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Strawberry - June 12th
#1
I made a post on March 18,2014, in it I stated that I thought this was going to be great year for the kokanee at Strawberry because so many were being pulled through the ice. I was right, this has been a phenomenal spring at the Berry so far & should only get better.

I had a little insomnia today , so I thought I might as well get up and go fishing. I get up at 3:00 a.m. and I am on the water at 5:30 a.m. For the first 45 minutes, I caught a lot of small cutts and rainbows. Around 6:15 a.m. the kokes started biting and it was very good fishing for the next 3 hours. I boated somewhere between 25 and 30 fish (my counter failed me today). I hooked many more that came off on the way to the boat. Out of the total I caught approximately 15 kokes, and the balance slot cutts and some nice fat rainbows. I kept the 4 kokes (these 4 are the nicest limit of kokes I have kept out of Strawberry over the past 10 years); the biggest on the left was 19-inches (2 lbs 4oz), the other three were over 2 lbs each (well over 8 lbs of fresh salmon).

I am fishing with downriggers. I started out with a depth of 15 feet and the preferred color was pink for the first couple of hours and transitioned to white and a depth of 45 feet as the day went on. Overall the bigger fish were caught at a depth between 35 and 45 feet.

I took a Gopro camera with me and attached it to the downrigger. I have some great footage I hope to attach a small sampling to this post. I think I have learned a few things by watching over 2 hours of underwater video. I am a beginner at this, so the video is very crude.

Let me explain what you are going to see in the video for those that do not fish with downriggers. The wire with the black clip is the downrigger release. Behind it is an orange bead. I generally use cheater hooks when fishing with downriggers. This bead helps me from getting the cheater hook tangled with the main line hook when fishing and reeling lines back in. Unfortunately the business end of the setup is the dodger and the squid/spinner at the end and the furthest away from the camera lens. For the most part the hook is approximately 8 feet behind the camera. Next time out, I am going to shorten this distance & hopefully get some better footage. The whining noise you hear is either my trolling motor or the downrigger wire cutting the water (or both) - I am not sure. I never realized there was so much noise under the water and it does not seem to affect the fish.

At the beginning of the video I am using a RMT dodger that I purchased at the ISE. I think it was a special promotion from the show. I have not seen this dodger in the stores. It is two toned (bahama mama & blue glow??) and a custom squid I made. At the end of the video, I am using a Kokanee Creek dodger (silver streak) and a Radical Glow spinner (UV hot purple). This RG spinner was extremely hot for over an hour. You would hook up within 2 minutes of getting your spinner to depth. Overall, any pink squid worked well first thing.

Not sure what DWR did to their kokanee stocking program, I love the change & this is going to be a banner year. My best kokanee fishing at Strawberry has been the best in July in years past.

I intentionally left the exact location of where I was fishing out. Last time I provided the location, there were hundreds of boats & fished out within days.
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#2
GREAT report. I have never fished with a downrigger before, but I'm contemplating hooking one up to my smaller pontoon boat just to give it a go.Ideally, I'll win the boat from the tagged fish contest at strawberry and just use that. [Smile]

How are you attaching the GoPro and keeping it pointed in the right direction?

Did you fry, smoke, or grill those Kokes?
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#3
I have a friend that has a small pontoon kick boat & he attached a manual crank down rigger to it and has done very well. I say go for it - there is nothing like fishing with downriggers. Once you try it, you will be hooked.

I purchased a "Protroll" mount for the Gopro that attaches to the downrigger line, just above the ball.

I like my kokes BBQ'd and a combination fry & bake. They are the best. I have tried smoking them in the past & did not really like it. I think the meat is a little soft for me this way.
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#4
Awesome video, really cool to watch - thanks for posting that.
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#5
Thats great video. Those GoPros in the hands imaginative folks as yourself, are really changing our view of the world and so much that we do. Thanks for sharing. I think I need a GoPro!!

I spent 6/11 and 6/12 up at the Berry. Fishing was great. We had real good success catching fatty Rainbows and some nice cuts with popgear/worm. I dragged a pink squid and dodger on my lead core but only caught 1 cut with it. We mostly fished west side of lake (hawes point to mudcreek.
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#6
Awesome video, appreciate you taking the time to get that footage. It's fascinating how many fish are initially attracted to the lure, inspect it, but don't bite. I have a GoPro as well - excited to capture some underwater footage of my own.
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#7
watching your video and seeing the numbers that did not strike make me think one could locate the fish then jig for them as one does ice fishing. Have you tried that? Maybe a smaller jig would do the trick. What does it matter if you're catching them trolling, right?

Just a thought,
RJ
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#8
I know folks that have jigged for kokes at FG in the past & were successful. I think the small number of fish at strawberry in the past would have made this difficult. However, this year may be different and worth a try. There were many large schools I trolled through, this was just a small sampling. They used a big heavy lead jig that was diamond shaped with a treble hook on the bottom - I forget what they were called.

I have caught kokes through the ice at Strawberry with a "Forage mini jig". A school swam below me for about 15 minutes - it was very fast action. II had a medium sized tube jig & getting hits light crazy. Once a put the mini jig on, I was able to put a few on the ice.

If you can find a school, I think it would definitely be worth trying a jig.
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#9
[quote OCF]I know folks that have jigged for kokes at FG in the past & were successful. I think the small number of fish at strawberry in the past would have made this difficult. However, this year may be different and worth a try. There were many large schools I trolled through, this was just a small sampling. They used a big heavy lead jig that was diamond shaped with a treble hook on the bottom - I forget what they were called.[/quote]

"Buzz Bombs"


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#10
Correct - buzz bombs!
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#11
I'll have to try that. I have downriggers and I have a GoPro but I haven't been brave enough to put it underwater yet! Great footage, I hope you'll give us some more.
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#12
I made this mount for my Go Pro
I like to let out more than 8 ft of line from the ball
but if you got 15 Kokes that close That is great.
I think the noise comes from the downrigger
If you check the Voltge on the down rigger wire and if it is the right votlage fish will come to the wire..
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#13
Thanks - it was a post this past winter, from you or someone else with a similar home made Gopro mount, that got me interested in taking the underwater video.

If you have any tips on taking underwater video, I would be interested. I am at the very beginning of the learning curve.
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#14
I have posted that picture before.
I put some videos on face book.
but I cant remember the face book address now or password I used
I think your pictures are better than mine I was using a older gopro
I'm new at this also.
I wanted to put it down to check out lake trout but the deeper you go you lose light

also I put a lake troll (Flashers) and a lure with no hook on the ball
and watch them go after it then turn around and go after my fishing line with a real lure and hook.
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#15
Very cool video. Amazing how many fish are sitting there following the lure.

Question. I am new to this koke fishing, I have a brother in law in Oregon that fishes for kokes up there a lot and uses a kernel of white corn on the squid that he is dragging. I am just wondering if that is legal to do here in Utah. If not do you guys tip your presentation with anything?
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#16
If I understand the proclamation correctly - you can not use corn as bait in the state of Utah.

I do tip the last hook on the squid with a single Berkley white maggot. It does make a difference!
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#17
Buzz Bombs.....or.... Snaggers Specials!
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