Quote:
Originally Posted by Godrew1972
Never caught one, are you getting from shore or boat?
I thought they where deep like lakers?
Nice to get salmon in NJ either way
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Not deep like lakers at all.. they are very tolerant of cold water as you can see.
They bite all winter, and you can catch them in the teeth of a blizzard from shore if you can take it, and if the water is open.. When the water gets warm they will head to the thermocline, but will never be too far from bait which is usually alewives in most lakes.. they need a high fat/oil food source to get good size.. we have them here in lakes without alewives, but they neve grow near as big as those in lakes with alewives..
Want to get a few??. Go NOW, and hit it hard through April, early mornings are best, but I have caught them at noon as well.. Big ones!. Go to a lake or lakes that is known to have them, use good size roostertails, white marabou bucktails with some mylar flash, Little cleos, or similar.. You want lures that will cast far but have good action, and the lightest line you can deal with.. also a longish flexible rod.. you want the lure to travel a long way, and the lure to cover a lot of water,,, Contrary to what most anglers think, they are NOT shy about hitting, and are pretty aggressive.. At times they are even pretty dumb.. You just have to target them, go at the right time. and fish hard.. they really aren't that hard to catch if they are around in decent numbers... It can't get too cold for them in NJ waters, and its hard to move a lure so fast they can't catch it... white bucktails swept through the water quickly is a killer lure, but find ones with mylar flash.. they hit those like crazy.. I also like big rooster tail spinners in flashy colors with a quick retrieve.. I don't think i have ever caught a LL in more than about 20-25 FOW, and probably 90% of mine have come from the surface down to 10 feet.. get out there, fish hard and you'll hook some... bob