lake washington
Posted: Mon May 21, 2007 8:59 pm
does anyone hav advice for where and what to fish on washington this summer?
what to use?
what to use?
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I've read a few articles on cutthroat and have caught a few. Use brass colored #1 needlefish with a red head, worm behind a ford fender, rapala, or flatfish in the order of affectiveness in my experience. Fish the shallows in early spring then 60 to 70' in late spring. Look for bait balls and fish around or beneath them. There should still be millions of fry and fingerlings in the water from the hatcheries. The worm behind the ford fender catches an occasional kokanee.Home Skillet 123 wrote: does anyone hav advice for where and what to fish on washington this summer?
what to use?
Are you serious?? Lake trout and Sturgeon in Lake washington? I don't think so.Palmer wrote:I spent 4 hours today trying to catch Mackinaw with kwikfish at 70 - 170' deep. I had no luck. There were a few fish at around 50 - 100'. These were big signals and may have been sockeye or cutts. I also saw some monster signals between the Cedar River and Coulon Park at 75' deep. I've never seen anything arch so long and thick. Maybe this is a good place to try for sturgeon.
Use a bottom rig (3 - 10 oz weight 3' off a T swivel with your hook, lure, or flasher off the T). Go near shore to about 60' of water and drop your rig to the bottom then troll out to deeper water at 60' down. Troll at the speed when your lure starts to get action, no faster. This is a good depth for cutts and sockeye during the spring and summer. I usually prefer to fish with one or two buddies because the lake is slow but rewarding for trout. I'll always set up at least one person with a worm behind a ford fender at about 1.5 mph. My next favorite is a needle fish and then a double jointed rapala. I don't have alot of luck this time of year but May is awsome. Fish near the surface in about 20 - 40' of water. Don't stay in one area to long if your not getting any action. Move around. The trout are following the smolt in the spring time.slicbob wrote:I need help with this as well. I have fished at the downtown Kirkland docks for bass with no success, and at the park in Kenmore with a bobber & worm, also tried for bass with no success. Are those bad places or just bad timing. Several times both locations in the last month.
Also am a new boat owner and would like to know if trout or Sockeye (during the season) can be caught trolling without leaded line or down riggers. If so how.
When, where, and how can I catch Bass from a doc? HELP
Thanks in advance.
I know two people that have seen sturgeon in Lake Washington. My uncle saw one from a sailboat and didn't know what it was at first. He said it was longer then he is tall and that it scared him so bad, he'll never go swimming in the lake again.ChrisB wrote:Are you serious?? Lake trout and Sturgeon in Lake washington? I don't think so.Palmer wrote:I spent 4 hours today trying to catch Mackinaw with kwikfish at 70 - 170' deep. I had no luck. There were a few fish at around 50 - 100'. These were big signals and may have been sockeye or cutts. I also saw some monster signals between the Cedar River and Coulon Park at 75' deep. I've never seen anything arch so long and thick. Maybe this is a good place to try for sturgeon.
To find 60' of water, Go to the NorthEast side of I-90, the South East side of Mercer Island, or 1000 yards North of the Cedar River, drop your line to the bottom and count how many times your guide travels side to side. This should put you at 60 - 80' of water. Then troll to deeper water.Palmer wrote:Use a bottom rig (3 - 10 oz weight 3' off a T swivel with your hook, lure, or flasher off the T). Go near shore to about 60' of water and drop your rig to the bottom then troll out to deeper water at 60' down. Troll at the speed when your lure starts to get action, no faster. This is a good depth for cutts and sockeye during the spring and summer. I usually prefer to fish with one or two buddies because the lake is slow but rewarding for trout. I'll always set up at least one person with a worm behind a ford fender at about 1.5 mph. My next favorite is a needle fish and then a double jointed rapala. I don't have alot of luck this time of year but May is awsome. Fish near the surface in about 20 - 40' of water. Don't stay in one area to long if your not getting any action. Move around. The trout are following the smolt in the spring time.slicbob wrote:I need help with this as well. I have fished at the downtown Kirkland docks for bass with no success, and at the park in Kenmore with a bobber & worm, also tried for bass with no success. Are those bad places or just bad timing. Several times both locations in the last month.
Also am a new boat owner and would like to know if trout or Sockeye (during the season) can be caught trolling without leaded line or down riggers. If so how.
When, where, and how can I catch Bass from a doc? HELP
Thanks in advance.
In the summer I would suspect their staying in the cold water. I read one article stating that the bows go up stream or up the rivers as summer run steelhead. The only luck I've had in the summer were for bass and perch out in front of Magnuson Park. I see the bass following me around when I've snorkled for crawdads. In August I've been realy lucky with the sockeye when it's open. I like the 60' depth as slow as possible. I've also caught and released sockeye and coho on the ford fender and a worm set up.