
Lake Ontario Rainbow Trout
By Lawrence Euteneier - Captain,
Blind Fishing Boat .Com
Lake Ontario can be both a cornucopia of large fish and
a moody inhospitable place, but when the stars line up,
hang on. This summer has been one of the best in recent
memory in terms of sheer numbers of Salmon and Trout
caught and their overall size. Charter captains were
reporting record-breaking catches spurring on a virtual
stampede of fishers eager to get out on the water to try
their hand. My turn came up the last week of August.
I first met charter captain Jean Robitaille at a fishing
show in Toronto when he visited my Blind Fishing Boat
booth. Jean operates out of the Darlington Marina at the
mouth of Bowmanville Creek near Oshawa, and runs an
17.5' Crestliner equipped with an 115hp Evinrude and 8hp
kicker. Clients hear of Jean's service through
word-of-mouth as he prefers fishing with those who know
there way around a boat. The Crestliner offers a dry
ride, but Lake Ontario is big so guests need to be open
to a bit of "rock&roll".
Jean and his wife Deb also operate an informal “bed &
breakfast” like service from their home for their
friends/guests. There attention to detail, warm
hospitality and Jean's prowess around the BBQ all added
up to a fantastic stay.
Weather for day one was looking not good with winds out
of the north-west gusting from 15 to 18 knots. It didn't
deter Jean and I from trying a little trolling along the
north shore in water 40-60 feet, but we marked little
and came home with even less. Anyone else who tried
venturing on to the lake quickly turned back, and even
though we stayed close in on the leeward shore we still
experienced a strong sample of what Lake Ontario is
capable of dishing out.
The
next morning was much calmer and by 6:30 we had motored
out on to the lake 17km and had our first line in the
water. Jean runs two downriggers with 10lb cannon balls
he's designed himself that are akin to dinner plates on
edge with large aluminum tail fins. Down 100 feet and
trolling at 4km/h, the downrigger lines ran almost
vertical.
Jean doesn't believe in stacking lines, preferring
instead to add sliders to the main lines using 6' of
10lb fluoro with snaps at each end. These sliders snap
to the main line and drop down half way between the rod
and cannon ball as they descend the upper slope of the
bellied out line.
Dipsy set-ups are also utilized on Scotty holders
positioned four feet up from the rear corners of the
gunnels. Each set-up is equipped with a medium to large
sized dipsy, a flasher, dodger or spin doctor, and
finished with 3-6 feet of fluoro leader with either a
fly or spoon. With the total set-up in place, Jean had
managed to deploy six lures on four rods.
This year green, white & chrome was the magic colour
combination, where as last year blue and chrome was the
ticket. Fish have also been feeding actively in 60 to 70
degree water. Somewhat higher than normal but likely due
to the overall warmer average water temperature of the
lake.
We
didn't have to wait long for the action to begin with
this small 4lb Rainbow Trout coming aboard by 7:am.
Plying waters with an average depth of 300 feet, we had
two more hits before deciding to pull up and move about
4km to another area where a charter buddy of Jean's was
reporting excellent success. Now, in hind sight pulling
up and leaving fish to find fish may not have been the
best idea, as by the time we had re-deployed the lines
that same charter captain was now reporting the bite had
dropped off.
With my train departing Oshawa at 12:38 p.m. we had
until 10:45 before we had to pull the lines. The next
four strikes came fast and furious, with the eighth and
final strike of the morning boating a second Rainbow
which tipped the scales at just over 7lbs. That was it,
we were out of time.

Interestingly enough, every fish we hooked and were able
to ID that morning was a Rainbow Trout. Salmon just
didn't seem to be feeding, a fact other charter captains
were also reporting over the VHF.
The week prior most Charter boats had stopped fishing
the "blue zone", (middle of lake Ontario), as the fish
and bait-balls seemed to have dispersed. Just like that,
an open-water season that may go down on record as being
one of the best in years had come to an end. In fact,
the day prior to my arrival a 34lb Chinook had been
taken from the Bowmanville Creek. No doubt, the Rainbows
and Browns won’t be far behind. The season for pursuing
Lake Ontario fish isn’t over, it's just changed venues.
Fishing with Jean was a real treat. His competitive
nature was honed fishing Northern Pike tournaments in
the Sturgeon Falls area, where Jean had lived until
2008. A weekly fishing show Jean hosted for a local
Sturgeon Falls radio station testifies to his love of
all things fish. You got to admire a guy that cares as
much about fishing as he does.
Anchors Up,
Captain Lawrence Euteneier
www.BlindFishingBoat.Com
|