
It had been a tough morning. The kokanee bite of the week before, when two anglers fishing with Monte Smith of Gold Country Sportfishing had caught 9 kokanee in the 15 to 16 inch range and one big holdover rainbow, had shut down.
"I don’t know where the kokanee have gone," said Smith. "In the Kokanee Power Derby on Saturday, fishing was very tough, and some people didn’t hook any fish. But that was during a full moon."
We trolled with a variety of Micro Hoochies, tipped with Pautzke-scented corn, behind Vance’s Dodgers, at a variety of depths from 45 to 85 feet, but the fish didn’t want to bite.
After not hooking any kokanee all morning, Smith decided to target rainbows in the main body of the lake using his homemade spoons, Chucker-Ts, at around 40 feet deep.
At first, none of the rainbows wanted to play either. Then one of the rods dipped and line began pulling off the reel. I picked up the rod, a little nervous about it because we hadn’t boated a fish yet that day and I was afraid of losing it.
After I grabbed the rod, the fish took off on a long run, pulling lots of line off the Shimano reel with a series of head shakes. "This feels like a salmon," I told Smith.
As the fish kept running, it suddenly made a leap. "It looked like a salmon or big holdover rainbow," I told him.
I carefully and slowly worked the fish toward the boat. As usual with a big salmon, the fish made a last run as I got it near the boat. However, it was tiring, and I slowly reeled the fish to the surface and Smith netted it. It was a big, fat silvery king measuring 24-3/4 inches long and weighing.