RT:
Actually I have already tried fishing a bobber herring rig on the Columbia in the past during springer season and caught something that was very unexpected.
One day many Aprils ago I was in the hog line at the mouth of the Lewis. Well springer fishing was slow, so I decided to tie up the rig and give it a shot. I put my stopper at the water depth under the boat (10') and then just simply cast the rig about 20 yards behind the anchored boat. I could hear the snickering from nearby boats and heard on guy even say "hell that will never work!". The bobber really went all over the place in that current so I knew I was getting some great action on my plug cut below. About 15 min. went buy and then all of sudden that bobber just got slammed and long behold up came a 14-15# native spring/summer steelhead. Fought it for a little while and released it. It was the only fish that was hooked that day. It just goes to show that it's never a bad thing to experiment on a slow day of fishing.
BD
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Bobber Down
"It makes no sense to regulate salmon habitat on land while allowing thousands of yards of gill nets to be stretched across salmon habitat in the water"
John Carlson, Gubernatorial Contender, Sept. 2000 speech at the Ballard Locks