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JoAnn and I missed fishing Baker Lake last year but this year we found an open window and were able to get in a day of fishing.
We arrived Friday evening at Panorama Point boat launch and put in the boat at the new (to us) ramp. All I can say is wow! A nice two lane ramp, no more watching people get stuck in the gravel. Only bad part is there is barely enough room to beach your boat. There is just one spot on either side during high water, which it is right now unfortunately. In any case we got the boat in and anchored up only to have to pull into shore around midnight for an urgent doggie do-do request from our puggle, Diesel. Once he did his thing we got a good night’s sleep and the 4am launch crowd awoke us for our day of fishing.
If you have never fished Baker, in the “old days” everyone fished the north end of the lake, Swift Creek, Shannon Creek, and Noisy Creek. The last few years more anglers have learned that the sockeye are actually spread out throughout the lake and not just at the north end. That said, we took the quick run over to the Noisy Creek side of the lake and by 5:20am had four rods running.
Those of you that read my reports on a regular basis know that I believe in sharing information – locations and techniques – to improve everyone’s success on the water. The more anglers we have actually catching and having success the more we ultimately can make our voices known to those in power. OK, personal perspective done, here’s how our morning went:
We ran two downriggers, each stacked for four total rods. All leader lengths were 12-16” in length. All rods had a chunk of bait (this is the one secret I’m going to keep!). Trolling speed was 1.2 mph using a bow mounted electric. Set back was 15 feet on the deep rods, and 20 feet on the stacker rods.
Port deep rod – this was the set up (pictured) that caught the most fish/bites. 3 caught, 2 lost/bites. Small pink hoochie, larger Macks silver smile blade, 50/50 1/0 dodger. Ran at 33 feet deep all morning.
Port stacked rod – Macks Double D dodger, chrome, two red hooks, accounted for one fish, ran at approximately 25-27 feet.
Starboard deep rod – chrome 0 dodger, red and pink hook, ran at 25 feet. 3 fish caught, 1 bite.
Starboard stacker rod – Macks Double D dodger with blue tape, 2 red hooks and a wedding ring insert. No bites. Ran at 20-23 feet deep.
OK, the action started ten minutes into our troll and the first half hour saw three fish caught and one lost so I was feeling pretty good we’d get our limits. I saw a few fish caught here and there so we weren’t the only anglers having success. After the first half hour things slowed down but by 8:58am we had fish number six in the boat and were putting away our gear. Here then is the action timeline:
5:20 – started fishing, all rods deployed
5:30 – caught at 33 feet
5:50 - caught at 25 feet
5:55 – lost at 33 feet
6:03 caught at 33 feet
7:10 caught at 25 feet
8:00 caught at 33 feet
8:30 lost at 25 feet
08:58 caught at 25 feet.
An excellent morning of fishing on Baker Lake! The fish are chrome bright and super feisty. Several of our fish put on acrobatic displays that I’m still wondering how we managed to catch them. The meat is a beautiful dark red and firm.
Random thoughts… we certainly did well and if I had to speculate as to why I would say it was a combination of the bait we were using and the stealth mode of the electric trolling motor, although I certainly have caught plenty of fish with a loud kicker so maybe I’ll give more weight to the bait. And maybe we were just plain lucky to run across plenty of aggressive fish. Crowds were very manageable and friendly today.
I hope this inspires you to give Baker Lake a try and good luck!
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