Sitting here watching tv, dreaming about ice off in Kamloops and in the Cariboo. Looking at my fly rod and thinking seriously about tying up some size 14-16 brown with copper rib. The last few years the ice off early chironomid season before the bombers show up, has seen this pattern as the most effective, on quite a few different lakes that we fish. Best bug was dark brown almost black with skinny copper rib and either gold or black bead head. It seems that the fish do not come as shallow as they once did on some lakes in the early season and that the big hatch on some of the lakes has been out in 14 to 18 feet of water past the indicator. It is rather strange as at one time we would nail the fish in more shallow water during the early season before the lakes turned over.
Screaming good fun sometimes when you come to a lake and it is only half iced off and you still manage to nail big fish in the shallows.
Even lakes with lots of weed beds seem to not have the fish come shallow as much as they once did. I remember having an indicator on and nailing big fish on small chironomids with no more than 6 feet past the indicator, especially west of Williams Lake and on some of the very best early season lakes near Quesnel. Now it seems the fish stay deep it is almost as if the lakes turn over as soon as the ice comes off. Anybody else notice a difference in what is happening in to these lakes especially in recent years past the big bug kill? Same thing seems to be delaying the caddis hatch on these lakes as well, on some the caddis hatch has all but dissapeared
I am finding that there has been a fundamental change in the ecology and seasonal timing of insects of some of the best rainbow trout lakes. Perhaps this might be in part due to the changes in the surrounding forest. Just a thought but I have noticed a radical change on the best interior lakes since the 1990s. I don't fish the Kelowna area or out in the Kootneys but have fished the Cariboo for very many years.