I love watching the Osprey nests all they way from Henefer to RP. Tough birds sitting over thier young in hail storms or heat domes. But watching them hunt is a real treat. Glad the perch behaved i have a video dropping tonight for RP but is was a week or so ago. Big ones are getting harder to find from the shore. I expect the heat is driving them down a bit past my cast range again.
Glad ya got out there, sounds like a fun day for sure! That baby perch looks to be about minnow sized. was any lure color better than another?
any smallies caught hunting the perch ? the last 3 or 4 times up there we were getting nice smallies , 12" -15" , around the perch....haven't been up there in a couple weeks and looking to go tomorrow but if the perch have gone deep i would assume the smallies have followed .
Thank for the report! I'm new to the forum and been wanting to learn more from everyone here to get on some walleyes and perch this year on my kayak. I've fished Rockport plenty before but usually head north from the boat ramp. Do you mind sharing where approximately this "perch point" is at? Thanks in advance.
(08-07-2024, 02:55 PM)TubeDude Wrote: [ -> ] (08-07-2024, 02:02 PM)luan87us Wrote: [ -> ]Thank for the report! I'm new to the forum and been wanting to learn more from everyone here to get on some walleyes and perch this year on my kayak. I've fished Rockport plenty before but usually head north from the boat ramp. Do you mind sharing where approximately this "perch point" is at? Thanks in advance.
Rockport is pretty much like all of our lakes. Some spots are usually pretty good. While others are hot only for a brief time each year...depending on water levels, water temps, etc. Helps to have fished them a bunch of times over several full years of changing conditions.
I have usually had good luck fishing the shoreline to the north mainly in the low water fall conditions But on any given day you can find pockets of fish almost anywhere. This time of year...and with higher water...I usually do better either going south...from Perch Point to the inlet...or going across the lake and fishing the steep rocky shoreline below the road. Attaching a map with X marks the spot (perch point). Not worried about it being overrun and fished out. Could never happen on a perch-rich pond like Rockport. But it might generate a few more tangler visits. If it gets crowed, just keep prospecting along the shoreline to the south. Almost always fish along there...but sometimes at varying depths. And if you throw some big plastics along that shoreline there are usually some good smallies too. Think Ned rigs.
Lots of those striped devil’s in RP, they need to be thinned out and put in hot oil.
Went there last Fri looking for some four year old Kokes.
Was setting back a silver dodger/pink squid combo about 40’ behind boat in 91’ water.
Right when putting line in clip something grabbed my squid.
Reeled in about a 6” Perch.
Very hungry…..and lost.
(08-07-2024, 02:55 PM)TubeDude Wrote: [ -> ] (08-07-2024, 02:02 PM)luan87us Wrote: [ -> ]Thank for the report! I'm new to the forum and been wanting to learn more from everyone here to get on some walleyes and perch this year on my kayak. I've fished Rockport plenty before but usually head north from the boat ramp. Do you mind sharing where approximately this "perch point" is at? Thanks in advance.
Rockport is pretty much like all of our lakes. Some spots are usually pretty good. While others are hot only for a brief time each year...depending on water levels, water temps, etc. Helps to have fished them a bunch of times over several full years of changing conditions.
I have usually had good luck fishing the shoreline to the north mainly in the low water fall conditions But on any given day you can find pockets of fish almost anywhere. This time of year...and with higher water...I usually do better either going south...from Perch Point to the inlet...or going across the lake and fishing the steep rocky shoreline below the road. Attaching a map with X marks the spot (perch point). Not worried about it being overrun and fished out. Could never happen on a perch-rich pond like Rockport. But it might generate a few more tangler visits. If it gets crowed, just keep prospecting along the shoreline to the south. Almost always fish along there...but sometimes at varying depths. And if you throw some big plastics along that shoreline there are usually some good smallies too. Think Ned rigs.
Thank you for sharing that map. I have a lot of luck with the smallies there over the years (caught my pb smallies there) but never catch any other species there from the kayak. I'll hopefully be able to come up this weekend and give your advices a try. Just barely got a Lowrance hook reveal 7x unit set up with my kayak.
(08-07-2024, 11:32 PM)TubeDude Wrote: [ -> ] (08-07-2024, 10:28 PM)chubby chaser Wrote: [ -> ]Im curious, for a "sweetener" have you ever tried using the gulp maggots? I wonder if they would attract perch as good as a worm?
I haven't ever tried the maggots, but I have caught a lot of perch on the small Gulp minnows...1" or so. Have also caught some on larger 3" Gulp minnows while fishing for other species. And a small piece of perch meat is usually well received...and stays on the hook better than crawlers. I suspect that anything with a bit of the right kind of smell will get munched.
(08-07-2024, 11:18 PM)MrShane Wrote: [ -> ]Lots of those striped devil’s in RP, they need to be thinned out and put in hot oil.
Went there last Fri looking for some four year old Kokes.
Was setting back a silver dodger/pink squid combo about 40’ behind boat in 91’ water.
Right when putting line in clip something grabbed my squid.
Reeled in about a 6” Perch.
Very hungry…..and lost.
Definitely a "sustainable" population in that pond. Like most perch waters of the past, when there is a lot of bigger perch they produce lots of babies...and the bigger ones feed on their own young. Almost becomes a biological perpetual motion machine.
In the glory days of Yuba there was no other forage base in the lake except the young of the year perch. And the bigguns were able to spawn enough each year to feed all of the predators...perch, walleyes, pike, and catfish. But as soon as there was a big drought...right after the year 2000...water levels dropped and there was no perch spawn. And the whole lake died.
Doubt we will ever see that in Rockport, but who knows. Both Starvation and Jordanelle had big perch dieoffs and the fish populations plummeted. And once the smallies began eating up all the baby perch in Deer Creek before they could get any size that lake took a nosedive too. Still some good fishing but not like the good old days.
Now if DWR could only come up with a cross between perch and kokes....
I am old enough to have taken advantage of the Perch boom in all those lakes you mentioned, even Yuba.
I have not taken advantage of Willard, blame it on Goose season.
(08-08-2024, 11:41 AM)TubeDude Wrote: [ -> ] (08-08-2024, 04:45 AM)MrShane Wrote: [ -> ]I am old enough to have taken advantage of the Perch boom in all those lakes you mentioned, even Yuba.
I have not taken advantage of Willard, blame it on Goose season.
I'm surprised. I know you to be a serious perch jerker...and also a prodigious shooter of fowl and fauna. But I can't believe you have completely avoided the ever more popular fall perchin' at Willard...just to subject yourself to the vicissitudes of Utah goosin'. With the "average" perch from Willard coming in around 11-12", and some getting over 15", it is the closest we are likely to get in Utah of matching the glory days of Yuba. And Willard is closer.
It has been awhile since we have ganged up on the fishies together. But if you are up to it, I will lower my standards and get in your boat with you again this fall for a personal introduction to some of Willards "tiger fish".
In case you missed this when I posted it a while back, I am attaching one of my PDF writeups on the subject. I also put up a video on this subject. WILLARD PERCH VIDEO
I have read it and it makes me feel warm and fuzzy.
The only reason I have not been before is because of my disease of wanting to lay in the snow and ice for hours waiting for a flock of Honkers to descend on me low and slow.
I would be privileged to go to Willard this fall with you, what is your favorite week to go?
I don’t winterize my boat so it can be as late as you want.
I will even throw in a heater for our fingertips if it is late as I think you like to go.
Sorry I did not get you up to DC.
My wife and I have lost 3 out of the 4 of our parents in last 16 months with 2 of them being mine.
I am their executor and I can’t believe how much paperwork still needed to be completed for months and months after their passing.
I have an Elk hunt next week and that is my only big game tag for the year so let’s get this date on the calendar and I will make it happen!
(08-10-2024, 03:09 PM)TubeDude Wrote: [ -> ] (08-10-2024, 02:01 PM)MrShane Wrote: [ -> ]I have read it and it makes me feel warm and fuzzy.
The only reason I have not been before is because of my disease of wanting to lay in the snow and ice for hours waiting for a flock of Honkers to descend on me low and slow.
I would be privileged to go to Willard this fall with you, what is your favorite week to go?
I don’t winterize my boat so it can be as late as you want.
I will even throw in a heater for our fingertips if it is late as I think you like to go.
Sorry I did not get you up to DC.
My wife and I have lost 3 out of the 4 of our parents in last 16 months with 2 of them being mine.
I am their executor and I can’t believe how much paperwork still needed to be completed for months and months after their passing.
I have an Elk hunt next week and that is my only big game tag for the year so let’s get this date on the calendar and I will make it happen!
As with most Utah fishing, every year seems to shape up differently...with the fish showing up more in some places than others...or preferring different lures, baits or presentations. But as a general rule, the perch start showing up by late September and usually get progressively more catchable right up until iceup...which is usually around the first week or so in December. But this last year the lake did not cap until February...and I caught perch from my float tube all through December and into January.
If we were to make any kind of advance plans, I would target somewhere around the middle of November. But whatever plans we make will be tempered with current conditions and reports from other perch jerkers. Of course, I will be conducting my own research throughout the period and should have some personal insights to help guide our final plans.
I hear ya on the aftermath of parents' passing. I moved both of my parents in with me in Arizona for the final years of their lives. Both were in bad health, with my dad being in advanced stages of Alzheimers. Endless visits to doctors and hospital stays. My dad passed in August of 2003 and my mother almost exactly one year later. They were not wealthy but there are always details to be handled and final expenses to be dealt with.
I lost my oldest son a year ago to lingering bad health. And a couple of months ago we lost a troubled granddaughter to suicide. That's tough for even a hardened old bird like me. No matter how much we think we can handle, there are always things that remind us of our own fragility and mortality.
Thankfully, there is fishing and other outdoor pursuits for therapy.
I am semi-retired so we can make it almost anytime.
Sorry about your son and granddaughter.
Nobody should have to bury a younger family member.