Page 1 of 1

Downriggers For Salmon/Trout

Posted: Thu May 25, 2017 11:56 am
by steveo955
Hey All,

Wondering if anybody can help with a bit of a shopping list. New to the Ottawa area and plan on dragging the boat to salmon/trout areas but I have absolutely no experience with this type of fishing. I have the downriggers all wired in and ready to go, just need cannon balls. I am hoping someone can chime in and make gear suggestions, all the gear I have now is for salmon fishing the rivers in BC. Any info would help, thanks in advance.

Steve

Re: Downriggers For Salmon/Trout

Posted: Thu May 25, 2017 6:05 pm
by mitch
Great info on this site

http://www.spoonpullers.com/

Re: Downriggers For Salmon/Trout

Posted: Fri May 26, 2017 7:32 am
by CCLad
steveo955 wrote:Hey All,

Wondering if anybody can help with a bit of a shopping list. New to the Ottawa area and plan on dragging the boat to salmon/trout areas but I have absolutely no experience with this type of fishing. I have the downriggers all wired in and ready to go, just need cannon balls. I am hoping someone can chime in and make gear suggestions, all the gear I have now is for salmon fishing the rivers in BC. Any info would help, thanks in advance.

Steve

Hey Steve, shoot me a PM if you would like to further discuss. I fished Salmon and charters on lake O out of wellington for more than 15 years.... There is allot of stuff involved......
Cheer's CCLad.

Re: Downriggers For Salmon/Trout

Posted: Fri May 26, 2017 9:30 am
by steveo955
Great site Mitch, Thanks!

CCLad, PM sent.

Re: Downriggers For Salmon/Trout

Posted: Tue Jun 06, 2017 10:20 am
by xbowhunter
For salmon I'd suggest a slightly heavier cannonball maybe 12 lbs. You will likely be trolling a little faster for Kings. Probably 2.3 - 3.5 MPH. The heavier weight will provide for less of an angle on your cable and make your depth reading less of a guessing game. Your lures also have to tolerate faster tolling speeds. Northern Kings are always a good bet. They need to maintain their action at higher speeds and not just start spinning. A VHF is also a valuable tool. Lots of charter boats will give out valuable information like speed, depth, and colour. At Wellington if you are bilingual that also helps. Lots of French spoken over VHF. One other thing is that no 2 days of salmon fishing ever are the same. Colour, depth, location and speed can and do change from 1 day to the next. Finally have respect for the big lake. When the winds pick up she can rock and roll. Safety first. If you are in doubt about your boats capability on a windy day stay on shore or fish other areas that may be more sheltered.

Re: Downriggers For Salmon/Trout

Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2017 3:50 pm
by moonshine
12 lb balls minimum. Make sure safety gear is in order and a vhf radio is mandatory. I believe they are still using ch 72.
Wellington is a great place to launch but only if you know where to fish. You hit 70 fow at 7 miles out. To get 100 ft you will be out 15 to 20 miles. There are a lot of shoals that hold fish. Mandatory tackle would be various spoons with green. On other days purple and black. 2 rods per person are allowed, so I would run different presentations in your spread. Don't be afraid to use leadcore and steel line. Lastly, spin doctor and flies catch the big ones.

Re: Downriggers For Salmon/Trout

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2017 7:40 am
by RJ
I'd drive a 45 mins further down 401 and going out of those ports, waaaaay less of a run and if it picks up wind wise you aren't worrying about a 20 mile run back.

RJ

Re: Downriggers For Salmon/Trout

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2017 8:19 am
by steveo955
Great info guys, thanks! I took a charter out last Thursday and we did ok, 8 lakers all around 10-12lbs. Main purpose was to watch and learn a bit of rigging. Great experience. I went out with Martin from "A Friend With A Boat".

Steve

Re: Downriggers For Salmon/Trout

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2017 2:26 pm
by Masterbaiter101
ive got the cannon pro series. they are awesome. but the retrieval speed is so fast the cannon comes flying out of the water and slams the downrigger. other than that its perfect. scottys are also great

Re: Downriggers For Salmon/Trout

Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2017 5:02 pm
by moonshine
If you were catching Lakers, then the troll speed was too slow for salmon. But when salmon bite is slow, like it is now, they put you on the Lakers to give you some action. Salmon start to bite better in July when the alewife move to the north end of the lake. If you want a short run to the fish, I would try Wicklow Beach Launch (7 or 8 miles) or Port Hope ( 5 miles) on a weekday. Too busy for my liking at Port Hope on the weekend. One tool that is worth it's weight in gold is a temp probe.

Re: Downriggers For Salmon/Trout

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2017 6:29 pm
by mitch
Just a note that Port Hope launch is not available due to high water level; however, Cobourg is fine. Cost is $10.50 which includes launch and parking.