06-05-2007, 01:01 PM
[cool][#0000ff]After 4 years of cyber friendship, I finally got to meet BFTer Lloyd Eldredge yesterday. We finally ran out of excuses for not fishing together and joined up with kentofnsl for a combo tubing and boating excursion on Huntington. [/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]Lloyd and Kent launched the PortaBote and I fished from my tube (of course). Kent was not too pleased with Lloyds reference to his "pride and joy" as a "Porta Potty". And so the day began.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]Air temp was about 50 and the water temp at launch was 54...later warming to about 57. The water has come up a lot but is still about 10 feet from high water...and the snow pack is just about gone. No visible runoff coming in. [/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]The "summer pattern" seems to be setting in on Huntington. Lots of small fish rising, to take the carpet of tiny insects on the early morning water. Didn't see any large fish hit the surface all day. And, a high percentage of the fish we saw on sonar were suspended at middepth, throughout the lake. Usually an indicator of neutral and non-feeding fish.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]That turned out to be the case for all of us. Trolling or retrieving spinners or other lures did not produce. Kent and Lloyd found a short-lived "boil" next to shore right after we got on the water, and got a few small fish on lures before it ended. But the rest of the day was tough fishing.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]I went through a variety of small jigs and spinners, getting only a few light bites for the first hour. I finally kicked my way into one of my favorite areas and found some fish on the bottom in about 20 - 24 feet of water. I began vertical jigging with several colors of small jigs, tipped with either crawler or small redside shiners. Lots of light hits and did score a few 10" -13" tiger trout. They are sure not as pretty in the summer as they are later in the fall.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]The morning started out glassy calm, but by 9 a steady west breeze was blowing (standard on Huntington) and I had to keep kicking to maintain position. After switching to a favorite chartreuse roadrunner jig, tipped with half a minnow, I began getting more hits...and hooked several larger tigers. At least three of them were over 16", and all went through the same routine. Chomp, fight hard all the way to the surface, run a few yards away from me, jump and spit the jig. I don't think any other trout fights harder for their size than Huntington tigers. [/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]A little later, Lloyd was awakened from an afternoon snooze in the boat by an 18" tiger that slammed one of those little chartreuse jigs and beat him up pretty good before agreeing to be netted and put on the stringer. That fish got top honors for the day. Good on ya, Lloyd.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]We all caught a few of the smaller fish, and they were fun, but the bite was not nearly what it is during cold water times. Part of the reason is that the insect hatches sustain the fish through the summer and they are not quite so desperate for food. A couple I kept for the pan yesterday were so stuffed with tiny black bugs that it is a wonder they even bothered to smack my jigs. Probably an instictive reaction to the color and flash of the little roadrunners. I know I missed a lot more than I stuck...and I sure saw a lot more on the sonar than I got hits.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]We adjourned from Huntington about mid afternoon, in favor of taking a brief shot at Electric Lake...for cutts and minnows. Just as we got there, the building clouds let loose with a blast of wind and a spatter of rain. The west end of E Lake chopped up and the shoreline turned muddy. No minnows to be seen and only got two among three traps in over an hour. Also, no bites for Kent or Lloyd, who fished while I worked the banks with the minnow traps.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]Great day on the water with two good friends. [/#0000ff]
[signature]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]Lloyd and Kent launched the PortaBote and I fished from my tube (of course). Kent was not too pleased with Lloyds reference to his "pride and joy" as a "Porta Potty". And so the day began.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]Air temp was about 50 and the water temp at launch was 54...later warming to about 57. The water has come up a lot but is still about 10 feet from high water...and the snow pack is just about gone. No visible runoff coming in. [/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]The "summer pattern" seems to be setting in on Huntington. Lots of small fish rising, to take the carpet of tiny insects on the early morning water. Didn't see any large fish hit the surface all day. And, a high percentage of the fish we saw on sonar were suspended at middepth, throughout the lake. Usually an indicator of neutral and non-feeding fish.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]That turned out to be the case for all of us. Trolling or retrieving spinners or other lures did not produce. Kent and Lloyd found a short-lived "boil" next to shore right after we got on the water, and got a few small fish on lures before it ended. But the rest of the day was tough fishing.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]I went through a variety of small jigs and spinners, getting only a few light bites for the first hour. I finally kicked my way into one of my favorite areas and found some fish on the bottom in about 20 - 24 feet of water. I began vertical jigging with several colors of small jigs, tipped with either crawler or small redside shiners. Lots of light hits and did score a few 10" -13" tiger trout. They are sure not as pretty in the summer as they are later in the fall.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]The morning started out glassy calm, but by 9 a steady west breeze was blowing (standard on Huntington) and I had to keep kicking to maintain position. After switching to a favorite chartreuse roadrunner jig, tipped with half a minnow, I began getting more hits...and hooked several larger tigers. At least three of them were over 16", and all went through the same routine. Chomp, fight hard all the way to the surface, run a few yards away from me, jump and spit the jig. I don't think any other trout fights harder for their size than Huntington tigers. [/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]A little later, Lloyd was awakened from an afternoon snooze in the boat by an 18" tiger that slammed one of those little chartreuse jigs and beat him up pretty good before agreeing to be netted and put on the stringer. That fish got top honors for the day. Good on ya, Lloyd.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]We all caught a few of the smaller fish, and they were fun, but the bite was not nearly what it is during cold water times. Part of the reason is that the insect hatches sustain the fish through the summer and they are not quite so desperate for food. A couple I kept for the pan yesterday were so stuffed with tiny black bugs that it is a wonder they even bothered to smack my jigs. Probably an instictive reaction to the color and flash of the little roadrunners. I know I missed a lot more than I stuck...and I sure saw a lot more on the sonar than I got hits.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]We adjourned from Huntington about mid afternoon, in favor of taking a brief shot at Electric Lake...for cutts and minnows. Just as we got there, the building clouds let loose with a blast of wind and a spatter of rain. The west end of E Lake chopped up and the shoreline turned muddy. No minnows to be seen and only got two among three traps in over an hour. Also, no bites for Kent or Lloyd, who fished while I worked the banks with the minnow traps.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]Great day on the water with two good friends. [/#0000ff]
[signature]