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Lone Lake Report
Island County, WA

Details

05/16/2009
Trolling
Rainbow Trout
Spoons
Evening
05/19/2009
4
1233

I headed out to the lake Saturday afternoon around 4pm and the weather was great! It was sunny and warm and the fish were feeding on the surface. Things started off a little slow for my father in-law and I. We started out with some flatfish and switched over to a silver dick nite that seemed to do well. He was using all silver and I tried a silver/bronze dick nite. We ended up C&R'ing 9 trout in the 15-16 inch range.
My dad and I went out the day before in the afternoon/evening and again we did well on flatfish....the weather was just as nice sunny and hot. I am still trying to figure out what type of lure to use during any given part of the day. It seems to vary from day to day on what the fish will hit on.

Also a question for anyone, since I have not seen a Triploid Trout (as far as I know) and I have read that they are planted in here every year...what is the size range on these? Would I know one when I catch one? Or have I been catching and releasing them all these years thinking they are all Rainbow Trout? I can say that all the trout that I have C&R'd from here look like a nice bright Rainbow trout.


Comments

f1sh1nf00l
5/19/2009 4:57:00 PM
Triploids are just genetically enhanced rainbow trout that grow and at an increased rate, but are sterile. Most trips that they plant start at a pound and go up from there, as opposed to the regular planters which are more like 1/4 lb. The thing with trips is, that they can gain alot of size over the course of a year and turn into those hogs you come across from time to time. I believe that the name referes to them growing at triple the rate of a normal rainbow trout.
powerhause
5/19/2009 7:21:00 PM
Well in that regard, it would appear that I have yet to tie into a triploid. I have fished this lake off and on for about 4 years and have not caught one. I would assume that there are quite a few trips in this lake still, if that is so than my "hog" quest continues for the elusive triploid...lol. Thanks again for the information.
ameluke
5/19/2009 8:16:00 PM
The difference in a day is just enough for the fish to turn on to one thing and off to another that worked only the day(or even hour) before. The only advice I can give you applied to everything that swims. Find what they want and use it. One day it might be spoons, the next powerbait, the next spinners, or even up a natch spinners fast and not slow or vice versa. It all varies from day to day. Good luck out there and keep catchin them.
Trout Master
5/20/2009 2:04:00 PM
triploids dosent mean triple the growth rate, trips are genetic altered rainbow. They have three chromosomes <sp? rather than two. They cannot reprduce. You most likely have caught trips and just dont know it. They spend their energy in eating rather then reproducing. Thats why they get big. Ps.s keep releaseing them and you will catch a big one
powerhause
5/20/2009 2:32:00 PM
Yeah I release everything I catch there and I encourage everyone else I fish with to do the same. Being only 10mins from my house this has become one of my favorite lakes on the south end of the Island. Deere lake is fine but more often than not it seems like a trout farm at times where you can catch your limit in an hour and a majority of the fish are not that big 8-12 inches. I like the fact that when fishing at Loan lake you can regularly catch 15+inch trout, to me it's more fun.
f1sh1nf00l
5/20/2009 5:05:00 PM
Thanks for the correction Trout Master. It's been a while since I read about them on the WDFW web site, all I remember is that they said that they were sterile, and they grow faster. They are definitely more aggresive feeders, I had one absolutely hammer a spoon last weekend, had a heck of a time getting that treble hook out of its mouth with all three barbs burried good. But he lived to hammer somone elses lure.
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Available Guide

Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Darrell & Dads Family Guide Service

Phone: (509) 687-0709