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Q: Mayfield lake washington tiger musky fishing ( No Answer,   3 Comments )
Question  
Subject: Mayfield lake washington tiger musky fishing
Category: Sports and Recreation
Asked by: 72chevylonghorn-ga
List Price: $10.00
Posted: 02 Jun 2004 17:16 PDT
Expires: 02 Jul 2004 17:16 PDT
Question ID: 355601
I'm looking for a specific web site about MAYFIELD LAKE WASHINGTON
TIGER MUSKY FISHING. The guy put together extensive info and as I
remember the opening screen was a black background and has pictures on
the right margin, vertically set. Near the upper left hand corner was
a square to click on, this opened the rest of the site
Answer  
There is no answer at this time.

Comments  
Subject: Re: Mayfield lake washington tiger musky fishing
From: digidaze-ga on 27 Jun 2004 08:40 PDT
 
I think I found your website but I'm trying to figure out how to use
Google Answers ( this is my first answer).
Subject: Re: Mayfield lake washington tiger musky fishing
From: scriptor-ga on 27 Jun 2004 09:33 PDT
 
Dear digidaze,

In case you are trying to answer this or any other questions and earn
the amounts offered for answers, I'm afraid I have to disappoint you.
Only the approved Google Answers Researchers can do so. But you can
provide useful comments, though you would have to do that without
compensation, of course.

Regards,
Scriptor
Google Answers Researcher
Subject: Re: Mayfield lake washington tiger musky fishing
From: don546-ga on 05 Sep 2004 00:32 PDT
 
I can't send you to that website, but I can tell you how to fish
Mayfield L. for tiger muskies.  The water entering the lake is very
cold, and the muskies tend to stay in the top 6 foot layer warmed by
the sun, so don't expect to find them in deep water.  They're often
right up against the shorelines.  Underwater stumps and logs absorb
heat and the muskies sometimes lay right on top of them, so when the
water is calm enough to see this sunken wood, memorize where it is.  A
large shallow weedbed across the lake from Ike Kinswa State Park also
holds tiger muskies.  This weedbed and any shorelines with sunken
stumps and wood are the prime areas.  The warm surface water is
released over the dam on weekends to feed the river below, which is
bad for musky fishing, so come here at midweek if possible.  The
lake's very clear water makes fishing tough on sunny days.  Fish on
cloudy or rainy days, and during low light periods at dawn and dusk. 
These fish do not like big lures, and I prefer small bucktails and
crankbaits no larger than 6 inches.  They do not hit after dark, and
they do not hit topwater lures; night fishing and topwater tactics are
a waste of time.  Even though the lake is open to fishing year-round,
the tiger muskies suspend and hibernate in winter, and are catchable
only from about late May to early October. Please release all muskies
because their numbers are limited.

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