The misses and I are heading up to Roche lake next Tuesday (11th). Neither of us have fished there before. I've seen it fished a lot on TV and after talking with the guys in my local tackle shop yesterday we've decided to check it out!
Now, according to the staff right now it's all about chronomids. I've never fished with them. I bought a decent selection of 15 or so in case I decide to give them a go. However there are two problems: 1- I'm not a great back caster and don't feel that comfortable fly casting with someone else in the boat. 2- The misses can not fly cast at all.
In the past we've had great success trolling flies (mainly leeches, wooly buggers, etc) very slowly in our canoe. We both have a spool with a full sink line on (type 3 i think) and we used that with a 12ish foot leader ending in light flourocarbon tippet. I realize that it is hard to control the depth when not using a strike indicator, but by varying the speed we paddled, amount of line out, etc we normally did alright using this method.
Now, my question is, is it effective to troll a chronomid? I really don't see why not. I've seen Brain Chan fish chronomids "naked" (no indicator) on TV and do very well. Now I think he is counting after his line lands to get a good idea how deep his fly lands (eg. on a type 3 line 40 seconds = about 10 feet deep). If we were trolling obviously we would not have that great of an idea how deep our fly is.
I realize that the most effective way to fish chronomids is to anchor and either cast out and retrieve them "naked" or with a strike indicator. My question is...
should we even try to slow troll a chronomid like we would a leech, or is this a complete waste of time?We will be renting car top boat from the lodge. My plan is to cruize to a selected spot using the outboard, then slow troll using the oars.
If anyone has any other tips on Roche Lake it would be much appreciated
I bought myself a new toy today, the Hummingbird Fishing Buddy 140C that I cant wait to try out on the lake!