Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Rule #11:  Never promise something you even suspect you might not be able to do.  Keeping promises is keeping your word--as such it is a key quality of a person's character.  Save promises for important things; don't promise to take out the trash, just say you will.  

When writing about my Bass Tournament experience, January 15, I referred to that feeling fishermen always get now and then wherein something goes wrong at the beginning of your outing and from that point on, everything just continues to spin out of control.  Today, as I was setting out:

I thought I'd get a coke at the Marathon, but of course, had no money or the Marathon card in my wallet.  I had to drive back to the house and start over.

When I got to the spillway by the Treatment Center, and parked the truck, it started to rain.

The first cast I took snagged a "Wacky Worm" rim I was fishing, and I had to break the line.  Though I'd stuffed the pack of worms in my front pocket, I had forgotten to bring anymore hooks, so that made that rod pretty much ineffective.

Ignoring the rain, I fished on and caught a smallmouth--only about a pound--but unfortunately, he swallowed the Panther Martin 1/16 oz spinner I was using, and to get it out, I had to kill the fish. Great.



After I caught a couple more very small bass, all on the Panther Martin, the rain began to come down in earnest, and so I called it a day.

That being said . . .

CONDITIONS

Temperature:  I mowed the yard yesterday and the sky was high and blue.  A storm cell moved through to our north last night, and this morning it was again looking clear and warm.  About 1:00, however, clouds moved in and it became more humid, and hotter, about 85 degrees.

Water Clarity:  I fished just above the "dam" across the river from the Treatment Center, because John Craddock told me that the smallmouth were thick there when the water officials had electro-shocked the White while making a species count.  The water today was that dark green color we get sometimes when the river is going down from being high and brown.   When I was retrieving the spinner, I could see it ten feet out at about 6" below the surface (the water is very shallow at this place on the river.)

Depth and Flow:  Just above 5', and flow rate, just above 0.4.   (I found a National Weather Service web-page that keeps record of this data.  It's measured close to the Elm Street Bridge, but still, this could be profitable information to keep an eye on!)

Bottom/Vegetation: Vegetation was marginal, really.   (Just "vegetation" isn't as big a category in the river, at least at this time of year.    So, I'll expand this to include "bottom," which is more important.)
The bottom in this area is very rocky, with even some gravel bottom closer to shore.  The river runs hard here, it's shallow, with some large stones beneath the surface that create eddies.  Those eddie areas were where I received the majority of my bites.  Snags too!

Cloud Cover:  Cloudy, rainy.

Wind Speed: 2 MPH, Maximum 12.

Pressure:  30.13


LURES/METHODS

Because I lost that Wacky Worm on my first cast, I used the other outfit I brought, which was my new ultralight reel on an old floppy fiberglass rod, designed for 6-10 pound test.  I used the Panther Martin 1/16th oz. spinner in bronze with a black body with little yellow dots on it.

I always take a pair of needle-nosed pliers to the treble hook on these lures to open the curve of each of the hooks just a bit, and I think it makes a huge difference.

I switched to a chartreuse Road Runner late in the outing, made maybe 12 casts with it, got one hit, though it's hard to tell with that fiberglass rod whether it was a hit or a snag.


I only fished about an hour today.  I think I'll start making my way down the river, starting where I ended up last year.  So, I'll begin at the lone sycamore tree upstream from the large concrete pad on the shore.  I might return to this spot, however, for a while, the bite was pretty heavy.


Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Rule #37:  Don't try to kick your attacker in the balls, he is hard-wired to defend against that.  Instead, fake that move and then punch or elbow him as hard as you can in the throat.  If he can't breathe, he can't fight.

CHANGES:  This week has been a week of dramatic changes around our house.  The Young Lady is moving to Bowling Green to enter a Master's Program for a year and a half.  The Boy has decided to join the Navy after he graduates in a year.  Girl 1 is, thank God, living with us again, working, and soon will take on another summer job in addition to her summer college courses.  Girl 2 is taking a math class at the local Junior College in preparation for classes at the university in the fall.

The 1st Girl is coordinating all of these changes while working hard for summer money from the university.

Me?  Cooking mostly.  And fishing.  And foot modeling, of course.

Monday, June 8, 2015



Rule #29:  You don't get to choose your own nickname.



FISH AND ANTS AND CATS, OH MY!

Girl 2 and I went fishing at the old Fisher Pond Saturday.  It was an odd day, a day brought to you by the makers of Slim Jim, makers of fine grease- and spice-laden meat products.




We got there about noon and fished for a couple of hours.  We looked all over for a styrofoam cooler to put ice in, because Carly wants badly to eat some of the fish we catch.  After 45 minutes, it became obvious that we weren't going to exactly slay them, so it wasn't an issue after all.  I've decided, though to start keeping all fish I catch in that pond, and maybe the Keep-Out Lake, cleaning them, and freezing them until we gather enough for a meal.




Anyway, the CONDITIONS:

Temperature:  We'd had a few hot days, higher humidity, and Saturday was a break from the heat. The high was probably 70 degrees, but while we were fishing, it was mid-60's.  I didn't take temperature readings of the water, but the bluegills and bass were largely in post-spawn pattern, so it's not as warm as it will be in the summer, but still, pretty warm.

Water Clarity:  The current owners of the pond dyed the water sometime in the last two months--as they do every spring.  The water, therefore, was that artificial-looking blue-green color.  Most of the water drops off steeply, so you can see maybe 3' of bottom, on average.

Vegetation:  Between the dye and the MANY grass carp, there is no vegetation to speak of--on top or on bottom.  The first lure I used was a Bitsy Jig with a salt-infused Tiny Paca Craw plastic grub.


Dragging and twitching it across the bottom, I snagged two small sticks, but never had to clean vegetation from my lure.

Cloud Cover:  It "felt" fishy--cool, with some humidity, and constant cloud cover, a grayish sky all day.

Wind:  Wind speed, 10 MPH, (ENE); max wind speed, 16 MPH; max gust speed, 20MPH.  Casting wasn't difficult, but then I wasn't using anything too light.  The only problem posed by the wind was that it was hard to "line watch" for strikes.  This is the first time I've tried to teach Girl 2 how to fish a plastic worm--by the end, we were both using a salt-infused, light brown, two-toned YUM 4" worm, wacky-rigged.  When the wind picks up and creates turbulence on the surface, it's more difficult to detect strikes, especially light ones.


[The worm I was fishing looked a lot like the brown and yellow one second from the bottom, "salt-infused and covered with it too.]

Pressure:  The whole time we fished, we were under a rapidly falling barometer.  On Saturday, the pressure fell from 30.2 to 29.6.


LURES/METHODS:

We forgot to get worms, so Carly started bobber/bait fishing with a hunk of Slim Jim she bought at the gas station!  It didn't work, but she stuck with it a while.  Sometimes that's a good thing, sometimes not.  I think there's a lot to be said for getting some bites immediately, it boosts the confidence--especially of a young person.  Next, I let her use my outfit with the Bitsy Jig and Tiny Paca.  Again, this dragging and twitching method is new to her.  Then, she tried a 1/4 oz. white Mister Twister jig and she got a couple of nibbles there.


Finally, she switched to the YUM rig I mentioned above, and I told her this time, to simply reel it in slowly and steadily.  This got her away from trying to keep the slack out of her line and at the same time, hopefully, kept the lure down low.
And, she finally hooked one well.



             [That's her fish below the catfish.  I had a good hold on my fish, so,              though it would've made a better picture if my big ugly hand
             weren't in it, I wasn't about to risk getting "barbed" by getting                        another hold on it!]













I only used three different lures:

  • the Bitsy-Jig/Tiny Paca package
  • a Kelly's fire-tail.
  • and the YUM worm set-up

I caught one bass on the jig and grub, about a 1.5 --2.5 pound largemouth--nothing on the Kelly's, but I had some good bites.  Then on the YUM wacky-worm, I caught three very small bass, maybe .5--1 pounds.

Then, as Carly was reeling in her fish, I cast the wacky-worm and the instant it hit the water, the lure was snatched up and driven to the bottom of the pond.  I couldn't believe the fight!   Carly got her fish in, and then I handed the pole to her to fight mine in the rest of the way.  I was using the Pfleuger/Micro-Lite combination, and it worked great.  Carly and I both pointed the pole straight up to let the rod do the work, but still, the fish was stripping line off the Pflueger, the drag operating extremely smoothly!

We finally got it close enough to the bank to see that it was a large Channel Catfish: 16" long and somewhere between 2.5--3.5 pounds.  A beautiful fish.


EPILOGUE:  As I was re-rigging our poles over on the pier, I heard Carly yell ad saw her running towards me.  Somehow, during our battle with the two fish, we had stirred up some seriously pissed-off biting ants.   Shedding her shoes as she ran, Carly got to me and I used our bottled water to rinse them off of her legs.  Frantic patting ensued. Finally, we got them controlled and we decided that that moment would be a good time to end our day.

Lots of emotional content--Channel Cat and biting ants!  Top that!

Saturday, June 6, 2015

Rule # 35.  Know the words to our national anthem and sing it loudly at every opportunity.

SO, IT'S SPRINGTIME.

The forsythia have bloomed, and that means the bluegill and bass have started nesting.  I told my late Great-Aunt Wilma that I could smell bluegill nesting, and she was certain I was continuing the family tradition of stretching the truth!  But I really can.  Really.  I can also smell Garter Snakes--but that one she just flat out refused to believe!!

I miss her so much.  Everyone needs someone who'll call them for bull shit--not that I was lying or exaggerating.

Not only do the forsythia signal the beginning of my heaviest fishing period, but because June 15 is Father's Day, and July 3 is my birthday, I'm looking forward to a new rod and reel this year!  Each year, for the last few, I have asked for a Pflueger reel and a Bass Pro Micro-Lite rod--one for Father's Day and the other for my birthday.  For Father's Day, I also ask if the kids and Peggy and I can go out for dinner--there's nothing I like more!!!

Last year, I asked for and received the Pflueger President Model 6925.  I've described this in previous entries, suffice it to say that I remain so very positive about this reel.  Today, as I was trying to wrestle in a 2-3 pound Channel Catfish, the drag actually engaged, and smoothly!

I paired this reel with a Bass Pro Micro-Lite rod: ML70LS2, a seven-foot Light weight rod, very sensitive and will cast a light weight lure a country mile!

The way I see it, that reel and rod constitute my mostly everyday, LIGHT WEIGHT, outfit.  I run 4 pound test on it, or the equivalent in different lines, and can cast lures weighing from 1/16 oz to 1/4 oz.  The catfish Carly and I wrestled in today give good evidence that the combination can take a large fish pretty easily.

This Father's Day/Birthday cycle, I'm working on creating an ULTRA-LIGHT outfit.  I looked throughout the Bass Pro Shops catalog for different makers of rods and reels, but in the end, I chose the lightest weight Pfleuger President reel, and the lightest weight Bass Pro Shops Micro-Lite 6' 6" rod.  I'll mostly use this outfit for river fishing, as I catch mostly smaller fish on the White.  I plan on spooling it with 2 pound test--probably braid.

I already have the makings of a MEDIUM-HEAVY rig, and I don't really want to spend much money on what will be my final outfit.  There are just so few times that I need to use more than 10 pound test.  The rod Peggy got for me from our bank's "Annual Value Points" is a wonderful MH weight rod, and I can slap just about any one of my extra reels on that and call it done.

I'm more interested in giving Carly some of my "hand me downs."  I want her to have a good rod and reel, because nothing is so frustrating as using inferior equipment when you know you could be catching fish!!


Rule #32:  Never answer the phone or text at the dinner table.


"CABIN FEVER" THOUGHTS


I've been reading how to catch winter smallmouth.

I think that's a bad sign.

Anyway, today, to keep myself from going down to the White and cast grubs across ice floes looking for a "fishy" looking area, I thought I would list the places I want to hit this spring with a vengeance:
And, once the season starts, I will take them one-by-one to present the way(s) I want to approach these waters this year:

1.  Fisher Pond
2.  "Keep Out" Lake
3.  Little Kentucky
4.  "Keep Out" Lake #2
5.  White River, upstream, from Treatment Center dam
6.  Mississinewa River
7.  Horse Pond
8.  Shamrock Lakes
9.  Buck Creek
10. The Rez
11. Small creeks, north-west of here, running under road bridges
12. Big Dirt
13. Doc's New Pond

I've got thirteen places to fish, at least.  As with the places I intend to fish, I'll tackle (haha!) each of these separately in a post.

1.  Fish at least once a week.
2.  Be on the lookout for a cheap john-boat.
3.  Check trolling motor or get new one.
4.  Make some new milk jug anchors.
5.  Buy/put together one more outfit:  This will be the ultra-light version of my last outfit:
     6' 6" Bass Pro Shops Micro Lite Rod
     Ultra-Light with the lightest weight Pfleuger President reel, model 6920.
6.  Put together a Medium--Medium Heavy outfit from the equipment I now have.  The rod Peg got          me from "points" at our bank is exactly what I need for this outfit.  I'll pick out the best reel for            heavier line, good drag, and load it with some heavier line.
7.  Become more proficient at cleaning fish, and subsequently eat more fish.  Also, when I'm fishing        cleaner water, I'm going to bring a cooler with ice each time, and kill some keepers, even if there        are only a few.  I'll clean those and freeze them so that I can build up enough for a meal.
8.  Buy cheap fly rod and learn to fly fish with new reel.  I got both at a rummage sale.  Now, I'm            going to try to find a store where I can buy backing, line, leader, and tippet, and have an employee     help me load it up.

There never seems to be enough writing about different gear and how to use it.  Though I'll treat these individually later, I will also try to identify the few ('cause I can't afford a $20 Rapala!!!) baits, lures, and gear that I will employ this season:

1.  Strike King Grub with Tiny Paca Chunk
2,  Larger beetle spin on White for Smallies
3.  [With Carly} Live bait on Fisher Pond
4.  Fly rod and automatic reel
5.  Wading the river with football cleets.
6.  White River bait fishing; standing in the river and casting upstream.
7.  Seining the river for crawdads, etc. to use as live bait.

+from Water Treatment Center, upstream
+shallow run just above falls across stream from Water Treatment Center--wading
+West Side Park and water down stream
+Between West Side Park and the High Street Bridge
+area around High Street Bridge
+shallow water around the Whiteley neighborhood
+area around the old wire factory