Running Partial Mission Capable

This is the second week since the ole Ranger took another hit in the battle with the spotted bass. Last week I lost my front sonar function on my Humminbird, which I suspect is the transducer mounted to the trolling motor. At a quick glance I saw some chaffing and nicks in the shielded wire going down to the transducer and I’d almost bet that is the cause of my front sonar going out. To top it off, the whole front unit died so I had to take my console unit and put it up front. Since the transducer is fried, I only have mapping up front which presents more of a challenge. 2D sonar is good to have this time of year to see underneath you, especially if you like to shop brush piles and drop shot but forward-facing sonar is great for locating fish near the boat and targeting topwater and suspended fish in 360 degrees. Since I didn’t have sonar, I had to alter my plan a bit but to be honest, I really don’t need sonar to catch fish right now. The only thing I’m running is mapping and faith.

It’s been 30+ years since I worked on the F-14 Tomcat, but I can still remember working on the complexed systems that kept the jet in the air. They say it took 72 manhours per flight hour to maintain the aircraft and I believe it. We were always fixing something, and the jets were constantly breaking. The more they flew, the more they broke. One thing we had to discern was whether the aircraft could still fly and complete a mission without a certain system if that system was inoperative. Things like air-conditioning or maybe autopilot were nice to have but not critical to the mission so if the pilots air conditioning didn’t work the jet may be “partial mission capable” but not “non-mission capable” and not quite “full mission capable”. For the past 2 weeks I felt like my sonar wasn’t really mission critical to getting the job done as long as mapping still worked, but I couldn’t do all the things I like to do with sonar, so I was “Partial Mission Capable” and running nothing but mapping.

For the past two weeks it’s been hot, but I’ve been on a pretty good topwater pattern lately. We’ve basically had the same kinda days where it was very sunny, hazy, hot and humid and the morning topwater bite was kinda slow but early in the morning there was usually some wind to work with out on the main lake, so I was chasing chop. The way it started out each morning was that the creek was slow for surfacing fish. You might see one come up here and there but there was very little chance to call a fish up. To me, the main lake has been fishing much better than the creek in the morning and early in the morning there are a lot of bass boat transients around the points and humps in the creek, so I’ve been heading out to the main lake to start my mornings. My target early in the morning is the main lake points and humps. To me, the fish are much more active chasing bluebacks early out on offshore stuff and the creek really doesn’t get cranking till after lunch when the bass start chasing bluebacks near the surface on certain points and humps. That usually works out well because I can be the first one to hit a lot of the productive humps out on the main lake before the bass boat traffic gets bad and by 11am or so, a lot of the morning creek bass boat traffic has moved on. I can work my way through the creek, and I can be back at the dock for a late lunch.

Last summer’s topwater bite is turning out to be just like this summer’s topwater bite. It’s just a matter of finding the choppy surface and matching it with the areas that produce fish. Just about every morning for the past few weeks it’s been the same weather pattern, light and meandering winds throughout the morning. There are moving veins of chop on an otherwise flat surface out on the main lake and my goal is to match the veins of chop with the productive areas, whether it’s a long point or a hump. The good Lord has blessed me with good eyesight, looking from a distance and I can usually find the areas that are productive and have a vein of chop over them by just driving up lake and looking around. If I see an area that has been producing and it has chop on it, I’m going to ease up on it from upwind and make my casts down wind into the area. I usually hit Spotlock and fan-cast the area. If there are active fish there, success usually happens quickly, and I usually don’t spend very long at one place. Within a few minutes the fish usually figure out what’s going on, and especially if you release a fish or two. After a release or two the bite quickly shuts down in most cases and I’m moving on within 5-10 minutes. The water is very clear, and the fish can see very well so usually after a catch or two a lot of fish have chased or followed your bait and seen the big scary boat, so they shut down and head for the safety of the bottom. With the extreme heat right now, moving every few minutes helps tremendously also. For that reason, I’m probably averaging 25-30 stops per 5-6 hour outing and I carry a big Igloo water jug with ice water to keep hydrated. I sit in a steam sauna for 30 minutes 3-4 times a week and the temp in the sauna tops out at 160 degrees, so the heat doesn’t really bother me as long as I stay covered and hydrated. To be honest, I think the bigger fish have felt more comfortable feeding in the hottest part of the day so if you can stand the heat the rewards have been great for the past couple weeks.

I gotta brag on the gear and bait I’ve been using for the past few weeks. I’ve been having success with some bigger fish lately and my gear has been put to the test more than once. I’m running 15lb braid and an 8lb flouro leader about 6-8 feet long. The braid to leader gives me the longest cast and when casting downwind with the braid to flouro system I can cast a mile. I had been using a Diawa Fuego spinning reel for a while and here lately I noticed the drag system on the Fuego was floating or backing off randomly during the course of a few casts. It was really turning into an issue, so I replaced the reel with a Shimano Stradic 2500 and I coupled it with my winter shaky head rod, the 7′ medium Shimano Zodias. I really like the medium rod for my little topwater bait for a few reasons, one being longer casts and another being more rod flex when fighting a fish and they make those bulldog runs that big spotted bass on Lanier are known for. The pairing of the rod and reel worked great and having a reliable drag system is a must, especially this time of year when you have a good chance of hooking a bigger topwater fish.

My bait selection has been pretty basic, I’ve been running a 95 Gunfish in Aurora Black for the past few weeks, and it has just flat out produced. I mixed in the Spro emerald colored popper early in the morning with some success, especially in a no-wind situation. I also used a Castaic CT-105 chrome topwater bait and I also threw a plain chrome 95 Gunfish with success but the noticeable size difference was in the color. The CT-105 and the plain chrome Gunfish produced numbers but the 95 Aurora Black Gunfish produced the size. It was just a matter of finding the right cadence that the fish reacted to best and once I hit that right speed and cadence the bigger fish responded well, especially around noon and into the afternoon. The Aurora Black fooled them the best into thinking the Gunfish was a fleeing blueback on the surface. The key was to keep it moving and not give the fish a chance to get a good look at it. Even if they were schooling under it, it was best not to stop it but keep going no matter what the fish did. A lot of times they would swat at it to see the reaction, but I’d just keep moving it and usually they would get frustrated and attack it.

Basically, the past two weeks have been running and gunning out on the main lake chasing chop using nothing but mapping and a topwater bait. I really haven’t checked the water temps lately, but it has to be in the mid to upper 80’s and it looks like we’re just a couple feet below full pool and dropping. I haven’t been able to access the corps release site, but I’ll bet they are moving water for a few hours during peak power usage during these hot days. I don’t expect much to change anytime soon as far as the pattern goes but I may be closer to getting forward facing sonar very soon. If that’s the case, that should make my summer more interesting. We’ll see. Here are some memorable fish from last week’s outing and this week’s outings.

“Hope Fishing” and Livescope

This week I had a lot going on and I was very limited to my time on the water, (which is a good thing sometimes) because I need a break to rest these old bones. On Monday I got to fish for a good 5-6 hours and for a few of those hours I felt like a rockstar. Same with yesterday, different day, different bait but same result. I felt like I could catch a fish on just about every cast. For the past few weeks, I’ve been gravitating towards a topwater or bust mentality, mainly because I’ve lost a lot of confidence in the spybait for bigger fish, and I’m not fully committed to the drop shot or spoon bite just yet. Right now, it’s hot out and there hasn’t been a whole lot of wind to play with if you want the topwater to work the best so my remedy is to keep moving and keeping my stops short. It’s mainly been up to the fish as to whether I get bit or whether I move on and usually that happens rather quickly.

I’m going to get this out of the way before I get to the fishing this week and chat about the topic of Livescope and it’s place in fishing imho. I’m sure some kind of forward-facing sonar will be on the bow of my boat soon but I’m going to wait a bit longer to make sure there aren’t any long-term negative mental effects or crossed eyes from the addiction. Just joking! I had the opportunity to fish with a friend in a tournament this week and we relied heavily on Livescope for our success. It’s not the first time I’ve fished in a tournament with a friend who used Livescope, both for winter and summer fishing. I’ll never forget the first time I saw it, right after it came out when my Friend Jesse Tacoronte from the Bassmaster Elite series pulled up to my dock and let me check it out around our cove. Jesse told me it would be a gamechanger and he was right. He said that if you’re not using it on Lanier, you’re behind the power curve. Fast forward a few years and what Jesse said has come to fruition and I’ve gotta say this, “if you are in business or competing in tournaments on Lanier, you’d better have it”. That “power curve” Jesse was talking about was strictly from a business perspective and that’s the mentality of some fishermen these days. They see an opportunity that tips the scale more in the fishermen’s favor so why not capitalize on the newest technology.

I’m by no means a technology denier by any stretch of the imagination, after all, to be perfectly honest, I’ve seen technology that would make the technology of Livescope resemble the design technology of a baby’s rattle. Sitting in the cockpit of a real modern-day fighter jet running diagnostics while staring at 4 different screens to figure out a complexed weapons system problem involves technology at a whole other level. I always enjoyed learning the new technology. The whole idea of technology in a military sense is to give the edge to you verses the enemy or adversary. Same with Livescope, it gives the fishermen more of an edge.

If there is an argument to be made about Livescope, it would be a “where do you draw the line” argument. A good example of drawing the line is Major League baseball and the Houston Astros scandal back in 2019. The Astros used technology to tip the scale in their favor, but MLB stepped in and drew a line by making a new ruling to counter the use of technology to tip the scale. Something similar happened in the NFL a few years back and the NFL stepped in and drew a line. NASCAR drew a line with restrictor plates when teams were using technology to tip the scale. It’s not uncommon for the implementation of rules to throttle back technology.

Right now, the Livescope transducer is tethered to the boat or the trolling motor but in my technical mind, it doesn’t have to be. Sound travels very well under water so it’s only a few years before we could possibly have wireless systems like smaller drone or pods to go beyond what you can see on Livescope at present. How about a much stronger transducer that can reach out for hundreds of feet and see beyond the next point in high definition? How about a fish ID that can analyze this fishes size with a high degree of certainty. It’s possible, and technology will continue to tip the scale in the fishermen’s favor as long as there is money to be made, but where do you draw the line? Is it when a sport changes from a sport to a business? Recently I was reminded once again by someone half my age that “if you’re not scoping, you’re hoping”, and I once again had to chuckle at that one. It’s the absolute truth but I have all day to hope because I’m retired now, live on the lake and I have well over 50 years of fishing knowledge under my belt. I really wouldn’t call it “hope”, after all, we’re all hoping to get bit and that’s entirely up to the fish, not Livescope. I’d call it “faith”, faith in my wisdom in fishing. Speaking of definitions, my definition of “sport” is leaving a hook straightened or smashing the barbs of my hooks to give the fish more of an edge after all, to be honest, that 4-pound spots brain is the size of a chic pea and figuring out what fish want isn’t exactly conquering the splitting of atoms. Why not tip the scale more towards the fisherman, but where do you draw the line?

This week I started on Monday with a pretty good trip once I figured out what the fish wanted. When I first started out around 7:30 Monday morning I realized that my sonar on the front unit wasn’t working and I had no way of seeing my actually depth or what was beneath me, so I just relied on mapping and shading to hit the spots on my milk run. I started out with the Z dog again and I learned very quickly that the fish had grown tired of the walking action. The mornings are a little tougher for the topwater because the fish aren’t schooling well in the early morning hours like they do in the sunny afternoons. I gotta say that I spent the first 3 hours of the morning on Monday fishless. I tried all kinds of different techniques and baits but just couldn’t connect. Around 11am I tyed on the little chrome chug bug and started tossing that around areas where I could find chop over long points, humps and brush out on the main lake. I hadn’t really used the little chug bug that much in the last week or two because the Z dog had been so successful, but I’ve learned that sometimes the fish need a little coaxing like splashing or popping to bring them to the surface. The little chug bug did the trick and for a couple hours the fish were absolutely locked onto the chug bug. I could just about call my shot at the height of the bite. As the early afternoon progressed, I realized that the fish were schooling just as well with no chop as they were with chop. Sometimes they were blowing up on the chug bug while it was just floating around without any action on the bait whatsoever.

One of the biggest reasons the little chug bug is so successful in the summertime with our gin clear water is because of that little dressed hook on the back. A few years back I proved that point on an afternoon much like an afternoon this week when I literally wore the dressing off the back hook after catching a lot of fish on the bait. Once the dressing on the back hook was gone the bite percentage dropped drastically and it picked right back up when I replaced the dressed hook. I realized that the holographic mylar dressing was the key to triggering the strike. Same with the original emerald popper, once the holographic dressing was gone the bite percentage went way down. These bass we have react to flashy things due to their curious nature and catlike predatory instincts. Another reason the little chug bug works so well is because of the chrome. These fish see the chrome as a possible blueback flashing on the surface in the sunlight and they react to it. Although the bite died off around 3pm and I headed home, I had a solid 2-3 hours of success using the little chrome chug bug again. Here’s a few fish from Monday.

I didn’t fish on Tuesday but I jumped in the boat with my buddy Matt O’Connell for the Hammond’s tournament on Wednesday and we did pretty well. Matt relies on Livescope a lot this time of year and when you’re using Livescope while tournament fishing, it’s pretty interesting. It’s much faster paced than I’m used to and reading the fishes posture is very important to success. Matt could read the fish we were scoping, and he could tell with a lot of certainty as to whether we would be successful just by the way the fish were positioned. Sometimes my old crusty butt was barely out of my seat when we were moving on. I won’t get into specifics but working together with Livescope is very important in a team setting. Each person has a roll and it’s not like beating the banks and covering unproductive water. The better you work together with Livescope, the more fish you’re going to catch. Matt and I were very consistent with the 3+ pounders at just about every stop but there was just a lack of connecting with the bigger class fish. We had opportunities and we were in the right places but sometimes that 3lber jumps on just before the 4lber. Nonetheless, I learned a lot, as I always do when I fish with Matt, however old and stubborn I may be, we still came close to the win, and I had a lot of fun.

Yesterday I was back at it, hitting my summer milk run and once again I was greeted by the early morning topwater grind. One thing I learned from fishing with Matt on Wednesday was that the fish were not reacting to the little chug bug as well as they did on Monday. On Wednesday, they would follow it, but rarely would they strike out at it. It was like they were growing weary of the chug bug. Matt threw an array of baits on Wednesday but one bait he threw triggered my memory of a couple of baits I bought back in June after having a conversation with Jeff Nail and his success with the Gunfish topwater bait last year. I told him that I had great success with the Aurora Black jerkbait pattern on Lanier for the last few years so that same pattern would probably work well as a topwater pattern and it kinda looked like the chrome chug bug. I had ordered two of the 115 and two of the 95 sizes, but I’ve had so much luck with the chrome chug bug and Z dog the new Gunfish stayed on the tackle box till yesterday when I tied it on and figured out a cadence that the fish couldn’t resist. That Gunfish flat out put them in the boat at every stop from lunchtime till mid-afternoon, but the problem was that I only had one and the other was back at the house. After a good run with the bait a big striper took the Gunfish down into the timber and it was time to head back to the house anyway, so I called it a day. Here’s a few pictures from the Gunfish run.

That’s it for me this week. It’s time for boat maintenance so I’m off the water for a few days. Right now, water temps are in the low to mid 80’s and the lake is a foot and a half below full pool. The corps is generating for a few hours a day during peak usage.

Back to the Shake and Bake

I think I’ve gotten out every day this week, at least for a few hours each day and it was a polar opposite of the week before. Last week we were enjoying the lower temps and some overcast days with wind to help the bite and this week we were greeted by sweltering heat, beating sun and glassed over surfaces on the lake. The topwater bite is good if you’re in the right place at the right time but it’s been kinda hard for me to call them up. A few weeks back, I wrote about the difference between the fish feeding up and the fish pushing bait up. This week was another week where the fish are pushing bait to the surface and quickly retreating back down to the depths. Not uncommon for our lake, especially in the summer months when the thermocline is setting up. There isn’t a lot of oxygen at the surface right now so when the fish does surface, he’s taking care of business quickly and is generally focused on one bait. If I was lucky enough, I could make a cast to the fish while he’s still up or within a few seconds of the fish going back down and connect.

It’s hard to fish topwater with any kind of hope of success when the fish just aren’t coming up when you call them so the next best thing for me this week was the spybait. The spybait bite was good this week and it was a good way to fill my time while waiting on surfacing fish. It was very important that I had my topwater bait handy and ready to cast if a fish or a small wolfpack of bass came up within casting distance. That’s how I caught the majority of my topwater fish this week including the big striper pictured above when a massive school of stripers and bass started blowing up all around me at 2:30 in the afternoon, in the sweltering heat on a main lake hump. I gotta brag on my little topwater bait this week and once again the little Azuma Z dog got it done for about 90% of my topwater needs this week. In the movie Titanic, one of my favorite villain actors, Billy Zane said, “I believe in making my own luck” and with the Z dog I had to make my own luck to call them up this week. Back in Oct. of 21 I wrote a report called “Shake and Bake in the Chop” and I explained the technique I used to make the Z dog work for me in tough times for topwater bites. I explained that instead of a traditional “walk the dog” fashion I increased the speed of the bait to a quick skipping across the surface and just slowing it briefly. The reason being that I didn’t want to give the fish a good look at the bait, and I wanted to make it look like a fleeing bait in distress much like the bluebacks I see every day skipping across the surface while being chased down by a bass. The predatory mentality of a bass, however small, reminds me of the predatory mentality of a cat. The bass are also very competitive and if they see a bait being chased down or a quick moving bait, they are drawn to it. All I had to do was speed up the cadence with the Z dog, so it turned into a reaction strike. If you’re not familiar with the Z dog Here’s a picture of the Z dog I’ve been using for a few years now and it continues to put them in the boat.

About the only other topwater baits I used with success this week was the little chrome chug bug, a chrome Livingston walking bait and a chrome Whopper Plopper. I used the chrome Whopper Plopper with some success very early in the morning but any other time I tried it, it didn’t work for me this week.

Spybaiting was good but the fish were a bit more finicky to the spybait this week. I had to change colors mid-week but I was still able to do well. I will say this about the importance of line size and even line type. I bought a spool of 6lb Inviz x and I spooled both of my spybait rods with it and I was rocking along just fine but experiencing some break-off here and there. Probably more break-offs than I’d like since the baits are 13 bucks a pop so I decided to up the line size to 8lb Inviz x since that’s what I’ve been using lately for my topwater leader. I used the 8lb Inviz x Wednesday afternoon and yesterday morning and the whole time I didn’t get one fish to even sniff the spybait with the heavier line on it. It just didn’t work at all for me, and I was losing 20 feet in distance on every cast. Distance is very important when spybaiting. I dug around my shop and found some Tatsu 6lb and spooled it up at lunch yesterday and within five minutes of going back out to try the Tatsu I was back in business with the spybait. Moral of the story is that I highly recommend the 6lb or even 8lb Tatsu for the best success with the little G-fix 80 spybaits. Technique is everything with spybaiting and there are all kinds of different spybaits out there now. I’ve used every size of the Duo Realis spybaits and I’ve caught fish on every size spybait by Duo Realis. They are a lot of fun during the summer months and if the fish aren’t coming up the spybait and drop shot combo is a great duo. I posted this a while back in a report, but I thought I’d put it out here again to explain the spybait technique in a little more detail. Here’s a video I made of the spybait breakdown.

Here’s another good spybait video with some cast to catch and technique stuff.

I haven’t broken out the drop shot rig yet but it’s coming very soon. I’ve seen all kinds of fish hanging out in and around brush for the past few weeks and if the topwater bite kinda fizzles this summer there’s always the spybait and drop shot bite to pass the time. A few things to keep in mind this summer out in the heat is to stay covered, stay hydrated and keep moving. I don’t spend very long in one spot in the heat of the summer, and I’ve always got plenty of water. I highly recommend a good buff and it never hurts to wet it every so often to help keep you cool.

Before I forget, I wanted to give an update on Chigger and our little Wren in the fern, Caroline. Chigger is plugging along and he’s slowly getting it together. We heard him barking for the first time in weeks today and he seems to get a little more excited when we come back from being gone. His eyesight is getting bad, but he can still see squirrels in the trees and stray cats in the driveway, so he isn’t exactly blind. He’s gotten back to eating a little more every day and it looks like his back legs are working better. We’re just taking it day by day with Chigger but he seems to have a little more pep in his step this week. On another note, our little Wren momma Caroline, who lives at the front door added another egg to her clutch for a total of 5. I’ve been leaving her alone with her eggs but hopefully I’ll get a picture of some little Wren chicks soon. I finally was able to snap a quick pic of Caroline this week.

Back to the fishing, I had it narrowed down to just 2 baits this week with a couple others that get honorable mention. First off, when it came to topwater it was lights out Z dog time with a little shake and bake action on the Z dog, a close second was the Duo Realis G-fix spybait in American shad. The two are pictured below. Thos two baits accounted for about 95% of my fish with the chrome chug bug, a chrome Livingston walking bait and a chrome whopper plopper getting honorable mention.

The corps is only generating an hour or two a day right now and the lake is about a foot and a half below full pool. Water temps are hovering around 80 degrees. Here’s a few of the memorable fish from my week.

Low Pressure Means No Pressure

What a treat this week has been. Normally, late June has a habit of bringing in some of the hottest temperatures of the year but this year the temps have been mild, and I’ve actually been wondering if I’m under-dressed rather than cooking off in the brutal humid heat. Yesterday the weatherman said that the average temps are around 90 for this time of year and from looking back in my logbook, he is correct. Early this week we saw a big upper-level low pressure system drop down into our area and it just sat over us spinning and drawing in moisture. One of the benefits to a low-pressure system is the drop in barometric pressure and the effect it has on fishing. My rule of thumb has always been that low pressure brings the fish up and high pressure pushes the fish down. It’s that simple. This week we had low pressure and with the mild temps and constant cloud cover it meant no pressure fishing. Just a few baits on the deck got it done this week.

Monday seems like a decade away, but I did make a quick lap around the creek and found a nice chop and some cloud cover about mid-morning. I’ve been looking for the Choppo bite to pick up and with the cloud cover and choppy surface, slinging a bone 105 Choppo around was a no brainer. As soon as I ran that thing across the crown of an offshore hump, I found what I was looking for in a topwater explosion. Even though conditions were right for topwater I decided to start throwing the spybait around brush out on the ends of points and on humps and put the topwater away. I kept my topwater rod handy just in case there was some surface activity within casting distance, but I found it was best to approach the area in a stealthier mode and start out with the spybait rather than throwing the topwater. Reason being is that when I would start out throwing topwater in an area, it scattered the fish after a few casts. Maybe a few would come up and hit the topwater but chances were that the fish would follow the topwater but not commit to it and when they would see the boat, they would go straight down to the bottom. After a few casts of this happening with the topwater the fish would be scattered and non-committal and by the time I started throwing the spybait, the bites were scarce. Starting with the spybait and forgoing the topwater netted me a lot more fish this week. Don’t get me wrong though, if the fish were chasing bluebacks on the surface where I was fishing, I would definitely throw the topwater. If I was approaching an area where there was no visible surface activity, I would start with the spybait. Here’s a couple nice fish from my quick trip on Monday.

After my discovery on Monday, I was back out Tuesday morning and I had two things in mind, topwater and spybait, but mainly spybait. I have a ton of confidence in the spybait right now and I feel like I can get bit at every stop. I want to explain the spybait technique with a little more detail and the importance of details when you’re learning the spybait technique. First off, the difference between success and failure in spybaiting is often found in the details. It’s important to have the right equipment for using the spybait, just like it is important to have the right tool for the job. I highly recommend the following gear to spybait. First is a medium rod. I’m using a 7’3″ KastKing medium Speed Demon spinning rod. There are a lot of good reels out there and the most important thing about the reel is the drag system. Get a good reel with a dependable drag system. You’re going to need it. I like 6lb fluorocarbon line and you’re going to want to use a small diameter line to help with the action on the spybait. The heavier the line, the less action you’ll have on the spybait. If you want to bump up the line strength, I recommend 8lb Tatsu because it has the diameter of most 6lb fluorocarbon lines out there. The 8lb Tatsu is pretty durable and dependable also. I just load my spool with straight fluorocarbon, no braid with a leader but straight 6lb fluorocarbon. Setting the drag for 6lb test is very important because these bigger bass can make hash out of 6lb test if your drag is too tight. If your drag is too loose, they can take you down to the brush.

I like to make a long cast with the spybait and the medium rod can really whip it out there. After I make my cast, I immediately bring in all the slack line and then let the bait fall. It’s important to bring in the slack right away because if you don’t, the bait can run over the slack line and foul itself as it’s falling. I generally give it a 10-15 count on the drop and then I use a slow and steady retrieve back to the boat. The bait drops at a rate of a little under a foot per second and I keep my rod tip low to the water’s surface, so with the right speed the spybait should be running horizontally. If your retrieve is too slow the bait will drop and snag the brush and to fast, the bait will rise. The two propellers on the spybait help to slow and stabilize the bait as its running through the water and if you have the right speed the bait should rock back and forth coming through the water. The rocking action is what triggers the strike. If the bait is running too fast, you won’t get the rocking action and if your line diameter is too large you won’t get the right rocking action. If I hook a fish, I immediately raise my rod tip to keep the fishes head up and keep him from swimming down to the brush. Another little trick the bass will do after keeping his head up, is he will shoot straight up and jump to try and shake the spybait out of his mouth. Generally, the bigger fish use the two tactics to evade being caught. Having the drag set right is very important because one of the last moves the bigger bass make is a pile driving run straight down after they see the boat. That’s usually the drag burning run and if your drag is to tight, it can’t keep up with the speed and the line will snap so it’s very important to have the drag set right. One other tip is to check your line often. Just a little nick can cause a break. Be sure and check out my YouTube page for spybait videos. I think I have several spybaiting videos that can help you.

Tuesday I was back out early in the morning, and I went right to work with the spybait and I think the little spybait saw action at just about every stop. Sometimes I’d pick off a 10-inch fish and in the next cast I’d catch a 3lber. It was really hard to say whether it was going to be a big fish with the spybait or a small fish but you can definitely tell the big ones from the small ones when they hit. I really boated a bunch of fish on Tuesday, and I had some very nice fish as well as quite a few smaller fish. Here were a few of the better ones from my morning.

Wednesday the weather was a little rough and we had rain off and on. I did get out briefly and caught a few fish on topwater and spybait but I broke my trolling motor lanyard and came back in early. I did have a few nice fish but there was a lot of rain and drizzle, so I left the phone covered up. Yesterday was more of the same and I started shaking off a lot of my fish on the spybait. Most of the fish were barely hooked and shaking them off at the boat was pretty easy. I did run into my buddy Matt O’Connell in the creek, and I got a chance to chat with him a bit about his 2nd place finish in the All-American and pick his brain about Forward facing sonar. I’ve known Matt for about 6 years now and have fished with him a few times. I’m always learning from Matt and spending a few minutes chatting with him is always an educating experience. Here’s a good one that I caught on the spybait while out yesterday.

Today I fished from about 8-1pm and lost count again on the spybait fish. I did have a few topwater fish including a nice striper this morning on the Zdog in the Casper shad pattern. I had to head back to the house around 1pm but I had a good morning and caught fish on the spybait again at just about every stop. Here’s a pic of my last fish this week. This was a great way to end the week! Water temps are mid to upper 70’s right now and the lake is less than two feet below full pool. The corps is only generating an hour or two a day this week.

Looking up vs Pushing Up!

Recently I had a discussion with a friend about some issues with our early summer topwater bite. As is the case sometimes, we are stymied by a lack of interest in our topwater offerings in early summer and the frustration can be maddening. Even when fish are busting all around the boat, you just can’t seem to connect no matter what you pull out of the tackle box. It’s been a problem of mine over the years, and I’ve spent hours just trying to figure it out. Today was no different but understanding why it happens and making the proper adjustments can be the key to success when all seems lost. I know it’s happened to you because it happens to me very frequently, especially throwing topwater early in the morning and late in the evening. I see a fish come up and I immediately throw my bait right where the fish surfaced but the fish is gone and not coming back. It could also be a group of fish blowing up but not even touching your topwater bait, even if you throw it right on top of them. Here’s my top two reasons this happens:

First being the “match the hatch” theory. Right now, we are early in the summer and a lot of the bait that is out there right now is small. I probably saw it at least half a dozen times today alone; the baits that the fish were chasing measured about1-2 inches in length. The little bait would be skipping across the water with a nice sized bass hot on its tail. Early in the morning and late in the evening the threadfin shad schools tend to come closer to the surface and right now the shad are still small. That big ole 4–5-inch topwater bait or swimbait I’m throwing looks nothing like the 1–2-inch threadfin shad that are scattering everywhere and being chased by the bass. Usually, it takes me a hot minute to figure it out but recently I’ve been combating the “match the hatch” problem with my little Duo Realis G-fix 80 spybait. Another suggestion would be a 1/8-1/4-ounce bucktail but I don’t tie or use them like I use to. I just run the spybait around the area the fish are coming up and usually it doesn’t take long to feel my little spinning rig load up. When a big fish hits the little spybait, the rod feels like the bait just hit a brick, then the brick pulls back. It’s a great feeling and a good early morning option when the bass are chasing threadfin shad early and late. Here’s a picture of my first two bass early Tuesday morning using the little G-fix spybait.

The second theory I have about why the fish aren’t coming back or coming up to hit your topwater is my looking up vs pushing up theory. There’s a difference between the fish looking up to get their meals and a fish pushing up a bait to the surface to eat it. A lot of times the fish get hyper focused on one baitfish and it’s hard to distract them. This happens a lot when there isn’t sufficient oxygen at the surface and the fish does not intend to stay up on the surface any longer than he has to. The bass has pushed a specific bait to the surface, and he intends to eat that bait a get back down to the more oxygenated water column as soon as possible. Sometimes, when there is sufficient oxygen at the surface the bass know that the bait will be up above, so the bass tend to look up for their meals. Generally, this happens during the afternoon when the bass are out searching for the larger variety blueback herring or hanging around a brush pile waiting on bluebacks to drift over the brush pile. Wake making baits, popping baits and splashing baits are good choices when the fish are looking up for a meal.

After my morning fun on Tuesday with the spybait I went to work on the topwater and found it to be hit or miss till about 9am and then I would hit a grind. The spybait and topwater would slow to a crawl till about 1pm and when the herring chasers would show up for some awesome topwater explosions. I only used 1 bait for topwater this week and that was the little chug bug. I tried a few other baits but I had the most confidence with the little chugger so I just rolled with it. The main lake humps are starting to produce for me and when the creek isn’t too busy I can call them up there too in the afternoons. Here’s a few more from Tuesday afternoon.

Tuesday afternoon Lisa text me and told me that our little Rat Terrier “Chigger” had a stroke or a heart attack and she thought he was dying. I rushed home and Chigger looked bad. He could barely walk and his breathing was very labored. Lisa had to go out for a while and I sat with Chigger as he slept. It wasn’t long till he stood up, fell over and locked up, yelping and having a bad seizure. He finally passed out and I thought he was dead for a second but then he started breathing again and opened his eyes. He kinda regained his senses but then it happened again about an hour later and all I could do was hold him until it was over. Chigger is 17 years old and is nearing the end of his quality of life. We were told by our vet that Chigger could live 2 weeks or two months, but his liver was failing, and he was near the end. That was 4 years ago and up until 2 days ago he was still chasing cats and barking at squirrels through the window.

Right now, Chigger is still trying to get it back together. I had scheduled to have him euthanized at 3pm yesterday because I just didn’t want to see him go through anymore seizures and he could barely walk. His eyes glazed over, and he was just staggering around, very confused. He quit eating and drinking after the episodes but yesterday morning he ate and drank enough to convince us to cancel the euthanasia. He slept last night and finally drank some water and ate more food this evening. As long as he’s comfortable, not in any pain and eating we’re going to just keep an eye on him and see what happens.

With the dog being sick, I spent a little more time at home this week, but I did get out a few times and I threw the chug bug a lot. I mixed it up with a little spybait and shaky head but yesterday and today the big-ticket bass came on the chug bug over brush and out on points in the afternoon. It’s by no means on fire with the topwater and chug bug right now but being in the right place at the right time is key to catching some nice topwater fish. Another key is patience, not every brush pile is going to produce but if you run a few you’re going to connect and if you get lucky enough to call one up in the afternoon, chances are it’s going to be a good one. I also saw some good schooling this afternoon and sometimes multiple fish would get after my little topwater bait. That’s always a lot of fun to see multiple bass fighting over your bait and then connecting with a big one.

I’m not much help this week and I didn’t get to spend a lot of time on the water, but I did have a good time with the chug bug this week. Water temps are in the mid 70’s and the lake is a little over 2 feet below full pool. The corps is only generating a few hours in the afternoon. Here’s a few bigger fish from yesterday and today.

The Surf and Turf Week.

As a kid growing up in the 60’s and 70’s I developed an interest in all sports. A friend of my father was giving me his used weekly (back when it was weekly) Sports Illustrated magazines every Tuesday, so I’d ride my bike into town and pick them up from a little wooden stand that stood in the foyer just inside his front door. I wore all those magazines out soaking up all the information. Back then I got to read about the greats like Pete Rose and the Big Red Machine. I got to read about, and watch “Wilt the Stilt” play in his prime, as well as “Kareem” and the sky hook. I watched Mohammed Ali and Joe Frazier go at it and I’ll never forget the lightning speed of Sugar Ray and Julio Ceasar Chavez. I went and watched Lou Brock in his final year and got a Birthday cake for a drunk Bill Russell, from the LA Dodgers, at a grocery store I worked at in 1978. My heroes were multi-sport athletes like Babe Dedrickson and Jim Thorpe (there’s 2 names you don’t hear about anymore). How about Bo Jackson, Neon Deon and Michael Jordon, three of the most talented players to every play. I really took an interest in golf after watching some of the greats from back then and my dad bought me my first set of golf clubs in 1972. It was a left-handed Tom Weiskopf starter set from Northwestern and I wore those things out in our little 5-acre pasture pretending I was in the final round-dead heat with Arnold or Jack, at the Master’s when they were in their prime. Although I played many sports I really took to golf, and I’ve played off and on for over 50 years now. Golf is the only sport I’ve found in which you compete against your own mistakes, and it is a fierce competitor. I bought my dad his first set of clubs when he was around 45-50 years old, and he eventually got good enough to beat the brakes off of me in some epic matches at his home course in south Texas before his passing. After that it was hard for me to find a reason to keep that handicap low, so I pretty much put away the clubs. This year I have made a vow to kick-start the bad habits of my golf game and try and play a little more golf in the infancy of my retirement. This week was the start of that so I’m spending a little more time on the course and less on the lake.

Monday was Memorial Day this week and it’s really a very distant memory at this point but if I remember correctly Lisa and I got out for a bit before the traffic got bad. We cycled through the usual stuff for this time of year and I was able to capitalize on a surfacing fish with my little Azuma Zdog topwater walking bait. We were mostly checking brush out on the ends of points before the traffic started going over these areas. There’s something that I’ve been noticing from the start of the week and even going much further back than that and that is that a lot of the fish are relating to the bottom right now when the sun gets up about mid to late morning. Early, the fish are doing their thing and chasing bait around the brush but around late morning they start to chill, and I’d hit a dead spot. During the early morning hours, I could convince a few to come to the surface or pop a few by backing off the brush and throwing the spybait around the area of the brush. The little G-fix 80 from Duo Realis is the only spybait I use, and the American Shad pattern can be deadly in the early morning hours or when it’s overcast. My rule of thumb for spybaiting is light solid colors in low light and translucent colors on sunny days. Here’s 4 of our biggest from Monday and Tuesday using the topwater/spybait pattern.

When I got up Wednesday morning the wind was out of the east, and it was getting it pretty good. The skies were overcast and to me it looked like it was setting up to be one of those awesome topwater days. I’m not advocating for anyone to get out on the main lake when the water is white capping and you’re the only poor soul out there looking for big spotted bass, because there is an element of danger and help may be hard to find on rough days. I’ve just come to the realization that fish are less cautious when the chop is beefy. That’s where I headed on Wednesday, into the beefy chop with my white pearl walker and the chrome Sexy Dawg. I spent the first 2 hours of the morning fending off stripers and the occasional big Blue Heron or Osprey from my walking baits, to try and connect with bass. You really had to stay on your toes with the stripers. Those suckers would wait till the bass started school under the bait and then they would come out of nowhere to steal the prize. You had to be quick with that little white pearl walking bait. I found that the stripers were a little more reluctant to hit the chrome Sexy Dawg, so I mainly stuck with chrome after fending off stripers for a while. I was back at my dock by lunch and had a nice morning of topwater in the chop under cloudy skies. Here’s some of my fish from Wednesday.

I’ve been hitting a few golf balls in the evenings at a nearby driving range so Thursday I finally played a round of golf with a good friend, Jeff Williams, after finding out he plays golf. Jeff’s like me, a passionate competitor and I’ve always had fun fishing with Jeff with that competitive spirit. I found out very quickly that he was very good at golf and just what I needed as a goal to improve my game. I had a blast getting a thorough beatdown from Jeff and after these aching muscles heal, I’ll be back on the range to make some adjustments.

I’m saving the best for last, and I’ll put my week together in a nutshell. The absolute best bait we had this week was the shaky head and if you’ve been following my reports, you should know exactly what we’re using for the shaky head. Lisa and I would go out in the evenings after work, and we wore them out during the generation periods this week. From about 5:30 till 8:30 we targeted the brush in 15-25 feet on the ends of points and humps in the creek and we had a blast. It’s a very good idea to hit the bottom with the baits during generation right now. Yesterday I went out into the creek before the generation period just after lunch to see if the shaky head bite was going well before they started generation and just as I had thought that worm bite is much better during generation. So, in summation, my best pattern this week has been the topwater walking baits during low light and windy/choppy conditions with the occasional spybait mixed in if they aren’t coming up but after the sun gets up, there starts to be a transition to spybait/underspin type stuff for the suspended herring eaters. Then in late afternoon when the boat traffic kicks up, the best thing we did was go to the bottom with the shaky head or drop shot. Here is a picture of my last fish yesterday, a nice shaky head fish from a brush pile in early afternoon before calling it a week. I couldn’t have scripted the weeks end any better and thank the man upstairs for another great week. Water temps are in the mid 70’s and the lake level is more than 2 feet below full pool and dropping fast.

Burpin Babies and Bustin Bass

Burpin Babies and Bustin Bass

I’m pretty sure I’m losing my mind, but lucky for me, it’s a slow process and sometimes it’s downright entertaining along the way. Over the past few days, I’ve realized that burping babies is just about as much fun as catching a bass out in the creek. Don’t get me wrong, I’m old and I was burping babies back before that kinda thing was cool for me, but here recently I’ve found a new love for the technique and with the right rhythm of back patting I can generate some huge burps in these twins. It’s like the different rhythms of the Berkley 130 Choppo, sometimes when you hit the right rhythm with the Choppo, you can generate some huge blow-ups and in the case of burping babies, if I hit the right rhythm of back patting, I can generate some huge blow-outs. That’s my job around here this week, feeding, burping and entertainment of the twin infant guests. It’s kinda like being a Plane Captain for babies instead of fighter jets.

Between hours of babysitting, cooking and wandering around aimlessly, wondering why I came into a room, I’ve found time to go out on the lake and wet a line. This week I spent more time out on the main lake poking around humps and points just to see what’s happening. When I was looking through my YouTube page for videos I had made around this time of the year, I found a video from a few years back and I was already catching fish on the Spybait. That raised my brow and got me to thinking about a fresh spool of 6lb Tatsu flouro that has been sitting on my bar for the last 2 weeks. I got that spool specifically for 2 techniques, the spybait and the drop shot/pitch shot. I use 6lb Tatsu for both during the summer and it’s just about time to get that rigged up and ready. For ya’ll that are new to the drop shot, here’s a video I made a few years back for pre-rigging your drop shot rigs. Lisa and I drop shot a lot during the summer and the bottom line is that if you’re not getting hung up from time to time, you’re doing it wrong. Sometimes we need to replace a rig in a hurry, and this makes it quick. There are different ways to rig your drop shot and this is just a rig I use.

When I was out this week, I saw plenty of fish that looked like I could have dropped on them although I didn’t but it’s that time of year to start. I found a few brush piles both in the creek and out on the main lake this week that were just loaded with fish and perfect to drop on. Another technique to start thinking about or even start using over brush is the Spybait technique. It’s a technique that usually starts when the fish are suspending and peaks when the thermocline sets up very soon. The technique is good throughout the summer months and into the early fall. Once you learn the technique it can be a lot of fun. Here’s a video I found on my YouTube page that gives you a little more insight into the spybait technique. I’ve got some other videos on my YouTube page for spybaiting references also.

Another observation from my trips out on the water this week was the presence of more topwater activity, as a matter of fact, it was helpful in catching a few of my fish this week. It wasn’t every stop I made this week but on a few of the stops I made this week I saw surfacing fish. They wouldn’t stay up long but long enough for me to get to the area and make a cast with the weightless fluke or the emerald popper. What little time I had to fish this week, those two baits produced the bulk of my fish. The popper was driving the stripers crazy out on a windy main lake point in the chop. It was kinda comical to watch some of the stripers come out of the water around the bait and I couldn’t tell if the near misses were intentional or were they just missing the mark. The stripers were rather large, so I was kinda glad I didn’t connect with one. There are two outcomes to hooking a large striper out on a main lake point in the wind; either you are going to land it, or he’s going to win the battle and break off one way or another. Generally, on Lanier, the striper is going to look for brush or timber at some point if there is any around, so I like to keep my rod tip high to keep his head upward during the fight. I don’t like losing bass lures to topwater stripers, but I still enjoy the battle on occasion. The popper did produce a few bass this week and it also provided me with hope after some near misses from some bigger bass. I was definitely able to call a few to the surface with the popper, whether they connected or not was a different story. This week it was the popper and fluke combo over brush and out on random main lake points in the wind. You could roll the dice and start with topwater when you get to the brush, but if you strike out with the topwater, sometimes it scatters the fish so at times it may be better to try a more silent approach to brush. I’ve often times made a cast and see numerous fish on my graph that had followed my topwater bait back to the boat but they didn’t react to it. Those fish generally go to the bottom after seeing the boat and it’s for that reason that I approach the brush in stealth mode if the fish aren’t reacting to topwater. A lot of these noisy type topwater baits can scatter the fish and spoil the bite at times so I like to test the waters and make brush pile approaches in stealth mode as well as the “bull in a China closet” or “death from above” mode.

It’s getting to be that time of year here on Lanier and the baits that could possibly be on my deck right now are walking baits, popping baits, plopping baits, swimming baits, spinning baits, jerking baits, spybaits and dropping the wiggly stuff around brush. That’s just what I have going. The water temps are probably low 70’s this morning out in the creek and the corps is moving water according to the amount of water between my dock and dry land. The lake level is over a feet below full pool and dropping. Here’s a few fish from my trips out this week.

My other job this week has been to entertain, feed and burp the babies. This is little Lainey learning all about selfies and the last picture is my main view this week, little Lainey girl and big Tater bug.

Finding the Ham Bone Stash

Finding the Ham Bone Stash

It’s usually a process this time of year on the south end. The fish are a moving target and success usually comes from trial and error during the post-spawn/recovery period. This is the time of year that the graveyard of failed lures on the floorboard of the boat can be rather large, and the fish can look rather ragged and tore up when you do finally catch them. Right now, the fish are getting back into the swing of things and starting to feed again after a long spawning period of up and down weather. I’ve witnessed some bass still in the act of spawning in shallow water this week and I’ve witnessed a bunch in transition to structure out in a little deeper water where they’ll make their summer home. I’ve seen some great surface schooling on bait early in the morning over deeper water this week and I’ve also seen sporadic shad spawning in very shallow water this week. There are plenty of big Blue Heron wading along the shoreline, looking for unsuspecting shad and stripers are on the hunt and cruising the same shallows looking for the shallow spawning shad also. It’s a time of year that you can literally pick your bite because a lot of tactics are now in play and fishing is very forgiving.

This week I made it out to the creek every day in some capacity. Most days it was just for a couple hours but I think Tuesday and yesterday I got to spend 4-5 hours on the lake. On Monday it was just for a few hours in the morning, and I mainly looked offshore for a viable hump bite that has started. I spent the majority of my time making a few casts here and there out on the main lake over humps with a combination of topwater, swimming baits and the occasional shaky head, looking for cruising wolfpacks or big singles chasing bluebacks across the shallow humps. I didn’t have a lot of time, so I didn’t really get a chance to break anything down and the bite was slow for me before going back to the house for the morning.

Tuesday, I had more time to figure some things out, so I put the hammer down and started running my summer milk run out on the main lake just to see what was hanging around my summer haunts. It’s pretty early in the season for a lot of offshore humps to produce but the fish are starting to appear in some areas. On my first stop Tuesday morning out on a main lake point, my first fish of the morning came to the boat on a 110 Choppo in a ghost pearl pattern. It was windy and choppy early in the morning Tuesday and the Choppo can usually call a fish up in the chop on a main lake point or hump. I tried to duplicate it several times during the course of the morning, but I never could get another fish to hit it after that first fish. If you don’t have a Choppo or Whopper Plopper in your arsenal I’d highly recommend getting a few. My favorite is the chrome out on the main lake in the summer. Here’s a pic of my first Choppo fish this year.

On my second stop out on a main lake point, not long after stopping and making a few casts with the topwater and spinnerbait and nice fish came up within casting distance of the boat. I had a body hooked super fluke tied on and I threw the fluke right on top of where the fish had surfaced just moments before. Just a couple quick snaps with my wrist and I felt the rod load up on the fluke and I knew I had hooked the fish that surfaced. It was a very large post-spawn fish but she was very beat up and ragged from the spawn. Here’s a pic.

After that fish I started using the body hooked fluke rig a little more. On my next few stops I started rotating between the weightless fluke and the spinner bait at just about every stop. I pretty much put the topwater away and focused on the fluke and spinnerbait out on the main lake points. We had some wind and chop to work with and the fluke and spinnerbait combo was perfect for the conditions. All I did was get upwind of the point, brush pile or target area and used the stop-lock function on the trolling motor, then fan casted the area, bringing my bait back against the grain of the chop or waves. Sometimes it was the spinnerbait that produced and sometimes it was the fluke.

One of the key reasons the fluke worked well for me this week was because of the action on the fluke. There are a lot of ways you can work the fluke and a few different ways to rig your fluke for this time of year. Years ago, when I poured my own lead head jigs, I used to pour a little 1/8- or 1/16-ounce egghead jig head and Lisa and I used the little egghead jig head with our flukes to give them a little weight, but we never really used them weightless until about ten years ago. When I started using them weightless, we went a few years of nose-hooking the fluke with octopus or circle hooks through the nose. We still use the nose-hooked technique from time to time but this week I used another method, and it worked well. Jimmy Sanders uses the technique more than I do but sometimes I find it more effective than nose-hooking and sometimes I use the technique out of necessity. If I nose-hook my flukes, I go through more flukes than if I body-hook them so generally when my supply gets low I do a lot more body-hooking the bait. The biggest key to my success this week was the action I put on the fluke. You can use a steady jerking retrieve at times, but I used a quick snap or two with the wrist and kill it for 5-10 seconds. I was using a 7’4″ medium MegaBass Levante spinning rod and a Shimano Ci4 reel loaded with 15lb braid for the main line and an over-sized barrel swivel attached to a 2–3-foot length of 15lb fluorocarbon. The heavier line and oversized swivel get the bait down beneath the surface during the retrieve and that can be crucial to a successful bite. I used a # 4 Gamakatsu offset shank hook to body hook the fluke and with the braided line, the quick snapping action I used for the fluke really gave the bait a lot of movement. That pop and stop action was what the fish wanted this week.

Through the course of the day on Tuesday I boated fish off and on but the two main baits I used to catch them all out in the wind was the pearl fluke and white bladed spinnerbait combo. The humps and isolated areas out on the main lake were pretty much void of fish but the points out on the main lake that were attached to land produced well this week. It won’t be long till fishing the main lake humps and the creek humps turns on better for me but for now, out on the points and beating the banks have filled my days. Here’s a few more pictures from Tuesday.

Wednesday I was able to sneak out for a bit but we had mandatory team fishing training for the newest Cast Away Fishing Team in training. We went over identifying all the different lure types and their uses. I used my YouTube channel as a training aid and put some sweet topwater videos on the flat screen. We also covered proper hooksets and fizzing deep caught fish. This was all between bottle feedings, naps and poopy diapers. Here’s a picture of the newest team in training, looking intently as I tell them the story of Poppi hiking up the Sierra Navada Mountain range in search of trophy trout back in the day. You can see Big Tate on the left was all jacked and drooling while little Lannie girl thought I was funny and laughed a lot.

During our training session with the team, I was looking for something and I found a stash of flukes I had hidden in the guest bedroom closet after a un-authorized trip to Hammonds Fishing. I needed a quick place to stash the bag of tackle and the guest room closet is where it was hidden behind an old toy firetruck for the last 2 years. It was like Christmas again only it wasn’t socks, skivvies and furry slippers this time, it was some topwater baits and a fresh bag of Ham Bone flukes that I had purchased right after they came out with the Ham Bone color pattern special run. I’d forgotten all about the Ham Bone and never used the Ham Bone color before, only the pearl flukes. It was like an omen, and I knew I was going to be able to spend some significant time on the water the next day. Something in my mind said, “throw the Ham Bone fluke tomorrow Jim”.

Thursday morning, I hit the water early as I wanted to target a few main lake points to start my day. I had my fluke rod rigged with the new Ham Bone color on a brand new leader and I was looking for big fish on top of brush early in the morning. This week it just seemed like the better bite was over brush in 20-25 feet of water, although most of the fish were beat up from the spawn, they were willing to eat and on the larger side. They were few and far between at times, but I was able to scratch out some good fish over brush in the creek after coming back from some main lake points. We had some wind on Thursday, so it was just a matter of me finding the brush piles in 20-25 feet of water with wind and chop blowing across the area. The wind and chop were the key as the fish were moving around the brush feeding in the wind and much more active than the fish in the calm or flat water around brush. Again, Spot-Locking up wind, fan casting the Ham Bone fluke down wind and bringing back over the brush with a few very quick snaps with my wrist, letting it fall and then snapping or popping it again accounted for all of the fish I caught on Thursday, and I had some good ones. By the time I had to head back home I was on my last Ham Bone fluke, and it was about to hit the graveyard when I caught my last fish to end the day and destroying my last Ham Bone bait from the bag. It was a fitting way to end the day and end my week out on the lake. It was a fun day in the creek and the population of fish out on the brush is growing by the day. The lake is dropping and almost a foot below full pool. Water temps are around the 70-degree mark and it’s continuing to warm. Here’s a few fish from Thursday and fishing over brush with the Ham Bone fluke.

Fishing Like March in May

Fishing has slowed way down for me of late, and my plan is to devote more time to my golf swing in the upcoming months. I’m kinda interested in seeing how the new knee will affect my old golf swing and we should have some perfect weather for a change of scenery very soon. We also have the addition of our twin grandbabies and we’ve been watching them a few days a week and that’s been chewing up some fishing time as well. My back has slowly gotten better this week and I think I probably strained it when I was working here at the house. Unfortunately, my brain thinks I’m still in my 30’s when it comes to lifting things. One of the worse things about getting old is the fact that the mind often refuses to accept it. The bulk of my injuries these days are due to that fact.

I only fished a total of 13 hours (mostly in the creek) this week and it didn’t really give me much time to find my rhythm but nonetheless I was still able to put something together. There are several different patterns going on right now at different locations on the lake and even at different locations in the water columns. Once again, it seems that the north end is ahead of the south in terms of fish feeding closer to the surface and changing their target food source to swimming baits due to the shad and blueback spawn. I believe there are still fish in spawning mode, hanging out close to structure on the shore, and I believe there are a lot of post spawn fish in transition to their summer homes out on the brush. This week I chose to target the post-spawn fish around the brush out in deeper water after seeing the bulk of the glitter boat fleet beating the shallow shores. Monday and Tuesday my back was recovering, and they were pretty much a wash for me, and on Wednesday I finally made it out for a while with my back brace on. We had a lot of NW wind to contend with on Wednesday. I got out early to avoid as much wind as I could, and I eventually went back to finesse after bombing for the first hour or so on the topwater and shallow moving stuff. With all the wind I decided to target the transitioning fish that were post spawn and hanging out around the brushpiles and relating to the bottom. I didn’t see a lot of suspended fish, so I just positioned the boat at a casting distance away from the brush, upwind, and spot locked the trolling motor to fan casting around the brushpiles. I usually tried to make a few casts with the spinnerbait over the top of the brush using a 5-10 count before throwing the shaky head. Sometimes there will be a sizable bass hoovering over the brush and the spinnerbait has been my go-to for getting that bass to react before throwing the worm and working on the deeper bottom-oriented fish. On Wednesday that’s pretty much all I did, move around and target the brushpiles in 15-25 feet of water and with the combo of the spinnerbait and then the shaky head. I missed some fish on Wednesday and wasted a lot of time on topwater but I found a few nice ones to end the morning using the shaky head and spinnerbait combo. Here’s a couple nice ones I caught hanging around the brushpiles.

Yesterday I set out to do more of the same and I was able to spend 6 hours on the water with better results. It was a good day and once again my target was the brushpiles out on the ends of points. I didn’t waste a bunch of time with the topwater or fluke and I just went right for the combo. There wasn’t as much wind, but I used the same technique starting with the spinnerbait over the top of the brush for a few casts and then go to work with the shaky head all around the brushpiles. Here’s some of the nicer fish from yesterday.

Today was another babysitting day but I did manage to get out for a couple hours to end the week. On my first stop I caught a couple smaller fish on the spinnerbait on a windy point and I moved on, but that was a good sign. On my second stop I caught a nice one on the spinnerbait over brush and followed it up a hour later with another nice one off another brushpile on the spinnerbait again. After that I hit a little lull and my time was limited so I headed back to the house. My last 2 fish this week are pictured below and a fun way to end the week. My best 2 baits this week was the 3/4-ounce SpotSticker Mini-Me with no trailer and the Zman Big TRD worm on a 1/4-ounce Boss Shaky Head (pictured below). I did catch a few on the weightless fluke rigged Jimmy Sanders style. Water temps are in the low to mid 60’s and the lake is just below full pool.

Laissez les bons temps rouler Pt 2

Laissez les bons temps rouler Pt 2

It’s been a minute since I wrote my last report from here at Cast Away Cove and a lot has happened during that minute. Since my last report our cat got clogged up with cat treats and had to endure a few enemas and some cat hospital time to get that straightened out. She’s doing great now, and by the way, I’d like to thank everyone for the thoughts and prayers. Big Sis is our rescue cat and follows me around everywhere like my sidekick so she’s pretty special.

I was pretty relieved to see Sis getting better because a week ago myself and 5 others from our Thursday night taco group embarked on a journey south to my old stomping grounds, the Louisiana marsh. We left last Thursday morning and arrived at our destination, the Venice Lodge, around mid-afternoon. We had to stop for a late lunch at Salvo’s Seafood in Belle Chase and this year I noticed that Salvo’s wasn’t as crowded as normal, and it got me to wondering what was going on. I later learned that the oil business down there was slowing some and business wasn’t as good as it would normally be in that area. For the rest of the drive down highway 23 I wondered what would become of this area if there was major cutback in the oil business down there due to moving away from fossil fuels and tougher restrictions on the fishing industry. What would the landscape look like then?

We arrived safely at the lodge around mid-afternoon and LJ led the way into the kitchen where our cook was hanging out and waiting on our arrival. Right away LJ made our cooks comfortable with our group and had them laughing within the first minute or two of our arrival. The 6 of us chatted with our new cook and her helper for a few minutes and then we found our bunks that were two to a room. We had some down time before dinner so we kicked back and played a little pool and chatted with one of our guides about what we would be doing in the marsh.

It’s always a crap shoot with the weather down there but we hit a nice little weather pattern for some good fishing, so we split up into groups of two in a boat and last Friday morning we set out for our first of 2 fishing days in the marsh. I fished with Jimmy S., LJ was with Morgan with Scott and Tom in the 3rd boat. I saw there were coastal flood warnings for the area and our guide Chris told us that Venice marina had some minor flooding the day before. The Mississippi river was very high from the spring runoff and the tide was very active which meant the redfish would be way up in the grass during the high tide. On Friday we happen to hit it just right and the tide was moving out early in the morning. The first stop that Jimmy and I hit, I caught a nice keeper red on a popping cork on the edge of the marsh cane on the first cast. There was a little open area surrounded by cane and it produced 9 redfish for Jimmy and I before letting another guide from the lodge and his crew have the area. We later heard that they caught 13 more reds out of that hole. I guessed that there was an oyster bed there in that open area to hold so many redfish like that. We moved on and I told our guide Chris about Lisa’s first bull redfish coming from the rock jetty at the southwest pass of the Mississippi. One of the reasons I told him that is because I knew we were somewhat close to it so Chris decided that we would take a ride out to the pass and see if we could find a nice bull red to add to our collection. The water was very muddy at the pass and we were in some steady rollers fishing right off the jetty, so we bailed on the southwest pass. There were no bulls to be had but I did snap one picture of a tanker coming into the mouth of the river as we were heading back into the marsh from the SW pass to finish our limit.

It didn’t take long before Jimmy and I finished our limit of 5 reds apiece and shortly after lunch we called it a day. When we pulled back into the Venice marina, and while our guide loaded the boat, Jimmy and I walked over to the cleaning station to look at some of the yellowfin tuna that were brought in for the day. It reminded me of a few tuna trips from years past. Tuna trips are fun, but you need to be prepared for the amount of tuna you could possibly bring back home. I prefer my tuna prepared fresh and I think it is somewhat of an injustice to freeze tuna and eat it later. I believe it just doesn’t ever taste the same as it did when it was fresh. Here’s a few pictures from my last tuna trip. It was Super Bowl Sunday, and the Saints won the Super Bowl that evening. My son Derek and I watched it down in Venice that year. I actually wrote a story about my last tuna trip to Venice.

Here’s a link: https://castawayblog.com/2010/09/22/a-sharks-tale/

We met up with the other guys back at the Venice Lodge and we compared notes on how everyone’s day went. LJ and Morgan caught over 40 speckled trout as well as limiting on redfish. Tom and Scott limited on redfish and Scott caught the biggest bull redfish for the trip at 32 inches. They limited out of redfish as well. Back at the lodge we relaxed before dinner and talked with the guides about our day and plans for the next day. On Saturday we had a little overnight rain, but we had about a 5-hour window to limit out again before some storms rolled into the area. Once again everyone limited on redfish on day two, and we had a mix of speckled trout, sheepshead and black drum with the redfish limits. We kicked back for the rest of the day on Saturday and Sunday morning the cook came in and made us breakfast before we departed for home. We had a lot of filets in the cooler and the accommodations at the Venice Lodge were top notch. If you want to dip your toes in the Louisiana marsh and red fishing, make it easy for yourself and stay at the Venice Lodge. They take care of everything for you from the time you show up till the time you leave.

The ride back was uneventful, and it takes about 9-10 hours from door to door from my house. We all got quite a few pounds of fish filets out of the trip and I was able to restock my seafood freezer for the next year. We’ve already had redfish twice since I got back, and it was delicious. If you check the recipe section of my blog you can find some of my favorite Louisiana cuisine the way I like to prepare it. Here’s a couple of redfish dishes from this week.

So, it was back to Lanier this week and I did get a chance to fish a few days. I usually just fished from early morning till lunchtime and ended my days of fishing this week shortly after noon. I threw a lot of baits to start the week, but I already had an idea of what I would be using. If you watch the wildlife around the lake, you can figure out a lot and one important thing, I noticed this week was the presence of Great Blue Herons wading the shorelines. For the last few months most of our Heron population has been hanging out around blowdowns and overhanging branches just waiting for an opportunity for a meal to swim by. This time of year, when the shad start to spawn along the shoreline the Heron becomes a more aggressive predator and starts standing and wading knee deep looking for shallow shade around the shore. When I see this I like to start throwing the shad stuff. My little 1.5 Shad crank shines this time of year but to be honest, just about any medium diving crankbait in a shade pattern will work. It is not entirely necessary for the crankbait to make contact with the bottom and I don’t think my crankbait touches the bottom once this week. My little shad crank dives to 8-9 feet in depth and I almost always made casts that started at 8-9 in depth. The fish were usually suspended and just below the depth that the crankbait was running so it was as simple as a cast and steady retrieve to get bit on the crankbait. The crankbait bite was pretty forgiving, and I had success over and around brush in deeper water this week. The second bait I used this week with a lot of success was the little SpotSticker Mini-Me spinnerbait. It’s spring and these fish are aggressive around the bank, especially as we near the shad spawn. These shallow bass will move on anything, and I caught some good ones this week once the wind kicked up around lunchtime. My biggest fish this week was caught over a brushpile on the end of a point is 22 feet of water. She passed on a topwater bait, a fluke and a swimbait but slammed the spinnerbait out in the wind.

On Thursday morning I took our pastor out for a morning of fishing and we had lunch at the marina. At one point in the morning my pastor asked how I knew what baits to use, and I told him about my gut pile on the floorboard of the boat just 24 hours earlier. The fact is that there were no less than 15-20 baits lying on the floorboard a day earlier and that was the ones that didn’t work. We were using the two baits that worked the best during my week. We were down to the shad crank and the spinnerbait for the week and that’s pretty much all I used. I caught fish on both all week and I think the two baits are a good choice right now. Don’t get me wrong, there are a ton of baits that will work right now because the fish are aggressive and in every stage of spawning. One of our fish on Thursday spawned on my hand as well as the floorboard of my boat so there are a lot of aggressive shallow fish as the water warms. Topwater is coming into play and only going to get better in the coming weeks and there are a variety of moving bait that will work. Lisa caught most of her fish this week on an underspin and little swimbait with mine being caught on the 3/4 ounce Mini-Me and a medium diving shad pattern bait. The water temps are in the mid to upper 60’s right now around the creek and the lake is just above full pool. It looks like the corps has been generating about 12 hours a day so there is some water moving through the lake right now. It’s just about time to get those flukes, hard swimmers and topwater ready because there’s a lot of hungry fish on Lanier right now. Here’s some pictures from my week on the lake and while I’m at it, I want to give a shout out about the little BBQ place at Bald Ridge Marine. My pastor and I had lunch there after fishing in the morning and it was great food and a nice day to sit out on the outdoor area. We just parked at the courtesy dock and walked up for lunch.