dan agnello Posted May 23, 2021 Posted May 23, 2021 Went 4 for at least 8; 2 small kings, coho and a laker. Small king on SS DW gold rasta goose on rigger slider with main down 57’; small king on dipsey on 3 out 147’ moonshine flounder pounder, coho on modified blue dolphin on dipsey out 217’ and laker on 300 copper on mag double orange crush. Had at least 4 or 5 trips on riggers with no one home , probably hit the sliders. Waves 1-2, a little foggy, Sog the usual 2.2 to 3.2. Got just as many hits uphill, going west, as we did downhill. Fished 150-220’ straight out to about 3 miles north’, all hits in 150-200’. 3
CAC Posted May 23, 2021 Posted May 23, 2021 Thanks Dan. Good report. I hope to get down there again late this week. Reel TherapyClydeSent from my iPhone using Great Lakes Fisherman
dan agnello Posted May 23, 2021 Author Posted May 23, 2021 Btw: Laker was planted and coho n kings were natural. 1
dan agnello Posted May 24, 2021 Author Posted May 24, 2021 Can someone please explain why lakers and kings are in 150-200fow this time of yr. Coho I get because they are eating invasive species Mysa (sp?) shrimp like they have the past few yrs. Last few yrs we were getting kings in skinny water, 50-60’. Have a good week and if you get out this holiday weekend be extra vigilant. Can be crazy the first official weekend of summer. 1
steelie Posted May 24, 2021 Posted May 24, 2021 Dan - I've found they're out deep in springs with lots of east and north winds like this year. As lake warms early in season, north and east winds prevent nearshore waters from warming earlier than offshore and sometimes the offshore water warms first. However, it is unusual for lakers to move out early, I just don't think we have many of those left in SoHa. My best guess is the one you got was a Wisconsin fish.
jdh Posted May 24, 2021 Posted May 24, 2021 I have a theory that's it's due to the drought. We didn't have the usual spring flooding the puts lots of warmer muddy water in the lake and helps the lake warm up faster. Ive found in the past, the coho and kings usually show up deep first before they move in. They just seem to have stayed deep this year.
dan agnello Posted May 24, 2021 Author Posted May 24, 2021 Yep you are correct. Two years ago we put in planted lakers w/head coded wires in fish cleaning freezer with completed forms and we got letter from Charlevoix DNR the next January that fish were planted in Wisc rivers.
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