Available Guide

Available Fishing Guide:
Website: MoonsGuideService

Phone: (509) 860-6497

Quick Links

18 - Lake Roosevelt South End to Spokane Confluence Report
Washington

Photos

Details

12/27/2013
26° - 30°
Trolling
Rainbow Trout
Streamer
Yellow
Cloudy
Other
Morning
Under 40°
12/27/2013
5
1210

WOW what a day! We launched out of Seven Bays and started trolling just out of the bay about 9:00 this morning. The drive down was not too bad with ice and fog only in some limited spots along the way.

The first rod was only in 5 minutes and BAM fish on. The 18 incher about tore the pole out of the holder!! It inhaled the Rapala. I put out a couple of Frisky Jenney Flies (Lenny Special and Trick er Treat) one three colors lead and one on the downrigger at 18'. Caught fish on both setups.

We in fact caught hungry fish on everything we tried. Trolled at 2.6 mph most of the time. We had four rods out and finished the year out with a quadruple!!! Even got them all in the boat without tangling. That made fifteen fat, feisty rainbows for the three of us by 10:15. What a way to finish out the year. Put the poles away and just let the boat drift while we ate our lunch and had coffee in the warm heated cabin.....life's tough!

Tight lines all and Happy New Year,
Alan


Comments

afk
12/27/2013 6:36:00 PM
Sweet way to finish out the year! Thanks for the report. And a Happy New Year to you and yours!
jonb
12/27/2013 6:41:00 PM
That sounds like a blast, great report.
Steelhead6438
12/27/2013 11:39:00 PM
That's really awesome Alan!!! Good job. Too bad you had to keep 15 fish... but Lake Roosevelt is pretty large I guess! LOL!! I like seeing some swim away! LOL
hewesfisher
12/28/2013 6:49:00 AM
Great job Alan and nice report. Good thing you KEPT all 15 fish, they are excellent table fare as you know. We're heading up in about an hour and I plan to KEEP all 10 fish we catch too. :-)
gregsalmon
12/28/2013 3:47:00 PM
Limit your kill, don't kill your limit
downriggeral
12/28/2013 6:07:00 PM
There are two types of trout in lake Roosevelt. The native Red Band and the hatchery raised triploids. The red bands should be released as they reproduce naturally in the lake. The hatchery fish are raised to take and are wonderful red meat table fare. If you look at the picture I posted you will see all fish kept have clipped adipose fins from the hatchery. No fish is ever wasted and all are eaten and enjoyed by our family and friends as smoked fish. If the fishing is really hot I will release fish that come unhooked in the rubber knot-less net we use. All of that said the fish we keep and eat from Roosevelt are awesome!!

I totally agree with Steelhead6438 when he releases the wild cutthroat on lake Sammamish only keeping a couple for dinner if so chosen. Single, barbless and no bait is the way to go if you want to release fish and have a high survival rate. Damaged fish should be kept for the table if that happens. Also keep in mind only five trout may be caught when using bait whether kept or released.

Tight lines and Happy New Year - Alan
Mike Carey
12/28/2013 8:38:00 PM
couldn't have said it better. Best tasting HATCHERY rainbows I ever had came out of Lake Roosevelt.
hewesfisher
12/29/2013 7:58:00 AM
There's a big difference between a "put and take" fishery and native fishery. 99.99% of us fishing Roosevelt for trout are catching net pen raised fish released for us to enjoy, not restore the resource. I've personally never caught a native red band in Roosevelt, and would most likely release one if I ever did. I have no issue whatsoever putting net pen fish in the cooler, that's what they are there for. ;-)

One difference with the fin clipped trout in Roosevelt is they are NOT raised in hatcheries, they are raised IN the lake in net pens. They live in the same water and feed on aquatic insects in addition to "fish food". That's why they have nice red flesh right after they are released, not the pale flesh more commonly seen with hatchery fish. :-)

Absolutely agree Mike, and having had them from Rufus Woods as well, I'd be hard pressed to say those are any better.
downriggeral
12/29/2013 9:56:00 PM
That's right hewesfisher. Guess what I meant was that the fish start out in hatcheries and then are raised in net pens IN the lake. You can see the history and program details here: http://www.lrf.org/Env/Env-History.html

I have only caught one Red Band; a 5+ pound beauty, in the Seven Bays area, a year ago. The 30 mile stretch of the Columbia above the Canadian border to the Arrowhead Lakes dam has native Red Band Trout. I have been to a presentation put on by a guide from Canada at the Sportsman's Show. What a fishery....still on the bucket list!
buc
12/31/2013 11:01:00 AM
people need to realize you don't have to eat em all in one setting!
Leave a Comment:

Available Guide

Available Fishing Guide:
Website: MoonsGuideService

Phone: (509) 860-6497