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Newbie to Western Washington fishing looking for advice

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2009 7:19 pm
by dodsonjg
So I've lived in Snohomish County for about 5 years now but until recently I'd never fished in this area. My family and I have been trying Gissberg ponds up in Smokey Point but haven't been able to catch anything. We fish from shore and have tried the following:

Bottom fishing with powerbait and power eggs with a 12-16inch leader.
Bottom fishing with worms. Injected the worms with air so they would float as well.
Top fishing with powerbait, power eggs, and worms.
We also used yellow and white spinners.
Powerbait and eggs are Charteuse

The majority of my fishing experinece was in Eastern Washington for Bass and in Florida at a small lake for bass. I would typically leave having caught plenty of fish but none of us can seem to catch anything around here. Anyone have some tips for catching fish around here? I'm thinking that we are doing something wrong but I can't figure it out. While we would prefer catching some bass or even catfish; at this point I've been trying for trout just to catch something.

Any advice regarding baits, rigs, and techniques for catching fish around here would be greatly appreciated. My kids are starting to dislike fishing because they think there just aren't any fish in the water!!

I'm also looking for some advice on good lakes to go to within about 30-45 minutes of Everett. Preferably someplace that isn't crowded, is easy enough for kids to fish at, and is good for fish other than trout.

Thanks!

RE:Newbie to Western Washington fishing looking for advice

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2009 10:00 pm
by Shad_Eating_Grin
Gissburg Ponds is my favorite spot for trout this time of year. My best spots are usually along the north shoreline, of the south pond. Increase your leader length to about 25-30 inches. There are thick weeds when you cast out, and so you need the longer leader to get your bait about the weeds.

Power bait is all I ever used there.

RE:Newbie to Western Washington fishing looking for advice

Posted: Tue Apr 14, 2009 7:13 pm
by Trent Hale
For good fishing your going to need a boat. Fishing from the bank your fishing areas are in one part of the lake. The way your fishing sounds ok you should be in the fish. I'ed go some where else. There are many lakes around try them out.

RE:Newbie to Western Washington fishing looking for advice

Posted: Tue Apr 14, 2009 7:24 pm
by fishnazzi
I would also try dropping your leader size to 2lb test it really does make a big difference.

RE:Newbie to Western Washington fishing looking for advice

Posted: Thu Apr 16, 2009 8:41 am
by Smar969905
Lake Stickney is small enough that you should be able to cast out most of the way, and it is right down off 128th street. Marth Lake is off 164th, and it a bit bigger but has public docks to fish from. Silver Lake in south everett is ok to fish from, but not really worth it. Lake Stevens is not worth the time without a boat, and even with a boat, it usually doesn't do anything for a lot of people, but does have kokanee. Up in the smokey point area, if you kept going west off the freeway, it takes you out toward Lakewood and the "7 Lakes" area. Lake Ki doesn't have a lot of bank access for fishing, but there is some, and it generally does decent for bass. Lake Goodwin is the biggest of the lakes in this area, and toward the east end, it supposedly has a lot of bass, but i have usually gone toward the west end where there is a natural spring and trout seem to go over here (and my grandma has a cabin very close to this spot). Goodwin is one that you will do better with a boat though, whether a paddle boat, kayak, canoe, or any thing else that will keep you floating and let you move around. Over near Lake Stevens is Lake Cassidy. It has a dock accessible off of the Centennial Trail, although i have never fished this lake. When i was riding my bike, i would see people out fishing there quite a bit, but the dock is small. There are a lot of plants in the water that grow up quite a ways, so it could be good for bass.

Hope this helps out a bit. I've been more of a trout guy than a bass guy all my life. it is just how my father conditioned me.

RE:Newbie to Western Washington fishing looking for advice

Posted: Thu Apr 16, 2009 9:36 am
by Rich McVey
Hey Smar969905

Can I play with your kitty?

RE:Newbie to Western Washington fishing looking for advice

Posted: Wed May 06, 2009 4:51 pm
by mike pederson
yes the guy is right I would try Lk stevens, Lk goodwin ive been catching some pretty nice fish at Lk goodwin 21.5 over 5lbs also try about a4FT leader

RE:Newbie to Western Washington fishing looking for advice

Posted: Wed May 06, 2009 4:53 pm
by mike pederson
:cheers:

RE:Newbie to Western Washington fishing looking for advice

Posted: Wed May 06, 2009 5:37 pm
by flippinfool
what ever you do dont listen to anything BASSIN BOMBER says if he replies that guys a BIG liar and a bait mooch too ! he thinks he knows everything! TEAM EATIN MARSHMELLOWS

RE:Newbie to Western Washington fishing looking for advice

Posted: Sat May 09, 2009 5:20 am
by T-Bone
Lake Padden, South of Bellingham has a park all around it with good fishing for trout.

Lake Terrell, North of Bellingham has some large trout, largemouth bass and some very large channel catfish (up to 20lbs.!); better from a boat, but it does have two docks.