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camper4lyfe

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Everything posted by camper4lyfe

  1. I saw a post on Facebook that said the numbers were down a bit this year.
  2. This is why I love drop shot rigs. Get the bait up 12-18" off the bottom and it significantly reduces goby hookups. It's not 100% foolproof, but it definitely helps.
  3. That’s quite possible. I’ve never looked too far into it later in the year so I wasn’t sure if it was realistic or not.
  4. Yeah, the bluegill spawn at the north end, pike, walleye, bullhead, and rudd spawn at the south. I don't have much of the pike making it over the dam, but I have a few of the staging below, and trying to get over.
  5. I've been down to the inlet several times to watch the spawning runs, and I'm always drawn to the swampy area above the spillway. Has anyone ever fished it, obviously in a canoe or kayak, and is it even worth it?
  6. I’m planning to take my oldest fishing (he’ll be at at that time) out on either Hemlock or Canadice Lake. I’m going to be borrowing a canoe to do it, so we can expand the fishing area a bit beyond just shore fishing. That said, trolling for trout and the like isn’t an option on those lakes. Of the two, which do you think is the better of the two to canoe fish on, and what tips do you have to give him the best opportunity to catch anything (and I mean anything, he’s still at the stage he’s content catching panfish)
  7. I was talking to my cousin about this, and this is the first rainbow stocking in a while. I guess they were pushing for browns recently, and they've been fighting it, so he was happy to hear they will be raonbows that are going in.
  8. Only 3000? That seems pretty low for a lake that size. Springwater Creek is getting 4000 rainbows next month.
  9. camper4lyfe

    Conesus Spawning

    I'm seeing reports that pike are starting to run now. Walleye will run after the pike, but the walleye just hang out below the spillway while the pike will jump the spillway.
  10. I'd contact a local marina. That may at least give you a starting point. I can't remember how we found our guy (up in Clayton), but we started by working through the Clayton Marina.
  11. Doc’s Tackle in Honeoye is a solid shop, though out of the way a bit for Conesus
  12. I’m pretty sure it’s state law that you have to wear a PFD in the spring. I can’t recall the exact dates, but they’re definitely required right now, for this very reason.
  13. Cool. Thank you. Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
  14. Good to know. Any particular time in the Fall? Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
  15. So in general it’s best to hit it on the 1st, as soon as the season opens. What typically defines the spawn/when they’ll be in the creek? Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
  16. I'm not entirely sure of my dad's obsession with fishing Springwater Creek, but it's a nice way to spend some time with my dad. That said, I'm hoping to get some help. I know very little about stream/creek fishing, and even less about trout. I typically fish the St. Lawrence for smallmouth, so this is a huge changeup for me. We've been going to the creek around mid-April for the past few years, and I've only started catching fish the last 2 times, but they've all been dinky rainbows (I don't entirely mind, as at least it's something), but I really don't have an understanding of what the trout are looking for, or where We should be looking for them. Tackle-wise, I've been using spinners (I've had my best luck with a small silver spinner), and my dad has been married to salmon eggs. I keep trying to get him to switch to spinners, but I haven't had any luck on that yet, but I keep trying. Unless he knows something I don't, I just don't think that's going to work for him. Initially, we were parking on Kellogg Rd and heading North on the creek toward the lake. The first couple years, we tried here with no luck, and barely even saw anything. Only when we pushed farther toward the lake, after parking along 15A and bushwacking in to the creek did we start having any luck, and like I said, they've all been pretty small. Questions: This year has been tough with the low water, and most likely abnormally warm water, but one of my biggest questions is what are the trout doing in the Spring? Are they heading up the creek for the summer, are they going up the creek to spawn and then head back to the lake? What's their movement, and how would/does water temperature potentially effect that? Does the trout fishing in the stream drop off as the season progresses, or does it move one way or another? I feel like a spinner is the way to go, and on the small size due to the small size of the creek. Is that the best way to go? Should I be pressing my dad more to move on from the eggs and switch to a lure of some sort? In the end, I'm just trying to up our odds of having some success, and definitely trying to get my dad to land his first trout. If you'd rather private message me with details so your secrets don't end up broadcast over the internet, that's fine by me. Any little bit will help, in all honesty, as we're complete novices at this.
  17. Or at minimum, don’t bother with the spillway. You’ll have to explore new areas. I’m hearing they’re staying in the lake, or close to it because of the low water and several beaver dams. Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
  18. There’s even less water than last week. At this point, I wouldn’t bother making the drive this year. Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
  19. The water's pretty low this year, and I'm hearing they're not running like normal. i may take a trip down in the next day or two to check it out.
  20. They must just be starting. There wasn’t anything this past weekend. Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
  21. It’s way too early Sent from my iPhone using Lake Ontario United
  22. My oldest (7) is already talking about "that time we went to see the fish" and wants to go back. The kid loves fishing, and would go every day if I took him.
  23. I just dug through my pictures from last year, and I have pictures of pike running April 1. We also saw walleye in the side streams around that time too. I can't for the life of my remember the order that they run. I THINK it's walleye first, then pike, but it could very well be the other way around.
  24. No bit, but still better than working.
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