Lessons from a week at Strawberry - Printable Version +- Fishing Forum (https://bigfishtackle.com/forum) +-- Forum: Utah Fishing Forum (https://bigfishtackle.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=386) +--- Forum: Utah Fishing General (https://bigfishtackle.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=58) +--- Thread: Lessons from a week at Strawberry (/showthread.php?tid=1101292) |
Lessons from a week at Strawberry - JeepNut - 06-27-2022 We were up at Strawberry last week from Monday to Saturday. We fished a lot of different areas and got the grandkids into a lot of fish. There are a lot of small cutts and bows that love the same rigs that the kokes do and we were constantly taking them off. It was fun for the kids as they were never bored but they didn't like having to release all of the slot cutts. We did manage to get a good number of kokes on certain days. We also learned some lessons along the way. The first lesson we learned was that even if you pay for the campground they charge $10 per day extra to launch your boat. None of the other places we have gone do this. If they are hauling in that much for launching boats they need to improve the ramps and make them much bigger to handle the crowds. One lesson we wish we could have taught the big cabin cruiser owners is that they shouldn't launch their monsters and leave them sitting on the small loading docks blocking the boat ramp. On Saturday there were two of the monsters just sitting there blocking the launch area during the busiest launch time. We also learned that if you go through the Narrows don't expect people to obey the proximity laws. For the week we were there only four boats obeyed the rule in the Narrows. Most just flew by at full throttle. We also learned that the kokes know when it is Saturday. My son in law could only come up for Saturday and we were out bright and early in the area where we caught the most during the week but we only caught cutts and bows. We also saw some fun stuff, we saw a couple of bucks swimming across the narrows, we also got startled when a twin engine jet came out of the Narrows flying very low and when he came into the Renegade bay he went into rocket ship mode with full throttle and climbed nearly straight up. One morning we went to launch and two older guys were trying like crazy to get their boat off their trailer, they were giving it a lot of throttle and kept backing it up deeper but still couldn't get the boat off the trailer. We launched and could hear a guy trying to help them out, he kept saying "it's still connected". He repeated it multiple times until finally the truck driver went out and disconnected the boat from the trailer. All in all a very fun week with decent weather and many willing fish. RE: Lessons from a week at Strawberry - obifishkenobi - 06-27-2022 I was up there Thursday to Sunday and got the notice on my truck every day telling me I owed $10 for parking. Since I payed for camping I ignored it, basically it is not enforceable. Funny you said Saturday was your tough day it was the fasted day for us to get our kokes. This year is a grind I only managed about 3 limits of kokes a day in the box we only got 11 Saturday because I didn’t fish the evening that day. On Thursday and Friday I got 4 each day between 5-6 pm and around 8 in the morning from 5:40am to midday. RE: Lessons from a week at Strawberry - PACMEN - 06-27-2022 (06-27-2022, 11:56 AM)JeepNut Wrote: We were up at Strawberry last week from Monday to Saturday. We fished a lot of different areas and got the grandkids into a lot of fish. There are a lot of small cutts and bows that love the same rigs that the kokes do and we were constantly taking them off. It was fun for the kids as they were never bored but they didn't like having to release all of the slot cutts. We did manage to get a good number of kokes on certain days. We also learned some lessons along the way. The first lesson we learned was that even if you pay for the campground they charge $10 per day extra to launch your boat. None of the other places we have gone do this. If they are hauling in that much for launching boats they need to improve the ramps and make them much bigger to handle the crowds. One lesson we wish we could have taught the big cabin cruiser owners is that they shouldn't launch their monsters and leave them sitting on the small loading docks blocking the boat ramp. On Saturday there were two of the monsters just sitting there blocking the launch area during the busiest launch time. We also learned that if you go through the Narrows don't expect people to obey the proximity laws. For the week we were there only four boats obeyed the rule in the Narrows. Most just flew by at full throttle. We also learned that the kokes know when it is Saturday. My son in law could only come up for Saturday and we were out bright and early in the area where we caught the most during the week but we only caught cutts and bows. We also saw some fun stuff, we saw a couple of bucks swimming across the narrows, we also got startled when a twin engine jet came out of the Narrows flying very low and when he came into the Renegade bay he went into rocket ship mode with full throttle and climbed nearly straight up. One morning we went to launch and two older guys were trying like crazy to get their boat off their trailer, they were giving it a lot of throttle and kept backing it up deeper but still couldn't get the boat off the trailer. We launched and could hear a guy trying to help them out, he kept saying "it's still connected". He repeated it multiple times until finally the truck driver went out and disconnected the boat from the trailer. Fun to see the deer swimming across. We've seen it any number of times. One time we had a doe and fawn swim across. When we see em swimming I usually stay 50 to 100 feet away and stay by them. I attempt to act a bit as a crossing guard. They are not as easily seen as a boat and as close as some idiots get to us fishermen I figure some would not respect the deer. RE: Lessons from a week at Strawberry - fishnotphish - 06-28-2022 (06-27-2022, 11:56 AM)JeepNut Wrote: We were up at Strawberry last week from Monday to Saturday. We fished a lot of different areas and got the grandkids into a lot of fish. There are a lot of small cutts and bows that love the same rigs that the kokes do and we were constantly taking them off. It was fun for the kids as they were never bored but they didn't like having to release all of the slot cutts. We did manage to get a good number of kokes on certain days. We also learned some lessons along the way. The first lesson we learned was that even if you pay for the campground they charge $10 per day extra to launch your boat. None of the other places we have gone do this. If they are hauling in that much for launching boats they need to improve the ramps and make them much bigger to handle the crowds. One lesson we wish we could have taught the big cabin cruiser owners is that they shouldn't launch their monsters and leave them sitting on the small loading docks blocking the boat ramp. On Saturday there were two of the monsters just sitting there blocking the launch area during the busiest launch time. We also learned that if you go through the Narrows don't expect people to obey the proximity laws. For the week we were there only four boats obeyed the rule in the Narrows. Most just flew by at full throttle. We also learned that the kokes know when it is Saturday. My son in law could only come up for Saturday and we were out bright and early in the area where we caught the most during the week but we only caught cutts and bows. We also saw some fun stuff, we saw a couple of bucks swimming across the narrows, we also got startled when a twin engine jet came out of the Narrows flying very low and when he came into the Renegade bay he went into rocket ship mode with full throttle and climbed nearly straight up. One morning we went to launch and two older guys were trying like crazy to get their boat off their trailer, they were giving it a lot of throttle and kept backing it up deeper but still couldn't get the boat off the trailer. We launched and could hear a guy trying to help them out, he kept saying "it's still connected". He repeated it multiple times until finally the truck driver went out and disconnected the boat from the trailer. I apologize in advance about the rant. Please skip if you've heard this one before (most of you have). I know we must have a hundred threads on this topic, but I am continually disappointed that they charge the same or higher rates year after year and decrease services. At the main marina, they have one set of restrooms open (with those absolutely ridiculous push button water sinks and completely empty soap dispensers) and the fish cleaning station is roped off like a high profile crime scene (I rarely use the cleaning station anyway, but I have to assume all the fees go to something). They don't want you cleaning fish in the campgrounds, either. So what are you supposed to do? The restrooms on the north side of the parking lot are locked. The water spigot near the marina restrooms is locked. I guess we're paying increased prices to continue to use the boat ramp, but little else. The payment is really a soft contract, is it not? In exchange for your fees, you will have access to use the facilities and the fish cleaning station, restrooms, etc. If they are not able to fulfill their end of the bargain, should they not reduce the fees? What incentive do they have to open additional restrooms or the fish cleaning station if they still collect the same amount of money and now don't have to stock or maintain those amenities? Where is the accountability for the money we pay? I know it's just a rant. It goes nowhere. I'm sure that by contract the campground management firm is supposed to have those things working, but what happens if they don't? The whole process is buried many layers deep in bureaucracy, arcane policies, and a general lack of transparency and accountability. </end rant> I love to fish at Strawberry. RE: Lessons from a week at Strawberry - Panchodog - 06-28-2022 I read on fake book one of the robbers, I mean "contractors" said that some water lines broke over the winter. Fixing them would mean digging up a bunch of parking lot and blocking part of the ramp. Not sure how true that is but that's the company line. I also love to fish at Strawberry. RE: Lessons from a week at Strawberry - N.E.T.O. - 06-28-2022 OP... I agree 100% that people need to learn boat launching etiquette. Flaming Gorge this year is an absolute joke. When we were there a couple weeks ago there were only 2 lanes open. So at 6:00 a.m. we are at the top of the ramp preparing our boat (like you are supposed to do), when not 1 but 2 rigs drive right past us and go to the bottom of the ramp only to choke it off preparing their boats at the bottom of the ramp in the way for the next 15 minutes. There were 6 other boats waiting to launch because those idiots had to prep their boats down at the bottom of the ramp completely clogging it up. TIRED of people that think they are above the rules that likely know, but ignore, proper boat etiquette because they are in a hurry. Rant off. That felt good. ...and yes, Strawberry is just as bad, and I love fishing there also. |