Color may have been due to the depth? A lot of what my left hand is buried in is air. It appeared that they may have 2 bladders, one side emptied faster than the other. Another thing I had to have proven to me is the vast difference in lake trout from lake to lake. Got the hang of landing them in one lake then moved on and found them to be more colorful and spastic. Learned the hard way again when a 20 incher was thrashing while suspended by a Rapala from my thumb, barbless is the only way to go.
Posted by: PhantomJug Posted on: Aug 27th, 2014 at 5:01pm
I'm guessing that's a 24-25 year old female. Wonder why her color is so poor and there is an excess of belly fat. A Quetico dinosaur for sure. She was probably scavenging for dead ciscos - scraps from the LT feast above.
Posted by: chaga Posted on: Aug 26th, 2014 at 11:07pm
Westwood, although the lakers were nice, 23"-30", I now believe the BIG ones are hanging with the northern. We caught dozens of lakers in 15'-25'. They were still burping air but we just play them longer and they seem to be able to burp it all up. I guess things are different at 40+. He was heavy, if he would have come to life in the canoe things would have turned out differently!
Posted by: mastertangler Posted on: Aug 26th, 2014 at 11:04pm
The jig was in the corner of his mouth right under that hinge thingy. I wouldn't make it a habit to target these fish because it was obviously hard on it, and probably the only reason I was able to land it on 8# mono with no leader. We tried to work it to shore but he wouldn't let that happen so I just plain tuckered him out. It REALLY pays to check for nicks in your line, I learned that the hard way earlier in the trip. To be able to boat him and get a photo was truly a miracle! I just held its tail to keep it upright, that was his biggest problem. Every 10 minutes or so he would give up some air, after at least an hour the breathing was a lot better. I will fish that spot in the future and hope to meet up again! We laid a paddle on it for a measurement and appears to be 45ish.
Posted by: Westwood Posted on: Aug 26th, 2014 at 8:52pm
So how big was your northern in terms of weight and length? It is a little unusual for the trout to be relatively shallow and the northern in deeper water.
Posted by: Puckster Posted on: Aug 26th, 2014 at 7:33pm
It puzzles me why such a monster fish will hit a tiny jig. They probably are not feeding, just biting due to aggression or irritation? The big ones I've caught on a jig almost always have been hooked on the edge of the upper lip....of course anywhere else and the line gets cut immediately.