Available Guide

Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Darrell & Dads Family Guide Service

Phone: (509) 687-0709

Quick Links

Whatcom Lake Report
Whatcom County, WA

Photos

Details

05/08/2011
Trolling
Kokanee
Spoons
Morning
05/08/2011
3
2284

So i went out to test my new trailer on lake whatcom today to do some trout fishing. Fished for kokanee with dick nites on the surface, caught a bunch, they were jumping all over, 2 hit the side of the boat, one almost jumped in the boat, but dang theyre small 8 inches at best. not what im looking for, so i decided to drop down deep for some C&R on cutthroat see if i couldnt get a few 20+ inchers which i have done in the past. Used cutt plug herring or a dodger and worm, wasnt great suprisingly. Landed 4, biggest 16 inches, and missed 5 strikes, one strike looked like a really nice fish. Only got one picture below of a 15 incher with a HUGE eyeball. Theyre all pretty skinny in there. Dropped down on some ledges and got as few nice smallies with plastics too, one about 3-4lbs, not a bass fan tho, so no pics.


Comments

The Quadfather
5/8/2011 10:58:00 PM
Yeah, that eyeball is a little strange I'd say.
MrLucky
5/9/2011 10:06:00 AM
While not technically illegal, targeting cutthroat in Whatcom is not cool, especially with bait, since a fish that swallows the hook is less likely to survive.
RiverChromeGS
5/9/2011 11:56:00 AM
I have never had a salmon or trout swallow a herring while trolled, in all the years i have fished. I have caught 5 pound cutts in washington lake with cuttplugs and never once had a mortally hooked fish. With that said, why is targeting them not cool? how is it any "less cool" than targeting native steelhead for Catch and Release? I have had days where i catch 30 of these cutts a day in here, there is no shortage of the population now that it is closed for retention. There is nothing wrong with targeting fish you wish to release, unless you mortally wound them with bait (such as powerbait fishing). I can fish for whatever i want if it is legal to do so, and is not harming to population in any way. Not once have i ever killed a whatcom lake cutthroat. Other than this one i even dont even take them out of the knotless net. had to get a pic of his eyeball on this one tho. lol
snake7676
5/9/2011 4:39:00 PM
Nice cutt !
baconlover
5/9/2011 6:00:00 PM
this lake used to be no fishing at all for cuthroats, i take it as a sign of the recovering population if its now a c&r fishery. Nice fish
Matt
5/9/2011 9:02:00 PM
The enlarged eyeball is likely a result of barotrauma from the fish being pulled from deep water rapidly. The damage caused to the internal organs and tissue structure of fish that have experienced severe baurotrama is irreversible and very often times fatal. Targeting a fish species that must be released is illegal as far as I know, if a river says "release chinook", or "release chum" you cannot specifically target those fish HOWEVER if those fish are caught INCIDENTALLY fishing for other species they must be released (without removing them from the water).

Nonetheless, targeting cutthroat in Lake Whatcom is a big no-no, and removing them from the water is a less than idea situation for these fish, this population is very fragile.

Thanks for the report.
MotoBoat
5/10/2011 12:58:00 PM
Not disputing the information given by Matt. Nor knowing at what depth "barotrauma" occurs in fish. Another option is, holdover trout have large eyeballs when compared to first year planted ones. That information was passed along from a WDFW fish biologis when inspecting a stringer of freshly caught trout.
earchcobber
5/10/2011 1:19:00 PM
that fish freaks me out.
RiverChromeGS
5/12/2011 6:33:00 PM
haha it freaked me out too. I know exactly what your talking about matt, because i have caught perch and other fish around here that this happened too, but the funny thing is that this fish was actually caught on the surface with a spoon, it just had a wacked out eyeball. haha
dmangler69
5/27/2011 1:00:00 PM
Hard to tell, but which one is the fish?
Leave a Comment:

Available Guide

Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Darrell & Dads Family Guide Service

Phone: (509) 687-0709