Englishman
Well-Known Member
Beauty Fall day on the water. We counted at least 100 boats out there, all spread out between Beechy and Otter, and all at various depths with a few small “clusters”.
Unfortunately it was the slowest early October day we have experienced. Lines in the water at 8:00am and we trolled back and forth between 250’ and 550’ of water, sometimes with “the gang” and sometimes on our own. Fished hootchies behind dodgers between 45’ and 65’ like Profisher and others reported last week.
Between our 8:00am start and 10:00am we had just 3 hits and they were impossible to hit. There was no warning bounce; just sprang off the clip in one go and by the time I reached the rod they were gone.
Decided to drop one lure to 85’ and finally just after 10:00am made contact with a conventional hit and boated a little unclipped of 5lb. We knew it was not going to be a good day, so we kept it.
Another hour went by with another two missed hits. Tried a flasher/ herring spoon combo for 30 minutes but nothing on that at all. Replaced that with a dodger/hootchie again and dropped to 100’ and made contact once more and brought a second 5lb unclipped to the boat.
That was all we had except for one long line release just as we were packing up after lunch. I though it must be the rain last week chasing them away, but there are two posts above for yesterday and it appears to have been great.
At the Sunny Shores dock another guy said it was dead slow for them as well, with a few impossible hits like ours. They released just 6 unclipped as they were all too small. So I don’t think it was just us!!
Unfortunately it was the slowest early October day we have experienced. Lines in the water at 8:00am and we trolled back and forth between 250’ and 550’ of water, sometimes with “the gang” and sometimes on our own. Fished hootchies behind dodgers between 45’ and 65’ like Profisher and others reported last week.
Between our 8:00am start and 10:00am we had just 3 hits and they were impossible to hit. There was no warning bounce; just sprang off the clip in one go and by the time I reached the rod they were gone.
Decided to drop one lure to 85’ and finally just after 10:00am made contact with a conventional hit and boated a little unclipped of 5lb. We knew it was not going to be a good day, so we kept it.
Another hour went by with another two missed hits. Tried a flasher/ herring spoon combo for 30 minutes but nothing on that at all. Replaced that with a dodger/hootchie again and dropped to 100’ and made contact once more and brought a second 5lb unclipped to the boat.
That was all we had except for one long line release just as we were packing up after lunch. I though it must be the rain last week chasing them away, but there are two posts above for yesterday and it appears to have been great.
At the Sunny Shores dock another guy said it was dead slow for them as well, with a few impossible hits like ours. They released just 6 unclipped as they were all too small. So I don’t think it was just us!!