny perch pattern fly, and that seemed to get the most interest, and boated the rest of our limits.
I varied speed a lot today, from 1.8mph up to 3mph and everywhere in between. Seemed to finally settle in at about 2.8mph for the best action. Flies were on leaded line out 150' and tipped with a piece of crawler. I also trolled Rip'n Minnow plugs at 195' but they were not very productive. The one lone kokanee did come on a plug and maybe one other rainbow. We lost several on the plugs, either withing 20' of the boat or when they jumped 170' or so back. At one point I thought all my hooks needed sharpening, but several of the flies were brand new out of the package, so that wasn't the problem with hookups. Sometimes you just need to enjoy your time on the water which we certainly did. :-)
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