
By Stacy Barawed
I try to text or have quick chats with my boat captains prior to fishing with them, and I can honestly say that this was the first time a guide had warned me about the possibility of being mauled to death prior to getting on the water. The plan was for Captain Chris Ditter of HeadRush Sportfishing to pull up to my motel at 4:30am so I could follow him to the boat launch for my first Mackinaw trout adventure. I was given two instructions: be ready to get a workout from reeling in some fish, and be cautious about bears coming to my car. Needless to say, I sprinted from my room to my Jeep in record time that morning.
By 4:45am I was on the dock on Lake Tahoe, unscathed. We boarded the boat in pitch darkness and headed to our first spot. Although this is Chris’s first season guiding on Lake Tahoe, he knew exactly where to find the schools. Only one other boat was on the water, and nowhere close to us…perfect!
“I hope you ’re ready for a good workout!” Chris smirked. I started to understand why as I watched him attach our lines to downriggers with 10- and 12-pound sinkers. Our spoons would remain between 4 and 10 feet from the bottom of the lake. This would be my first time using medium to medium heavy rods for trout fishing, a far cry from the light tackle I used in March for rainbow trout.
Once our lines were down, I couldn’t help but notice the readings on the reels’ line counters. 200…300…400 feet of line went out and I realized this was going to be a completely different experience than I was used to.
We began trolling at a crawl and kept our eyes peeled for subtle ticks at the tips of the rods. Within minutes I had my initial bite, and the first thing I had to learn was how to free the line from the downrigger clip.
“Reel in the