Pretty much new to the whole trolling approach. Been almost 30 years since trolling. Been a bit preoccupied with the whole fly fishing thing during that time but now with young children I figure this is a better way to get them out on the water and excited about fishing without all the frustrations associated with fly fishing. Spent last year figuring out, or trying to at least, the perch in Cascade for the same reason. Figured the local koke population and proximity to home just made too much sense not to work on. Not to mention the table fare.
First outing on 3/15.
Cold and windy in the morning...DUH. Fabulous weather followed.
Fished the dam pool area from 10:30 to 7:00
One strikes the first 5 hours - one pole on the surface (no weight) and one pole with a couple ounces weight, both longlining. Unweighted rod with a dodger, weighted with a small lake troll. Apex, Kokabow, and hoochies all tipped with white corn.
Started to pick up fish occasionally in the afternoon. Both lines unweighted, again one with dodger the other with troll. Both rods with kokabow, one tipped with corn, the other with maggots. Green dodger, pink kokabow with the maggots got virtually every hit and all the fish minus one rainbow. If I had found this somewhat succesful combo an hour or two earlier, I think I could have filled the cooler.
Ended the day with 3 14" kokes and a couple rainbows released.
Overall my impression was that a "good/decent" koke fisher probably eeked out a limit, but it took some time.
Marked lots of schools at 20-40' but seemed the players were all at the surface as expected.
Couple random observations or questions:
Whats up with the folks up there? I'm trolling along and catch this awful smell and immediately think "somebody's lost a motor and the smell does not bode well" smells like a motor running with no oil. I look around and see a speedboat with the hatch up and figure that's it. So I slowly start to troll his way. I watch no fewer than a half dozen "nice" boats go by and not one of them slows down or stops to offer these guys a hand. Just blow by in their jet, ski, or large fishing boat without a second thought. Now I don't mind giving someone a tow in when they need it, but seems a little silly on that lake that with so many people around that I need to tow in a speed boat with my 30 year old 16' boat and motor. I'll take the fishing karma, but it sure makes me wonder about the quality of folks I'm out there with.
Incident #2 - While searching for fish in all corners of the pool, another boat trolls past about 180 degrees and all is fine, but as soon as he goes past, he makes a sharp turn into me. I see this and go "oh #$%". The only option I had because of the shoreline was to try and turn the same direction he was and maybe this was a bad idea on my part. He ends up making more than a 180 degree turn and is going to pass about 50' behind me. He drops his downrigger balls and I grab the first rod and start reeling as fast as I can. Not fast enough. I spool the line and let him know that he's hooked me up. All goes slack and the ball comes up empty, I think he cut my line with his prop. I get a simple "sorry" and we go our seperate ways. I keep an eye on this boat and notice that he has a real regular and predictable route that he is repeating and I can't help but wonder if this turd was somehow trying to protect "his turf"? Maybe I did something wrong and the whole thing is a "my problem" issue but in my mind I know I wasn't trying to steal his track because I hadn't even noticed he had one until after the fact. Is there some sort of unwritten rule or trollers etiquette I'm not aware of? I can understand being a bit upset if others interfere with a route you have established, but I had barely crossed over the end of his route when the whole incident happened.
Final question. The fish that were caught seemed awfully lethargic when hooked. Is this just a water temp issue and will they get a little more spunky as the season progresses? Even with just a dodger, there really wasn't much of a fight involved in bringing them to the boat.