Showing posts with label flipping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flipping. Show all posts
Thursday, May 1, 2014
5 Fish, 34lbs of Bass
big bass smash. a mix of topwater and flipping. gambler big ez swimbaits and the gambler jigzilla doing work in the grass.
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Saturday, March 15, 2014
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Never Say Never - Even if it Never Happens
Never
Say Never – Even if it Never Happens
Florida
offers a diversity of fisheries by anyone’s standards. The St. Johns to the Florida Everglades,
natural lakes to impoundments… they’re all here. One of the most pertinent aspects of that
diversity relates to the largemouth spawn.
The elongated north/south geography of the state, the milder winter
temperatures, and the sheer size of the dominant largemouth populations spread
across the state make for one of the earliest and longest spawning seasons in
the U.S. That season however is, by
definition, an early deal. Normally
beginning in the very southern portion of the state in late fall (October/November),
it comes to a gentle dénouement in the north about March. Rarely – aside from those years with a hard
winter season – does one find a wave of bedders, especially on southern water
such as the Big O after March…that’s the rule.
As I am continually reminded in other contexts Mother Nature doesn’t
follow generic rules, she’s much more apt to dictate by factors – and this year
those factors made an interesting exception: an end of April spawning wave.
Let’s
take a look at why it happened - in retrospect everything makes sense!
Mild
Winter with all the Wrong Fronts
Although
the Florida winter of 2011/2012 was fairly mild in comparison to the past few
years it seemed to stack up a ton of fronts at all the wrong intervals. Throughout the winter months I would locate
large waves of staging fish moving in from the main lake, however as they would
begin to shift into bedding mode a serious front would pass through and reset
the process. One of the keys here is
that this situation didn’t just happen once, but rather multiple times from
January on.
The
Scattering
Obviously
the badly timed fronts didn’t inhibit all the bedding activity. A mild wave came up in late October early
November and scattered fish trickled up through March. However, in comparison to the huge trans-lake
wave FLW anglers found during the 2011 Tour Open, spawning activity during 2012
was far more compartmentalized and spotty.
The
Drop
The
shad spawn was in full swing through March and intimations of bedding bream
were beginning to be seen on and around the grass lines. Both of these were strong indicators of the
post-spawn/pre-summer periods as well as rising water temperatures. The end of March gave way to a heat wave
pushing water temps into the upper 70’s and over 80 degrees following a sunny
afternoon; however April flipped the script.
I
left Lake Toho March 31st with water temps of 83 degrees, two weeks,
two fronts, and a handful of cool nights later I arrived at The Lake to find
water temps from 69-70 in the a.m. – peaking 73-74 degrees in the afternoon. The cooler nights held temps in the mid 70’s
through the end of April – probably the biggest factor in bringing up the last
minute wave of spawners.
The
lack of continual stable weather and thus mass spawning movements on The Lake
really paved the way for a nice late surprise.
Stepping back and taking in all the factors really points to a late wave
as a strong possibility but it’s tough to have such clarity on the water “at
the moment”. For me this was an echoing
reminder to keep general seasonal rules in mind but to be always making
decision based upon real time factors and what they point to.
Stay tuned for some
more in depth details on the one-two approach I took towards these fish as well
as the various presentations that accounted for 2 near 30lbs days.
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
10lbs Giant Lake Okeechobee Bass Flipping
Check out Monster Fishing Tackle and a Giant Lake Okeechobee
largemouth by following the link at the top of the vid!
largemouth by following the link at the top of the vid!
Thursday, April 5, 2012
Lake Toho BFL 3-28-12 thru 3-31-12
I fished
the Gator Division BFL this past weekend up on Lake Toho – ended up pretty
shabby in 59th even though I took 3 days off to pre-fish (3-31-12 BFL Lake Toho Results). Here’s how things layed out in my eyes.
Shad Spawn
The first
2 days I was able to track down a shad spawn bite that lasted 15-30 minutes
after sunrise. With water temps in the
morning ranging from 74-78 degrees, the shad spawn was happening pretty
solid. I found 2 areas that both had the
same overall features: a scattered hydrilla edge run up against a Kissimmee
grass line adjacent to a hard bottom area (sand/shell). One area had so much bait that it was tough
getting the fish to single out my bait over the real-deal – in that case a
Pop-R was key (old school). The rest of
the fish all fell victim to a 1/2oz D&M Custom Baits Spinnerbait in a
white/translucent pattern as well as white/chartreuse. The wind and air temps increased each day and
the shad spawn basically disappeared by the day of the tournament – I think due
to water temps starting out at 78-79 degrees and winds kicking at 15mph right
off the bat in the morning.
Flipping the Blown in Stuff
I found a
couple areas to flip as well. Nothing
too consistent but all the areas boiled down to harder cover (Kissimme grass,
Gator grass, bulrushes) with various grasses blown into them (hydrilla, chopped
Kissimmee grass, anything floating on top).
Once again, I caught a few fish here and there on this pattern up until
the day of the tournament including a 4lbs and a couple 3lbs. Depending on the thickness of cover I flipped
everything from a 3/4oz to a 1 1/2oz paired with beaver baits and smaller craw
baits. I did flip quite a bit of open
emergent grass – bulrush clumps and Kissimmee grass – without much luck.
The Irony
I tried
to cover a lot of bases during the practice time I had and ended up catching a
few cranking scattered hydrilla flats off of Kissimmee grass lines – nothing
memorable and no size comparison to the above patterns. The day of the tournament a front started
coming through kicking the wind up more than the past 3 days and my trolling
motor took a dump around 11am. I had
already missed a 4-5lbs and lost another of the same size shaking a 1oz Punch
Craw in a bulrush head. To escape the
wind a bit we drifted the flats around the powerlines without success and
finally about 1ish pushed up to the scattered hydrilla line out from one of my
shad spawn areas.
My
coangler started catching fish on a trap and I missed a few on a swimming worm. Switched to a 1/2oz Red Eye and started
burning and ripping and turned a limit around in ~1hr making 3 drift passes on
a 200yd stretch. Key was a section of
green good condition hydrilla.
Got a little lucky in end. A storm blew up ~3pm and we pushed behind an island to use the last bit of time we had in the day and I ended up ripping up a 3lbs on a trap off an isolated hydrilla patch off some old dock pilings. Ended up with a whopping 10.01lbs but I was awfully close to zeroing for a majority of the day. For as much as I was aware of the shad population in Toho and its reputation as a trap lake, I really didn’t explore that avenue enough during practice. Seemingly it’s just another case of looking at what’s right in front of your eyes instead of over thinking things. It’s too bad too, because I think I could have found a few areas to toss the Alabama Rig I’ve been wanting to bust out in some offshore circumstances = guess she’ll have to wait.
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