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Washington Lake Report
King County, WA

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Details

02/08/2013
41° - 45°
Trolling
Cutthroat Trout
Other
Pink
Cloudy
Flasher
Noon
41° - 45°
02/08/2013
2
1180

Chalk up another tough day fishing to the dreaded rising barometer. The two of us fished the south section of the Lake from 10:30 until 2:30 with only one fish brought to the boat. I’d commented to my partner at the launch that the lake buoy was showing a steady rise in the barometric pressure and that this trip might just turn into a boat ride. Shortly after we started fishing near the south tip of Mercer Island, the boat ride was officially over. I was hugging bottom and had just brought up my gear a bit to make sure it cleared the point we were about to cross and received a major take down. My hook held through a few nice runs and several series of tail walking displays and brought to me a very nice buck in the 4lb range. A quick pic and back into the lake he went, hopefully to delight another angler. The rest of our time on the water was not nearly as exciting and although there was a massive amount of bait in the area, the predators were not on the bite. Shortly before we quit for the day, I did have another fish on for a brief moment and that was all of the action we saw for the day. Interesting note was that there were times that the bait showing on the sonar was so dense and consistent that my partner questioned if it was really fish that we were seeing. Well, he moved his downrigger ball into the mass and you could see an immediate reaction on the screen with the bait quickly moving and repositioning above the ball, so bait it was. I stuck with hoochies for the entire day, while my partner tried a variety of gear including cutplug herring, flatfish, hoochies and a rooster tail variant. The sun broke through a couple of times while we were on the water, but for the most part it was calm and overcast.


Comments

eenakok
2/9/2013 4:15:00 PM
Thanks for the report, my dad took our second trip out today ( I had to work) and he had a couple of bites but nothing else. I will make sure to check the buoy before heading out. We are going to try again next week. We are determined to get this figured out... Thanks for all the information you have provided!
ballardbrad
2/9/2013 5:49:00 PM
Great report. Tesla and I were out there as well from 11-3. Managed to get two fish; one was 18" and a 20.75". The 18" was taken on a rattle trap Rapala and the 20.75" on a Firetiger spoon. Marked a lot of bait. I cleaned the larger fish tonight. She coughed up two threadfin smelt that were 3-4" long, completely spawned out but a remaining couple of eggs. I also found a 4 inch black rubber worm in her stomach. Anyone on this board want to claim it? Tight lines~
homewaters
2/9/2013 5:50:00 PM
Thanks for the report G-Man. I fished for about five hours today, with only two hook ups, which both popped off the hook before the boat. Basically I took the good old boat ride today. Maybe next time will be my turn. I've read your Season Effects On Cutthroat Trout Strategies for Lake Washington. What a brilliant body of work, thank you. I have a couple follow up questions, if you are willing? What are you using for mainline, mono or braid? I ask because with the 100+ drop back with a UL rod, plus whatever depth your are fishing, there's a lot stretch. When those soft subtle bites happen, like the ones I had today, they can go undetected for a bit, like today, and when I noticed the bite happening and finally grabbed the rod and popped the clip, the fish felt fairly big before I lost it. Seems like fishing braid in the LW fishery might telegraph all the incoming information to your rod tip better than mono? Thoughts? Finally, both bites came today at the I-90 area using a #2 Needlefish, Brass/Red Head, with no flasher or dodger. My questions is, when you fish with a dodger or flasher, what leader length are you finding works best targeting Cutts in LW?
natenez
2/9/2013 8:32:00 PM
Braid makes a big difference, I think, in both communicating the strikes and getting a good hook set. I favor 10# powerpro to which I add about 10' of fluorocarbon as a pre-leader.

Leader length behind a dodger depends mainly on if the lure has action of its own (like a needlefish) or not (like a hoochie). Standard rule of thumb is 4x the length of the dodger for lures with action. And 2x for without action. However sometimes you need to experiment to find what the fish like that day, especially when relying on the dodger to impart action. Stiffness of the leader (stronger line tends to be stiffer) also is a factor in this too.

Rule of thumb aside I've had good luck on sammamish and Washington putting spoons/flatfish/rapalas/etc 3-4' behind a 4/0 dodger.

Another great resource is go down to sportco and ask for Tom Pollock. He's probably spent thousands of hours on that lake, and has lots of great advise.
Tesla
2/10/2013 3:42:00 AM
Well said natenez! That is solid information without the fluff. I'll also put in my pitch for Tom at Sportco. While Ballardbrad and I were trying to figuring out this fishery we were fortunate enough to get about an hour of Tom's time, and the information that came from that single conversation has paid huge dividends.

However, I am in no way implying that I have this fishery figured out, or that I ever will. You can read every scientific study out there on cutts and fisheries ecology in Lake Washington (and there are many), try and understand it from the most logical and informative view point, incorporate the information from those with many years of experience (G-man and others), and there are still things about it that can't be predicted. For me, this is what makes the Lake WA cutty fishery so addictive. See you all out there. Tight Lines All.
homewaters
2/11/2013 9:43:00 AM
natenez and Tesla, excellent information, thank you. Time to re spool with Braid!
G-Man
2/11/2013 5:23:00 PM
I have spooled up with 10 or 15lb braid for the past 7 years for trout and kokanee downrigger trolling. I use a 30' of 8lb or 10lb Maxima Ultragreen leader which acts like an extra shock absorber. I also tie up my own release clips and make them 4' to 5' long. This makes it easy to detect the lightest of strikes and has eliminagted break-offs due to hit and run strikes by large fish. If you plan to continue fishing the lake this year, you'll eventually need it as I have a feeling that this summer will be much like 2008, with plenty of resident chinook and coho ripping gear off of unsuspecting anglers. Nothing like having a 5lb to 8lb chinook take you for a ride on your ultralight gear, if it survives the takedown! As for leader length, I go extra long like 4' to 5' on apex, spoons, cutplugs and the like and 3 to 4 times the flasher/dodger length for hoochies, flies and other non-action lures.
homewaters
2/12/2013 8:31:00 AM
Thanks G-Man. Well sounds like a UL version of my Puget Sound salmon tactics, braid, top shot of mono, long release clips, etc. 5 - 8# Chinook on UL gear sounds pretty epic. Can't wait!
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Available Guide

Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Washington Guide Services

Phone: (509) 881-9052