Went higher in altitude 5/15 - 5/16/2024

Starman77

Life of the Party
Forum Supporter
With all the hot weather in central WA this week, I decided to go higher in altitude to find cooler weather and water. The lake I fished had winter-killed in 2022 - 2023, so I wasn't sure what I'd find, although I knew that the lake had been stocked after the winter-kill with 13 to 14 inchers, because that was all I hooked last spring. I hoped that with the milder winter this year those fish would have survived and grown larger. I fished this lake on Wed afternoon/evening and on Thursday morning to early afternoon before quitting due to the wind. The highs were around 72 degrees, and the water temperature was 59 to 60 degrees.

20240516_073342 p.jpg

The wind was ferocious most of the time, but early Thursday morning, it was calm. I was surprised to see something out in the lake, and it turned out to be a moose swimming the length of the lake:

20240516_065158 cropped.jpg

The moose could have easily walked around this small lake, so why it was swimming was a mystery to me. Even with its spindly legs, it was making pretty good speed (as you can tell from the wake), and when it got out on shore, it shook itself three times like a big dog. Very cool! I've seen moose in BC and Alaska, but I think this is the first time I've seen a moose in WA. Also saw 3 deer at the lake.

Fish Size Distribution Chart 2024-05-16.jpg

Those 13 to 14 inchers I was catching last spring after the winter-kill had grown pretty nicely to be the 17 to 19 inchers, as indicated in my chart above (the fish were all measured in my Measure Net, from the tip of the nose to the fork in the tail). The rainbows were all very silvery, well-fed, good fighters and about half were jumpers. Here's a photo of one of the 19 inchers that jumped a half-dozen times (note the small head size relative to the body, suggesting it is eating quite well):

IMGP6005.JPG

About 75% of the hits came on my water boatman pattern and the rest on a scud imitation, but I don't think the particular fly pattern makes much of a difference. Getting the depth and retrieve style right are much more important than fly selection.

A number of other small lakes in that area also winter-killed in 2022 - 2023, so I'm interested in trying those lakes to see if they have recovered equally well as this lake.

Rex
 
Rex -
Nice trout!!! How cool to see a moose swimming across the lake! A friend of mine used to live on Blue Lake (which one? The one in the Sun Lakes chain.), he had a video of a moose swimming across Blue Lake towards the west shore.
 
Moose are cool animals and huge! They are also fast. Luv to see them except when they charge you.

Don't ask me how I know this from a couple of experiences on Rock Creek.

Give them a wide berth when you encounter them.
 
I had a huge bull chase me to shore in a local lake about 10 years ago. Kicking my ass off in a float tube I was no match for his speed. Fortunately I had just enough lead to beat him to the bank...
The bull swam out in the lake after you?
 
Moose are cool animals and huge! They are also fast. Luv to see them except when they charge you.

Don't ask me how I know this from a couple of experiences on Rock Creek.

Give them a wide berth when you encounter them.
We came across this guy driving on the Rock Creek road a few years back. So glad we were still in the truck driving and not on the creek fishing yet. He was ornery and charged at the front of the truck, we were lucky he didn't actually connect and spear the grill and radiator.

I had a cell phone video at one time but can't seem to find it now.
 

Attachments

  • Moose Pic1.jpg
    Moose Pic1.jpg
    475.4 KB · Views: 7
As a Maine transplant with lots of time spent in "Moose Alley"....otherwise known as Oquossoc....
saw the strangest thing a few years ago.
The wife and I took a motorcycle ride from Walla Walla up to Steptoe Butte.
On the way home coming back down 195 across the Palouse, we both did a double-take.....
A cow was streaking across a freshly plowed field.
But that cow just didn't look right.....
the double-take revealed a large cow moose running across the Palouse, far from the nearest forest or water source.
We chatted the whole way home about the children's book we could write about the Moose on the Loose in the Palouse.
 
Oh, and I lost a side mirror off off the jeep just north of Qquossoc coming out of the logging roads on the way back the Rangeley Lodge to a moose. Can't see those things at all after dark on the blacktop where they come out of the woods to graze on the side of the road.
For moose and spring fed lake brook trout fishing, that area can't be beat.
 
Back
Top