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TR-Sliver Lake Washington
On the water at the crack of dawn - 10am. My companion for the outing is a
professional musician and that is as early as it gets. We rented a motor boat and the lady was apologetic about the current fishing conditions - not a good sign. The weather is hot, the water 69 degrees, the sky is clear and we can see Mt. St. Helens with no puff of smoke this morning. I line up my 5wt temple fork, put on a chartreuse popper and head for the canals. I tie up a spinner bait for my friend and he starts working the lily pad borders and I cast underneath an overhanging tree. As I work the shore line I notice fish slurping something on the surface under a tree. It make a spectacular cast, well spectacular for me anyway, and my popper disappears. I can tell by the take that it is too big for a sunfish so I assume it is a bass. The fish takes out line and charges under the boat. After a few minutes I work him to the surface - not a bass - a grass carp. Maybe 6 pounds but fought bigger and better than his size. Boated and released the carp. The sterilized carp, as I learned later, were planted to eat back the vegetation that is choking this fishery. Anyway, I abandon my popper and put on a girdle fly, like the one I tied for this last swap and I landed an 8" bass and that was all the fish activity for the day. My friend never caught anything, even though I concentrated on helping him the rest of the afternoon. Got a little sunburned and then fretted whether or not to post this TR, but decided it might be OK to add to the Wayne affect even if it wasn't much of a report. Chris |
Padishar Creel wrote: Got a little sunburned and then fretted whether or not to post this TR, but decided it might be OK to add to the Wayne affect even if it wasn't much of a report. And Wayne appreciates the report. Glad you got out. Thanks |
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