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COLUMN: Best time of year at hand for kokanee

Mike Howe | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 9 years, 4 months AGO
by Mike Howe
| September 2, 2015 9:00 PM

In his excellent book, “Kokanee — A Complete Fishing Guide,” author Dave Biser recalls his first experience with catching a kokanee.

Like many of us, his first exposure to the “silver bullets” ended with a lost fish, and there were several more hook-ups before he succeeded in landing one. But once he did, it wasn’t just the fish that got “hooked.” As he recounts his journey from that first fish forward, I see so many similarities to my own education as a kokanee angler that each time I look through the book, it is like a walk through time. And I learn and relearn many lessons.

As we approach one of the best times of the year for kokanee anglers, I recently did just that to share some of that knowledge with you.

Kokanee around the Northwest typically begin their pre-spawn activity in mid- to late August. From a simple observation of the physical condition they are in, the fattest and sassiest they have been all year, to location, feeding and behavioral changes, there are changes afoot, or perhaps “afin.”

The early warming of many area lakes this year, along with extremely high surface temps, may have some lasting effect on these fish that remains to be seen, but these fish have to spawn, so I am counting on their natural instincts to kick in no matter what the conditions.

Early morning and late evening are typically active times for these fish to feed since their forage is primarily plankton-based or at least plankton-motivated. Look for kokanee to begin to move into or at least stage nearby mouths of bays and entrances to spawning streams, especially gravel bars and shoals. If the streams don’t have enough water, those bars, shoals and humps will be where they stay until they do.

Trolling around these areas is what I like to do, using electronics to locate the schools and downriggers to reach them. Jigging can be a very effective technique as well, but I find I catch my bigger fish by trolling around the edges and can very often separate these fish out on my sonar.

This also helps me ensure that I can get these fish at least hooked for a client that may not have the skill sets required to effectively jig these fish. As Biser accounts in his book, tackle and gear have evolved significantly in the last 20 years or so for these light-biting, hard-fighting fish. The gear I use these days is lighter and smaller and does not inhibit the fight of these fish in the least. In fact, in some cases it may enhance it.

Fundamentals are very important when fishing for kokanee and can often make or break a day on the water.

I always use a baited hook, making sure I have a piece of corn, maggot, or bit of worm on at least one hook, and I replace it after every bite, catch or every 15 minutes. Scent is another factor — these are salmon have incredible noses. Scent from the chosen bait is one thing, but a commercial shrimp scent is a necessity in my book.

Coat your swivels, blades, beads etc. with this and rub a little on your fingers before handling baits and lures. Trust me, your catch rate will reward the effort. Speed is the last fundamental, a trolling speed of .8 mph to 1.4 mph will put you in the zone and experiment from there. More in my next column, I’ll see you on the water!


Howe runs Howes Fishing/A Able Charters. Contact him at www.howesfishing.com or 257-5214 or by emailing Mike@aablefishing.com.

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ARTICLES BY MIKE HOWE

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I know, it’s not even opening day of hunting season yet, but I have ice fishing on my mind. As a tournament promoter (Perch Assault and Ice Duels), my thoughts turn to ice fishing about mid-summer as permits must be submitted and advertising deadlines loom, so I have an excuse.

September 18, 2014 3:28 p.m.

Fishing Flathead Lake is best in the fall

In my last column, I wrote about all the reasons to be excited about fall fishing here in the Flathead Valley. Indeed there are a ton of opportunities to fish well into winter here in the valley and one of the best ones is the coming lake trout spawn on Flathead Lake.

May 23, 2017 2 a.m.

A land grab of the aquatic kind

Over a year ago, the Quiet Waters Initiative popped up on the radar as a seemingly benign way to limit motorized boat use and “user conflict” on several waterways in the state. Sponsored by the Montana Chapter of the “Backcountry Hunters and Anglers Group,” this initiative is a covert attempt to stop motorized use in areas owned or controlled by a select group of fly fishing purists, many of whom own, represent or control property that will be directly impacted by this initiative. The most disturbing thing about this is that the Chairman of the Fish and Wildlife commission, Dan Vermillion, is right there in the thick of it with several businesses. Talk about a conflict of interest!