07-06-2021, 04:57 PM
Because we had tickets for a tour of Lehman Caves on Saturday July 3, I hauled my canoe out to Pruess Lake late in the afternoon on Friday July 2 in hopes of 1) catching a Sacramento perch and 2) exploring the lake. Well, no luck on the 1st goal, as the only fish we enticed to bite in about 2 hours of fishing was a chub. As far as goal #2, a stiff breeze from the south made exploration difficult. We were able to drive down close to the water's edge and launched from the north end.
So here's what we did and discovered:
So here's what we did and discovered:
- We fished the north half of the lake, by rowing out and anchoring, then drifting back a hundred feet at a time, re-anchoring, etc..
- The lake was about 3.5 deep at the deepest, but often shallower (it was never deeper than the length of our paddles).
- The bottom of the lake is quite soft (clay) and we didn't observe any vegetation where we were.
- With the wind blowing, the water was quite murky.
- We didn't see any fish surfacing or jumping.
- The lone chub was caught by jigging a nub of nightcrawler on a jig head right next to the canoe.
- I used my Ice 35 flasher to check depths and observe fish action. It worked fine when we were anchored, but the shallowness of the lake made readings difficult. I did observe a few other fish besides the one chub we caught.
- We had 1 or 2 other bites, all real light.
- We also fished with a bubble/bobber, with about 18-24" of line below it, terminating with a small jig tipped with nightcrawler or a small piece of chub. We had no observed action when casting and retrieving these rigs or when casting and letting them sit.
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j.o.a.t.m.o.n.
jack of all tackle, master of none
j.o.a.t.m.o.n.
jack of all tackle, master of none