70 feet is the drop from the summer pool too winter pool. Lake is up 12 feet as of 2pm so thats out for the weekend. I guess the perch and calico dont mind the level swings. Guy I know was telling me he got calico 55 feet down in 103 feet of water.Then there are the 40' drawdowns and refills.
I think there are absolutely giants in there.
Last summer I had a fish just take my line and just swam away with it. I never turned him. Line broke at about 100 feet distant and maybe 20 or thirty feet deep. What was that? I figured it was a big cat or a snapper but I'll never know. Happened at Gouldsboro as well and I bet it was a snapper there as they have monster snappers there.
Not even close lol. FEW is a panfish lake for me. If I add a smaller boat I might try it for bass too. The Pack is for big boys.Depending on where youre at I would think that the pool is very deeply oxygenated most of the year. I've heard mega-Brown-trout stories but you know how that goes..... This is your new Paupack, eh?
I had something similar happen, dry fly fishing the Susquehanna during a white fly hatch. I thought I might've had a big channel cat but it wouldn't budge, just a slow steady pull, like a log, but it was headed directly across to the opposite side of the river. 8 wt fly rod but nothing I did could slow it down. I finally decided to just pull line like hell so I didn't loose all my fly line and somehow the fly came loose, my guess was giant carp.It was slow and steady moving down and away. no fighting back and forth. That was at FEW on the wall.
At Gouldsboro the same thing happened but the water isn't but 5-6' deep. It just moved away, no fight. There are two gigantic turtles in this lake that I have seen and I've often seen one surface near hear. I think that is what it was. These two have heads that are 4 or more inches wide. They're so old, large and scaly that they appear like the alligator snappers of the southern swamps. Tip of tail to head over 3' I believe.
Time for a 12wt lolI had something similar happen, dry fly fishing the Susquehanna during a white fly hatch. I thought I might've had a big channel cat but it wouldn't budge, just a slow steady pull, like a log, but it was headed directly across to the opposite side of the river. 8 wt fly rod but nothing I did could slow it down. I finally decided to just pull line like hell so I didn't loose all my fly line and somehow the fly came loose, my guess was giant carp.
I've heard of walleye there a long time ago then they seemed to vanish for 20 - 30 years. Regulars told me they got a good number of smaller ones last year. There a giant smallmouth there, reports of big browns that come down from the Lehigh. Being deep isnt really a requirement for walleyes. Lower Woods and White Oak both had decent walleye populations from steady fingerling stockings before they were drawn down. 12 feet was as deep as those places got. Alewives arent there but from what I've saw they arent needed. There are strange, unique forces at work there.I thought FEW would have Walleye being so deep. Surprised it doesn’t hold other trophy fish. Alewives not being there might explain it. Or fluctuations when drawn down.
No head shakes, thought it was a large piece of debris or log at first but they would float down with the current, and it was dark so that didn't help.HD was there head shakes or not. Sometimes carp will give a couple small one. Turtles and cats don’t. Always fun guessing on what it could have been. Sure is a good story to tell how the big one got away haha.
Seems lakers would be at home there too. I’ve seen huge trout but not deep. Hanging by feeder springs in warm temps. Caught 18” range but saw a few big shadows. Only tried once, I’m usually drawn to the Lehigh below when there.I've heard of walleye there a long time ago then they seemed to vanish for 20 - 30 years. Regulars told me they got a good number of smaller ones last year. There a giant smallmouth there, reports of big browns that come down from the Lehigh. Being deep isnt really a requirement for walleyes. Lower Woods and White Oak both had decent walleye populations from steady fingerling stockings before they were drawn down. 12 feet was as deep as those places got. Alewives arent there but from what I've saw they arent needed. There are strange, unique forces at work there.