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Lake St. Clair, Thurston County, open year around, lots of fish, big and small! Almost never has ice and is fishable in almost all weather. In addition it is a great lake to take kids, they WILL catch fish!
American would be my 2nd choice.
Sparkles said:
I'll just choose American lake. Only 12 miles away so it's cheap to fish. Not really that tough to find and catch fish. And it will be good for kids to catch rock bass every cast when needed. Plus I don't really want to name lakes I like going to haha!!
Since the rules are vague, I would choose a lake in a warmer climate. Clear Lake would work for me. If we are talking Washington, then my choice would be for Lake Washington. It is only an hour away and you can catch quality fish all year. It is a giant lake with so many different areas to fish.
Mine, Tapps. I'm sure there are lots of Tapps haters out there, but I can find nice SM, 12" crappie, and you can hit a bonus 4ft Musky just by accident. Also, every year I see someone catch an 8lb largemouth. This is all assuming that the lake isn't drained, and I don't have to pay $17 per trip to launch...
River is the only thing over here that doesn't ice up. I don't walk on ice. I don't care how thick it is. That is just a rule of mine. Columbia River by default.
To be fair though, is there a body of water in Washington that is more diversified than the Columbia River at Tri Cities? If I have to fish a lake 2 days a week, I need to see some changes of pace from day to day.
Ditto!
Tyler Brinks said:
Long Lake Spokane...no question
The River... there's simply too many options, for any other body of water to compare.
If it's in Washington state, I have to say Lake Washington. There are other lakes that I catch them better on when fishing is really good but day in and day out Lake Washington is the steadiest 365 days a year.
Posted by Tom Melowitz on September 7, 2019 at 2:45pm
Posted by Eric Urstad on April 3, 2019 at 7:38pm
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