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Lake Ontario Trout and Salmon Fishing Tips from the Fish Doctor
Posted on January 23rd, 2010 No commentsMLE(Make Life Easy) Tips from Fish Doctor Charters
There is nothing a charter fishing captain who fishes two trips a day, day after day in all kinds of weather and conditions likes any more than something that MAKES LIFE EASIER(MLE)! Over the years, I personally have discovered some of these MLE items, and thought some MLE tips might help you as well.
As I look toward the beginning of the 2010 charter fishing season that will begin in early April in and around Oswego Harbor fishing for browns and cohos, one of the first things that makes life easier for me when I’m trolling shallow, say less than 30’ deep, is 6 lb. downrigger weights.
It may not sound like much, but the difference between using 6 lb. and 10-12 lb. downrigger weights when you’re fishing up to two trips day after day is huge. It’s huge as far as saving energy, and it’s even huger when it comes to reducing wear and tear on your body and equipment.
Here’s the deal. Most anglers use the same 10 or 12 lb. rigger weights all season, whether they’re fishing shallow or deep. However, there is actually no need for the heavier rigger weight when you’re fishing shallow, especially at early spring brown trout depths or offshore spring steelhead depths shallower than 10-15 feet. The lighter rigger weights work fine with minimal blowback.
If you’re using downriggers mounted either astern or abeam with booms long enough to require a retro-ease, which is used to pull the weight close enough for rigging, there is a huge difference between pulling a light rigger weight and a heavier weight to the boat. If you’re using a heavy weight, you have to grab on to the retro-ease line firmly with your full hand, pull it to the boat, and lock it in place with the chock. It takes some “umphh”! When you get it locked in place, if the water is rough, you all know what happens. The weight starts to rock and roll, putting a lot of stress on your retro-ease line, downrigger boom, rigger cable, terminal snap, etc., etc. Put too much stress on the cable connection to the weight too many times, and you hear the dreaded splash as the cable breaks and the weight heads for bottom. Been there, done that, eh?
Now, with the lighter 6 lb. MLE weights, you grasp the retro-ease line with a couple of fingers, easily pull the light weight to the boat and lock it in the chock. When it’s rough, the little weight bobs around a bit, but doesn’t put much stress on your gear.
This MLE tip saves me tons of energy thru the season whenever I’m trolling shallow. The other benefit…, far less disturbance(smaller signature) from the small weights in the water, and fish tend to hit on less setback.
There is a HUGE difference handling 6 vs. 12 lb. rigger weights.

