jeff:
partner and i fished potholes today, specifically targeting perch. we, as well as 3 other perchers in another boat, could only find dinks, 4 or 5 inches long in 11 or 12 feet of lind coulee water. of course, we tried deeper because “that’s where the bigger ones are” but could not locate any.
while searching the deeper water outside of lind, i dropped my thermometer to 40 feet and discovered that it was 58 degrees down there, versus the 75 degrees on the surface.
when you get to mardon’s, ask the folks in the store for current fishing info. i believe they try hard to steer you in the right direction. and they can sell you most any kind of lure that interests you. fishing from the mardon dock can be productive, maybe particularly at night. today around noon there were 15 or 18 folks fishing there, sitting on the benches and enjoying the sun.
the southerly wind today, jeff, was stiffer than forecast and the dunes/crab creek areas up north were not exactly fun fishing; controlling the boat took too much attention and slow trolling or jigging were unworkable. i haven’t tried a sea anchor yet, but if you happen to have one be SURE to take it with you. a surprising number of boats ended up fishing in the protected waters of lind coulee; when we drove across the dam, there were NO boats working goose island or the rocks between it and the dam, and that surprised me too.
the irrigation drawdown has lowered the water a lot; i hope you are good at backing your boat trailer a long ways down the ramps. the water skiers and the wave runners began being a bit bothersome this morning before noon.
good luck to you, jeff, and please let us know how you and the kids do.
john