Thursday, October 22, 2015

10/22/15 Expect the Unexpected

Just one you think you have something fishing figured out, it puts you back in your place. In recent years I have had a lot of success fishing for Saugeyes below the dams in town. This year, I have not managed to land a single one. I have however caught a multitude of other species including Smallmouth Bass, Channel Catfish, Freshwater Drum, and Northern Pike. I had about an hour after work today to hit the river. With the way things have been, I should have known what to expect. About 5 minutes into the trip I had a nice take on a fluke. I saw the fish flash and was almost sure it was a Saugeye. It gets to the net and is a Northern Pike. Go figure. That was the only fish I caught but it was a beautiful evening to be outside and on the water. Plus I'll take a Northern Pike over nothing at all any day of the week.


Tuesday, October 20, 2015

10/18/15 Sunny Day Rainbows

With summer fading into fall, the air and water temps are beginning to drop. We've had some cold nights as of late so I thought that I'd give some trout fishing a try. I hit the lake about 10:30 to give it time to warm up as it was a chilly 29 degrees overnight. Once on the water I quickly got my fish fish on and lost it just as quick. Before too long though I tied into and landed my first trout of the year. After that though, it turned into a pretty slow day overall. Bluebird skies and no wind is definitely not my favorite conditions for this fishing. After a few hours the wind picked up and so did the fishing. In the last hour I was on the water I landed 3 more Rainbows and lost several more. All in all on the day I went 4/9. The 4 fish I landed were all obviously this years stockers and they all were right around 14" long. Catching less that half the fish hooked is not too great by anyone's standards. I think I need to go back to the drawing board again and rethink my flies. I just don't seem to be getting hooks into enough of the biters. You can read about my tactics for trout and watch videos of my system in action by clicking here: Trout Page. Get ready everyone, because fabulous Indiana trout fishing is just around the corner.



Monday, October 12, 2015

10/10/15 The Fast and the Furious

On a whim, Kelly and I went down to Salamonie Reservoir to look for White Bass and Crappies. We didn't arrive at the lake until 5:30PM so we didn't have very long to look for fish. The good news: I got my kayak in the water, cast a small spinner on my ultralight rod, and immediately caught my first White Bass. Catching a fish on the first cast is usually either really good luck or really bad luck. Either the action will continue or that will be the only fish caught during the trip. Luckily the action continued and within a few minutes I was catching fish on consecutive casts. Looking out over the water, you could see Shad constantly being chased and jumping out of the water. Kelly started off fishing a bobber and jig around downed timber. She quickly caught her first crappie within minutes of starting to fish. Once I realized how many White Bass were in the area though, I had Kelly switch over to throwing a spinner as well. Over the next hour the action was fast and furious. We had multiple doubles and I really couldn't tell you how many fish we caught. If I had to guess I would say somewhere in the neighborhood of 40-50. Most of the fish were between 8 to 12 inches. If you've never caught White Bass before you might be surprised how well they fight for their size. They fight very frantically and the bigger ones can really pull hard. They make for great sport on light rods and Kelly and I both had a blast. It is always great when the fish are this cooperative.
 

Monday, October 5, 2015

10/3/15 The Impressive Esox Masquinongy

It was looking like one of those days. The forecast is calling for highs in the 40s. Winds ENE at 20-30 mph occasionally gusting to 40 mph. And a chance of rain all day to boot. So as I arrived in North Webster with rain hitting the windshield and the thermometer reading a balmy 44 degrees, I'm thinking to myself "What the hell am I doing here?" Despite the fact that we are probably at least a little crazy, we were here to do some Muskie fishing. Randy and I arrived at the lake just after noon and got set to head out. Despite the wind, the North and East portions of the lake were pretty calm and looked good. We began fishing the North bank and within an hour we had already seen 2 follows from really good sized fish. We went to fish another main lake point where Randy had recently moved a giant fish. We didn't see any fish there so we headed back to the first area where we had the first two follows. We began fishing and before long it happened. I made a cast to the breakline, began my retrieve, and in an instant I remembered why we were out here in these conditions. I set the hook into a fish and began pulling it to the boat. I couldn't tell how big it was but it stayed deep and headed towards me. As it approached the boat, Randy readied the net. It was now directly underneath us and to my amazement began to pull drag and I could feel it's massive head shakes. I have 80 pound braid on my reel and have my drag almost all the way down so pulling line is quite a feat. It really showed how strong the fish truly was. It came to the surface and we realized how big the fish really was! It gave a couple more head shakes and headed for the net. It was all over in less than 60 seconds, but what a rush! Randy grabbed some pliers and went to unhook the fish. He realized that it had already thrown the hook and was now sitting in the net waiting for a few glamour shots. Missing half of it's tail and with a large notch in it's upper jaw this fish wouldn't win any beauty contests, but it sure was an amazing fish! I pulled it from the net and we got several pictures and measured it at 46", making it the biggest fish I have ever caught. We released the fish back into the water and I stood there shaking from the thrill. Despite our best efforts all we had to show for the rest of the day was a 26" Pike. Any other day I would have been happy to catch it, but after landing a 46" Muskie, a 26" Pike looked and felt pretty small! I can't thank Randy enough for the invite and being the net and camera man both. This trip was something special and I will remember it for a long time!