Fishing Tips

Trolling Tips

After fishing many years on the Crystal Basin Lakes, Ice House, Union Valley, Loon lake, and many of the surrounding lakes in El Dorado Co., Ken at Ken's Custom Tackle is offering these trolling tips that have been proven to produce fish. 
Trolling is an easy and successful way to catch trout.  First you must select the way you are going to troll, be it down rigging or top lining, with flashers and lure, or just a lure, such as Ken's Double Flutter trolling lure.  Ken prefers flashers, trailed by our trolling worm harness, tipped with half of a crawler or one of our trolling flutter spoons.  Dodgers are another good choice for an attractant. Dodgers work well wtih any of our Trolling Hairy bugs or with Apex lures for kokanee. Trolling flasher selection is critical. It is going to be made according to conditions, such as water clarity & weather conditions. Select flashers according to weather conditions. On clear to partly cloudy days, use gold and silver blade combinations. Overcast days or low light conditions such as early evening; use our polished copper blades.  Down rigging requires maximum flash and vibration.  Use large blades, such as our #1 willow leaf or our #7 polished copper blades.  Lure selection is made by preference or by what the fish may be feeding on.  We find that our trolling worm harnesses or trolling a flutter spoon works extremely well, but in slow conditions a worm added to the flutter spoon, enhances the strike. Ken also has good success using Pro Cure's bait scents applied to the worm or flutter spoon. Ken uses minnow patterns and occasionally when the fish are feeding on rising water, around stumps, he trails a black or green woolly worm fly behind the flashers.
Basic flasher setup:  Attach flasher to main line with snap swivel to rudder.  From the end of the flasher attach a 12 to 24 inch piece of 8 or 10 pound leader to barrel swivel and attach your lure of preference to the end of the leader. 
For top lining, let flasher trail beside boat and check for action of blades and lure.  Adjust speed of boat for maximum flasher and lure performance; the tip of the rod should pulsate with correct flasher action. 
REMEMBER!!  Troll slowly.  Big fish do not like to exert themselves more than necessary while feeding. Start releasing line until flasher setup is approximately 75-200 feet behind boat.  We find more fish striking in approx. 150-200 feet behind the boat.  Flashers in this range are generally running at approx. 8-25 feet deep, depending on the size of flasher and lure.  The larger the flasher generally the deeper it will run in the water.
Trolling in gentle s-curves, lures on inside of curve will slow and sink, lures on outside will speed up and rise, triggering fish to strike.  Fish are not likely to strike if lure runs at a constant speed.  Ken finds that occasionally an increase or decrease in speed also helps trigger strikes. 
When down rigging, troll in old river channels or next to drop-offs.  Ken finds it best on these lakes to down rig next to steep banks in 40 - 60 feet of water, but also adventures into deep channels and around bottom structures, which hold fish. 
In late spring, the larger lakes will separate into 3 temperature layers, with the middle layer being the thermo cline, which is generally the most productive temperature zone.  You should troll close to or in this layer, which is generally from 15-50 feet deep. 
Some of the best areas to troll are around inlet or outlet streams, rocky banks, and steep drop-offs.  In windy conditions, troll close to shore where food is being blown, fish generally will hold in 8-25 feet, close to the food source. 
Remember these are only suggestions based on Ken's experience and years of fishing.  Every trip is different and everyone has a different way of fishing.  These are tips that work best for us.  The rest is up to you. Just have fun!!

Ken's Favorites for….

Kokanee

If using flashers, our #13 Kokanee Special medium curved blades, our #14 micro curved blades or our new #17 micro willow blades, trailed by  one of our worm  harnesses in Rocket Red, Watermelon or any of our new Pro Glow UV Worm Harnesses, tipped with white corn that  has been dyed and soaked in scent oil. (see corn tips below)
  
If  using a dodger, our Blue Prism or Crush Glow dodger trailed by one of our trolling Hairy Bugs in Hot Pink, or one of our other New Colors such as our new Pro Glow UV Pink or Red Hairy Bugs, tipped with white corn. (see corn tips below)   Also add scent oil to the whiskers of the hairy bug to increase scent.  Tie the hairy bugs 12-18 inches behind the dodgers.  Troll speed should be 1 to 1.5 mph.

Another one of Ken's favorites is using our Blue Prism dodger with a custom tied UV Apex, trailing approx. 30 inches behind the dodger. This works extremely well late season, in deep water when kokanee are getting ready to spawn. The dodger and Apex combo has maximum action and vibration which causes the fish to strike.

Note: Dodger Set up. Lures with no action, ex. bugs or flies. Attach approx. 1-3 dodger lengths behind the dodger. Lures with action, ex. Apex or Pro Glow UV spinners, attach 3-6 dodger lengths behind dodger.

Down Rigging for Kokanee is done by using our ball flashers #6 or #7 attached to down rigger weight.  Attach our micro flasher #14 or #11 or #17 trailed by any of our Pro Glow UV worm harnesses, tipped with white corn soaked in scent oil, to your fishing line.  Now clip your line into a stacker clip about 3 ft. above down rigger weight, with enough line out so that the  micro flasher assembly is approx. 3-6 ft. behind the flashers that are on the weight.

Top Lining for Kokanee--Use our curved flasher #12 trailed by our worm harness in Rocket Red, Hot Pink or Candy Cane, Red Shiner, Lemon Lime or Pearly Pink Glow tipped with a crawler or white corn soaked in scent oil.

Note: Sometimes just plain white corn, scented with scented with your favorite oil will work when these other dyed corns don't.

Keep track of what works best for you at each lake. In some lakes the kokes will like one scent or color better than another.

1/2 of a mini night crawler also works well. Some of Ken's new favorites for kokanee is Berkley Power Maggots (not really maggots) in pink or chartreuse work extremely well when corn won't work or corn is not allowed to be used.

Rainbow Trout
Our flashers #1, #2,  #12, #8 or #16, trailed with our Fire tiger, Green Glo or Rainbow or Bumble Bee worm harness or trolling flutter spoon, with ½ a night crawler.

Brown Trout
Our flashers #1, #2,  #8 or #16, trailed by our Rainbow or Fire Tiger Double Flutter Lure or a Rainbow, Fire Tiger, Bumble Bee or our new Halloween worm harness. 
Our Double Flutter Lure in Fire Tiger or Rainbow can also be trolled by itself for Browns.  Troll speed should be 1-2 mph.

Mackinaw
Any of our Double Flutter lures trolled by itself or tied approx. 18 inches behind
our flashers #1. Our #1 flasher trailed by our worm harnesses in Rainbow, Fire Tiger, Green Glo, and our Bumble Bee tipped with minnow or large crawler also works well.
 Ken's favorite way is to run any of our Double Flutter Lures, that has been coated with Pro Cure's Herring or Krill Gel Scent, 200' behind down rigger ball.   Then run the ball down so that you are working under the schools of kokanee or bait fish.  If they are holding in 60' of water, run down rigger and Double Flutter Lure down at 70-80 ft. or split depth of bottom to bottom of bait fish.  Macks and Browns feed near these schools and this works best for Ken. If no bait fish can be found work 10 to 20 ft. off bottom around heavy structures. Another tip for mackinaw is using a 8-10 inch dodger trailed by a frozen herring tied approx. 1-3 dodger lengths back is a deadly combo for macks.

Down Rigging
When down rigging, Ken has these basic set-ups and techniques.  In water that is bright and clear down to 60', gold and silver flashers are a good choice.  60' and below, our polished copper #7 , #1 or #8 flashers work best.  Copper throws the farthest flash in the least amount of light.  Also when working murky water use copper flashers.
Set-up.  Ken finds it best to let flashers and lures trail 100-150 ft. behind the boat then attach to down rigger release and send to desired depth which should be 15-20 ft. above bottom.  By doing this the flasher and lure trail beneath the ball by 8-15 ft.  This increased strikes and spooks the fish the least.

ken@kenscustomtackle.com
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