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July 19, 2008

Sometimes The Fishing Is Secondary

Started practicing with one of the Jr. Bassmasters for their upcoming championship to be held in August on Glenn Fllint Lake. This lake was on fire about 3 years ago, but has become pretty darn tough since then. No real explanation that I've been able to gather. I keep waiting for it to turn on, but it just isn't happening. It's not just me either. Tourney results on this lake have been pretty dismal, with one fish usually getting a check. There has been at least one or two tourneys where no fish were weighed. There have been a couple good stringers weighed, but it is certainly the exception for most anglers.

C&RBass We struggled along for a good bit of the day, but finally put something together late. Managed 3 keepers out of about a dozen bass fishing during the heat of the day from 2:00P - 7:00P. Water temps were low 80's and well stained. Neat occurrence of the day was this fish to the left (click to enlarge). He hit cranking a DT10 and when I got I got him in, I noticed he had something in his mouth. Look close in the pic and you'll see me holding a slider head that I removed from inside his mouth. You can even see the red sore in his lip where it had tried to start healing. It was actually hooked in two spots and from his skinniness, might have contributed to difficulty in swallowing prey. He still managed to eat my crank, but you'll notice he was hooked by a single hook of the rear treble.

SureSet This is the first fish I've caught on the DT Series of cranks, and this particular lure had the Sure Set trebles. Ironically enough, he was hooked on the long EWG hook of the set, on the back treble. Would I have caught that fish if the bait had standard round bend hooks? It will  take a lot more fish to see how the pattern evolves, but I'll be certain to be tracking which particular hooks I catch fish with when throwing this bait in the future. Might make for an interesting report in the future.

As for the title of this post...We ran across this bald eagle sitting in a dead tree in the very back end of a little cove. Truly awesome birds that we don't get to see around our parts much. I can now add this lake to my list of ones where I've seen bald eagles in Indiana (I'm up to 5).

EagleSit2

EagleFly2

July 18, 2008

The Challenge of Applied Science

ClearLakeCA

Clear Lake, California...Frequent Bassmaster stop, stomping grounds for "Fish Chris" Wolfgram and operator of what was the best big bass site on the Net before he throttled it down. Still tons of great info, pics and articles on the site to browse through despite the forum being removed. But Clear Lake is also the subject matter for one of my favorite little chapters in what is a wonderfully detailed read about the Putah and Cache watershed. The particular chapter deals with the differences and difficulties of applied science vs. basic science. Written by Pete Richerson, "Data: The Lovely, the Flirtatious, and the Ugly" is a quick read at under 5 minutes. Not sure why it sticks with me after finding it many years back, but I think it is its simplicity and line of thinking that resonates with me, applied science (scientific research being applied to my bass fishing) being why this website was largely created. The full online book can be found at: "Putah and Cache: A Thinking Mammal's Guide to the Watershed".

July 15, 2008

They're Back - Conditioned Response

Bucket I posted this once back about this time last year, but with all the recent talk of conditioned responses I thought I'd bring it up again. I'm referring to the bass that live around the marina on one of the lakes I regularly fish. These fish get fed at least twice a day by the operators of the bait house. All the dead minnows that either didn't survive overnight or those that die during the course of the day get collected in a pail and fed to the wolves. You can click on all the pics to make them larger for better discrimination. Those are a bucket full of dead minnows about to be sacrificed on the left.

Lurking Here is a shot of one of the lurking bass I took today that is just cruising below the surface and checking things out. Notice all the live shad swimming around in the pic above him. They don't attack these shad, at least not that we've ever seen. Instead they wait for the dead minnows to be fed to them. This might also speak to the principle of OFT or Optimal Foraging Theory. You can find a big write up on that in the archives under 'Not Another Juicy Steak Story'. Hard to say how long you'd have to fish using dead minnnows "in the wild" before you caught a bass.

Attack Here is a shot of one of the bass blasting on a dead minnow just floating on the surface. It is not unsual to get as many as 8 or 10 bass feeding in the morning on the free food. They'll actually start cruising up and down the boardwalk once they know you are there, waiting for the food to be dropped in. The attacks can be pretty violent, to the point of splashing people on the edge of the walk observing the feeding frenzy. Again in this shot notice all the shad cruising by in the lower 1/3 of the picture while the bass is well off the walkway feasting on a dead, floating minnow. These aren't little bass either. these fish range from 2-4 pounds in most cases, and we occasionally see one larger. Last year there was even a giant crappie that hung with the bass for a good part of the year and got in on the feeding.

July 13, 2008

You Could Learn a lot from a Walleye

Another big line of thunderstorms rolled through Friday night and Saturday morning. Locally we received between 2-3 inches of rain in a short amount of time. This was enough to jump the water level in the local reservoir to the point of an idle only restriction. When things finally cleared after lunch Saturday I loaded the boat and headed out, hoping to get some fishing in before the next line of storms made it over. When the water makes a nice jump, it is not unusual to get a good group of fish push shallow into the newly flooded cover. In this case we were only talking a 12"-18" rise, but that is still rather significant on this particular body of water. How fast bass react and move to these changes varies from water to water.

HL18 I was planning on whacking some nice bass flipping jigs to newly flooded shorelines. That turned out not to be the case this time. Instead, I found fish still holding out slightly from the bank, not right up in the heavy cover. I was able to run a shallow crank around a catch several fish up to 3 pounds, but it was fairly slower than expected. After a bit I figured I'd try something different. Out came the walleye gear.

While I actually spend about 90% of my time on the water chasing bass, I probably only spend about 50% of my time studying bass. The other 50% is spent studying other fish and fishery related issues. I'm a big believer in understanding as much as I can about fish and how to catch them - all fish. As a tournament angler I always felt there were little "secrets", presentations or adaptations I could make to my bass fishing based upon how the pros and experts fish for other fish. These would be things that my competition most likely never picked up on because they were always focused on bass. A lot of this type information came from studying walleye sticks.

7_12_Eyes I had been graphing the lake as I moved around from area to area and seeing lots of fish stacked up in 8'-12' of water. These were larger arches of what were most likely either bass or eyes in this lake. So I grabbed a rod and set it up for trolling and started making passes out in this depth range. It didn't take too long until I figured out some of what I had been marking. Walleyes.

There are numerous cross over applications between walleyes and bass. Graph reading is a biggie which I already mentioned. Boat control is another, learning how to stay on contours. Trolling is also a very effective technique for covering water. While it is illegal during tournaments, it is perfectly valid as a search method in practice. This never registers on most bass anglers minds. Walleye trollers are pretty fanatical about their trolling setups. They've gone to great lengths to completely understand exactly how deep their baits run in all scenarios; different baits, different weight lines, different length lines, trolling versus casting, etc.. They have probably researched and spent more time learning this stuff than most any bass angler alive. And a lot of this information is available for public consumption.

Bandit100 If you love throwing cranks, you're really missing the boat if you haven't spent some time studying walleye. Mike McClelland started the whole thing off years ago (~1989) with the publication of the book "Crankbaits: A Guide to Casting & Trolling Depths of 200 Popular Lures". I have one of these original guides and believe me, it has a lot of bass crankbaits in it. The concept was expanded and became incredibly comprehensive when Mark Romanack ran with the idea and published the book Precision Trolling. Click on the link to learn a little more about how the whole thing came about. Even Rapala created their own "Tackle Box Guide" based on the Precision Trolling data for all their lures. I've included a little snippet in the picture box to the left of what type information you can get for bass lures, in this case a Bandit 100. But trust me, this little table barely scratches the surface of what is covered in the book.

July 12, 2008

Understanding Water & Color

Colorvision

Lots of discussion on various boards over the year on red line, red hooks, solar/yellow line, lure colors, etc. Thought it might be appropriate for a real good overview on the subject of color frequencies, filtering, optical properties of water and vision. I came across these fine articles that have a nice balance of both technical and non-technical info on the subject. Certainly not scientific journal articles but much more detailed than run-of-the-mill fishing articles. You'll be way ahead of most after reading and understanding these.