06-23-2024, 04:11 PM
The past 4 weeks my fishing buddy and I spent our Saturdays at Starvation (our first year doing this). We went to basically the same place up Rabbit Gulch and had very successful days catching Rainbow trout. We anchored in locations where the water was 14-22 feet deep and used Powerbait. I caught my personal best Rainbow at just under 23 inches and 4.3 pounds on one trip. The water temp on all these trips was below 60 degrees. Anywhere from 53 to 58 degrees. Here's a video I made of our second trip. https://youtu.be/qlOxUPCkzg4 You can find a couple more Starvation videos on my channel OutFishing13.
So we hit it again for the 5th trip and were sorely disappointed on the showing of rainbows. We caught 1 within 5 minutes of anchoring up, but then with nothing biting we started jigging and watching our fish finder. We saw lots of bait balls of new minnows and we jigged the bottom with just a worm and picked up some decent sized yellow perch and juvenile walleye, which we kept to thin the herd. That was in 15 feet of water and the water temp was 65 to 66 degrees.
We moved once to deeper water to see if we could locate our rainbows, but nothing after 6 hours. Just more Jr. walleye and lots of perch. We were amazed at the quantity of perch willing to take a worm jigged off the bottom. Lots of 4-5 inchers and we kept the nicer big ones that were 10 inches or so.
So the question for those much more familiar with Starvation. Where did the trout go?? We caught them last week and this week we landed two. One (14 inches) when we anchored and one (14 inches) trolling back to the docks with a flicker shad right by the buoys.
Do you have to give up on the rainbows in the summer months?
Thanks for any tips.
Matthew
So we hit it again for the 5th trip and were sorely disappointed on the showing of rainbows. We caught 1 within 5 minutes of anchoring up, but then with nothing biting we started jigging and watching our fish finder. We saw lots of bait balls of new minnows and we jigged the bottom with just a worm and picked up some decent sized yellow perch and juvenile walleye, which we kept to thin the herd. That was in 15 feet of water and the water temp was 65 to 66 degrees.
We moved once to deeper water to see if we could locate our rainbows, but nothing after 6 hours. Just more Jr. walleye and lots of perch. We were amazed at the quantity of perch willing to take a worm jigged off the bottom. Lots of 4-5 inchers and we kept the nicer big ones that were 10 inches or so.
So the question for those much more familiar with Starvation. Where did the trout go?? We caught them last week and this week we landed two. One (14 inches) when we anchored and one (14 inches) trolling back to the docks with a flicker shad right by the buoys.
Do you have to give up on the rainbows in the summer months?
Thanks for any tips.
Matthew