Monthly Archives: June 2021

GEORGIA DNR EXPLAINS LAKE “TURNOVER”

from The Fishing Wire

“Lake turnover” is a term that is often used incorrectly to describe one period of the annual cycle of lake stratification (layering), which affects the water quality of Southeastern reservoirs. Throughout the year at Georgia’s latitudes and elevations, reservoirs go through a fairly predictable annual cycle. I will address the annual cycle of Lake Lanier and its impact on water quality downstream in the Chattahoochee River. In general this pattern is similar through the Carolinas, Tennessee and most other reservoirs that do not freeze, or are not in tropical climates. Sunlight, air and water temperatures and the density of water at different temperatures drive this annual cycle.

During the cold winter months Lake Lanier’s water is generally the same temperature from the top to the bottom. The lake’s water is cold (around 45–50 degrees F) and clear. Water on the top and bottom of the reservoir has similar densities. Wind action on the surface water rolls the lake and surface water mixes with the bottom water. The exposure that all of the lake water has to the surface allows the lake to have plenty of oxygen from top to bottom. In winter, water temperature and oxygen concentration do not limit fish movement in the lake. Lake water, which is released from the bottom of the lake into the Chattahoochee River below the dam, is cold, oxygenated and clear.

State Record Brown Trout
State Record Brown Trout (20 lb, 14 oz),
caught on Chattahoochee River (7/27/14)

During spring and early summer the lake begins to gain heat and stratify into three somewhat distinct layers: the surface layer called the epilimnion, a bottom layer called the hypolimnion, and a layer between the two called the metalimnion or, as anglers know it, the thermocline, which is how I will refer to it as well.

During the warm months, high air temperatures and more sunlight heat the lake surface faster than the lake can mix. The warm water, which is less dense, floats to the surface and becomes the epilimnion. This warm layer is fairly uniform in temperature and varies from 15 to 30 feet thick throughout the summer. It is full of oxygen from wind action and from oxygen production by microscopic algae, called phytoplankton, via photosynthesis.

The hypolimnion, the cold (45–55 degrees F) bottom layer, becomes isolated and no longer mixes with the warm, oxygenated epilimnion. Oxygen is not produced in the hypolimnion, because this cold, deep layer does not receive sunlight and is devoid of phytoplankton production. Early in the lake stratification process the hypolimnion still contains some oxygen and fish movement is not restricted, but dissolved oxygen levels decline through summer as biological and chemical processes consume oxygen. That is, oxygen is used up in the decomposition of organic matter (nutrients). The amount of nutrients entering the lake from its watershed is called nutrient loading. Water released into the Chattahoochee River from the dam comes from this deep-water zone. Native river species could not adjust to the changed conditions created by Buford Dam, but the cold river water, once re-oxygenated by running over shoals, was a great new habitat for trout.

Between the epilimnion and hypolimnion layers is a layer of rapid temperature change (at least 2 degrees F per yard), called the thermocline. The thermocline, usually 20 to 30 feet thick, does not mix with the surface layer and has little sunlight reaching it. Therefore, oxygen production in the thermocline begins to decline after the lake stratifies.

By summer’s end, the lake is strongly stratified. The epilimnion is warm; it receives sunlight and has plenty of oxygen. Water temperature and oxygen concentrations within the thermocline are both lower, but still often provide acceptable habitat for cool water fish species like stripers and walleye.

In the hypolimnion (deeper than 60 feet), the water is stagnant, cold, and low in oxygen (less than 3 parts per million or ppm). Fish cannot survive in this deepest layer when dissolved oxygen drops much below 3 ppm. As the oxygen concentrations get low, some metals and sulfides in the lake sediments become soluble. These dissolve in the water and are passed downstream as water leaves Lake Lanier and enters the river. This is first noticeable in late September or early October, when these metals and sulfides give the river water its distinctive fall colors and a rotten egg smell. Although these are stressors for the river fish, low oxygen concentrations and high metal and sulfide concentrations are very rarely associated with fish mortality in the river. The river water becomes re-aerated quickly as it flows downstream, and fish in the river avoid water with low dissolved oxygen by finding seeps, springs or feeder streams that have higher dissolved oxygen and lower metal and sulfide concentrations. However, trout fishing in the river near the dam suffers in the fall, because of these water quality conditions.

Prior to the 1980s, oxygen concentrations (greater than 5 ppm) and temperatures in the thermocline of Lake Lanier, a young reservoir at that time, were adequate to allow trout to survive. Since then, organic matter entering the lake has increased, and the oxygen needs of trout can no longer be met. There just isn’t enough oxygen to keep trout alive through this critical summer period. Today striped bass still find enough oxygen and adequate cool water habitat in the lake’s thermocline to survive the summer; however, they can be stressed by low oxygen conditions (2–4 ppm).

In the fall, as air temperatures drop, the lake begins to lose heat, and the process of de-stratification begins. The warm water of the epilimnion cools and becomes deeper and denser. It still has lots of oxygen. As the epilimnions density approaches the density of the hypolimnion, mixing of the layers can take place. When this happens the stratification is broken and the bottom water mixes with the surface water, and the lake is no longer stratified. This event is called “Lake Turnover, and generally occurs around Christmas each year. After the mixing there are no layers, and the entire lake will have high oxygen concentrations. Within a few days after lake turnover, the dissolved metals become insoluble and settle to the bottom. This leaves the lake water clear from the top to bottom, and the river water clears as well. Metals that have settled on the river bottom are eventually washed downstream by the daily generations.

With the warming of spring, the stratification process will repeat itself, and the plankton, fish, and other aquatic wildlife will react to these changes in their habitat.

Hank Cherry Wins Bassmasters Classic – Two In A Row

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 
CHERRY PULLS A STUNNA
Berkley pro relies on new bait designed in conjunction with Berkley scientists to become fourth angler to win back-to-back Bassmaster Classic championships.
 
FORT WORTH, Texas (June 13, 2021) — After he won his first Bassmaster Classic in 2020, Berkley pro Hank Cherry and the Berkley bait scientists set out to develop the ultimate jerkbait. More than just one of Cherry’s favorite ways to catch bass and a presentation with which the North Carolina native has become synonymous, the team believed it could produce a bait that would work year-round in any fishery and, hopefully, be a factor in the 2021 Bassmaster Classic on Lake Ray Roberts. 
 
All the off-season homework paid off.
 
Cherry brought 13 pounds, 1 ounce to the weigh-in stage on the final day of the 2021 Bassmaster Classic, giving him a three-day combined weight of 50 pounds, 15 ounces. With the win, Cherry pockets the $300,000 first-place prize and etches his name into the history books as only the fourth angler to win the Bassmaster Classic in consecutive years. 
 
“This is the biggest honor I could ever dream of as a kid,” said Cherry about winning the Bassmaster Classic for a second time. “I have fulfilled my childhood fantasy two times now. That hasn’t sunk in yet.”


 
Cherry said six of the 15 fish he weighed in during the championship event came on the Stunna, including some of his biggest fish. Cherry said he threw the size 112+1 Stunna in Stealth Shad on 15-pound-test Trilene 100% Fluorocarbon. He paired the line and bait selections with an Abu Garcia Zata casting reel (7.1:1) mounted on a 6-foot-10-inch Abu Garcia Winch rod.
 
In addition to tipping his flipping jigs with the soon-to-be-released Berkley PowerBait MaxScent Chigger Craw, Cherry said he turned to a 4-inch Berkley PowerBait Pit Boss in Green Pumpkin. He flipped the Texas-rigged Pit Boss on a 4/0 Fusion19 hook with 20-pound-test Trilene 100% Fluorocarbon spooled on an Abu Garcia Revo STX (7.3:1) paired with the new Abu Garcia Veritas PLX Tournament rod.


 
The new Berkley Stunna features Berkley’s first tungsten weight-transfer system and a unique brass block weighting system that delivers a slow sink and slight shimmy in the water. With an action that engages quicker with a larger roll, increased bill durability and ultra-sharp Fusion19 hooks, the Stunna comes in 14 colors and two different dive depths. The 112 size runs 3 to 6 feet deep while the 112+1 runs 6-10 feet deep. Both styles weigh 1/2 ounce and have a fall rate of 1 foot per 8 seconds.
 
“We went through 38 different incarnations of this bait before getting it just right, as evidenced by the response to the Stunna by both our pros and the bass they are catching on it,” said Berkley Senior Vice President of Marketing Jon Schlosser. “The bait looks incredible whether it’s being jerked, twitched or even with sweep-and-pause retrieves. The bait’s 180-degree head turns and side flash trigger bites from aggressive fish and the slow, natural sinking action has proven to be extremely effective on not-so-aggressive bass.
 
“None of the bait’s unique performance features would be possible without Hank’s vision and the tireless work of our bait scientists. We congratulate Hank on back-to-back Bassmaster Classic championships and celebrate this victory with him and the entire Berkley team. Hank and the Stunna will be linked forever thanks to this historic win, which we are sure will not be the last one for this exciting new bait.”
 
The new Berkley Stunna is scheduled to reach retail outlets in July. Anglers looking to be among the first to get their hands on the bait first are encouraged to contact their favorite tackle shops.
 
To learn more about Berkley products and the company’s legacy for research and innovation, go to https://www.berkley-fishing.com/
 
About Pure Fishing
Pure Fishing, Inc. is a leading global provider of fishing tackle, lures, rods and reels with a portfolio of brands that includes Abu Garcia®, All Star®, Berkley®, Fenwick®, Fin-Nor®, Frabill®, Greys®, Hardy®, Hodgman®, Johnson®, JRC®, Mitchell®, Penn®, Pflueger®, Plano®, Sebile®, Shakespeare®, SpiderWire®, Stren®, Ugly Stik®, and Van Staal®.
 

Fishing Diverse Lakes Seminole, Demopolis and Hartwell

 Lakes Seminole, Demopolis and Hartwell are about as diverse as you can get in out area of the world.
I got to fish all three in the past two weeks and enjoyed them all but got very frustrated at Hartwell.

Demopolis on the Black Warrior and Tombigbee rivers in south western Alabama is narrow and long, with big sloughs off the old river channels that are very shallow and full of grass.  It is full of three pound largemouth with a good mixture of spotted bass mixed in.

Seminole in extreme south western Georgia on the
Flint and Chattahoochee Rivers is bordered by Georgia, Alabama and Florida. It has miles of big, open water but it is so shallow much of it covers in grass in the summer.  It is full of big largemouth, four and five pounders are common.

Hartwell is a deep, clear lake on the upper Savannah River in north east Georgia, bordered on the east by South Carolina.  Big open, deep water is the norm, but it has many smaller creeks and branches off it, but they are deep, too.

I fished Demopolis with local guide Russell Jones and he caught several nice bass up to five pounds on topwater early.  The shad were spawning in the grass way back in a slough – we had to idle for ten minutes to get to it – and the bass liked his frog.

I love the river lakes in Alabama. They are totally different from what we have around here.  There is almost always current on them, something we seldom see on our lakes. The current makes the bass feed better, especially in the summer.

I wish Lake Seminole was not so far from us.  It is the best lake in Georgia to catch four and five pounders right now. The vast grass beds offer perfect spawning and feeding areas for largemouth, and they grow fast and big. 

I fished Seminole with local guide Paul Tyre and he got a nice bass on top early, then we rode and looked at spots that will be good to fish in June. We didn’t fish much since it was a cold day for May and he needed to get home, it was Mother’s Day!

Lakes like Seminole are fun to fish since you can catch bass on topwater most of the time.  And the average size of the fish there makes it a good place to catch your personal best largemouth.

Paul specializes in guiding fishermen to the biggest largemouth they have ever caught. It may not be huge, for a young visitor it may be five pounds.  But he has guided his clients to several ten pound plus largemouth the past three years, too.

He is proud of the fact he guided 50 people to their personal best largemouth two years ago, increased that to 87 last year and is in line to improve that this year with 53 so far, including a 14-year-old that landed a ten pounder last month. 

The next week i went to Lake Hartwell

Berkley Pros Will Give Free Seminars at the Bassmasters Classic – and You Can Get Free Line!!

Berkley Pros to Compete and Give Seminars at the Academy Sports + Outdoors 2021 Bassmaster Classic and Bassmaster Outdoors Expo

COLUMBIA, S.C. (June 7, 2021) –– As the bass fishing world turns its attention to the Academy Sports + Outdoors 2021 Bassmaster Classic, professional bass fishing fans attending the events can expect to see Berkley pros on and off the water. Nine Berkley pros will compete for the Classic title with additional Berkley pros conducting seminars throughout the three-day run of the Bassmaster Classic Outdoors Expo. 

Berkley fans who attend the event can cheer on fan-favorite competitors including defending Bassmaster Classic champion Hank Cherry as well as childhood friends John Cox and Keith Carson as they compete for the $300,000 purse on Lake Ray Roberts. Additional Berkley pros competing in the event include Brandon Cobb, Shane LeHew, Bryan New, Luke Palmer, Matt Robertson and Hunter Shryock.

Prior to each day’s Classic weigh in, fans will be able to attend seminars inside the Berkley booth inside the Outdoors Expo conducted by Hank Parker, Jordan Lee and many others, as well as get insights from Berkley scientists who will break down the fish-catching science behind Berkley baits. 

Attendees who purchase reels or rod-and-reel combos at the Classic Outdoors Expo can visit the Berkley booth to have those reels spooled for free with leading Berkley monofilament, fluorocarbon or braided line (limit three reels and 1,000 yards max). 

To learn more about Berkley products and the company’s legacy for research and innovation, go to https://www.berkley-fishing.com/

About Pure Fishing

Pure Fishing, Inc. is a leading global provider of fishing tackle, lures, rods and reels with a portfolio ofbrands that includes Abu Garcia®, All Star®, Berkley®, Fenwick®, Fin-Nor®, Frabill®, Greys®, Hardy®, Hodgman®, Johnson®, JRC®, Mitchell®, Penn®, Pflueger®, Plano®, Sebile®, Shakespeare®, SpiderWire®, Stren®, Ugly Stik®, and Van Staal®.

Fishing Lake Hartwell

I went to Hartwell on Tuesday, May 11 to camp and fish, getting ready for the Potato Creek Bassmasters tournament.  Wednesday was miserable, windy rainy and cold, so I was on the water only about three hours.  I went way up a creek to put in to get out of the wind and did not find anything to make me want to go back.

Thursday was nicer but still cold, and I explored some new places to try to find a pattern.  I caught one barely 12-inch-long spotted bass. I felt completely lost even though I found one point with a lot of shad and bigger fish under them, so I planned to start there in the tournament Friday morning.

I pulled up there Friday and caught a throwback on my first cast with a topwater plug, then had a 2.5 pounder jump and throw my bait. I stayed there an hour and got one more bite but missed it.

I started running to places where I have caught fish in the past this time of year, trying all kinds of patterns, structure and cover. I manage to catch one keeper spot and one keeper largemouth by weigh-in.

Saturday I started in a different place and got no bites, so I went to a small creek that has been good in the past. I quickly caught a two-pound largemouth on topwater so I thought maybe it would be a better day.  By the end of the day I had caught one more small keeper spot, on a Carolina rig.

That was a very frustrating trip for me.

—-

Last week at Hartwell 21 members of the Potato Creek Bass masters fished our May tournament. We landed 102 spots and largemouth weighing about 157 pounds.  There were six five bass limits during the two days and no one zeroed.

Raymond English won with ten weighing 15.89 pounds and Niles Murray placed second with nine at 15.46 pounds.  Lee Hancock came in third with seven weighing 14.63 pounds and that included the big fish weighing 4.83 pounds.  Kwong Yu rounded out the top four with nine keepers weighing 14.58 pounds.

Fish were reportedly caught on a variety of baits in a big variety of places.  With weights that close, one bite makes a huge difference.  On Friday, Kwong culled several fish but could land only four on Saturday.  If any of his culls weighing 1.5 pounds had hit Saturday he would have won, just like if Niles had landed one of his culls from Friday.

Its amazing how often that happens and how close the top four often are in weight. I keep telling myself that during the tournament, especially if it is a bad day for me. Just one bite can make a big difference!

At Hartwell it would have taken a lot more than one more bite for me, though!

WARNING – 15% Ethanol Gas Will Ruin Your Boat Motor – Don’t Get Confused

Confusing and Ineffective Fuel Pump Warning Labels a Risk for Boaters

from The Fishing Wire

SPRINGFIELD, Va. – Efforts by the ethanol industry to create a new federal rule that would weaken or eliminate important warning labels designed to prevent boaters and consumers from misfueling with prohibited higher-ethanol fuels at roadside gas pumps has Boat Owners Association of The United States (BoatUS) concerned. The national recreational boating advocacy, services and safety group recently co-signed a letter to EPA Administrator Elizabeth Dermott addressing the proposed “E15 Fuel Dispenser Labeling and Compatibility With Underground Storage Tanks” legislation (EPA-HW-OAR-202-0448) and urging the federal regulator to side with consumers on its Misfueling Mitigation Program (MMP) to ensure transparency in the sale of fuel to consumers.

“Ethanol manufacturers are pushing to blend more ethanol into the nation’s fuel supply. To accomplish that, consumers are not being fully informed at the roadside pump about the type of fuel going into their boats’ gas tanks,” said BoatUS Manager of Government Affairs David Kennedy. “New marketing schemes to brand these prohibited 15% ethanol fuels as ‘regular 88,’ promoting them as a low-cost alternative and, at the same time, attempting to drive federal rulemaking efforts to reduce and weaken warning labels at the pump is an anti-consumer one-two-three punch that should not be tolerated.”

The proposed rulemaking provides no new data on a theoretical basis to support the proposals to either decrease the stringency of the existing E15 warning label or eliminate it altogether. A 2020 Outdoor Power Equipment Institute (OPEI) poll shows that only about one in five consumers know that “regular 88” — or 88 octane fuel — has more ethanol (15%) in it than 87 octane (10% ethanol) fuel.

Use of ethanol fuel blends with more than 10% ethanol, such as “regular 88,” in recreational boat engines, motorcycles, off-road vehicles and power equipment is prohibited by federal law. E15 fuels have been proven to damage engines and fuel systems, and its use in a marine engine voids the warranty.

Consumers have indicated the need for a better, more effective higher-blend ethanol fuel warning label design as well as more prominent placement of the warning label on the pump. A recent national poll shows that just 18.25% of consumers think the current E15 label used at gas pumps across the country is very effective for warning that E15 is hazardous to certain types of engines.

EPA has also worked to broaden the availability of E15 fuel in the U.S., including most recently with the 2019 repeal of summertime restrictions on its sale. These restrictions were originally implemented years ago to address concerns over the higher ethanol fuel’s contribution to ground level ozone (smog) on hot days.

“Visit a local gas station dispensing higher ethanol fuels and look for the warning label on the pump,” added Kennedy. “It’s often hidden or buried along with a mountain of promotional signage. EPA should help consumers make the right fuel choice, and efforts to weaken the Misfueling Mitigation Program, such as stripping away label elements that indicate a warning message or exclude mention of 15% ethanol altogether, only accommodate the interests of ethanol producers and harm boaters.”

Congratulations Jordan McDonald

   Congratulations to Jordan McDonald for finishing in second place in the Bulldog BFL on Lake Eufaula last weekend.  He beat out about 199 other fishermen on the boaters’ side in the tournament.  Fishing against some of the best fishermen in the state, that is quite an accomplishment.

    Jordan’s five bass weighed 16 pounds, 12 ounces, just two ounces less than first place winner.  Those two ounces were worth $2000 each in winnings!

    Jordan joined the Flint River Bass Club as soon as he turned 16, the minimum age.  He started fishing as my partner the end of that year and joined the Spalding County Sportsman Club the next year as my partner. 

    We fished together for almost ten years then he moved on up, fishing as a no-boater in BFLs and the BASS Weekend series. He did well in both, winning one trail’s no boater points standings one year and making the regional tournaments in both.

    After starting a business and a family he got a boat and got back into fishing big time the year, and I look forward to seeing him post many wins and top ten finishes in the future!

Trolling Seattle’s Puget Sound for Blackmouth

FEATURE
By John Keizer, Salt Patrol
from The Fishing Wire

Connected to the ocean, Puget Sound is a massive inland sea that at its beginning marks the northern boundary between Washington State and Canada before turning southward past Seattle-Tacoma all the way to Olympia. And while Puget Sound’s many rivers support salmon that migrate to the ocean and back again years later, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife manipulates the release timing of some hatchery salmon (referred to as Blackmouth) such that they stay within Puget Sound their whole lives.The name Blackmouth comes from the black gum line that identifies the fish as a chinook salmon. Resident Blackmouth salmon range in size from the just legal 22 inches up to fish nearing the twenty pound mark.

We have all heard the line, “Find the bait and you will find the fish.” It sounds so easy but many anglers ignore this simple advice when trying to locate salmon. Blackmouth salmon are voracious feeders and will be constantly on the search for Sand Lance (candlefish) or Herring to fill their bellies. And while food sources are a big draw for Puget Sound Blackmouth, where these salmon might be lurking and when they’re willing to bite has a lot to do with bottom structure and what the current is doing based on the in-and-out flow of daily ocean tides.

The Sand Lance, also known as “candlefish,” because pioneers used them to make candles due to their high oil content is an ecologically important forage fish for salmon throughout Puget Sound. As you might guess the salmon crave the high oil content of these small forage fish. According to recent studies 35% of juvenile salmon diets are composed of Sand Lance and Blackmouth salmon depend on them for 60% of their diet.Herring tend to linger in resting spots that are dictated by the ever changing current. As in river fishing, the bait and following salmon will be pushed into the lee (downstream) side of a current flow behind points of land and islands. The same is true in Puget Sound, knowing the position of the tide will allow you to find the best locations where baitfish are likely to linger and salmon congregate.

Trolling your gear in combination with a downrigger is in my opinion the best method for consistently catching Blackmouth from Puget Sound. I spend much of the winter fishing season employing this fishing method. So much so that I run three Hi Performance Scotty downriggers onboard my 27 foot “Salt Patrol” North River boat. Being able to cover lots of water with your tackle at a controlled depth is an extremely effective way to fish for Blackmouth salmon in the deep waters of Puget Sound.For salmon trolling my rod and reel outfits include Shimano Tekota-A 600 line-counter reels matched with a G. Loomis E6X 1265 moderate action rods. The reels are spooled up with 30-pound test monofilament line.

And while we have used many different lures to catch salmon over the years the all-new SpinFish bait-holding plug has been a game changer for us. In addition to its unique vibrating, spinning, wounded-baitfish action the SpinFish features a pull-apart bait chamber design that disperses scent as it’s pulled through the water column.I was lucky to get to test prototypes of the SpinFish last fall. My first experience with the SpinFish started with targeting winter Blackmouth out of Port Townsend located on the northern part of Puget Sound. To attract salmon to our gear we ran the SpinFish in combination with 11” rotating flashers and medium size Fish Flash.

This combination produced immediate results for Blackmouth up to 15 pounds. The first thing we noticed was that the strikes on the SpinFish were vicious as compared to using just bait. The Blackmouth hit the SpinFish hard, running a bunch of line off the reel before racing to the surface. Several times the rod tip would be in the water and the fish pulling line right from the get go.To add bait to the SpinFish you just pull apart the lure body and fill with any bait. What we often use is herring or sardine cut bait. But what seems to work best on Puget Sound is canned Chicken of the Sea Tuna packed in oil. We just mixed the canned tuna, making sure to include its natural oil, with Pro-Cure’s Bloody Tuna scent and fill the bait chamber with it.We rigged our SpinFish 25 to 40 inches behind a Fish Flash or 35 to 45 inches behind our rotating flashers. While SpinFish come pre-rigged from the factory when re-rigging we snelled two 4/0 size Mustad octopus hooks close together using 30 pound Seaguar fluorocarbon leader and add one glow bead above the top hook to act as a bearing for the SpinFish. We then slid the SpinFish down the leader and attached a swivel to the lead end before attaching to our flashers.

The SpinFish can be rigged to spin clockwise or counterclockwise and unlike other bait-holding lures, it needs no rubber bands to keep the lure together. The holes in the SpinFish will disperse the scent into the water and salmon will follow the scent trail back to the lure. Because there are undersized Blackmouth around, we check our gear every 30 minutes or so to make sure we are not pulling around an undersized fish. My routine is to have four or five SpinFish pre-loaded with bait and ready to swap out each time we catch a salmon or conduct a gear check. Blackmouth bite windows are short and you don’t want to waste time rigging tackle when the best bite of the day is happening.

The new SpinFish comes in two sizes, a three inch and a four-inch version. And while we have had the best success using the three incher early in the season, the four inch model will likely be the go-to sizes as the baitfish get larger.Blackmouth are aggressive feeders and tend to feed when the current is minimal to expend as little energy as possible. That means the best time to catch them is when you’re fishing in the right current flow. You may have heard that the best fishing for salmon is one to two hours before or after a tide change. What we have found is the very best bite is right before or right after the change, when currents are soft.

While trolling I spend a lot of time with my eyes glued to my Lowrance HDS Live sonar screen watching for where bait or salmon are congregating and adjusting my rigger depth accordingly. I often bracket the water column by adding depth on each pass until I hook a fish or locate where the bait and salmon are holding. And while I do change depth based on what my electronics reveal my go-to depth, when all else fails, is to run my SpinFish tight to the bottom.As you might guess, my early success using this all-new lure has me jazzed up for fishing it more and more. I know how well it works for Puget Sound Blackmouth and got to believe it will work for other fish too.

For more information on the Yakima Bait SpinFish visit: www.yakimabait.com
Capt. John Keizer
SaltPatrol.com

Second-Annual Celebrity Fishing Tournament on Lake Lewisville

Academy Sports + Outdoors Hosts Second-Annual Celebrity Fishing Tournament on Lake Lewisville

Deion Sanders, Jimmie Allen, Maddie & Tae, Marcus Spears and Sheryl Swoopes to compete in fishing tournament for charity

 
 
WHAT:  To kick off the 2021 Bassmaster Classic, Academy Sports + Outdoors presents the second-annual Celebrity Fishing Tournament on Lake Lewisville. Members of the bass fishing community, influencers, sports legends and country music stars will hit the water to test their fishing skills with pro anglers serving as their guides. The first-place team will make a charity donation to the benefactor of their choosing. 

WHO: This year’s anglers include three-time Olympic Gold Medalist and former professional basketball player Sheryl Swoopes, NFL legends Deion Sanders and Marcus Spears, and country music stars Jimmie Allen and Maddie & Tae.

WHEN: Wednesday, June 9th, 2021

**B-ROLL PACKAGES AND DIGITAL ASSETS AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST FOLLOWING TOURNAMENT**


WHERE: Lake Lewisville
               Sneaky Pete’s: 2 Eagle Point Rd, Lewisville, TX 75077

M 

* Event and launch location and timing are subject to change based on weather restrictions. 
 

Problems at Lake Eufaula Make A Bad Tournament

Last weekend 14 members and guests of the Spalding County Sportsman Club fished our May tournament at Lake Eufaula. It was a madhouse with more than 200 boats in the BFL on Saturday and several smaller tournaments going on. Then on Sunday there was a 60-boat tournament along with us, all out of Lake Point State Park where we launched.

    After 16 hours of casting on two hot days, we weighed in 40 bass weighing about 85 pounds.  Most were largemouth that had to be 14 inches long or longer to bring to the scales, but there were a few spots that are legal at 12 inches.  There were no five fish limits and two members did not catch a fish either day.

    Randall Sharpton won with six bass weighing 14.01 pounds and John Miller had five keepers weighing 11.95 pounds for second.  My five weighing 9.67 pounds placed third and Sam Smith had five weighing 8.81 pounds for fourth. Glenn Anderson had a largemouth weighing 4.68 pounds for big fish.

    Eufaula is an extremely popular bass fishing lake, producing many four-and five-pound bass over the past five years. But fishing there is getting tough, partly due to the fishing pressure and partly due to stupid management practices.

    The lady at the marina store at Lake Point told me there had been at least one tournament every weekend this year, since January 1, with at least 150 boats in it.  That is a lot of pressure, especially since several of them were two-to-five-day tournaments. 
Add that to the usual number of club tournament and local fishermen and it is overwhelming.

    The bass population at Eufaula is so healthy due to habitat. The waters of the Chattahoochee River feeding it are fairly rich in nutrients by the time it gets that far south. And the thousands of acres of shallow water filled with water plants like water willow, lily pads, alligator grass and hyacinths, provide cover and feeding aeras for bass.

    For some reason either the states of Alabama and/or Georgia, and/or the federal Corps of Engineers that manages the lake, it trying to kill all the water plants.  Last year I could stand at the campground at Lake Point and look across acres of water lilies between the campsites and islands across Cowikee Creek.

    This year there was not a lily pad in sight from my campsite, or anywhere else on the lake.  Areas where I usually fish topwater baits through the pads for hundreds of yards for bass hiding and feeding there are open water now.  It is sad.  One local fisherman told me there were four air boats spraying on the lake two weeks ago.

    Add to that the fact the Corps of Engineers, during spawning season for many species of fish there, were dropping the water.  It was almost two feet low by the time I left Monday, dropping several inches each day. Cypress trees with roots under water last Wednesday were dry by Monday and any bass or other fish beds in two feet of water a week ago were now dry and dead.

I could understand if the Corps was generating power at the dam during the hot days, but all the drop in water level was at night!

    I am doing some research trying to find out the reasons the lake is being managed like it is.  The economy of the area depends on the millions of dollars spent there by fishermen.  The cost of a motel room for two or three nights, gas for vehicle and boat, launch fees of five dollars a day and meals for two or three days can easily run three hundred dollars per fisherman.

    Multiply that by the 500 to 600 fishermen there just last weekend and you get an idea of what the local economy will lose, more that $150,000 per weekend, if fishing gets bad and tournaments are not held in the future.

    Maybe there is some good reason for the management practices I see as stupid.