Posts: 6,352
Threads: 0
Joined: Jan 2006
Reputation:
0
Such was the story for me and many others last week. We were killing them and then BAM!! 2 kokes, 1 splake and 3 hits beteween 8 of us in 4 hours.
[signature]
Posts: 5,856
Threads: 0
Joined: Feb 2003
Reputation:
0
Causey was like that last year. Good for a bit, then whammo, someone hit the kill switch.
[signature]
Posts: 5,976
Threads: 1
Joined: Jan 2003
Reputation:
0
they keep moving the switch up there, ill see if i can find it in the morning
[signature]
Posts: 5,976
Threads: 1
Joined: Jan 2003
Reputation:
0
Well i couldnt find the Dam switch today, between 3 of us we caught 2 tiger trout, about 5in each
[signature]
Posts: 386
Threads: 0
Joined: Jan 2003
Reputation:
0
We got there this afternoon at about 2:30 and stayed until 4:45 when it got too cold. We walked up the south arm and fished in 15 feet of water next to the shore line. I caught 15 and my son caught 1. They were all dinks. Biggest dink being 10 inches (2 of them) and the rest ranged from 4 inches to 6 inches. I caught splake, tigers and 1 rainbow. They were hanging right on the bottom. I caught them on a ratfinky tipped with a wax worm. My son caught his on a night crawler.
[signature]
Posts: 376
Threads: 0
Joined: Feb 2005
Reputation:
0
My sons and I fished causey on the 30th also. We started about noon and fished 'till around 3:30. We ended up with 7 'kokes and a handfull of TINY splake. All of the kokanee were caught in about a 5 minute time span. We were just lucky enough to be in a spot that a small school cruised through. A fishfinder is a must for the kokes. If your fishing the bottom of the water column when they come by, you'll never even know they were there.
[signature]