For lake reports, go to
http://www.washingtonlakes.com ...look up Cascade, Mountain, and Twin Lakes in the lakes index. There's good information there.
Cascade is right on the main road and has two large swimming areas and can be noisy, even in the evenings--Ah, Camp Humanity! It was pretty generous with its rainbows earlier this year, but I haven't fished it since...uh...May.
Mountain is more secluded and tranquil, and contains ravenous cutthroat. Strip buggers and muddlers or throw black spinners right up along the shoreline. Should be good evening chironomid hatches on both these lakes.
Boats can be rented for either Cascade or Mountain lake--there's a little office on the dock at Cascade Lake.
Twin Lakes are a short walk. The big lake holds little fish (lots of 6") and the little lake holds big fish (very few 14").
It kind of depends what sort of fishing you'd like to do...toss out bait and sit in a lawn chair? or paddle like hell against the wind while shooting out a sink tip and weighted fly?
I've been watching the north beach of Orcas on and off, and haven't seen a thing yet this year, which is odd. Not many boats have been working the Parker Reef-Pt. Thompson troll, either--and this is usually a popular spot. I've tried a couple times and caught only dogfish. Ditto the Hummer Hole. So I get kind of a furrowed brow when I look down at my newly-installed Black Box. "Were you really worth it?" I ask. ".600," it replies. Sigh.
Read somewhere that mild el Nino ocean temps are causing the bulk of the Fraser sockeye run to go around the north side of Vancouver Island--they're not headed up the straits. Could it be the migrant kings will, too?
"I got a lot to learn about this blackmouth thing, don't I?"
".600."