
By Cal Kellogg
Rain had fallen overnight and it was chilly. Both the air temperature and the water temperature hovered in the low 40’s. Fingers of fog snaked through the pines on the hillsides above the lake and the surface was dotted with leaves, pine needles and twigs due to a rapidly rising water level. Yet the water itself was nearly crystal clear.
The kayak cut through the water silently and the Lowrance unit to my right indicated a speed of 1.8 mph. On the portside a trolling fly was working off my hybrid leadcore rig at 5 feet deep. A copper Trigger Spoon Jr. was swimming just under the surface on the starboard side on a spinning rod rigged with 8-pound test.
Clearing the cove, I turned up the lake and was just thinking that I was surprised I hadn’t had a bite when the trolling fly got hit, hit again and then hooked a fish. Snatching the rod from the holder I made a crank or two on the reel and felt the fish come off, but I didn’t have time to feel any disappointment.
Glancing down I was shocked to see the spinning rod buried and bucking against the fight of a determined fish. Double hookup! Putting the leadcore rod back into its holder with my left hand, I grabbed the spinning rod with my right and pedaled forward to keep the kayak from spinning around and tangling my world.
The trout put up a strong fight with lots of head shaking, but it was no match for the flex of the spinning rod and I soon had the rainbow beside the kayak. The trout was chrome bright and contrasted brilliantly against the background of the water. I’d forgotten my net, but the trout looked solidly hooked so I slid it up towards the nose of the kayak and lifted it aboard. The rainbow was a chunky planter that measured about 16 inches long. What a way to kick off the trout season!
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