Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Darrell & Dads Family Guide Service
This was only my second trip to American, it being over an hour away from where I live, but when I was there last, I was really impressed. I only got a bunch of small rock bass, and the wind was blowing like crazy, but the lake was beautiful and had a large variety of shoreline environments. My 18 year old nephew was visiting the west coast for the first time and had caught his first fish ever in Kitsap's Island Lake, only 2 days earlier.
This time the wind was perfect, though this meant an abundance of jet skiers and water skiers. We worked the shoreline of the SW end of the lake quite thoroughly, catching more small rock bass, but nothing larger and even our efforts at jigging for perch on the bottom between 10 & 40 feet went unrewarded. When the battery showed signs of getting weak so we returned my inflatable to the launch and swapped in a fresh one. I'd learned from the previous time ... this lake is big! We continued along the north shore and got even fewer bites. The view of Mt. Ranier from here was incredible though! By the time we reached Silcox Island, we decided to cross the lake and head back.
As there are a number of docks along the SW shore of the Island, I told my nephew that we'd fish those but pass up any where homeowners were visible, to give them some privacy. Well before I knew it we came to a dock with a middle aged woman sitting on the it. I said something like "Hi. Nice day, isn't it?". Her reply was "You're too close!". I asked her, "For what?", to which she replied that if she were to dive into the water directly at us, we could hook her. I pointed out that she needn't be afraid since neither of us had a line in the water. Why must some people just be nasty by default?
For those of you who are privileged enough to own waterfront property and have a dock, I can appreciate that the dock is private but please also recognize that your dock is occupying space that was previously public. If a person floats by in the surrounding public water, offers a friendly greeting, and doesn't touch your dock or even have a line in water, show some common courtesy. You may now be able to exclude the public from the space where your dock is, but that doesn't entitle you to guard a buffer in the water around it. Obviously if people are in the water, there or anywhere, appropriate caution needs to be exercised and distance maintained.
The rest of the trip back was uneventful. So, there was nothing caught to talk about, but what a beautiful lake! I will be back!
Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Darrell & Dads Family Guide Service