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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
We fished Elevenmile yesterday, and the plan was to locate ice-out lake trout and try and boat a few. We were on the water at about 6:30 a.m., and started trolling towards east bay and the dam while trying to locate lake trout. We located a few at east bay hugging bottom in 40 ft. of water, but instead of stopping, we decided to continue to troll the lake in hopes of locating a greater concentration of fish. We continued to make our way around Witcher?s Cove, up past Deer and Goose Island, and towards the bluffs, while changing hardware in order to entice a bite. We soon realized we needed to do something quick to toss the ?Skunk? out of the boat, and land some fish. It was really disappointing to see how few fish we marked on sonar through out the day.

A the bluffs, Terre and I decided to cut down the center of the lake over the channel and back towards east bay to set anchor to bottom-jig for the few lake trout we spied earlier in the day. I switched over to a black and silver minnow crank-bait on one rod, and a jointed rainbow pattern crank-bait on the other, long-lined trolled at depth of 15 to 20 ft of water and landed a bow near the bluffs, and another on the way to east bay. Once at east bay, we discovered that the lake trout had moved on; so back out to the channel we went. We continued to troll a line from the bluffs, and back towards rocky flats. Terre took a double a hit couple of seconds apart on the rod she had rigged with a minnow crank, and missed the fish. After another run back towards rocky flats, we boated another rainbow and missed a strike or two. On one of our last passes and working our way back towards, boat ramp bay, I took a hit on the jointed rainbow crank, and grabbed the rod, as the drag began to sing. This was definitely going to be the biggest fish thus far. As I reeled in about 75 feet of line, the fish went straight for the bottom, and we were thinking, oh yeah lake trout. Terre went for the net, as the fish surfaced just behind the boat long enough to let us get a quick look; rolled and threw the crank bait? gone; not huge, just a few pounds, lake trout.

We talked to several fishermen through out the day and it seemed that the average catch was about half a dozen rainbows or so. We talked to one fellow who said he landed a 13 lb. lake trout while boat fishing just after the lake opened, but wouldn?t reveal what he was using to catch it; no problem.

All in all, we had a great time, as the sun was shining, and the wind gods were good to us by providing for flat-water fishing throughout the day. I had an awesome time meeting and fishing with another board member, Terre, who is an exceptionally knowledgeable fisherperson and is all business in the hunt for fish. I was hoping to bring back some fish photos to post, but not this time. Instead here?s a pick of Terre, and Terre?s 2005 21 Ft. Sea Pro taken at Eleven Mile. This is beautiful rig, and a fully loaded fish havoc reeking machine; check it out:

Pete

<img src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y12/advancedangling/ElevenmileTerre4.bmp" alt="Image hosted by Photobucket.com">
 

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Hi Pete,

Is fish havoc reeking a good thing? What Pete didn't mention is I changed sweatshirts to get the skunk out of the boat. What worked for the boat, did not work for me. I backed up a nice skunk a weekago sunday on Chatfield (me and 5 kids) with a skunk yesterday. I did get rid of it this afternoon though, one keeper (19") at chatfield.

Mustang, we weren't there for lake trout, at least I wasn't. We knew Elevenmile is supposed to "have" a few lakers, I have not caught one there, so I have been curious, we wanted to see what was there on structure. Low and behold there were a few lake trout.

Terre
 

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There have been lakers in there for a long time,just not very many.Theres also some big splake from antero in there.Thing is,nobody ever really targets the lakers so you dont hear much about them.
 
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Fished from 8:00 till 6:00 with my wife. We were targeting pike but didn't have any luck. We threw everything in the tackle box at them, (mepps spinners, spoons, large rapalas, jigs, etc.) no luck.... we fished stoll mountain when we first arrived, then howbert point and all the coves west to cross creek...we did not even see one....we were thinking the water must be still too cold at 46 to 47 degrees. Does anybody know what temp they start to cruise the shallows and start biting?

We also tried trolling the west end with rapalas for trout but did not have any bites. We saw people catching fish from shore at suckers cove area and anchored down 40 feet off shore and threw out some bait and started getting bites on powerbait and marshmallows fished off the bottom. My wife caught a 17" bow on a marshmallow. Got a couple of nice hits on a olive pistol pete but could not get them in the boat. The wind started up so we headed up to East bay for some shelter and tried fishing for pike again, no luck, then tried corral for pike and trout ...same story.

Hey Pete, what size crank baits were you using.....how deep were you you trolling....what type of line...where you using any type of flashers?

We just got our boat last year and do not have any downriggers and are still trying to fiqure out the best way to troll elevenmile. We have tried long line tolling sometimes with a dipsy diver if they are deep and usually with flashers. We usually just throw lures all day but my arm needs a break every once in a while. Any suggestions would be helpful.
 

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Discussion Starter · #8 ·
YellowJackets,

I was using the rapala r13 floater (5 inch long) in silver and black, and  the joineted rainbow pattern as well.  I had weighted it down with several large split shots to get it to about 15-20 feet, and let out a ton of line to get way out and away from the boat.  We trolled at about 2-2.5 miles per hour. We cycled through a lot of hardware just to try and get a bite. We had spotted a few fish (large arcs on sonar) down at 40 ft crusing the lake. Our guess was that they were lakers, so Terre lowered a tandem lured weighted line down to that depth. She also continued to change up in order to entice a bite as we trolled the length of the lake, but I don't think that rod ever took a hit at that depth.

Personaly speaking, I don't well at Eleven mile when hunting for the larger trout, and haven't quite figured out how to target the Northerns yet. I either get skunked, or I catch one or two fish per trip. I don't know whether it's just me, or whether it's just that hard a lake to learn to fish.

I will be meeting up with Bigbrown towards the latter part of May to get after the Northerns at Eleven Mile and Spinney; you're welcome to join us if you'd like, just drop me an email.

Can anyone else offer Elevenmile tips?
Pete
 
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