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Rock Lake Report
Whitman County, WA

Details

12/21/2007
Trolling
Rainbow Trout
Worms
Orange
Plug
Morning
12/22/2007
4
446

Three of us hit the water at about 8:30am. I sure wish Fish and Wildlife would put in a real launch. It takes a person in the water with waders to get the 18' boat off the trailer.
We had heard that the fish were all on the surface so we fished two rods with mono about 100' back (1 3" orange/gold rippin minnow, 1 3" orange rapalla) and a 3rd with a red 000 flasher and kokanee killer. Tipped the front hook on all lures with just a small pinch of worm. In 2 hrs of trolling, we only had 3 fish in the boat, so I put the downriggers down to 30' (with the same set-ups and put the 3rd with leaded line 3 colors out. We had strikes immediately and in the next 2 hours we had our limits.
The fish were kind of small for Rock Lake. Most were Browns around 13-15" with a couple of Rainbows, the biggest which went about 18".
Most of the fish we caught were on the north side of the lake about 2-3 miles up from the launch in water that ranged from 65-150'. Trolled at about 2.2mph. It was a bright, sunny day, but cold as could be. Very little wind today. Only one other boat on the lake, and they came in with limits of similar sized fish right after we did.
This is a great lake to fish!


Comments

crappie007
12/22/2007 9:30:00 PM
Nice report, I'm planning on going there after the 25th Dec--before the 1st. Jan,
I fish there every year, your report gives me enough information to know I should
fair pretty well.
Anglinarcher
12/25/2007 12:23:00 AM
Without tipping my hand on Rock, fish where the food is. Enough said, and maybe, maybe I'll see you on the 29th.
crappie007
12/25/2007 12:33:00 AM
lol, I havent learned how to read bait fish on the fish finder yet or where to even look for them. I have to say its fun trying and just part of the fishing experiance.
We will be in a 17' fiberform ski boat, converted to a fishing boat, you cant miss it, new 10 horse tohatsu on the back.
Tom T.
12/25/2007 2:23:00 PM
I'm with you! I haven't figured out the lake either, I just think there's an awful lot of fish in it. I'm going to try to make it before the end of the year myself. If I'm there, you'll see an 18' Hewescraft Sportsman. Feel free to flag me down. Tom
crappie007
12/25/2007 4:30:00 PM
Thanks Tom, If we see each other we can swamp whats working or not.
basaltbone
12/25/2007 9:44:00 PM
Glad to hear you had some good fishing, Tom. Yes, Rock is an outstanding fishery for a few species. I fish Rock with success, mostly for trout, about 30 times a year. Tomorrow will make day 32 for 2007. My close proximity in Cheney allows me to indulge my obsession with big browns. Despite the BS you hear around the boat launch about limits of huge browns, most of which should be released anyway since it really is a trophy fishery and since big browns are really old fish, Rock's browns are often lockjawed and hard to catch. The smaller fish you describe, the ones that are a year away from being spawners (they're skinny and 12-14 inches), if left in the lake, grow to immense proportions. There are far more rainbows than browns, and the rainbows are much meatier than the small browns.

Having fished the lake a lot over the past few weeks, I know that most of the rainbows and smaller browns are holding in their usual locations, slightly deeper than normal, ranging from 40-15 feet. The large browns, which I note are absent from your catch, are still bunched up from the spawn in their typical locations, but should be dispersing soon; they probably are, in fact. The large browns, especially the really large ones, will be much more apt to be found shallow in good ambush spots throughout the winter. I can speak from experience here, having caught many 20-plus inch browns on large stremers over the years. The larger rainbows (16-21 inches in my experience) are also more apt to be found shallow, on or near feeding flats. Of course, you'll sometimes pick up a really nice fish that is suspended over deep water.

The downrigger can be a help on some days this time of year, especially for the smaller fish (small fish in Rock are big fish in many other lakes), but, in winter, bigger fish will be caught in shallower water by people using bait, flies, and lures fished on mono or two colors or fewer of leader line with a long leader--usually.

Good luck on the water.
Tom T.
12/26/2007 11:40:00 AM
Thanks for the tips! It's going to be a lot of fun learning to fish this lake.
Shady136
1/1/2008 4:53:00 PM
Hey sounds great! I love Rock...and if you see me on the water, I will be in 4 foot brown waders, feel free to wave me down HAHA.
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Available Guide

Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Jones Sportfishing

Phone: (208) 861-0654