Bald Ridge Report 5-3/4-2014

After working in the yard all day on Saturday Lisa and I drove over to Bass Pro for some shopping and then across the street from Bass Pro to a little seafood restaurant called “The Red Crawfish”. They have a few things on the menu that reminds me of living in Louisiana. We got back to the lake just before dark and decided to go out in the boat for a while. I had just repaired the lower unit in our bass boat after it gobbled up a few yards of fluorocarbon. I wanted to stay close to the house with the newly repaired lower unit. We hit a few points in the back of the creek and we found a few willing bass. Last weekend Mercer and I were on Clarks Hill and I did well on a little jerkbait I made called “The Zebra Shad”. I really wanted to get it wet on Lanier and see if the spotted bass were interested in the pattern. We hit our first point in the creek and on my third cast I picked up a dink which made me feel great. It was a spot, however small, it was my first spotted bass on Lanier with the new bait. Shortly after the first, I nailed another spot in the same area, only a little bigger. Man, I was really happy to see the jerkbait working so well. We moved on out further towards the mouth of the creek and on the next point, a striper decided to have my only Zebra Shad for dinner. It was right at dark and a striper chased the jerkbait back to the boat a opened his big cake eater right at the side of the boat and like a dummy, I let him have it. He tore off with it and my drag on my little spinning reel with 6lb test was set just a bit to tight and the line snapped as he made his escape. That ended our evening and we headed back to the house.
The next morning we got up and hit the creek again at about 8am for round 2. Right off the bat I hook a big crappie on a brand new zebra pattern jerkbait I went and retrieved from the shop. The crappie was pretty good sized and a nice first fish of the morning. To make a long story short, Lisa was working a little square bill Sexy Shad crank bait and I did nothing but throw the zebra shad for the next 3 hours. We lost count of how many fish we caught, mainly because there were a lot of dinks to wade through.

We ended up with around an 8lb sack if we were counting but on the last fish of the day it finally happened. After years and years of bare handing fish, a #4 Diiachi Death Trap treble hook found it’s way into the meaty part of my left thumb. It buried itself all the way to the bone with a 2lb spotted bass flipping around with the other treble buried in his lip. I hadn’t felt that kind of pain in a while. After I got the bass under control and released we headed back to the house for some self surgery on my thumb. I dug up a pair of sturdy wire cutters too cut the hook when the time came. First I popped the end of the hook out of the bone and then took the needle nose pliers and turned the hook upward. Once I got the hook pointed in the right direction, the painful process of working it back through the skin began. I will say this, those Diiachi hooks made it a little easier to get it back through the surface of my thick, tough thumb skin. Finally after a final painful bloody push, the barb shot through the surface of my thumb and I was able to get the wire cutters on the back side of the treble and cut it free. I grabbed the barb with the needle nose and pulled the remaining part of the hook from my thumb. After a good soaking in Hydrogen Peroxide I was kicking back watching the Nascar race. Although the larger fish were few and far between in the back of the creek, it was a nice day to be out, even with the painful ending. Here’s a quick video of a few of our fish, including the big crappie.

Clarks Hill Bass Report 4-26/27-2014

I hadn’t been to Clarks Hill for a few years and the last time I went my target fish was stripers. This time was different as my buddy Mercer and I were looking for bass with a few new color patterns I came up with just for the occasion. After a couple margarita’s on Friday evening I went back down to the tackle shop to make one final color pattern before our early morning departure for the Lake. I had different shades of blue and some greens as well as chartreuse, but I wanted one more pattern with a couple of colors that that have always been good for me and those colors are plain old black over white. Thanks to the margarita’s I put a little twist on the colors and came up with “The Zebra Shad”. That’s how the zebra shad was born. I made 2 of them before going to bed Friday night and off we went to Clarks Hill early in the morning in search of Large Mouth Bass. We arrived at the lake at around lunch and launched out right away. It looked like there was a big tournament going on because bass boats were everywhere we looked. We made our way back into a creek and started looking for any signs of life. We started with points and on our second stop we saw some baits being pushed to the shore by a school of small bass so we sat down on the point and started moving around. After a few casts, I decided to scrape my jerkbait across the crown of the point and I picked up my first fish which was a nice 2lb LMB. I put my second cast in the same area and got the same result, another nice fish. Well, it worked twice so I hit the same spot again and got the same result again on the third cast. . After the third fish we caught a couple of dinks before it died off. We moved around the rest of the afternoon and saw some bass swimming with their fry in some of the pockets we worked but after the lunch bite it was slow fishing. I caught a lot of chain pickerel and a few perch in the evening when I switched over to a chartreuse jerkbait. Even nailed a 5lb turtle on the jerkbait. At the end of the day I hade racked up 5 largemouth, 5 chain pickerel, a perch and a turtle. For Mercer, he couldn’t buy a fish. He threw the box at them but just could get into a rhythm.

The next morning we hit the lake shortly after dawn and hit an old road bed I was very familiar with from past years. As soon as we pulled up on the point and got settled we started seeing a lot of surface activity right on the top of the roadbed. I saw lots of shad flipping followed by a lot of fish feeding on the shad. Mercer tied on a weightless twitch bait and immediately locked up with a nice big striper. It was a good fight to start the morning. I was steady working my Zebra Shad. Not long after the big striper rodeo I finally hooked up with a respectable largemouth to start my morning. We eased the boat into a good position to work the area and continued to catch bass, stripers and hybrids for the better part of the morning. The fish that we caught were off the jerkbait and unweighted flukes. We lost count of the fish we caught and had to cut through some dinks to get to the bigger fish. Every once in a while a school of hybrids would surface and almost immediately Mercer would get one on the unweighted twitch bait. Water temps ranged from mid 60’s in the early hours of morning and heating up to near 70 in the afternoon. I was a great trip for us and it was nice to get on some good fish.
More to follow but here’s a few pictures from our trip and “The Zebra Shad.
IMAG0191

IMAG0190

IMAG0189

IMAG0188

IMAG0187

IMAG0186

IMAG0185

Clarks

Clarks 14

Clarks 12

Clarks 10

Clarks 9

Clarks 5

Clarks 6

Clarks 7

Clarks 8

IMAG0182

Bald Ridge Bass Report Easter Sunday

It’s been a while since I’ve been out in the creek but I got to go out this afternoon for a few hours. Water temps were around 58-60 and the boat traffic was crazy. There was a constant barrage of waves so we mainly concentrated on pockets off the main creek channel. I think all the boat traffic pushed the fish and bait back into the pockets and we were able to catch 11 spots. Eight of the spots were dinks and not really photo worthy but we had 3 that made a photo op. We trolled 2 crankbaits today, mainly concentrating on keeping the crankbaits just off the bottom. The crankbaits we were using were running at 21-23 feet at 2-2.5 mph. If you can keeps the crankbaits running just off the bottom, occasional scraping flat bottom you’ll find a few bass. The biggest trick is keeping the cranks out of the structure, but there are bass roaming flat bottoms where bait is present. Seven fish came off of my Sand Key Shad Pattern and the others got hooked up on my Lanier Blueback pattern. Here’s the fish that made the photo op.
You can click on the pics to enlarge them.

IMAG0162

IMAG0161

IMAG0165

DSC02663

From the April Angler Magazine

The Southern Tackle Box by Jim Farmer

April has always been a special month for me when it comes to the outdoors. Growing up in a rural farming community in the middle of the heartland gives me a special appreciation for April and the arrival of spring. The cold frozen ground would finally thaw and everything was changing from haze grey to a fresh color of green. The dark rich freshly plowed farming soil always gave off a distinct smell and the threat of tornadoes were what I remember most about April. Another memory I have of April is the crappie and bass spawn and fishing with my grandparents as a child. My grandfather spend more than 30 years in the Army and survived 3 wars as well as atomic testing in the Bimini Islands when he retired. My grandmother worked at the local armory for years and when my grandfather retired from the military my grandmother retired from the armory. At the time I was still in grade school and my parents worked so my retired grandparents watched me after school and during the summer months. One of my fondest memories I have of the time period is fishing with my grandparents. They loved to pond hop for bass and crappie and we had the green light to fish any of our neighbor’s ponds. My granddad was a well decorated veteran and well known by all in our community. There wasn’t one farmer within a thousand miles that would deny my grandfather access to their property out of respect. My granddad had an old truck with a minnow bucket, a cooler filled with cold drinks and lunch and 3-4 fishing rods hanging out of the truck bed. We would set out in search of spawning crappie in our favorite crappie ponds in April. Granddad would be driving, my grandmother sitting on the passenger side and I’d be right there in the middle flying down dirt roads laughing without a care in the world. Lord, we caught so many crappie and the occasional big ole pond bass along the shallow shorelines with minnows and bobbers; those memories of sitting on the tailgate listening to my granddads stories are forever etched in my mind.
Every year when April rolls around I still have a desire to scour the shoreline for spawning fish in hopes that just one of those fish will bring back a memory of my childhood, long forgotten by time. When it comes to fishing, certain months and seasons drive me to pursue a certain species of fish. As the water warms into the upper 50’s and lower 60’s I start thinking about spawning fish. Whether it’s big female stripers moving up our rivers, driven by genetics or our smaller predatory fish like bass and crappie crowding into the shallows, driven by the same genetics. When these fish are driven to spawn, they are also driven to eat. In the case of a striper, a female can produce up to 3 million eggs and can gain weight in leaps and bounds, after all, she’s eating for 3 million. I believe its relative with size, as the bass and crappie follow suit and have a healthy appetite prior to the spawn. A hearty appetite coupled with these fish getting very territorial during this period provides the angler with a great opportunity to score big in April in shallow water. Not every striper decides to move up river in April, there are plenty of striped fish moving into the shallow backs of our larger creeks in April too. Along with the stripers, the crappie are moving into the shallows, looking for structure in the shallows to perform their yearly ritual. Bass are still moving around the shallows before pulling out to deeper water in a post spawn mode.
Harassment is a great strategy in April and I believe in pestering shallow fish into biting is a valid plan. Every year my wife Lisa and I spend hours paralleling the shoreline with light tackle and smaller offerings like 2-4 inch plastic fluke type baits, small creature baits and little bucktails with lead head jig weights of 1/4 ounce or smaller. We’ve always been able to figure the shallow fish out and 2 colors have always stood out for us, those colors being either chartreuse or plain white. Lisa has become a master with the little white ¼ bucktail and I’m convinced that if there are fish in the area, the little bucktails will get em. Sometimes I use a combination of chartreuse and white with success and other times it may be one color or the other, but generally speaking, if the bite is on you can’t go wrong with those two colors. In April it’s all about shallow aggressive fish and shallow grassy shorelines and areas around docks are a good location for bass in April. Long shallow points, flats and the shallow backs of creeks are a good location for stripers in early April and there should be a few crappie cruising the shallows looking for the perfect spawning areas around structure. With the higher lake levels, the shoreline bite should continue to be great throughout April with some great spring fishing. Good Luck!

From the March Angler Magazine

The Southern Tackle Box By Jim Farmer

Well, it’s happened again. The finish line is within sight. After a winter that will certainly go down in history as one of the very worst, there are signs of warmer weather and spring approaching. At last glance the jonquils in the back yard have begun to bloom and I notice that the sun is staying up just a bit longer these days. Now I’m sure we’ll see our share cold fronts blasting through the south this spring just to remind us that old man winter is still alive and kicking to our north. That’s fine, just give me a few warm sunny days in between cold fronts so I can enjoy some spring fishing.
Things are shaping up to be a banner spring for some shoreline striper fishing. The lake is very near full pool and the bait is still plentiful. I’ve been netting Blueback Herring from my dock and there have been plenty in a variety of sizes. Last night under my dock lights there were schools of large mature 6-10 inch Bluebacks circling under the dock lights. The night before last, the bluebacks were very small and rolling under the lights by the thousands. March and April are months that shallow water fishing is at its finest and some of our biggest fish will be lying in wait along the sundrenched shores waiting on a meal of big juicy protein packed Blueback Herring. Our lake stripers are starting to warm up and get back to business, and business is eating bait. The shad die off is winding down and the stripers are starting to get very aggressive when finding a meal. Scores of Blueback Herring are cruising the shoreline in search of warmer water and a food source to prepare them for their spawn later this spring. The herring are feeding along the shore and the stripers are right there with them. Sometimes stripers will lie in wait on a warm afternoon in just a few feet of water just off the shore just waiting for a big fat Blueback Herring to make the mistake of swimming in front of him. With a quick lunge and an open vacuum mouth, dinner has been served for a hungry striper.
With this scenario of striper feeding in the spring, my plan of attack involves planer boards. The planer board is the one piece of gear that can get your bait right up against the shore without the boat being too close to the shore. Pulling Blueback Herring behind planer boards along the shore is a great way to increase your chances for a big strong spring striper. As these big stripers start to warm, they start flexing some muscles that have been dormant for a few weeks as their metabolism slowed in the coldest part of winter. They are like bulldogs in the spring and they really can make the drag scream. For this reason you really need to have your gear ready for some hard pulling fish. I like to start gearing up my leaders to 15-17lb test fluorocarbon with a good octopus hook at the end of a 6-8 foot leader and a 25lb test mono main line. You may want to use this time of year to re-string some reels if your gear has been through a long hard winter of abuse. Having new line on my reels eliminates the worry of break-offs when the drag starts peeling at breakneck speed from a big hungry striper.
So here’s the plan; make sure your gear is in good working order and you’ve got a good set of planer boards. I prefer Cast Away reversible planer boards. Head down to your local bait shop and pick up a few dozen Blueback Herring and head to the lake. Take one of those herring and put it on a hook and run it out 30-60 feet. Hook up the planer board and troll along the shore at .5 to .8 mph and keep that planer board just a few feet off the shore. If you do this in March and April, there’s a good chance you are going to wind up with some exciting spring fishing and some great striper memories. Get out and enjoy the warmer weather and some spring planer board fishing!

Jim Farmer is an avid fisherman and is the owner of Cast Away Bait and Tackle, a custom tackle shop located just off the shores of Lake Lanier in North Georgia.

Bald Ridge Report 3-1 through 3-11

The creek is clearing up and the fish are starting to heat up also. We’ve been concentrating most of our efforts to bass fishing of late because I’ve trailered the big striper boat back to the boat garage for maintenance and to prepare it for the summer striper trolling season that will kick off in a few more months. Right now we’re plinking away at bass with smaller tackle in shallow waters as the bass enjoy the warmer shoreline temperatures and start relating to shallower structure in lieu of the upcoming spawn. We have been using our new little Bed Bugs with 1/8 and 1/16 ounce egg heads and also our little 1/4 ounce Ultra-Spin with a 3.75 inch Twitch bait in a pearl white, blue iridescent pearl or chartreuse over white has worked the best. Here’s a few pics and video from the past few trips out.
IMAG0105

IMAG0102

Bass

IMAG0343

20140308_094011_1
)

Bald Ridge Report 2-22-2014

           Well, my plan was to get some good looking crappie jigs and a few minnows and search the creek for crappie. Lisa and I had bought each other crappie rods for Valentines day and we are determined to catch crappie with our tiny new rods. Lisa and I went from stalking big striped bass on heavy tackle to sizing down to crappie and finesse fishing around docks and structure in a matter of a few weeks. This took some getting use to. I practiced shooting docks with my little rod and I must say that I’ve gotten pretty good at it. It’s kinda like fishing with a slingshot. Our plan was to throw around docks and structure to see if we could locate any schools of crappie and concentrate on those areas while loading the cooler with a bounty of the little speckled beauties.

Off we went at lunchtime for an afternoon of fishing. The back of the creek was completely blown out from recent rains so we decided to fish outside the mud line in the clearer waters. I think we chunked and jigged around docks for an hour or so then I decided to hit some blow downs along the shore. We were using a variety of colored jigs in 2 sizes, 1/6 ounce and a 1/32 ounce with some little Bobby Garland bug looking plastics. I liked the little Key Lime Pie color because Key Lime reminds me of Key West and some of the many memories I made on that little island paradise. I put that little plastic on a 1/16 ounce green colored jig head and started throwing around shoreline and blow down structure. It didn’t take long and I had my first fish on the little crappie rod and the fight was on. I realized very quickly that this was probably not a crappie as the fish stripped drag on the little rod. I played the fish on the 4lb test fluorocarbon line. When the fish finally came to the surface it was a nice respectable spotted bass. He was very lively and I thought maybe he had been hanging out in the warmer water of the shoreline. I returned the fish to the lake and off we went again in search of crappie. Lisa was in the front of the boat trying different colors and was just as determined as I was to catch a fish. I threw my little jig just beyond the end of a pretty big blown down and let the jig drop till the line went slack. As I put pressure on the jig I felt a little tap tap and set the hook on another fish. Just like the first, the fish stripped drag at will and when the little fella surfaced it turned out to be another respectable spotted bass.

At the point of catching the second bass within a few minutes of the first, to me that constitutes a pattern and should be addressed as such. I put the same jig pattern on Lisa’s little crappie rod and we went to fishing shoreline for bass with our tiny crappie rods and Key Lime bass jigs. It didn’t take long till Lisa got in the act with her first bass, a nice little buck bass in less than 10 feet of water. I believe the drag screaming on the little crappie reels is just about as exciting as the drag screaming on our big gear with a big striper doing the pulling. After the third and fourth bass we decided that the fish were hanging in 5-10 feet of water so we concentrated our efforts to that depth. We had a blast catching bass along the sun drenched shoreline of the creek and at last count we had a total of 9 nice spotted bass boated and a few that pulled off. We never caught crappie one during the whole afternoon but it sure was a lot of fun to catch bass on ultra light tackle. To cap off the evening I turned on the dock lights and did a little crappie fishing with crappie minnows under the dock lights. I didn’t expect much because the water was stained to the color of my morning coffee with heavy cream. Not long after putting out 2 lines complete with spanking new bobbers, one of the bobbers submerged and I knew I had my first crappie of 2014. I grabbed the rod and the fish was off to the races as he went under the dock and then under my boat that was inside the slip. I kept pressure on the fish and finally he came to the surface. I got a quick glimpse of what looked to be a 2-3lb crappie from the lighter color of the fish but on second inspection I realized that it was a nice respectable 2-3lb Largemouth bass. I fished for a while longer and didn’t get another bite so I called it a day. Surface temps in the creek varied from 50-53 degrees so there is a definite warm up in water temps. Looks like it’s shaping up to be a great spring.

Cast Away Baits on Talk Radio 12-28-2013

Brad and Jim

I spent a little time in the studio talking with Brad Myers on Saturday morning the 28th of December on Georgia Outdoors Radio, 92.5 FM “The Bear”. We talked about striper fishing and tackle for over an hour. There is a lot of good striper fishing info in the show so if you missed the live version and you want to listen to the edited version including a report from Arnie Davis live from Lake West Point and my segment live from the studio you can Click Here.

If you would like to listen to the full show including a saltwater report from Captain Judy Helmey from “Miss Judy Charters” and a Lake Lanier fly fishing report from Captian Henry Cowen from “Henry Cowen Quality Flies and Guide Service” you can Click Here.

*Be patient, it will take a minute for the upload!

Lanier Stripers 12-20-2013

I fished yesterday afternoon, Thursday the 19th and zero’ed for the day. Just before dark I found some stripers back in the creek but they were feeding on small threadfins so the trout I pulled behind the planer boards didn’t work well. I figured they may hit a trout early in the morning if they stayed in the general area so my plan was to hit the same area at first light. I left my dock just before 7am and motored up the creek at first light. After getting a spread out I started marking a few big arches in less than 20 feet of water and I knew the stripers were still there. It didn’t take long till the trout on a freelined balloon started getting very nervous. I was pulling the trout on a balloon about 150-200 feet behind the boat at the time. I picked up the rod out of the rod holder and pulled the bail lever back to free spool. The striper chased the trout around the balloon and soon my thumb and rod tip felt the striper nail the trout and at the same time the balloon took off skimming across the water. I threw the bail lever forward and set the hook on my first striper of the morning, a healthy 15 pounder. It was a nice way to start the morning. I decided to pull boards to the back of the creek so I got as far back as 49 degree water temps and 7 feet of water when I turned around. The back of the creek was like the land that time forgot. Plenty of run down docks and summer homes and it seemed every tree had a few turkey buzzards hanging around. It was like a scene out of “Apocalypse Now”. I kept thinking spears and arrows were going to start flying out of the tree line so I turned around. I went through a dry spell for several hours but I checked another area we had been catching some nice fish further out in the creek and found the big arches on the graph again. Another striper started chasing the balloon bait again in shallow water and after a game of cat and mouse with the striper, I set the hook on him and the fight was on. Just as quick, the fight was off and the striper was gone. I had turned the video camera on early in the cat and mouse game and I had some great footage of a big striper chasing and slapping the trout before he inhaled it. I was holding the rod and talking to the camera as I set the hook on him. It would have made a great video along with the first striper footage I had from my early dawn striper. The camera ran out of memory and I had to dump the videos I had so I could video the next fish.

I made a big circle back to the same area I had marked the arches. I gotta tell you, I can really tell the difference between a big striper directly under the boat in 20 feet of water, and your run of the mill spotted bass swimming to and fro. The big arches looked like they were just dripping with electronic static because of the high sensitivity on my graph in shallow water. It looked like 3 bigger fish just off the bottom in 20 feet of water so I figured I still had a shot at the other two. This pass I aimed the right planer board at the same area and just as the trout passed over the big stripers I saw a big boil where the trout should have been and the planer board rocketed across the water. That’s when I grabbed the rod and reached back to turn on the camera. Here’s what happened next:

20131220145353(1)