Robert Lindsey
3/18/2011 10:52:00 AMMy secret for catching freshly planted trout (works for the first couple weeks after the plant) is to use small thin bladed spoons with lots of white coloring (with maybe some speckles of red and/or green) on one side. Luhr jensen and a few others make them. I've tried this on freshly planted rainbows in many lakes and it's worked every time but once (Battleground lake about 5 years ago and I think it failed because water was too cold). Freshly planted fish tend to hang around near the surface for the first couple of weeks waiting for someone to feed them so you need to be trolling or casting the spoon very shallow. And I don't know why the "white" coloring is important but I've tried trolling a white tbs and an all silver one at the same time on the same water and the one with some white will out fish the silver one 10 to 1.
Also, don't overlook north windmill lake. I haven't fished the lower lakes for over a decade but used to do very well in north windmill. The rainbows were in the 13 to 14 inch range and would hang just above the weeds on lake bottom. I used to carry in a float tube and work them with sinking fly line and a black woolly bugger. But powerbait off a slip sinker should work just as well. North Windmill is a lot shallower than canal or windmill lake and these are fish that have been around and living off the available forage so they respond to different tactics than the freshly planted bows.
The Jigmiester
3/18/2011 7:13:00 PMfishslayer80
3/18/2011 9:32:00 PMfly15
3/19/2011 9:48:00 AMfly15
3/19/2011 4:47:00 PMThanks again