Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Lake Roosevelt Charters
Normally we’d be fishing coho but with the closures this year we are exploring other fishing options. I’ve fished Cavanaugh before but not in a while. The lake is close to our home, but it always seems far away because of the long drive through winding county roads to get there. Anyway, we arrived and had the boat in the water and fishing by 7:55, a bit later than I would like but that’s OK. We had the lake to ourselves today.
The launch is shallow and flat and JoAnn was dubious we’d be able to launch our boat. Well, I didn’t drive all the way to not even try! I actually managed to launch without getting my feet wet, although retrieving was a different story.
My plan was to explore the lake today and shot some video footage. We started about a quarter mile from the launch and had a nice early fishing bite, and landed a couple really dandy kokanee in spawning blush color. 15” and 14.5”, caught one deep (48 feet on the rigger, 56 feet of water) and the second on the stacker line at around 35 feet deep. We ran four rods today, using standard kokanee gear.
In addition to the two nice koks we hit a couple nice cutthroat that we released.
I continued our course down to the islands but except for another cutthroat and losing a smaller, brighter kokanee at the island area the bite died off. Having gotten the video footage I wanted I pulled gear and ran us back to our starting point, but not before first doing a pit stop for the dogs. This is actually easier said than done on Cavanaugh, as the lake is fully developed and all private property. We did find a stretch of non-posted land on the north side of the lake where the county road comes right up to the lake. I nudged the boat on to shore and let the dogs do their thing. Sure is nice having a boat that is easy to get in and out of from the bow!
Back to our starting point and I noted immediately the meter marks of kokanee showing. They were still biting and we picked off a couple big kokanee, and lost one besides. These fish came on the deep downrigger lines, at 43 and 48 feet in 53 feet of water.
I’m thinking that the fish are staging on the east side of the lake prior to running up a stream that flows into the lake on that end. That’s my theory, anyway. I sure didn’t find them on the far end of the lake. The other thing of interest today – unscented corn did way better than scented. You just never know with kokanee!
We called it a day at 11:30am as rain started increasing and we had things to do. It took a couple tries get the boat on the trailer straight but managed and off we went having enjoyed a new fall fishing adventure thanks to the coho fishing closure. When WDFW gives you lemons make lemonaide!