My friend Billfish and I are heading over to Spokane on Thursday morning
for a 3-day volleyball tournament that begins Friday. 

We are looking for a lake to try near Spokane and neither of us has ever
fished Amber. 

Would anyone familiar with Amber Lake recommend that we give it a try?
The two reports posted seemed at least encouraging.

Thanks in advance for any advice.

- Dave
 
David Weitl
Northwest Realty Advisors, Inc.
3380 NE Rova Road
Poulsbo, WA  98370
(360) 779-3802
(360) 779-1467 fax
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, March 07, 2005 11:50 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Amber Lake Report

Fished Sunday with the Olive Willy and hit 11 fish, all about the same
size you
describe in your post. Have you tried Crab Creek yet? Doing fantastic
with
basically the same type of chironomid pattern you used in Amber, but
down to a
size #22. Fourth of July seems to have suffered some winter kill, as
there are
a number of dead fish floating at the N end. Think we are all going to
experience a dry spring and a dryer summer. Wouldn't surprise me if
there are
early emergency closures on some of our more popular river and streams.
Allen

Quoting johnny costanza <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

>
> Fished Amber lake today with what seemed like every other flyfisherman
in
> the Spokane area.  The lake this weekend was as crowded as I have ever
seen
> it, but I was fortunate to have some very good success fishing
chironomids
> near the shoreline in anywhere from 4-8 ft of water.  Not that I was
paying
> too much attention to what others on the lake were doing, but it
seemed that
> most of the guys I saw catching fish were fishing close to shore using
> chironomids under an indicator.  For me, the most productive pattern
was a
> bloodworm (sz 8) with a black v-rib chironomid (sz 12) also accounting
for
> some fish as well.  When fished in the right locations, the action at
times
> was fast and furious.  I changed locations frequently as the fish, if
they
> were there, would usually respond fairly quickly.  If I did not have a
fish
> within 15 minutes at the most, I'd move to a different spot.  Once you
found
> one fish however that was willing to take your fly, it usually meant
that
> they were 5-6 more in the same area that would do the same.  What
surprised
> me about today was the size of the fish I was catching.  I landed 7-8
in the
> 18-20 inch range, with one or two that were close to 21 inches and
very
> thick/heavy.   With the exception of one 8 incher, most of the caught
were
> 14-17 inches.  They were very active in spite of very cold water
> temperatures.  I'd be curious to know if anyone else fished Amber over
the
> weekend and what they encountered in terms of the size of the fish
that you
> caught.  They seem to be much bigger on average this year.
>
>
>




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