Monthly Archives: August 2013

Fishing A Hydroglow Light At Lake Sinclair

Bob Williams caught this bass at Sinclair just before dark

Bob Williams caught this bass at Sinclair just before dark

On a Saturday night in July a few years ago 15 members and guests of the Spalding County Sportsman Club fished our July tournament at Lake Sinclair. Fishing from 6:00 PM to 2:00 AM we tried to beat the heat, but it didn’t work. I had sweat dripping from my nose even at midnight. But it was more comfortable that it would have been with the sun shining down.

After eight hours we brought in 19 keeper bass weighing about 32 pounds. There were two limits and seven people didn’t have a keeper to weigh.

Kwong Yu won it all with three bass weighing 9.91 pounds and his 7.14 pound lunker took the big fish pot. I had five at 7.28 pounds for second, Brent Terry came in third with five weighing 6.37 pounds and Russell Prevatte was fourth with two at 2.29 pounds. Kwong said he landed the big one on a jig head worm and eight pound test line.

I got lucky. After two hours of casting practice I went to a cove where there were some docks shaded from the setting sun. As I passed one dock I saw brush out in 12 feet of water on my depth finder and cast back to it, and landed a barely legal keeper. I noticed a strange blue and green glow under the dock and started fishing around it.

A man walked down to the dock and I expected him to turn off his lights. Instead, we started talking. Darrell Keith owned the cabin and he makes and sells Hydro Glow fishing lights. They were what was making the glow under the water. He said he tested his lights there and they brought in bass every night. As we talked it got darker and I could see shad starting to circle the light.

He went back to his cabin, saying a lot of fish would move in when it got real dark. At about 9:00 PM, at full dark, he came back out and I landed a keeper bass on a jig head worm almost immediately. He said he could see a bass swimming around and I got my third keeper on a crankbait. He left again and at 10:00 I landed my fourth keeper on the worm.

I kept fishing the dock and landed a fifth small keeper at 11:20 then one that culled the first fish I caught at midnight. Although I stayed there until 1:30 I did not get another fish.

If I had a dock or fished at night, I would definitely have one of those lights. There were shad around it the whole night but lights 100 feet on either side, one big bright street light type on the end of a dock and one dim light right on the water, never had a shad around them when I fished them.

The web site for Hydro Glow fishing lights is www.hydroglow.com. They are expensive but worth the price, I think!

Canadian Bass Championship

Winners with nice smallmouth

Winners with nice smallmouth

Kenora’s Jeff Gustafson and Bemidji, Minnesota’s John Peterson Take First Place at Fort Frances Canadian Bass Championship

from The Fishing Wire
By Jim Edlund

Jeff “Gussy” Gustafson and John Peterson quadruple-fist Rainy Lake bronze. The team finished with impressive 55.42 pounds over the three-day tournament.
Like the weather-beaten parchment of some maritime legend, the map of Rainy Lake should read “Here Be Dragons.” Straddling the border between Minnesota and Ontario, Rainy is a multi-species playground teeming with monsters: fat walleyes, giant crappies, big pike and linebacker smallmouth bass. With an expansive 220,000 acres of world-class fishing, it should be on every angler’s bucket list.

It’s also home to one of the most prestigious open team bass tournaments in North America, the Fort Frances Canadian Bass Championship (FFCBC), an annual three-day event that draws the continent’s best bass anglers in a veritable treasure hunt for the lake’s biggest bronzebacks.

Held this past weekend, July 25-27, the weather was as fierce as the competition. A hundred teams plied calm waters on Day One but rode out Day Two and Three in cold-front conditions, culminating in a more than ten degree drop in water temperature and northerly gusts reaching 40 mph. Not typically the kind of conditions for filling bags with big bass; yet, for many competitors the bite was excellent.

Case in point, 2013 FFCBC champs Jeff “Gussy” Gustafson and John Peterson, who weighed an impressive 55.42 pounds over the three-day tournament, finished first after five consecutive years in the top ten, including three third place spots.

“Rainy is one of my faves-lots of water and big fish,” said Gustafson.

We’ve been close to first place a number of times since JP and I teamed up in 2007, but like any big water tournament a lot of things have to go your way to win it.”

Northland Tackle’s John Peterson agreed. “Seems like the stars have to line up to win the FFCBC. But this year, on Day One we had nearly 20 pounds and Gussy boated a 4.72-the biggest fish of Day One- that really anchored us.”

Ultimately, though, it’s the result of a lot of hard work by the multi-generational team, who’ve spent the past ten years scrutinizing Rainy Lake’s smallmouth bass habitat.

“It’s not just about finding and catching the right fish, it’s about traversing a giant body of water and getting back home in adverse conditions. Rainy can beat the snot out of you. We’ve been adding to our game plan every year, which is a big confidence factor,” said Peterson.

For Gussy and JP that confidence boost is partly due to stringing together a trap line of high-probability waypoints, many in the southern part of the lake, where they’ve taken to hunting larger, lone wolf fish on isolated structure.

“The new LakeMaster Version 4 Woods/Rainy card has a lot more detail than Version 3, which really paid off for us. Helped me find nearly a dozen little humps and shoals that held fish I never even knew were there, even though I’d fished the area seven or eight years,” said Gustafson.

Once high-probability spots were identified during pre-fishing, Gustafson used Side Imaging to find the hard bottom corners with surrounding weeds. He’d then create waypoints to allow casting to the structure from a distance to avoid blowing out the fish.

“Especially for this year’s shallow-water game, the Humminbird 958 on my bow was set to full-screen GPS. Once the tournament started, we were fishing solely to what we saw on the map,” Gustafson reported.

Yet, rather than burn waypoints right away, they spent their time finding new fish the first two days of the tournament, still relying almost entirely on the lake map to locate new spots.

Gustafson says the detail on the new LakeMaster Version 4 Woods/Rainy card helped them locate fish-holding structure he didn’t even know was there, like the small hump in the image above.
“We found a couple new areas that ended up being pretty key in the tournament. By 8:30 am on Day One we had 18 pounds without touching any of our high-profile spots, almost every fish on a Jackall popper.”

At the end of Day One, Gussy and JP climbed into first with an impressive 19.17 pounds.

DAY TWO

Although they hoped for a repeat of Day One, Day Two greeted competitors with increasing north winds and falling temps. “The conditions were definitely more challenging. By 11 am we only had three fish. We pulled into an area and caught three pretty good fish on ½-ounce white and yellow Northland Reed Runner spinnerbaits – and ended up getting a few more upgrades, but it was difficult. We finished at 15.90 pounds, which dropped us into fourth place.”

DAY THREE

The weather only worsened on Day Three, furrowing the brows of competitors, particularly Gussy and JP, who had leaderboard space to climb.

“My buddies Jay Samsal and Troy Norman were in first going into Day Three, but only by a pound and change. Still, we were a little bit worried with the falling water temps and severe winds. So we planned to start dialing in our saved waypoints on the Humminbird.”

Gussy and JP could almost see the whites of their competitors’ eyes as they began Day 3 fishing a mere 300 yards from Samsal and Norman.

“We started on a point where we caught some of the better fish on Day Two and discovered pretty quick that this was no normal cold front situation. Although it was super windy, we ended up catching four big fish and a two-and-a-half pounder in the first half hour and then started upgrading the rest of the day.”

Added Peterson: “We found a school of big ones, which isn’t always easy. Normally, we’re picking one fish off a sweet spot here, a sweet spot there. Bass holding on an inside turn, a weedy area with boulders in a bay or a wind-blown shore or an isolated hump with the same stuff.”

“But we got into got into this little area where the fish were really hot for spinnerbaits. Just proves that you can have all the preconceived notions you want but the fish will bite where and what they want, we just needed to capitalize on it. My twin Minn Kota Talon shallow-water anchors kept us right on target, even in the extreme winds, so we could keep our baits right in the strike zone,” said Gustafson.

Their money spot was just one of 40 or 50 waypoints on the Gustafson’s Humminbird 1198, many of which were just the right combination of weeds and rock in water less than 10 feet with deeper water nearby.

With 19 pounds in the livewell that quickly, Peterson says Day Three was a thrilling final chapter to “a day from heaven and the day from hell.”

“It was blowing so bad you couldn’t distinguish bites on jigs or tubes, so we had to resort to power fishing spinnerbaits. Given the cold front conditions, we weren’t sure if it’d work, but it did. I think the water was so warm earlier this season that the drop from the high 70s to mid 60s actually helped the bite.”

Following relatively calm conditions on Day One, the bite soon changed from poppers and finesse baits to pure power fishing in the form of ½-ounce Northland Reed Runner spinnerbaits on heavy braid. Photo by Bill Lindner Photography

Peterson says normally the FFCBD is won with finesse baits, but this year was all about power fishing. “It’s just what the fish wanted. We covered a lot of water looking for biters-and the fish that hit spinnerbaits just about tore your arm off. We didn’t have to baby any of them.”

Peterson laughs when he says the first two days of the tournament neither of them lost a fish. It wasn’t until looking for those final upgrades on Day 3 that Murphy’s Law took effect.

“To be honest, while we were looking for a kicker we lost six big fish in a row. Of course, then doubt sets in-that you lose big fish in a tournament and you don’t win. But we had a bunch of wild jumpers that came unbuttoned and spit the hook. Likewise, we lost a fish close to 5 pounds a foot from the net. And we had problems with fluoro breaking. I’m convinced if we could have upgraded with half of those we lost, we would’ve come in with 22 pounds. It was probably the best day of smallmouth fishing I’ve ever had-all in the middle of a cold front.”

Along the way, Gustafson switched rods from a stiffer 7’2″ to a 7’6″ with a softer tip, and also substituted his Shimano Chronarch reel’s fluoro for 30-pound PowerPro braid.

“The longer crankbait rod allowed me to make longer casts and it’s softer tip made it possible to fish the heavy braid without ripping the hooks out of potential upgrades,” said Gustafson.

All said and done-Murphy’s Law defeated-the Kenora/Bemidji duo ended up with a 20.35-pound bag, enough to raise their confidence to where they thought they might have a shot at first place once back at the weigh-in.

Gustafson: “Anybody who’s been on Rainy knows that it’s big water with a lot of open stretches. Day Three made it uncomfortable for a lot of guys out there. But we were fortunate that we had a pretty good bag and didn’t have to run home at the last minute.”

Also the first pro bass competitor in recent memory to fish the FLW pro bass circuit in an aluminum V-hull boat, Gustafson says the FFCBC is a good example of how the hull of his Lund Predator 2010 eliminates one of the greatest stresses of big-water tournaments.

“We made it home without any problems – the boat isn’t real heavy and the hull design makes it possible to ride pretty high on big waves. Plus, fish were healthy in that big livewell. For guys who fish the Great Lakes it’s a dream smallmouth boat in big water. It’s not a big tank, rides comfortable, and gets the job done.”

Finishing a pound and three quarters above the second place team of Ryan Hyatt and Karl Wolff, Jeff Gustafson and John Peterson left Fort Frances with the rewards of a decade’s worth of hard work. Sure, they made a little money, but the team says the gorgeous trophy and respect from their peers far outweighs any monetary sum.

Night Tournament At Lake Sinclair

This bass hit a Zoom Mag 2 worm

This bass hit a Zoom Mag 2 worm

A couple of weeks ago 10 members of the Spalding County Sportsman Club fished our July tournament at Lake Sinclair from 5:00 PM to 1:00 AM. Or some of us stayed in the rain the whole time. Three people had gone home to bed by weigh-in time.

We had two five-fish limits brought in and the three that left early zeroed. We had 19 keeper bass weighing about 35 pounds and there were two bass weighing over four pounds each weighed in.

Al Rosser won with four weighing 8.39 pounds and his 4.41 pound largemouth was big fish. Raymond English was second with a limit weighing 7.70 pounds, I placed third with five at 7.19 pounds and Russell Prevatt had two at 6.55 pounds for fourth. Russell had the other four pounder.

Al fished with me and it started out tough. At 9:00 I had caught two keepers, both off boat docks. We tried a deep point first and bass and baitfish showed up on the depthfinder but we could not get them to hit. After an hour of trying we ran to one of Al’s favorite docks. Nothing hit there so we started working down the bank hitting docks.

I cast in front of the next dock with a jig head worm and realized my bait never hit bottom. My line was moving off and I set the hook and landed a good keeper bass. After fishing several more docks I skipped a Zoom Mag 2 worm under a dock and felt a thump. By the time I set the hook the fish was almost out to the boat but I still managed to land it.

At dark we went to a bank with a lighted boat dock but didn’t get any hits on it. Further down the bank, at an unlighted boat dock with no lights but some brush piles around it, Al go the big fish almost as soon as we started casting to it.

We stayed there for almost three hours and I got four keepers, all on the Mag 2 worm and Al got two more off it, after “borrowing” some of my worms. Then at midnight we ran back closer to the weigh-in ramp and fished a rocky bank. Al got his fourth keeper on a spinner bait and I got another one on a chatter bait.

I like night fishing, even in the rain. Sure is a lot cooler than during the day, and the bass bite!

ICast Show and Women Fishing Products

ICAST Shows New Products for Women

Companies are paying attention to what women want in fishing gear. Help them out – tell them what you want!

By Betty Bauman, Ladies Let’s Go Fishing

Ladies Lets Go Fishing Website

Ladies Lets Go Fishing Website


from The Fishing Wire

The staff of “Ladies, Let’s Go Fishing!” (LLGF) News Casts scoped this year’s ICAST trade show in Las Vegas to seek new products designed to make fishing easier for women. Held July 9-12, the 56th International Convention of Allied Sportfishing Trades (ICAST), produced by the American Sportfishing Association (ASA), showcased new innovations in fishing gear, accessories and apparel. The latest data on fishing was announced at the show.

New statistics on the numbers of women in fishing indicated women hold the lead, according to the 2013 Special Report on Fishing and Boating, produced by the Recreational Boating & Fishing Foundation and the Outdoor Foundation. Here are some of the facts presented:

Jimmy Houston was at ICast

Jimmy Houston was at ICast


Fishing TV stars were there! Jimmy Houston with Jenn and Betty.

Females now represent the highest share of those entering fishing, with 41 percent of new fishing participants female, 34 percent male. Let’s go, ladies!

Women still remain the minority of the overall existing 47 million Americans participating in freshwater and saltwater fishing, with 34.4 percent female, 65.6 percent male.

There are 12 million participants in saltwater fishing, or 4.2 percent of the American population ages 6 and up.

31.7 percent of saltwater fishing participants live in the South Atlantic region.

44 percent of saltwater fishing participants are ages 45 and older.

6.6 percent of women in America own boats. 8.4 percent of men in America own boats. There are 21.2 million boat owners in America.

What colors do women want in tackle? Tell us what colors you like! Or, how much does color matter? Post your answer on Facebook!

In addition to the typical female pink colors, we’re seeing alternative tackle colors such as teal, white and purple. Beyond the color choices were many innovations designed to make the fishing experience more comfortable for women and beginners, including more lighter-weight kayaks, canoes and paddleboards.

With more than 10,000 representatives and media from the global fishing industry in attendance, the show had plenty to offer.

While there were too many innovations to mention, below are some of the new products the staff was able to view. It was impossible to get to all of them – with some so busy writing orders – we did our best to cover the show for you!

New stuff that will be available to you soon…Here’s what we saw

American Tackle – Microwave guides to give baitcasting action to spinning rods
Avet Reels – Reels of many colors and easy to use reel gear settings
Beam Outdoors – Lighted rods to see while night fishing
Beam Outdoors – Elastic eyewear holder that has a clip to attach to back of the hat
Cocoons/Live Eyewear – Turns prescription glasses into polarized sunglasses with a frame that fits over glasses. Also a clip on with expandable frame
Columbia – Great selection of moisture wicking clothing. Omni-Freeze Zero sweat-activated cooling technology
Cortland Line Co. – New Master Braid line, ultra thin, twist free, in many sizes and colors
Costa Del Mar – New women’s line to come, won best of show with their Tuna Alley selections
Creek Company – Inflatable paddleboard, light weight, designed for fishing
Eagle Claw – Even more ultra sharp Lazer TroKar saltwater hooks
Ear Visors – Protects ears from the sun and make your sunglasses float
Engel Coolers – Coolers to keep food cold for days, plus a new paddleboard for fishing
Flambeau – Tackle boxes in many colors with translucent containers, some with waterproof compartments and soft sided tackle boxes
Flex Spex – Magnetized reading lenses that disconnect at the front to put on top of a hat
Flying Fisherman – Multi-piece rods in a case, great for travel
Frabill – Nets that fold and collapse into a tube, new crankbait net with mesh that won’t tangle treble hooks plus a cooler conversion to baitwell kit
Gary Yamamato – Huge introduction of hard plastic lures, great for inshore fishing
Hobie – More features on a sailing kayak equipped for fishing
Hook & Tackle/Sportailor – New Crosswinds technical shirts with side angled vents
Humminbird – Bow 360 fish finder to see 360 degrees
Jackson Kayaks – Kayaks with cool gear for fishing
Gary Yamamoto introduced new hard plastic baits.
Gary Yamamoto Hard Baits
Johnson Outdoors Predator – Old Town Predator kayak with so many fishing features, it won Best of Show!
Johnson Outdoors Talon – Minn Kota Talon shallow water anchors in new colors and with 10 and 12 foot lengths with new features
L.L. Bean – Clothing with UV protection, lightweight, some with mosquito repellant
Lick-em Lures – New soft plastic bait that resembles a spoon
LifeProof – Containers to keep your phones and valuables waterproof
Logic Lures – Soft plastic shrimp that come in pairs so it looks like two are jumping after each other
Maxima – New Maxima braid
Mustad – Many kinds of hooks and new polarized sunglasses in the $20 range
Native Outfitters – Stylish moisture wicking clothing
NuCanoe – Frontier canoes with many options for fishing
Onos – Sunglasses with readers and a new line of womens glasses
ORCA Coolers – Coolers with built-in LED lighting, keeps food cold for days
Plano – New Guide Series tackle boxes in multiple sizes with removable day pack on top. Also waterproof storage
Power-Pole – Micro Anchor for kayaks and canoes that won Overall Best of Show
Pure Fishing – New Pflueger freshwater rods in white with teal reels and rod accents, more new items in their multiple product lines
Pure Fishing – Ugly Stik with purple acents
Rapala/Williamson Lures – New high end fillet knives and cutters, Speed Pro bait that trolls straight at 15 knots for wahoo and toothy fish
RigRap – Organize leader and tackle with mini plastic compartments so they don’t tangle
Rod Keeper – Universal rod holder that floats and can be clamped onto rails at the pier
Seaguar – Threadlock 16 strand hollow braid for incredible strength – run fluorocarbon leader inside line for seamless thread from flouro to braid, 50 to 200 lb. 4 colors. Plus new, slim and ultra strong braid
Shimano – Stradic CI4+ improved inshore spinning reel. Stella spinning reel. They won six Best of Show awards.
Smith Optics – New ChromaPop color optimizing lens technology, recognizing true color faster regardless of lens color. Also affordable quality Suncloud line
St. Croix – New Legend Xtreme inshore rods, white with skin handle
Star brite – Useful assortment of liquids and accessories to clean boats and most anything, many environmentally friendly
Star Rods – Nice spinning combos, great quality, affordable price
StreamWorks – New lighted pliers and hat lights
Strike Pro – New Tail Gunner inshore lures
Sunday Afternoons – Madrone Technical caps with ventilation and removable neck protection
T. Allen Rods – Light weight rods, some with MicroWave guides to give baitcaster action to a spinning rod
WaveSpin Reels – Reels that prevent braid wind knots
Wiley X Sunglasses – Sunglasses designed for high impact to protect eyes from getting hit by hooks, sinkers and more

To view a selection of videos taken, visit this Youtube link for the billfishbetty channel. Other video highlights are on www.icastfishing.org.

Best of Show awards below were presented by National Baseball Hall of Fame member Johnny Bench. These products will be available soon at retailers.

ICAST 2013 Overall Best of Show – JL Marine Systems, Inc.
Product – Power-Pole Micro Anchor www.power-pole.com

Best of Show – Apparel – Shimano American Corporation
Product – Dryfender Insulated Raingear www.fish.shimano.com

Best of Show – Boating Accessory – JL Marine Systems, Inc.
Product – Power-Pole Micro Anchor www.power-pole.com

Best of Show – Boats – Johnson Outdoors Watercraft, Inc.
Product – Predator 13 www.johnsonoutdoors.com

Best of Show – Combo – 13 Fishing
Product – Whiteout www.13fishing.com

Best of Show – Electronics – Johnson Outdoors
Product – Humminbird Bow Mount 360 Imaging www.humminbird.com

Best of Show – Eyewear – Costa
Product – Tuna Alley www.costadelmar.com

Best of Show – Fishing Accessory – American Tackle Company
Product – Tidal Wave-MicroWave System www.americantackle.us

Best of Show – Fishsmart Tackle – Foreverlast, Inc.
Product – G2 Floating Wading Net www.foreverlast.com

Best of Show – Fly Fishing Accessory – Columbia Sportswear
Product – Henry’s Fork V Vest www.columbia.com

Best of Show – Fly Fishing Reel – Beam Outdoors
Product – Elite 21 Reel www.beamoutdoors.com

Best of Show – Fly Fishing Rod – G. Loomis, Inc.
Product – PRO 4x www.gloomis.com

Shimano won several Best of Show awards.
Best of Show – Freshwater Reel – Shimano American Corporation
Product – CHRONARCH C14+ fish.shimano.com

Best of Show – Freshwater Rod – G. Loomis, Inc.
Product – NRX Umbrella Rig www.gloomis.com

Best of Show – Giftware – Rapala
Product – Original Floating Bottle Opener www.rapala.com

Best of Show – Kids’ Tackle – Pure Fishing, Inc.
Product – Shakespeare Ugly Stik GX2 Youth Combo www.purefishing.com

Best of Show – Line – PowerPro
Product – PowerPro Zero-Impact www.powerpro.com

Best of Show – Hard Lure – Koppers Fishing & Tackle Corporation
Product – LIVETARGET BaitBall www.koppersfishing.com

Best of Show – Soft Lure – Lunkerhunt
Product – Lunker Frog www.lunkerhunt.com

Will Bill was at ICast

Will Bill was at ICast

We caught Wild Bill from Deadliest Catch! Boy did he make me feel short!

Best of Show – Saltwater Reel – Shimano American Corporation
Product – Stella SW 30000 www.fish.shimano.com

Best of Show – Saltwater Rod – St. Croix Rod
Product – Legend Xtreme Inshore www.stcroixrods.com

Best of Show – Tackle Management – Plano Molding Company
Product – 3700 Guide Series Tackle Bag www.planomolding.com

Best of Show – Terminal Tackle – Mustad
Product – Grip-Pin Swim www.mustad.no

For complete ICAST information, visit ICASTfishing.org.

Just curious, is there something for fishing that is not offered that you wish you could buy? Post your answer on Facebook! Please tell us what you like the most from the new products we mentioned!

We worked really hard to get all this info for you, miles of walking. It was hot in Vegas, more than 100 degrees. My shoes melted from the heat on the pavement. Time for a new pair of Crocs!

Come visit us at www.ladiesletsgofishing.com, email [email protected] or call 954-475-9068.
Tight lines, Betty Bauman and the gals

World Record Bass Caught In Japan in 2010

Its official – we have a new world record bass. A 22 pound, 4.95 ounce bass caught in Japan in July 2010 was certified by the International Game Fish Association (IGFA) as a tie for the world record.

Way back in 1932 a Georgia boy fishing in a small oxbow lake off the Ocmulgee River landed a huge bass. He took it to the post office in Helena, Georgia and weighted it, then entered it in the Field and Stream big fish contest. That fish weighing 22 pounds, 4 ounces held the world record status for 77 years.

The reason the new bass is considered a tie is the IGFA requires a new record to beat the old record by at two ounces. There are several reasons for this, including the fact that new scales are more accurate then older scales. Also, a spring loaded scale will usually show only pounds and ounces, not pounds and tenths and hundredths of ounces, that the new ones show.

When George Perry landed the big bass in south Georgia, bass fishing was a simple sport and was more for food than sport. Rods and reels were primitive by today’s standards, as were line, hooks and lures. And bass fishermen could not even dream of depth finders, you stuck your rod tip into the water to see how deep it was.

Even when I started bass fishing in the 1950s, 25 years after Perry landed his fish, most of our time was spent in a wooden rowboat sculling with a paddle to move around. We fished with a knuckle busting casting reel that had no free spool or level wind, or one of the new fangled spinning reels. Line was a form of braid since monofilament line was just hitting the markets.

Manabu Kurita, the young Japanese fisherman that now holds the record, was using some of the best rods and reels available and casting a swim bait on high tech line. The swim bait is a very new type bait that has been on the market just a few years.

It took the IGFA months to review the application and make sure all rules were met. They even required the fisherman to take a lie detector test to verify he caught the fish legally and was not fishing in an off limits area as some gossip claimed. And the scales were carefully tested to make sure they were accurate.

The reason for all the care in certifying the record is the fact it will probably be worth millions of dollars to the fisherman. All that endorsement money has caused many false claims of world record bass, none of which have been verified.

A few years ago a bass weighing 25 pounds was caught in California and pictures were taken of it. But the fish was released and no application was made for the record because the fisherman snagged the bass in the side. While trying to get it to hit while on the bed he hooked it in the side and the rules of the IGFA require the fish be caught in a sporting manner.

Is there a bigger bass out there? Maybe. And this record may be beat at any time. But it may stand up for 75 more years, just like Perry’s record.

How Can I Catch Offshore Kentucky Bass?

Kentucky DFWR Biologist Suggests Targeting Offshore Largemouths
from The Fishing Wire

Fish offshore for post-spawn largemouth bass

Catch bass offshore on crankbaits in Kentucky

Catch bass offshore on crankbaits in Kentucky

Crankbaits are a favorite once bass go deep on big lake chains like those of the TVA system in Kentucky.

Frankfort, KY. – Chris Hickey, black bass research biologist for the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources, said the cool weather this spring delayed the largemouth bass spawn a couple of weeks, but now everything is on schedule as we head into the heat of summer.

He said anglers report largemouth bass gathering on the channel ledges on Kentucky and Barkley lakes.

Summer fishing for largemouth bass frustrates many anglers, although anglers themselves are usually the source of the problem. The anglers often don’t change the presentation or places they fish from the spring season, although their summer catch often consists of a few small male “buck” bass.

Forget fishing the visible cover along the bank and instead concentrate on off-shore structures such as channel ledges, submerged islands, humps and long points to catch bass during the day in July and August. Studying a map of the underwater features reveals these fish-holding structures. Anglers should plan on probing several during a day of fishing.

“I look for three things for deep ledge fishing,” said Ryan Oster, federal aid coordinator for the fisheries division of Kentucky Fish and Wildlife. “The first is the presence of bait, second is stumps and third is current. Mussel beds on the ledge are also a big help.”

Depthfinders are a great help in finding offshore Kentucky bass

Depthfinders are a great help in finding offshore Kentucky bass

Big-screen sonar is a huge help in locating summer bass on channel ledges and humps.

Oster, formerly western fisheries district biologist who helped manage Kentucky and Barkley lakes, prefers deep running crankbaits, 7- to 10-inch straight-tailed worms rigged on Shakey heads and heavy football jig and trailer combinations to fish ledges from 12 to 25 feet deep in these lakes.

“I like the Sexy Shad color for clear water and the chartreuse Sexy Shad for stained water in my deep crankbaits,” Oster said. “Typically, bass want it raking across the bottom. On some days, the fish want a slow and steady retrieve and on others, they want it fast. Mix it up until they hit.”

Boat positioning is important to keep these lures crawling on the bottom and across those underwater ledges and humps. Some anglers use marker buoys to visualize the ledge or hump.

Slowly crawl a Shakey head rig along the bottom, stop it every few feet and shake the rod tip to wiggle the worm and entice bass. Anglers fishing jigs may also work the bottom, but many “stroke” a heavy football jig by ripping it off the bottom with their rod tip and letting the lure fall on a slack line. Trophy largemouths often hit the jig on the fall.

Use a swimbait to catch Kentucky bass offshore

Use a swimbait to catch Kentucky bass offshore

Swimbaits can also produce when the head weight is keyed to the depth where the fish are holding.

Use at least 1/2-ounce of weight to get down on the deep structure. Many opt for 3/4-ounce or 1-ounce jigs. Shakey worms in green pumpkin, black or purple work well in deep water. Black jigs in combination with blue, purple, brown or chartreuse produce deep bass.

During the hottest times of the year, largemouth bass suspend over the ledge or hump and ignore lures worked on bottom. A swimbait works well for suspended bass.

Pearl-colored swimbaits with shades of gray, blue and light purple work well. Fish the swimbait just above bottom rigged on a 1/4-ounce or 3/8-ounce head as heavier heads deadens the lure’s action. Oster prefers 5-inch swimbaits.

Points that extend well out into the lake are high percentage spots for summer largemouth bass. Jigs slowly crawled across the point in water 15 to 25 feet deep draws strikes. Points with stumps or chunk rock on them hold the most fish.

The best ledge fishing is on Kentucky Lake, Lake Barkley and Barren River Lake. Most lakes across Kentucky have long extended points and many have underwater humps.

Get off the bank and catch huge bass on the hottest days.

Author Lee McClellan is an award-winning associate editor for Kentucky Afield magazine, the official publication of the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. He is a life-long hunter and angler, with a passion for smallmouth bass fishing.

Media Contact: Lee McClellan 1-800-858-1549, ext. 4443

Fishing Demopolis Lake In Alabama

Sambo caught these two nice bass at Demopolis Lake

Sambo caught these two nice bass at Demopolis Lake

Wednesday I drove to Birmingham and met a young professional fisherman, Sambo Fish, to get information for an Alabama Outdoor News article. We pulled his boat to Demopolis Lake about 70 miles east of Birmingham. I am constantly amazed at the excellent fishing on so many Alabama lakes, even those not well known.

We started fishing shallow grassbeds and caught a few small fish and missed a lot more that hit a jig and pig flipped into the thickest part of the grass. That is fun fishing and you can catch some big fish.

We then went to a river ledge near the mouth of a creek and caught bass after bass on crankbaits, Carolina rigs and other baits. They were all about 14 inches long and fun to catch, but not the big bass we were looking for.

After checking out several more spots we stopped on another river ledge and the bass bit there, too, and were bigger. We caught several in the two to three pound range and he landed a four pound plus bass. Since it was getting later in the day and I had a five hour drive home, we left the fish feeding.

I wanted a picture of a spotted bass for the article and there are some big ones in the lake. We had caught a half dozen in the 13 inch range but they were not nearly as big as the largemouth. So he said he would take me to his “spot” hole where he always caught spots and caught some big ones.

As luck would have it we did catch a few small spots, but he caught seven or eight nice largemouth close to three pounds each. They hit a crankbait out from the rocks where he usually caught spotted bass. I told him he would have to change the name of this hole!

Demopolis is where the Tombigbee and Warrior Rivers come together. Like most river lakes in Alabama, it is narrow with coves and creeks filled with grass beds and wood cover. The river itself has ledges, the tops of the old river channel banks, that are now under water. Bass love both kinds of places.

Current on these lakes moves almost all day and that makes the bass feed better. When the lock at the dam was opened to let in a barge the current increased and the bass bit even better. It is an incredible kind of fishing.

Demopolis has some very nice campgrounds. There are many similar lakes, like Lay and Logan Martin. If you want to experience some great summer fishing, plan a trip to one of them.

Fishing In Florida’s Dry Tortugas

Take this ferry to teh Dry Tortugas

Take this ferry to teh Dry Tortugas

Fishing adventures await in Florida’s Dry Tortugas
from The Fishing Wire

The Dry Tortugas Ferry out of Key West makes it easy to access Dry Tortugas National Park, and you can bring your kayak with you.

A few weeks ago, I had an opportunity to spend four days and three nights on Garden Key in Dry Tortugas National Park; the experience was one that I will never forget. Sneaking up on a tailing 15-pound permit in 12 inches of water, presenting a live crab to it, and having the fish scream off a hundred yards of 20-pound braid on the first run will make your heart pump like just about nothing else!

The Dry Tortugas, a series of very small islands and submerged coral reefs about 70 miles west of Key West, has a rich history and offers some of the most exceptional and exciting fishing opportunities in Florida. While you are there enjoying saltwater fishing, you will also see an array of marine and terrestrial wildlife and have an opportunity to tour historic Fort Jefferson.

Warning! This is not a posh resort. With the exception of the visitor’s center and museum, which are accessible only during the day, Garden Key has no fresh water and no electricity. So if you require air conditioning, hot tubs, cable television, fine restaurants and all the luxuries of home, you might want to consider a day trip instead.

Getting out there

Catch permit like this one in the Dry Tortuga

Catch permit like this one in the Dry Tortuga

Permit and bonefish are abundant on the clear, shallow flats. Live crabs are top bait for the permit.

If you happen to own a sweet, 36-foot offshore boat with triple motors or something comparable, just load up all your fishing and camping gear, fuel up and bust out there. More than likely, your options include a high-speed catamaran, called the Yankee Freedom, that makes one trip per day, a commercial float plane that makes multiple trips per day, depending on demand, or a chartered vessel.

My old, 17-foot Whaler with a 12-gallon tank seemed a little inadequate for the trip, so I opted to take the Yankee Freedom, which arrives at Garden Key at 10:30 a.m. each day and departs for the return trip to Key West at by 2:45 p.m. The ferry holds approximately 150 passengers and makes the trip out there in a little over two hours. The boat is very comfortable, and breakfast and lunch are provided at no additional cost.

If you simply want to do some snorkeling, view the wildlife and tour the fort, a 4.5-hour stay is all you need to have a great day of sightseeing. The ferry has room for only four hard-sided kayaks per trip, so if you intend to camp and fish, reserve space for yourself and your kayak well in advance.

Camping

If you can handle a few days without all the comforts of home and want to enjoy some truly amazing fishing, try camping. At $3 per day per person, camping is very inexpensive, but spaces are limited and on a first-come, first-served basis. Each camping space includes a grill and a picnic table, and your normal camp ground rules apply in terms of quiet hours and keeping things clean. Very nice, waterless restroom facilities are available right next to the camp sites.

Fishing

Visit the fort between fishingtrips

Visit the fort between fishingtrips

The old fort is worth a visit in itself, but the fishing and diving are the true stars for outdoors families.

For starters, the park boundaries encompass around 100 square miles of open water, but only half of the area is open to fishing and anchoring. The rest of the waters of the park make up the Research Natural Area (RNA), designed to provide protection for important shallow-water habitats. Garden Key and Fort Jefferson are within the RNA; however, a 2-mile-diameter fishing area is established around Garden Key. Within that circle, fishing is allowed except in the swimming/snorkeling area adjacent to the fort and within a couple of small coral and nurse shark protection areas. Park rangers will provide information and maps to help you stay within the boundaries.

If you are fishing by kayak (and I would suggest using one), you will be limited to the 2-mile-diameter circle around the fort, as the larger portions of the park (outside the RNA) are too far to reach by kayak. But don’t be alarmed. Within that relatively small fishing area you can catch a huge variety of species.

In the morning or late afternoon, especially during a low tide, scan the flats and you will likely see schools of bonefish cruising in 6 to 10 inches of water in search of crabs. With a little luck you will also see a solitary permit tailing as it digs crabs out of the coral rubble. To catch the bonefish and permit, you need to get pretty close and present your bait quietly to avoid spooking the fish. This can be done from the kayak or by wading, but the key is to keep quiet, cast beyond the fish and drag your bait back to the fish and then let it sink.

The water is clear and fish abundant

The water is clear and fish abundant

The clear water here makes sight fishing easy during the day, and tarpon come cruising the channels after dark.

During the day, the shallow coral reefs in 6 to 25 feet of water are covered with yellowtail snapper, mutton snapper, red grouper, scamp, graysby and various wrasses. You can also move out into the deeper reef areas and catch larger snapper and grouper, but on medium/heavy spinning tackle, the 6- to 9-pound muttons were about all I could handle from a kayak. A variety of pelagics, including yellow jacks, rainbow runners, blackfin tuna and cero mackerel, also move through the area in search of baitfish and squid.

At night, bigger game are afoot. Tarpon in the 80- to 200-pound range are just about everywhere you look and relatively easy to hook up with live bait, dead bait or by trolling diving lures. Huge sharks also cruise around in the boat basin at night and can be hooked directly from the ferry dock. You may also see one of the resident goliath grouper hanging around the dock’s fish-cleaning areas, looking for scraps. I don’t know where else you can do all that in a kayak!

If wildlife viewing is more your thing there is also an 8-foot saltwater crocodile that sometimes visits the moat during the day and several species of shorebirds that nest each summer on Bush Key.

Fishing regulations

The 2-mile-wide fishing bubble around the fort is within state waters of the Gulf of Mexico, so the fishing regulations are pretty simple. Just follow the regulations that apply to state waters of the Gulf and stay within the boundary line.

If you access the Tortugas by private or charter vessel and have the opportunity to fish outside the RNA, things become more tricky, because you have to know the Gulf-Atlantic boundary line as well as the state and federal boundary lines for the Gulf and Atlantic. You will also need to remember that grouper regulations in all state waters off Monroe County follow the regulations for state waters of the Atlantic in terms of seasons, size limits, bag limits and gear requirements.

If you need maps showing the Atlantic-Gulf boundary line, the Dry Tortugas National Park boundary line, or the state waters boundary line around the Dry Tortugas, please send me an email and I will be happy to help you access the maps.

So make your plans for a fishing adventure of a lifetime at the Dry Tortugas, and don’t forget to record all of your catches on the iAngler phone app or at snookfoundation.org. Share your photos, video and fishing tales with us as well by emailing them to [email protected].

Gone Coastal is one of many ways that the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) Division of Marine Fisheries Management is helping recreational anglers understand complex saltwater regulations and learn more about saltwater fishing opportunities and issues in Florida. We are also available to answer questions by phone or email anytime, and we would love the opportunity to share information through in-person presentations with recreational or commercial fishing organizations. To contact the FWC’s Regulatory Outreach subsection call 850-487-0554 or email [email protected].

Bedding Bass and Bluegill, and Stupid Skidoo Drivers

This spot was caught at Bartletts Ferry

This spot was caught at Bartletts Ferry

On a Wednesday in May I spent most of the day at Bartlett’s Ferry Lake trying to figure out some patterns for a Spalding County Sportsman Club tournament. I didn’t for me but I did for my partner!

Although there was a strong current coming down the Chattahoochee River and I figured muddy water was on the way, the river was still only lightly stained and the bigger creeks were clear. So clear I could see the bottom about four feet down and I looked for bass on the bed. It is late for bass to be bedding but the cool weather this year had delayed the spawn on many lakes.

Not Bartlett’s Ferry, it seems. The water temperature was about 79 degrees and I didn’t see any bass beds, but I did see a lot of bream beds with fish on them. And I saw a lot of balls of bass fry with adult bass guarding them. Those fry looked to be a couple of weeks old so I guess a lot of bass went on the bed there on the last full moon.

When the water temperature and length of daylight is right, usually on the full moon in April around here, male bass find a shallow hard bottom and fan out a bed. The beds look like saucers on the bottom, since they are usually lighter than the surrounding area. The females will come in, find a bed or several beds to their liking, and lay eggs in them. Then they leave, not sticking around to help raise the babies.

The male will fertilize the eggs and stay with the nest, guarding it against bluegill and other water critters that want an easy egg meal. And he has a lot to guard. A female will lay 2000 – 7000 eggs per pound of her body weight! He won’t eat while guarding the nest but will chase off bream and other predators by biting at them. That often makes him easy to catch.

After the eggs hatch in two to five days the male will continue to guard them for a week or two, not eating the whole time. He is usually easy to catch during this time, too, since he is so aggressive. Then, after a couple of weeks, he gets hungry and will eat his own offspring!

I was surprised I could not get the males guarding fry to hit any of my baits. They would run at it but not take it.

I did catch a good many smaller bass, from 10 to 14 inches long, on baits fished around docks. Several times I would be reeling in a jig and pig or worm after fishing a dock and see the bass run out and grab it. That was exciting in the clear water.

When I got ready to head home and got back to the cove with the ramp in it I noticed a good current coming across it. That point is a big “community hole,” a place everybody knows holds bass and a lot of people fish there. With current running across it, bringing schools of shad down the river, I figured bass would be waiting to feed on them, and they were.

I quickly caught three on my new Pflueger Purist rod and reel, giving it a good test. I had spooled the reel with 12 pound Trilene Green line and was casting a #8 Shadrap. The outfit handled the 13 and 14 inch spots easily but I am a little worried the medium action rod is too light for big bass. But it casts well and is comfortable to fish with.

I also caught a few bass on a Carolina rigged lizard and a jig and pig. But I got a bit upset at what happened while fishing there. I had noticed two skidoos being launched at the ramp. Two teen-age girls got on one and their parents got on another. The girls came out first and went at a fast idle speed between me and the bank.

I was fishing about 50 feet from the bank. So the girls broke state law, did something very inconsiderate and were stupid. I let them know what I thought as they passed within 30 feet of my boat. The parents came by a few minutes later and seemed oblivious to what the kids did, but at least they didn’t come too close to my boat.

Stupid actions like that are why kids get hurt on skidoos. They come way too close to the bank, boat docks and boats running on plane and get hit or hit something. If you have kids, teach them the laws, safety rules and some common courtesy.

I expect a lot more such stupid stuff this weekend since it is Memorial Day weekend and there will be a lot of people on the lake that should not be there.