Details
I've lived in Lakewood my whole life, but only fished American Lake a few times- usually in a canoe or rowboat. That works ok, but it takes a long time to get around anywhere. So this year, I decided to buy a larger boat with a decent motor and really concentrate on learning to fish American.
I bought a decent running boat and took it out a few times, then over the winter tore it down and rebuilt it. Sunday was the "maiden voyage" of the renovated boat.
My buddy and I got on the water around 10 am, and headed across to the far side of Silcox. We were running two downriggers- one at 45 feet and one at 50 feet. I was using a small splatter pink dodger, with a green hootchie behind it. My hootchie rigs are on fairly short leaders, about 2.5 times the size of the dodger, and I have smile blades in front of them, with a few beads in front of that. My buddy ran the same setup, only with a watermelon dodger and a pink hootchie setup. Both rigs were tipped with white shoepeg corn, and both dodgers had herring oil applied.
We trolled back and forth on the kicker motor (5 horse) very slowly for a few hours. I tried a few different depths, but wasn't seeing much on the finder. We were seeing a good amount of surface activity- there appeared to be a mayfly hatch of some sort happening, but I didn't bring my fly rod. I tried trolling a lake troll rig for a while, but then later switched to just a simple spoon-style lure. (this was on my second rod, not on the downrigger.) I have a 2-pole endorsement, but my buddy doesn't so we had 3 poles working.
After a couple hours, we chatted with a couple nice gents in an Alumaweld boat. They already had 2 trout and 2 kokanee, so we asked them for some tips. We matched their depth (35 feet) and suggestion for trailing length (pretty far back behind the downrigger). I noted they were using dodgers about the same size as ours with similar leader length.
This continued on for most of the day- I saw them catching several more fish, and we didn't get so much as a nibble. I tried varying speed and depth several times, but to no avail. Some days are just like that I guess.
We took a break for a late lunch after a while, and anchored up near the entrance to Little American in the bay just before it. While we ate we used drop shot rigs on 2 rods, using Berklee minnows about 3' off the bottom, and on the remaining rod I floated a few power eggs above an egg weight. My buddy got a few little nibbles but no takes.
At one point while we were sitting there a trout jumped out of the water and smacked into the side of the boat. If the sides of the boat had been shorter we would have had caught it with no pole and no effort.
After about an hour of that with no success, we went back to trolling back between Silcox and the VA. Results were the same as before- no fish. The only real downside was that at one point I was putting my rod in the downrigger and heard a light "sploosh". I looked down, and the handle for my reel was gone! It fell off right into the lake. Oops!
Anyway, it was a nice day to be out and "field test" the new boat. There were plenty of fish around, and I saw several caught, so I'll up my rating to a 2- but we didn't get any ourselves. We got off the water just at dusk- we loaded the boat in twilight and drove out at dark.
View other reports
from tmib.
Comments
Why is this comment inappropriate?
Delete this comment? Provide reason.