EveryDay, how does temp affect what setup you bring to the river? I had built up a bit of confidence with my spinning setup over salmon season. Now 3 trips, all be it short trips and nada for steelhead so far.
Im hearing the "look that guy has a coffee grinder", you wont catch anything with that till March or April bla bla bla. I am starting to lose some confidence in it. I couldnt be bothered to take 2 rods, I find it really cuts down mobility when trying to cover water.
I am about to head out again this morning and am at war with myself over bringing the pin or the spin.
I use to be a firm believer in warmer weather = better spoon fishing.
I had an eye opening experience however two years ago. It was -12C that day, ice forming rapidly on the eyelets after every cast. We came across a hole that had approximately 20 fresh steelhead that had come in the day before (maybe that morning?). This area allowed bait, so we started with roe, moved to pieces of shrimp, then to ghost shrimp. Tried pink worms, jigs, my stonefly nymphs, literally everything else I had in my box. Starting to get discouraged - I half laughed at Kitty when she pulled out her spoon rod. She hit 6 of those steelhead in 7 casts and ended up hooking 12 of them. I was in complete shock.
After that I started using them every day I went out, and would always pick them up in cold weather. The year before last on the Vedder (2013 season) I got 6 steel in 5 trips out in December, along with bulls and bows. Last year I didn't get to fish the Vedder as much as I would have liked, but still got nearly 50 bulls and a half dozen steelhead in 10 trips (it was a great year for bulls!). Spoons work, and they work well, no matter what time of year (I should mention every trip to the Vedder last year was between December/February - no March/April trips).
The coffee grinder comments on the Vedder were my favourite, as I quite often would hit fish right after those guys exited the run. You're obviously not going to hit a steelhead every time out on the Vedder... but I would say your chances on spoons are better than on a float set up (in my personal experience - and by how many I've caught directly behind float guys). Make sure you fish right into the tail outs, and when you think you are done the run (especially in places like Bergman, Brown road in the lower) take another 3 casts (so 15 steps total). You'd be surprised how many fish get forced out of those runs into the chutes -water that is hard for most people to cover - but spoons do it quite well.