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18 - Lake Roosevelt South End to Spokane Confluence Report
Washington

Details

02/12/2011
Trolling
Rainbow Trout
Surface Lure
Morning
02/12/2011
3
744

Hit lake Roosevelt from 10 till 2:30 trolled a trout color rapala and a flouresent green rapala, J-7 and XR-8.I tried many different lures but these were the two that caught fish. My buddy backed out at the last minute and I said what the heck and went alone. I just got my 1st fish finder and wanted to test it out so it was a great time to go it alone as I spent alot of time learning how to use it instead of trying to catch fish. I saw alot of marked fish in very deep water close to the bottom around 85 feet. Has anyone tried for these and what might they be? I fished north and south of the marina at 7 bays with a few trips into deep water to check out the depth finder ( I just wanted to play with the new toy). All in all it was a great day on the water as is any time spent out there. Put a few more fish in the freezer to wait for a smoker full.


Comments

The Jigmiester
2/12/2011 6:58:00 PM
Playing with your "new" toys is half the fun Tom! A fish finder is critical more a multitude of species, espeacially walleye. Those deep water blips could be Burbot> fresh water Ling cod or walleye, even winter smallmouths.Hard to tell unlessyou hook one. nice report. Jiggy
dbrowning
2/12/2011 8:46:00 PM
Great report Tom! Nice to see the fish are still biting for you. Did the fish have any size or the usual 15-16"? Haven't been out in a couple months, you may have just influenced me to give it a go again.
Lundegard
2/12/2011 9:08:00 PM
Your 85-foot-deep fish were probably walleye, which gives me some good intel. Sometime about now each year they stage along there, headed for the Spokane. But Jiggy is right....we have also taken burbot/ling at that depth, and I have indeed caught smallmouth that deep (down to 107 feet in fact) when fishing for walleye. Thanks for the info! Don't forget to try a suspending Husky Jerk occasionally for the bows. They run a little deeper than a jointed Rapala, and the bigger 'bows can't resist 'em.
tomnordman
2/13/2011 11:57:00 AM
Thanks for the replies everyone. To answere dbrowing's question yes they were the usual size. After doing alot of reading and research about walleye fishing I am now going to target them on Lake Roosevelt. You guys all say the deep fish were either burbot or walleye and now that I have a depth finder it is time to step it up a notch. I know it will be slow at 1st but at least I will be out there fishing. There are two types of people, those who like to fish and those who fish. Thanks
hewesfisher
2/13/2011 4:56:00 PM
I was there yesterday too Tom, we launched at Seven Bays about 9 and headed down to below Keller to try for kokanee, which turned out to be a bust. After a couple hours of that we changed gear and targeted 'bows in and around the mouth of the San Poil. We limited there in 3 1/2 hours. I have to agree you may be seeing burbot but may also be seeing some sturgeon which do exist in Roosevelt. I see returns in the Spokane arm under the Hwy 25 bridge in 200'+ deep water that look like logs, and those can't be burbot unless they're as big as a log. LOL. Only advice I have for your sonar is spend time playing with it and turn off the fish symbols. You'll get better info with fish arches than fish symbols. Also, remember the trout this time of year are in the top 10' - 15' of water and you will not see them on your sonar unless they are directly under the transducer. Since rainbow scatter as a boat travels over them, you will almost never see them on your sonar. I didn't see a single fish on my sonar yesterday above 100', yet we caught plenty. I use the sonar primarily to ID bottom structure and as a warning for shallow bars/rocks that can create with motors. Enjoy the toys! :-)
bigyfish
2/13/2011 9:31:00 PM
The large fish deep (below 60 feet) if you are seeing a lot of them are Lake Whitefish they range in size from 3 to 7 pounds. These fish are the forgotten fish as they are generally tough to catch. However, there are a lot of them, they out number walleye and burbot but are in similar numbers to hatchery rainbows.
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Available Guide

Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Ross Outdoor Adventures

Phone: (509) 750-7763