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Stevens Lake Report
Snohomish County, WA

Details

05/13/2013
71° - 75°
Bottom Fishing From Boat
Kokanee
Worms
Pink
Sunny
Hook & Bait
Afternoon
61° - 65°
05/28/2013
2
936

This was our first trip to Lake Stevens, since we usually stick with smaller lakes to avoid the zoom-zoom water traffic. Since it was a weekday and we had no idea where we were going, we took our time and got out there around 1:30 pm. We used the Northern boat ramp ($5 launch fee, no cardreader).

We were trying for Kokanee, since we had read profiles of the lake and this was a few days before the Kokanee Derby there. We had some (alleged) kokanee trolling rigs with big willow blade spinners. I don't know a dodger from a flasher from a fender, so I don't have any of those. [maybe we need to set up a glossary with pix]

Trolled on downriggers at various depths from 15-25 feetin the deep part of the lake. Also trolled without downriggers. Nada. Zero. All afternoon.

We gave up and considered sticking around through the evening, hung around the shallows in the northeast area where we got a perch. A nice one, which we put in the livewell in case there were more hanging around. Yay! that makes it a no-skunk season so far (we count this on the team basis, so if one of us catches, it dissipates the skunk ju-ju. Getting no further action, we released the perch.

When the evening rolled around and the steady stream of boats hit the water, we were too tired and sunbeaten to continue. We beat it out of there, so we wouldn't be waiting around to exit.

Very low-energy trip with curiosity satisfied. 2nd time launching the boat this season and it went a little better .

We decided we prefer Flowing Lake (in that vicinity). After getting slightly familiar with Kokanee fishing, I now believe the 3 we caught there were Kokanee, not trout. If anyone has a reason why Lake Stevens is attractive, feel free to express yourself!


Comments

Steelheadin360
5/28/2013 1:36:00 PM
I fish lake stevens 3-4 times a week and some days are hot, others its alot of work to scratch out a few fish. If you want to really get into kokanee fishing i would pick up a few dodgers, my favorites are the pink splatter dick nites and the pink/purple dick nite. A couple of wedding rings in some different colors. run those 12-14" behind the dodger and tip with either shoepeg corn or bekely gulp maggots. Stop by Gregs Rod shop and he will set you up

15-40 feet has been working good for me on that lake, just try to find a school of fish and if you pick up one or two try to turn around and go back thru them. I usaully try to post what worked for me in my reports and often put pictures of the "hot" lures. hopefully that helps
Smalma
5/28/2013 2:01:00 PM
First on the City of Lake Stevens boat launch your WDFW permit is valid is no need to pay the fee; just hang your permit in the front window.

On Stevens (and most kokanee waters) the late morning and early afternoon is often the toughest kokanee fishing period of the day. The attraction of Stevens kokanee beside the fact that kokanee are found to catch and even better earing is that historically Stevens has provide decent catch rates on nice size kokanee. This time of year (especially mid-day) a good depth finder is a must so that you can target the depth the fish are holding.

You might consider Roesiger; the north (far lake) has good numbers of smallish kokanee that are easier to target than the Stevens fish. It also has trout, bass and panfish.

Finally no doubt you caught fish in Flowing that looked like "kokanee" but they were most likely residual coho. For many differentiating between those coho and kokanee is difficult.

Curt
downriggeral
5/28/2013 10:32:00 PM
Kokanee are a challenge; that's what makes it fun plus they are great to smoke and eat. All of the advice given is spot on. You might also want to take a look at the Kokanee Fishing Forum, lots of great info there too.
Alan, kokanee fisherman in Eastern Washington.
vvstevens
5/31/2013 6:29:00 AM
Thanks very much for taking the time to comment.

I Googled the pink splatter dick nite and found many links specific to Kokanee fishing. I'm eager to look into these further and pick up some of these items. I am not experienced with downrigger fishing, but I did have 2 installed on my boat. I would call much of my usage 'just practice', though I did hook one at Flowing lake that jumped all over the place (making me think it might be Kokanee). I promise I'll study the difference.
I have noticed that using downriggers on small lakes takes some work (or a driver that knows the depths well). But I guess that means I get a lot of cranking practice.

As for Lake Roesiger, I blush to say that the absence of a dock makes this seem difficult. I've been looking at You Tube vids to see how it's done. The lake map for Roesiger is very alluring, as it seems like it offers diverse fishing possibilies.
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Available Guide

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

Phone: (509) 687-0709