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For whatever reason, you mention macks and they say "stay on bottom" and "ring the dinner bell". Well maybe that has worked for some but the key to this lake in my opinion is active suspending fish and bait + speed. Yes i have caught them off bottom but have caught 5x the snags than i have fish, trolling so close to bottom.
If you have seen the lake at 10% capacity you will see it is a vary barren lake with some old forest that was cleared before filling the res. Some bushes up on the north end and a few higher water level stumps on the nw point. Which equals not much general cover. But this lake has a major river flowing its whole length and many major points.
With rising and falling res levels this river has carved many features in the north end of the lake at the tip of the major 80ft+ drop off(bout a mile north of the wishpoosh launch). Creating a sorta huge hand print in the sediment/sand which is really the many courses the river has flowed through. These channels or "fingers" are excellent spots for big macks. Even though the lake is full the cold water sinks and still creates currents which flow down these fingers and off the huge drop into the first main lake depression which hits about 260FT at 100% capacity. Those channels of water consistently pay off for us when the res is 80% or more. This area is about 120ft deep and the fingers can run as deep as 180ft as you cross them. The highpoints seem to be the sweetspots and as the water just levels off to 120.
When the res water is under 70%-60% the fingers and flats are pretty shallow and havn't been so good to us. So we move to the drop off, just a little south of the fingers/flats. The drop is sharp and sudden on the east side and more gradual as you move west. And creates a huge 3/4 mile long arch or crescent moon of drop off. Another excellent spot to jig or troll. Keeping your baits just off the edge of the drop off. Jigging right against the sheer cliff is good too.
We almost (key word almost) never go deep no matter what the lake simply because suspenders are active fish and more likely to take a bait. So for the most part, almost ever time we go we look for 120-130ft of water preferably paralleling the shoreline on a relatively steep slope and set our gear at 85 and 100. 85 on the pole closest to shore. And troll at idle speed which is barely 1mph on our gps. And i swear speed affects the fish in this lake the most. No joke, a breeze will come in or wind will change to a little stronger and your speed will change and they shut off like a switch. No idea why this is so critical but on days with no wind we absolutely kill them. One weekend we fished a day and a half and landed an estimated 147lb of macks. Sounds unlikely but it was our best day out. And every day that has been calm, no matter what part of the year, we have done well so speed is crucial.
Finally baits. We like plugs and spoons. Best plug so far has been rapalas and yozuri non diving/shallow type. Anywhere from a 4" pin minnow to the 12" jointed and ghost minnows. Size really hasn't made much of a difference. Color is the most important. The lake is dominated by kokanee and some rainbows, few cutts and some burbot. So we pick those colors the most except for the odd yellow/red combo in spoons and plugs that always work well. Also many macks have burped up 3-4" neon green and blue minnows in big quantities. Not sure if these are baby kokes, but i don't think they are because mostly the spring caught macks burp them up and kokanee spawn in aug sep. But could be.
Macks aren't really that easy to catch, they can be quite challenging, mostly the reason i like to fish for them so much and the very reason i have about 150 plugs/crankbaits and spoons, too addicting LOL. And conditions change so often there that you constantly have to change lures and colors until you find something they like. Then you can fine tune what they want and wind up having a really nice day or go home thinking of a different color or style of plug or spoon for the next time out. Yeah they might not fight the hardest or taste the best, but you always know they are there and they are big, its just a matter of how good a fisher you are to temp them into your net.
If you want crome bright macks that taste the best, fish in early spring through June. After that they start to change to the common brown look and their diet changes or something and the meat changes color.
BUT i strongly suggest releasing 99% of your catch. This lake drains very low every year and can have major kill offs with cold winters since it usually doesn't fill back up until spring. Although the fishing can be good at times, there are not a lot of macks in the first place and never will be. Mackinaw also don't grow very quickly. So if you have to harvest some, keep the 5 pounder and release bigger ones so we continue to have Cle Elum as we know it.
The wishpoosh launch is accessible down to 38% res level if i remember correctly. After that i would use the north end launch until about 32% then you will have to launch at the beach. No beach launch unless you have 4x4!
Good luck.
Hope that helps a bit.
FFF
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