Friday, September 23, 2016

Up North Road Trip

NumenOn the Water

Date: 9-14 through 18-16
Body of Water: Burt, Douglas, Crooked and Walloon Lakes
Boat: Numenon
With: Generally Alone
Target:  Smallmouth and Largemouth Bass
Time: Any time from 7 AM to 7 PM or so


9-14-16: Conditions at the Maple Bay State Forest Boat Ramp and Campground on Burt Lake were clear at 7 AM, but the North wind was already starting to build.  Water temperatures were noted to be 68-70 degrees F, and the water was very clear with a mild green stain. I went around the prominent point guarding the north side of the bay, where I noted nice bottom for smallmouth (some gravel and rocks), with a long flat breaking sharply into the  main lake basin.  I worked a jerk bait quickly and also tried crank baits and the Ned rig.  I knew my time on this portion of the lake was limited by the wind, so I covered water quickly.  Despite my confidence and the appearance of this area, I found no biting fish in an hour or more of effort.

I moved inside Maple Bay and worked a very sparse weed line (cabbage!) along the bay's northern perimeter.  With no fish evident, I moved across the bay to the windswept south side.  Weeds were more prominent here, but the skunk was still aboard!  I navigated across the lake with no problem at about 10 AM, but it was obvious that I would have little to no boat control out in the open.  All other boats were apparently trolling for walleye or anchored in the bay for panfish; I'd seen only a single bass boat all morning.

The day was still young; I though my best chance to make something bassie of it was to re-locate to a smaller, more protected lake.  By 11:30 AM or so, I was relaunching Numenon on Douglas Lake just to the north.


Numenon at the Maple Bay State Forest Boat Ramp on Burt Lake

Douglas Lake is less known for the size of its bass, but still has a good reputation, while offering the prospect of a quiet outing.  The water was noted to be 68-70 degrees F, but with a slight brown stain; and the health, variety and prominence of the weeds was immediately obvious.  I briefly tried openings in the weedbed near the launch, but without any bites, I quickly consulted my GPS maps and selected a sharp break that funneled the main lake body into a partially isolated bay near the lake's deep, southeastern corner.

With conditions now super clear and calming, I worked the deep weed edge of this funnel quickly with a Rapala Deep Shadow Rap and soon connected with a 13-inch smallmouth.  Finally, a fish, and the targeted species, too!  Soon thereafter I jerked the nice largemouth pictured below from this same edge in about 11 feet of water, but the day really got interesting when I started working this same area with a bluegill-colored Berkley War-Pig rattle bait.  A particular cast went further into the weeds (cabbage!) than expected, and as a I worked the bait through these weeds, I got a heavy hit and pulled a four-plus-pound smallie out of the salad.  It was a beautiful fish (which I dropped overboard in attempting to photograph), but most importantly, it keyed me into the weeds, as supposed to the deep edges.  I stayed in the weeds for the duration of the day.

This nice Douglas Lake largemouth ate a Berkley Cutter jerk bait and was the first good-sized fish of the trip.
I continued working the same area and caught another nice largemouth on the War-Pig.  I continued to "junk fish", however, alternating presentations as conditions presented themselves.  I caught several small smallmouths on topwaters, deep cranks and a wacky-rigged Senko, but I'd little interest in these small fish.  However, by taking conditions as they came to me instead of staying with a specific pattern, I did observe that the inside edge of the weeds separating the expansive flat from the deepest portion of the bay obviously held some worthwhile bass.  I could see them!

I'm not a super-polished sight fisherman, so I couldn't necessarily get the fish I could see to bite.  But by backing off and making long casts into these areas, I thought I could perhaps catch a few. I did, too, fairly quickly, with solid 16-inch largemouths on a bluegill-colored swim jig and with a Texas-rigged green pumpkin Senko.  These fish were holding in the weeds, but looking onto the flat; in about three feet of water. These fish completed my virtual "limit", which would have weighed 13.5 to 14 pounds or so, anchored by the big War-Pig smallie.

As a bonus to the fun fishing, I think I was the only boat out fishing this lake on what had turned into a beautiful day!  I had a strong starting point for the next day; I planned on returning to this beautiful and pleasant lake!

9-15-16: After a series of small misadventures, I arrived at 7:15 AM to a calm, bright Douglas Lake, but one with the unexpected bustle (and associated lack of parking) of a bass tournament.    Once I finally got out on the water, I found four boats already in my preferred starting location.  I turned out to be the only one working the inside edge, however, and so we all had enough space to fish comfortably; and all but one boat bailed in the first hour or so, anyway.

Despite the calm, clear and crisp conditions, I was not seeing fish like I had the previous day, and I got off to a rather slow start.  I mixed in a topwater and a shallow crank, but I had the most faith in the Senko.  After perhaps a half hour, I felt the anticipated "tick" on my line.  I set the hook, and my drag slipped; this looked like a decent fish, but it morphed into a big smallie (well over three pounds) at the boat's side; I misplayed this fish and broke her off.  Ouch!  But the Texas-rigged Senko put two more keeper-sized bass in the box (one smallie, one largemouth), and I found myself after an hour or so off to a decent start to the day.  I ground out another keeper smallmouth (this one close to three pounds), but after that, the fish seemingly shut off.  

I consulted my GPS map to find a similar spot, and my first attempt failed; there were no weeds on the selected edge.  The second spot I chose because it simply looked interesting on the map; large flat, deep water, a couple of sunken points and crannies.  I utilized the bluegill DT10 to search for fish and weeds.  I found sparse cabbage first, but soon thereafter I found a nice, keeper largemouth.  This was quickly followed by another, very solid largemouth, and soon I settled into a pattern where I hoped to get bitten on the retrieve before I hung the crank in the weeds.  This happened frequently enough to allow me to catch a few more keepers, cull my smallest smallmouth, and even lose a couple of fish.

At 12:30 PM, my top five weighed about 11.5 or 12 pounds; and with low juice in the trolling motor batteries and a probable cluster pending at the ramp, I called it an early day, despite having been so beautiful and enjoyable.



Peace and quiet at Douglas Lake; the bass tournament has already blasted off.



The productive lures for Day 2 on Douglas Lake were this Texas-rigged green pumpkin Senko and a bluegill Rapala DT10.



Because I was angry at myself for not photographing the previous day's fish properly, I set up the GoPro and got these shots of my Top 5 Keepers; Keeper 1.



Keeper 2

Keeper 3

Keeper 4

Keeper 5, a brown one!

I spoke with a couple of local gentlemen at the ramp, and they informed me that it might take 20 pounds to win the day's tournament (four pound average for five bass); and one thought it might produce 25 pounds if somebody really got into them.  Clearly, the lake produces some big fish!  I was only scratching the surface of the lake's potential; but I wasn't doing too badly, either, for having never seen the lake until the day before.

9-16-16: I fished Crooked Lake near Petoskey from about 7:15 AM until 10:15 AM.  Little Traverse Township offers an excellent ramp right off US-31.  The water was about 68-70 F, and not as clear as in the previous lakes.  The water was chalky green, and I never really found any good weeds.  I hopped from spot to spot and caught a variety of fish, including a smallish walleye (DT10; most fishing pressure on the lake seemed to be oriented towards 'eyes); a very nice perch (wacky Senko); a very small smallmouth bass (wacky Senko); and a handful of very respectably-sized rock bass (wacky Senko and Ned in PB&J.)  The bass are here and the fishing was pleasant enough, but time was constrained; we had to re-locate to our rented house on Lake Walloon!


A beautiful morning awakens on Crooked Lake.
By 3 PM or so, I was on Walloon's clear, green, 70-72 F water.  Based on the hottest available fishing tip, I initially worked an area in 7 feet of water that offered gravel and scattered rocks and wood with jerk baits, cranks and grubs.   With nobody home, I worked various other deep edges in the lake's southern lobe with the Rapala Deep Shadow Rap, but I never moved a fish by the time I left the water at about 6 PM.   It was my pleasure to return Numenon to her place on our temporary, private dock instead of the landing; I enjoyed simply walking down to her and going fishing (in lieu of dealing with ramps) for the rest of the weekend!

9-17-16:  I fished from about 7 AM to 12:30 PM and again from 3 PM until dark at about 7:30 PM.  The day started overcast and gray with sporadic light showers, and I returned to the "hot" spot.  Nothing responded here, nor anywhere in my expanded shallow search area.  At about 9:30 AM or so, I consulted the GPS mapping and found an area where the shallow southern basin deepened slightly before plunging dramatically into the depths.  I quickly found a group of fish here, spread out from about 23 to 40 feet of water.   I first tried power fishing this deeper water with a Jigging Rap and then a Ripping Rap (which I could easily control to depths over 40 feet), but had no bites.  When I switched to a drop-shot rig with a goby bait I quickly caught a nice, 16.5-inch smallmouth from about 35 feet of water.  At this point, I thought I was onto something, but I ended up simply burning up the next few hours searching deep water for more bites, unsuccessfully.


A glimpse of the full moon as it prepares to set over Walloon Lake.

The first fish from Walloon was a nice 16.5-inch smallie; it ate a drop-shot goby bait in 35 feet of water.

Returning to the water at about 3:30 PM after a necessary Power Nap, I tried a new part of the lake.  I found the edge of a large flat dropping dramatically into the West Arm's depths and started working a Deep Shadow Rap jerk bait from the edge out to about 25 feet of water in the bright, windy conditions.  In a fairly short period I caught a pair of 17-inch brown bass on this bait and a bonus 16-incher on a Spro deep diving crank bait.  

By sunset, I had relocated to a prominent point drop-off, and, after a long period without a strike, in short order caught a short bass and simply farmed out a nicer bass on the drop shot in about 15 feet of water.  After a long, but enjoyable day of fishing, I'd caught just four keeper-sized bass weighing in at 9.5 pounds or so.

9-18-16:  I fished from about 7 AM to 9:30 AM in gray conditions with a continuing westerly wind.  With not much time available, I visited the productive spots from the previous afternoon and evening.  A 15-inch smallie smashed my pink X-Rap jerk bait at about 7:15 AM.  This fish came from about 13 feet of water, near the end of the prominent point discussed above.  But I could raise no other fish; Walloon was back to her generally stubborn disposition.


What do I have to say about this?

This was a wonderful introduction to some new lakes, and I enjoyed the challenge of new water in generally quiet, beautiful settings.  Plus, I was chasing brown bass; and my instincts for the trip were correct in that I discovered during the trip that the new Michigan State Record smallmouth bass had been taken just before my visit from connecting waters; check THIS out!  I cannot even imagine connecting with such a fish, but I guess it is at least possible!

There was also the enjoyment of being free of the public school calendar for the first vacation in quite a while.  And, I was engaged enough in the fishing to just about totally forget about work; that doesn't happen too often.

I shall return.

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