
I have always been an enthusiastic kokanee fisherman. I love fishing for the little silver bullets all over northern California, from Whiskeytown to Don Pedro and everywhere in between. They fight extremely well, are a ton of fun to catch, and I love them on the barbeque.
The first week of August I made the journey to that hallowed kokanee lake – Flaming Gorge Reservoir. Mark Kalinowski of Concord and I sailed east in his big Ford Excursion towing his beautiful 22-foot Rogue Jet. It was a nice treat for me to be the passenger for a change and able to take in the sights instead of concentrating on the road.
The 14-hour road trip culminated about 6 pm in Green River Wyoming, where we bought our fishing licenses and headed to camp at Buckboard Marina in the central part of Flaming Gorge. As we pulled into the small campground, both Mark and I perked up as we spotted a distinctive bright blue Wooldridge boat outfitted to the gills. Mark exclaimed “Hey – that is Sambo’s boat!” Sure enough we spotted Sambo Lage of Concord and his buddy Gary Edminster, who we often see fishing kokanee and trout tournaments in Northern California.
Sambo said they had been there for a few days and were catching a ton of nice kokanee. They gave us a few tips on what to use and where to go, and we said we’ll see you on the water. Sometimes it really is a very small world.
Thursday morning we launched the Rogue Jet and headed east to where we could see a pretty good size “fleet” of kokanee boats. We went around the main flotilla and worked what Mark called the “rock wall” area. There were lots of fish on the graph, and we were soon hooked up with our first Flaming Gorge koke. I was running a Vance’s watermelon dodger with a pink Yakima Bait Tight lines kokanee rig with a plain piece of shoepeg corn at 55 feet deep when my rod in the aft downrigger bowed to the water.