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I had obligations in the morning, so I decided to try the afternoon. I did not have time to locate a partner, so today was a great day to experiment and try new methods and locations. I did catch 13, lost at least that many, with fish averaging about 18". I did not catch any real monsters, but the fish were pretty good. All fish were Browns today, not a single Rainbow.
The coldest water I found was ~39.5, with the warmest only 43. Most of the lake seemed to be only about 40.5 degrees. I suspect that it had been warmer, but we had experienced quite a wind today so I suspect it was mixing the colder deep water with the warmer surface water. The water is dropping with reduced outflows. The green algee high water marks were about 6 or 7 inches above the existing water. The green and browns aglees are starting to grow, so expect the shore to get slimey soon.
I found that the fish started to hammer my offerings, but miss the hooks, the later in the day and the lower the sunlight. I suspect that water is sufficiently muddy that the fish are having a hard time feeding by sight. My advice would be to try to use lures with noise (my preference), or to fish with bait. Keep in mind the rules for counting all trout caught when using bait. I know of one boat that had 5 fish and they were trolling with flashers. I believe that the has only about 2 feet of clarity. At the launch, I was not able to see the bottom when I was loading my boat, and my boat wheels are not 24" tall.
Now, I know people get tired of hearing my warnings about this lake, but please stick with me for a moment. People should always have their required safety items on boad, to include a fire extinguisher, flares, horn, etc. Three poor guys in a 12' boat were almost to the dogleg when I was fishing about a quarter of a mile upwind. I heard, well more like felt something that I took for hearing, what sounded like someone was excited. I was ready to move toward the inlet, so I decided to go by the only other boat I could see. As I got closer, the guys on the boat stood up and started to wave their life jackets. It turned out that their motor had died on them and their oars were just not cutting it. I had seen the boat for some time and I thought they were drift fishing the middle. It turns out they had been trying to get to shore for over an hour with the oars. IF they had continued the route they were drifting, they would have been in cliffs for a long time. IF they had flares on board, or an air horn or whistle, perhaps they might have made contact with me sooner. Fortunately I was able to tow them back to the launch. But, FYI, it was a good reminder. I double checked to make sure I have all my stuff on board as well after that.
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