Quote:
Originally Posted by Braun
Look for dropoffs along shore. I know a nameless someone that likes to tell people of the story of his first ever fish he caught....... A perch in the glenmore........ said it was around 14 inches.
I do believe that the perch in there are going to be big. No one ever targets them, and glenmore has so much food in it its un believable. Perch population is controlled well by the pike and trust me, there are still lots of big pike in there. but I just think people can't find them because they are hanging out in the deeper waters and on the unreachable shallows in the north end. I know of some spots i would like to try for perch but i think it will be more of a late fall venture
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.... and I thought it was too small and threw it back then caught a 6 lb pike the next cast,, a week later a kid beside me (I was still a kid too) caught a HUGE RAINBOW on a kamlooper spoon. North side of the Glenmore overpass right below where the trees start going west on the shoreline. I thought Chubb saw some near the boat launch on the southside in May. And I met a guy who only targets perch. They should have a weekend without sailboats and skullers and have an onwater derby,, I'd love to troll where only the skullers can go,,, the fish are so well fed in there and there are many a monster. And Brauno, ok, so your fish was tired from spawning but it was a pretty stellar Rainbow, 22 inches???,, and that kids Brown this week on the buzz bomb,, whoop!!