Round Valley Reservoir Labor Day 2011 Fishing Report

Fished labor day with Chris and Erin from Hillsborough. We hit the water at 5:30am with a plan to drift for lake trout. The wind was pretty steady coming out of the southeast so I set up some long drifts to take us from about the middle of the lake across from the North Point taking us toward the North Dam.

The water surface temperature was a balmy 75 degrees. We fished right on the bottom using 3/4 egg sinkers, #6 hooks and live “large” Shiners. I bought the Shiners the day before at Efingers in Bound Brook out of desperation (Everyone was closed like it was some kind of holiday… oh wait). The large Shiners at Efingers are most other places small, so keep that in mind when buying from them.

Lake Trout Labor Day 2011 Round Valley Reservoir

Our depth ranged from 59 feet to 83 feet as we covered a lot of ground and we caught lakers at all depths. The size ranged from 19 inches to 22 inches and all but the 19 incher had big bellies full of eggs. Remember too that Lake Trout spawn on the rocks of both dams (though predominantly the North Dam) and it’s catch and release only from September 16th to November 30th to coincide with their spawn.

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Going Fishing this Labor Day? Be Prepared!

One of the great things about RoundValleyFishing.com is you can go back through the archives to see fishing reports. Now granted I’ve only been doing this since 2009 so the earliest posts were quite spotty, but if you dig around a little you’ll find a gem, which is how I got to this article.

Here is my fishing report for labor day 2010. You can read about what we were using, what we caught and the weather and water conditions. Read the comments section and you can see what another fella was doing too.

If I go out this Monday, you can bet I’m going to be using live herring AND fishing as early as possible. If you can’t make it out this weekend, no worries. Always check the archives to see if something relevant has happened at the same time last year. Remember that 40 inch Lake Trout that was caught last year? When was that, on what? The search bar and archives are your friend. Use them! See you on the water!

Pullman_strikers_outside_Arcade_Building

ps. If you don’t know what labor day is all about and have never heard of the Pullman Strike then take 30 seconds to read up on a little American history and use that knowledge to show off at your BBQ.

pps. That big laker was caught in December.

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Night Fishing Report

Got out fishing Saturday night with a full boat. Chris D., Chris F. and Jay joined me for a night of fishing on Round Valley Reservoir. I was especially excited because I built a couple of night fishing lights and was eager to try them. The weather and moon phase were great too. 1/4 moon so our lights weren’t competing with the big light in the sky.

Night Fishing for Rainbow Trout

We fished from 9:30pm to 3:30am in 3 different locations throughout the night, the red x’s above indicate our approximate locations. The reason we moved the first two times was because we didn’t like our depth and bottom structure. The last time was just on a whim to shoot over to the other side of the lake.

Night fishing at Round Valley Using surface lights
It’s really peaceful at night on the valley.

We double anchored as best we could. I don’t have nearly enough anchor line to set the boat right so that was a challenge. We were using some lights I made from 12volt 55watt marine “deck” lights I got at West Marine for $29. A trip to home depot got me 2 extension cords, two dowels and some zip ties. The lights worked 5.5 hours and never killed my battery.

Chris from Hillsborough started strong with 2 Rainbows.

We were using cooked shrimp for bait and whole kernel corn for chum. The fishing was a slow pick all night but we all had fun and everyone caught fish, also the four rainbows we caught were taken home and eaten and they were delicious! If you’d like to learn more about the technique we used to catch these fish at night, check out our night fishing for Rainbow Trout article. If you’re looking for a way to beat the heat the next few weeks, I suggest a night fishing trip on Round Valley Reservoir.

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The Hunterdon Anglers Take Me Night Fishing for Rainbow Trout

If you fish long enough at any one place, you start to recognize people. This is how I came to meet Hunterdon Anglers president, Ed Harabin. A few months ago at Round Valley I was talking to Mike (sorry dude, I forgot your last name), a guy I run into once in a while at the valley. I casually mentioned that I run roundvalleyfishing.com and his eyes lit up. “There’s someone here I want you to meet,” says Mike and he walks me over to another fella standing next to his truck and introduces me to Ed. We talk a little and exchange info and agree to fish together sometime in the near future. Fast forward to last week and I get a call from Ed inviting me to come out on a night fishing trip for Rainbow Trout on his boat the Double Anchor.

Now in that phone call Ed told me he was out a few days ago and caught 101 Rainbows… I was a little skeptical but intrigued. I had heard of people catching large numbers of trout at night, but 101? Of course I agreed to go. I wanted to see how Ed sets up for night fishing AND how we’d manage given his outrageous claim. Prior to this my only other night fishing attempt was with a headlamp tied to an anchor line!

Leaving the dock - Night Fishing Rainbow Trout

At 8pm this past Saturday, I met Ed to go fishing on his 22 foot C-hawk, by far the biggest boat I’ve ever been on in Round Valley. We would fish with a Hunterdon Anglers contingent comprised of Fran Harabin, Dennis Haggerty and Charlie Rahner… like I said, it’s a big boat! What I’m about to share with you is the technique Ed uses to catch rainbows at night. He was gracious enough to share this information with me and indeed his club’s motto is, “Share The Knowledge”.

Location:
Waypoint - Night Fishing Rainbow TroutWe motored out to a waypoint near campground 71 in 50 feet of water. Here’s a PDF map of the campgrounds if you don’t know where campground 71 is, I’ve also marked it on our Round Valley Google Map. Round Valley is a big body of water and this is not the only place to go night fishing for rainbow trout, sometimes the south shore is the hot ticket, and sometimes the north point is the place to be. You really have to try a few locations and depths and note the results. A fishing log book would come in very handy.

As you can see from the contour lines on the sonar, the bottom is a fairly gentle slope. You’ll also notice a red x much shallower in 15 feet of water on the same screen. That’s from earlier in the year when water was much cooler and trout were hugging the shoreline seeking warmer water (Ed was probably jerking streamers for trout at those depths). Last month he found trout at 30 to 45 feet, but again, tonight we were targeting fish at 50 feet.

Fishing Technique:
We would be double anchored over Ed’s waypoint and fish with lights hanging over the side gunwales pointed at the water’s surface. The reason for double anchoring is to position and hold the boat over your location. Anchoring from just the bow allows the boat to swing (potentially in circles) as wind changes direction or gusts of wind kick up. Double anchoring also focuses the lights on one particular area allowing all the microorganisms, gammarus, baitfish and trout to hang in one area.

Anchoring Up:
Watching Ed double anchor over a waypoint was a teaching moment in and of itself. As we motored over the point he threw a lighted buoy to mark the location and kept going about 150 feet past it. We next dropped the stern anchor and motored back across the lighted buoy and past it about 150 feet and dropped the bow anchor. Finally he pulled us back over the buoy by pulling in the stern anchor line and allowing the bow line to feed out. Once in position all anchor lines were fastened to cleats and buoy was removed from the water. I really like his use of a lighted buoy (which was just a normal barbell style buoy with a strobe light attached to it) for setting the point of reference, without it we’d have been blown off course by the time we anchored up.

Ed Harabin - Double Anchor Technique

Fishing Lights:
Ed had two home-made lights for this type of fishing. The lights fit neatly in his rod holders and connected to his 12 volt battery. These lights never touch the water and their hoods kept the light out of our eyes. A quick search on Google reveals bulb and lamps for less than $20, a nice weekend project!

Ed Harabin - Fishing Light Setup
Fishing light and corn used for chum. Filleted fish had corn, shrimp and little fish in their bellies. You can also see other boats anchored in the distance.

Rod, Reel and Tackle:
We used ultralight spinning rod/reel combos. I asked why and Ed said mainly because the ultralights are short and allow you to better see the rod tip when it’s 2am and the moon is down. Also, rainbows can be finicky and the ultralight setup allows you to feel the slightest tap or bump.

Night Fishing Rainbow Trout - Hook, Line, Sinker

Our hook, line and sinker consisted of 6lb test, a barrel swivel, a snelled #8 hook and a small split-shot near the swivel. The snelled hooks allowed us to quickly release trout that were deeply hooked by simply cutting the line as close to the hook as possible (while keeping the trout in the water and not touching it). Of the 50 trout we caught about a dozen had to be released using this technique and they all swam away no worse for the wear. So have a pair of scissors handy as well as a few packages of #8 snelled hooks. Lastly, set your drag so a hook-set will not break the thin line. It’s ok for the drag to slip a little when you set the hook on a fish, you can always tighten the drag but too tight and you’ll just snap your line on a big fish.

Bait:
Cooked Shrimp - Night Rainbow BaitCooked shrimp… ok are you done laughing? Seriously, find the best deal on cooked shrimp at your local grocery store and get a frozen bag of size small or medium. Make sure you’ve defrosted them before your trip. Using the previously mentioned scissors cut the shrimp into little pieces about 1/2 inch by 1/2 inch. Don’t go too big. You’re going to bury the #8 hook in the shrimp, make sure the tip can easily come out on a hook set. Also, drop a handful of whole kernel corn right alongside the boat, an entire can should last all night. You want the fish congregating around your boat and lights.

You can also use worms and Powerbait, though trout and other fish can quickly rip worms right off your hook without you knowing it or being able to set a hook. We had a few poles set up with Powerbait nuggets in the beginning but as the night wore on it was clear that the rainbows preferred shrimp.

I asked Ed how it came to be that we were using shrimp of all things as bait. He claims a fisherman from Louisiana moved to NJ and brought the technique with him. “Down there they use shrimp to catch everything.” The fact that it works didn’t hurt either.

Technique:
OK, so we are double anchored in 50 feet of water, lights on and pointed at the water, chum in the water, rods and baited hooks in hand. How do we fish? Send your bait to the bottom. Close your bail and reel in any slack. Remain vigilant and if you feel a fish bump bump bump on the rod, give a little by dropping your rod tip, toy with the fish, tease it into striking and when you feel the pull or jerk of a trout inhaling the shrimp set the hook. Set the hook hard by swinging your rod tip high and reeling immediately. Remember you’re in deep water using a short rod and thin monofilament which will stretch.

So you’re on the bottom and not feeling any hits for about 5 minutes? Give your reel one full crank. Now stop and wait again for any sign of life. Nothing? Go one more crank and stop. Keep doing this until you start getting hits and catching fish. Early in the night we caught a few trout on the bottom, but later on we were catching them all 6 cranks up. It was quite amazing. You’d be at 5 cranks and not get a single nibble but go one more full crank on the reel and you’d either have a fish on or your bait stolen in under a minute. By the time the trip was over it became our new motto “Six Cranks Up”!

When fighting a rainbow, keep your rod tip high and just keep reeling. Do not pump your rod or try anything fancy. This isn’t ESPN! Let the flexibility of your rod and drag on your reel do all the work. Once at the surface determine how you are going to release the fish. Can you see the hook? Keep the fish in the water, grab the hook with a pair of needle-nose pliers, turn the hook 180 degrees and quickly give the pliers a jerk. Your fish will come right off. If you cannot see the hook, just reach down as far as you can with your scissors and cut the line as close to your hook as possible. If you don’t touch the fish during either type of release, it will have a great chance of living. If you are going to keep the fish, just guide it head first into the net and deposit it quickly into an ice box.

Our Trip:
We started at 8pm a little earlier than normal because Ed wanted to show me some things in the light. Because the moon was almost full our lights were not as dominant a source of light for Ed’s technique. We had a slow pick for several hours first catching nothing but giant sunfish (a pound, pound and a half) then a rainbow here and there. It wasn’t until the moon went down behind the southern mountains at 1am when the bite started. Most boats had left by then. I think we were the only boat left when we were really got into them!

By 3:30am the five of us had caught 50 Rainbow Trout, lost countless others and kept 9 for the coolers. It was an awesome night of fishing on Round Valley and I want to thank Ed Harabin and the Hunterdon Anglers for taking me out and showing me how they double anchor for night rainbows at Round Valley Reservoir.

09 July 2011 - Night Rainbows aboard the Double Anchor
In the background is the Double Anchor. Pictured left to right is Robert Ivan, Fran Harabin, Dennis Haggerty and Charlie Rahner. Behind the camera is Ed Harabin.

At the end of the trip I joined the Hunterdon Anglers, a non-profit organization and Ed mailed me a bunch of their newsletters which are packed with fishing reports, pictures and perhaps most importantly, fishing technique articles for waters in all of Hunterdon County. It’s not just boat fishing either; he has lots of shore reports and articles as well. The Hunterdon Anglers motto is “Share The Knowledge” and indeed, on the water and in their newsletter, they do share the knowledge.

If you’d like to get in touch with Ed you can send an email to double.anchor@yahoo.com or if you see a guy with a big white boat that says Double Anchor on the side, go on up and introduce yourself. I’m certain you will find that Ed is eager to speak with you and answer your questions. Thanks again Ed. I had a great time!

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Memorial Day Weekend 2011 Fishing Report

Started fishing at 5am. The water temp was 70degrees, there was heavy cloud cover until about 10am when the sun burned everything off, then it got HOT. Lots of fish on the surface gulping flies, unfortunately we didn’t have anything with us to imitate that. We flat line trolled around some usual spots pulling live herring. We had two hits and no hookups so we decided to drift on the bottom. We caught our first laker at 9am at 99 feet, than another about an hour later at 79 feet and the last at 105 feet in the south tower channel, everything on live herring.

We had enough with the trout and moved into the park ranger’s cove to fish for some bass. The area is swarming with life. We saw sunfish, bluegills, largemouth, a perch, the big snapping turtle pictured below as well as a pod of carp that were cruising all over the place. We threw every lure imaginable at these fish, but it was pretty clear that we saw them, and they saw us and were having none of it… all except for one bluegill that a impaled itself on a phoebe minnow.

memorialDay2011-SnappingTurtle

Here’s the video I got of one of the big carp. There were 5 carp in all and they were back there the whole time in the same area. Read all about the common carp on wikipedia.

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