Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum
Fishing in British Columbia => Fishing Reports => Members' Fishing Reports => Topic started by: Rodney on March 10, 2013, 03:04:26 PM
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After exactly four months and three days since I last fished (three days before the baby arrived), I decided to come out of hibernation and visit one of my favourite fisheries. Kawkawa Lake opens on March 1st each year for its kokanee fishery. Originally I had intended to go on opening day so I could bring my father along during his visit, but unfortunately the weather did not cooperate. A week after opening, the weather was finally giving us a break so I wasted no time to get the boat ready after Nick provided an encouraging report.
(http://i217.photobucket.com/albums/cc90/fishingwithrod/2013/130308-1_zpsce2508e9.jpg)
we arrived at the lake at 9:30am and it was flat calm. With the sun beaming down and the view of the big snowy mountain in the background, this was starting out very nicely. By 10:00am I had the boat loaded up while Nick and Fred from Chilliwack Dart and Tackle were already anchored and anticipating for the first bite. Just as I cruised past them, Nick reeled in the first kokanee of the day.
There were the odd risers on the surface, but most fish were swimming right on the bottom at 45ft as they always do when it is calm and sunny. We were fishing with krill and a variety of other bait. While bait fishing seems easy, there are lots of uncertainties when fishing at 45ft of depth. The fish could be anywhere. If the bait is suspended a few feet away from the school, then chances are you will be staring at a motionless rod all day.
As soon as I dropped anchors, the sounder showed a big school of fish directly below me. The beeps kept on coming and I thought that it was broken because I've never seen it that active before. Immediately the rod tip started moving and I managed to miss all three chances in the first ten minutes.
I decided to anchor 100 feet away from Nick. Seeing that we were anchoring at the same depth, I didn't think the fishing results would be very different. Once again I was completely wrong. While I couldn't trigger another bite, Nick managed to haul in one fish after another on each drop.
"Come on closer!", he yelled. I hesitated and re-anchored at 50 feet away from him.
"Closer! No fish there!"
::)
I pulled up anchors once again after another 30 minutes of no fish. Meanwhile, Nick and Fred had already reached their limit of four fish each in the cooler.
I re-anchored at 5 feet away from Nick and I reached the conclusion that spots do not always make a difference. While I was still trying to trick a fish to bite, Nick continued to pull them up from the deep like a commercial long-liner!
Finally, after 15 minutes of fiddling around, I detected a soft bite on the rod tip. Perhaps I am simply too rusty after many fishless months, I don't seem to remember kokanee bites to be that light. I missed the first hit, but it managed to hook itself after I left the rod alone for a few more minutes. The first fish was finally in the boat, a fat silver kokanee measured at 13 inches long.
Just as I was getting excited about the non-stop action, the bites stopped for everyone! "Time to move.", Nick announced, "We are going to target cutthroat trout now."
???
I decided to stick to the same spot and hope the school would return for another feeding frenzy. The southwesterly breeze picked up gradually as I waited. A trout must have sympathized my poor performance and ran itself into the line. Other than that, it was pretty uneventful for a couple of hours.
(http://i217.photobucket.com/albums/cc90/fishingwithrod/2013/130308-2_zpsb7378e82.jpg)
Eventually there were some surface activities. While the sun was still out, the chop on the water provided a good cover for fish. I pulled out the float rod and adjusted the depth to around 5 feet. It took no time for the little orange dot to disappear. Finally I was in the zone. The bites could not be stopped. Each cast was followed by a bite a minute after. I managed to bring in both kokanee and landlocked coho salmon in a variety of sizes.
The last hour of the trip definitely saved the day, because I was sure that no fish other than the lonely one was coming home. In the end I brought four healthy looking kokanee back and enjoyed them very much by lightly seasoning and baking them in the oven. This is why fishing can be so exciting, every trip is an unique experience with plenty of lessons to learn.
Here is a short video from the trip:
http://www.fishingwithrod.com/video/video_blog/2013/03-10-spring-kokanee.html
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Nice report and great catches. Is there boat rental there? If not, can you fish with belly boat?
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No rental boats available, not that I am aware of anyway. I've seen people in belly boats at times, but there's no way you'd get me in that water. I touched it for a few seconds on Friday and my hand was frozen, but I'm a wuss so that doesn't really say anything...
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Thanks for the info. Perhaps later in summer it can be fished like with a belly boat on a trout lake. :)
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Thanks for the info. Perhaps later in summer it can be fished like with a belly boat on a trout lake. :)
You then will have to contend with all the water skiers and the speed boats ripping around the lake. ::)
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Nice catches, Rod.
Any idea how the Coho and Kokanee got in Kawkawa? I don't see that they were ever stocked in there.
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Nice video Rod.
Really enjoyed it. :)
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July and August are the months to avoid as those speed boats can ruin your fishing day. Mid to late June can be good.
Typhoon, I'm pretty sure those kokanee/sockeye and coho are natural populations with a pretty healthy recruitment rate.
Thanks bigblue. :)
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Nice catches, Rod.
Any idea how the Coho and Kokanee got in Kawkawa? I don't see that they were ever stocked in there.
Pretty sure there is a creek connecting the lake to the coquihalla river.
I remember seeing a study on the stream once before... Can't remember the name of it now.
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Pretty sure there is a creek connecting the lake to the coquihalla river.
I remember seeing a study on the stream once before... Can't remember the name of it now.
Sucker Creek
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Is odd how Kawkawa fishes well right from the opening and Allouette doesnt get going until mid April.
You would think Allouette would be warmer and therefore should start earlier than Kawkawa?
Any thoughts on this?
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Is odd how Kawkawa fishes well right from the opening and Allouette doesnt get going until mid April.
You would think Allouette would be warmer and therefore should start earlier than Kawkawa?
Any thoughts on this?
As you know Bruce Allouette is a very deep lake and big! Kawkawa is more of a pond in comparison with a max depth of around 50 feet. It's also a bit lower in elevation.
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That surprises me that Kawkawa is lower in elevation.
You just may have something there with the depth.
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If Allouette is so much deeper than Kawkawa, do you fish bottom set up the same like Kawkawa and will it be too deep? Is the Allouette kokanee fishing as productive as Kawkawa? What is the most effective way to fish Allouette. It seems a much bigger and deeper lake, so does trolling flies produce better there?
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If Allouette is so much deeper than Kawkawa, do you fish bottom set up the same like Kawkawa and will it be too deep? Is the Allouette kokanee fishing as productive as Kawkawa? What is the most effective way to fish Allouette. It seems a much bigger and deeper lake, so does trolling flies produce better there?
I fished it last year for Kokanee for the first time. I was trolling flies and my buddy was trolling a wedding ring/dodger combination. Once we found the fish it was pretty steady action. While he was muddling around with worms I was able to casting/retrieve with the boat not moving and also was able to hook into several fish.
The fish were intercepting a chironomid hatch at about 15 feet down from the surface in 70+ feet of water. I did not see fish on my finder but followed the hatch.
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I troll with a 4wt. clear intermediate line.
If its windy you can just drift with the wind.
Finding the fish is the key and usually they are in the same general area.
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Wife was up in Golden Ears today as they were doing a film shoot. It snowed up there today. We are still a ways behind Kawkawa buddy. Like someone mentioned Alouette is a very deep cold lake. Thats the main reason as to why it fishes better later than Kawkawa.