Tuesday, June 27, 2017

LSC 2017 v.3.w

NumenOn the Water

Date:  June 24, 2017

Body of Water: Lake St. Clair
Boat:  Numenon
With:  Alone
Target:  Smallmouth Bass; but then Walleye
Time:  6:30 AM - 1:30 PM
Conditions:  Clear and bright; 65 - 80 degrees, developing a stronger WNW wind to over 15 mph; water clear inshore and 73 degrees; 66 and a bit colored/stained offshore.

I was pleased to see Lake St. Clair in a calm and navigable state, and I was doubly pleased to arrive at the weedbeds off the 400 Club and encounter excellent water clarity.  At 73 degrees F and with post-spawn conditions for bass, Lake St. Clair was going to give me a new experience.  I figured my best option was to simply cover some water here and let the fish reveal themselves.  Given defined inside and outside edges and the excellent extent, health and variety of weeds here, I was reasonably confident that I had a chance to figure this out.

Starting on the outside edge in 10 or 11 feet of water, I chose to throw a Yozuri top-water prop bait.  With no positive response, I quickly changed to a Red Eye Shad rattle bait, and scored a tiny largemouth bass.  With nothing else biting, I then switched to the inside weed edge in about 6 feet of water.  I think I missed a quick bite on a swim jig; a spy bait was also subsequently ignored.  Moving over the weedbeds and to the outer edge and a bit beyond, I continued searching for bites with the spy bait, a pumpkin tube, and a Pb&J Ned rig.

Some kayakers  dropped a buoy marker in 12 or 13 feet of water and seemed to have a bit of action.  I shook off a small bass on the tube in this same depth, but the day was starting off slowly, and I couldn't help but notice that the wind was building.

I confronted myself; did I want to work through a slow grind and not experience anything new on the lake?  I'd likely encounter some fish and they might be nice; on the other hand, I wouldn't cover much water, and by the way, where were all the bass fisherman?  They certainly weren't around here!  Meanwhile, the wind looked like it was going to be a factor.  If I wanted to make a move, now was the time to do so.

So I decide to run out to the shipping channel and the St. Clair Light.  I arrived to choppy 2-footers and clear, green 66-degree water.  There were also piles and piles of mayflies!  Here I used some local advice and trolled a couple of crank baits, up high in the water column.  I was marking fair numbers of suspended fish between about 8 and 15 feet (over 20 or more feet), and I had confidence in my jointed Shad Rap (size 7, perch), Husky Jerk (size 6, blue glass minnow) and Flick'R Shad (size 7, purple and gold.) Back between 50 and 100 feet, these should have been cruising at or just above the fish I was marking.

But nothing happened, and there was only one other boat out here.  I was getting a bit queasy changing baits and cleaning lines, and so I decided to relocate a bit north, to the area around Buoy 28.

There was a sizable group of boats here (probably a couple of dozen, including a couple I recognized as launching with me earlier in the day.) From my mapping, it looks like an approximate 15-foot flat intersects the shipping channel here.  There seemed to be various spoils along the channel edge, and it seems like maybe any fish from the north could eventually find the channel in this area.  I set my lines, and trolling at about 2.1 mph, the rod with the Shad Rap quickly doubled over.   It wasn't the walleye I was looking for, but it was a dandy white bass.  This repeated itself a few times as I roamed the area, weaving through boats, south and east of Buoy 28.

Nets were flashing with some regularity, and most folks were drifting or slow-trolling with electric motors while dragging bottom-bouncers.  I'd thought I'd just give trolling a quick try as I scouted the area, but it was getting late in the morning; it was now quite rough; the return trip to the west side would take some time and/or deliver a beating; and I had my spinners, harnesses and Gulp! aboard, so I decided to stay in the area and try these techniques for the first time in 15 or more years.


Passing freighters were a frequent occurrence, and might have been part of the local walleye equation; their turbulence would stir up the bottom and provide an ephemeral stain to the water.
Crank-bait casting outfits worked well for bottom-bouncing.  The chartreuse Mack's Smiley Blade (below) with a death-roll hook and a pinched Gulp! worm outperformed the perch-colored conventional spinner rig (above) with a full Gulp! crawler.


Working mostly 19 feet of water along the eastern edge of the channel, south of the buoy, I trolled at speeds from 0.6 to about 1.1 mph while presenting spinner/Gulp! combos along the bottom with bottom-bouncers.  My crank-bait casting outfits performed nicely for this; their softer tips amplified nibbles and pending hookups, and their moderate action kept fish hooked.  It was actually quite enjoyable, but the walleye were infrequent (two, both about 14 inches), and most bites were more white bass (probably a dozen landed, total.)  I also caught a couple of perch, which later in the season might be an abundant and worthy target.

And I did see a couple of other walleyes boated during this time, so they were out there.  I also seemed to do best in certain spots, and especially where I was marking fish, so there's certainly some room for me to refine my techniques, should I choose to do so.

It was still pretty rough at about 1:30 PM, and I knew I was at least 30 minutes away from the ramp.  It was time to head in! 

When you struggle with smallmouths and walleyes, white bass can make the day.  This one was just under 16 inches.

What do I have to say about this?


It was a different kind of day!
I've clearly lost my Sea Legs, and I was surprised to feel so queasy.  I guess I've not done enough Big Water fishing, lately.  Despite the small targeted catch, this was a fun day, and I like having a bit of success with new techniques in new locations.  I've got friends that I might bring back.  The spinners and Gulp! will probably stay in the boat with me.

Monday, June 26, 2017

Monday in Traverse City

NumenOn the Water

Date:  June 19, 2017

Body of Water:  East Bay, Traverse City
Boat:  Numenon
With:  Alone
Target:  Smallmouth Bass
Time:  6 AM - 2 PM
Conditions:  Cloudy to sunny; winds S to WNW about 10 mph; water temperatures were 57 - 63 and the water was very clear.  Some bass were in spawn mode, but not many.  Quarter moon (waning); still too early for the major spawning wave?

With Monday off from work, I headed north with my new pup tent on Sunday evening.  I set up a quick and easy camp in a State Forest campground just south of Traverse City, maybe 20 minutes or so from the launch.  I intended to get to Traverse Bay early; that would assure some peace and quiet, while giving me a chance to get a full day's fishing effort in; and still be home by dinner time!

I received this Pup Tent for Father's Day, and it served me well as my Fish Camp that night.

I was second to the launch, and was greeted by cooler-than-expected water; 57 degrees.  I immediately headed across the bay to Deepwater Point.  The low light conditions and slight chop from the southerly wind limited visibility into the clear water, but I had no qualms about blind-casting this area with a jerk-bait, hoping to entice a bass or two from the rocks.

Having neither encountered no seen any sign of bass here, after a half-hour or so I headed south to what I'll call the "Acme Marina" channel; this is another of my known spawning areas.  Searching the few available dark spots in 6-8 feet of water around here (I hesitate to call these active nests at this point, since I saw no sign of fish), I caught a nice, 16-inch smallie on a PB&J Ned Rig.  It was before 7 AM on a weekday, and I'd already had a good day!

On the board before 7 AM, during a work day!  This was a good start!  Selfie Time!

Another view of No. 1; note the buoy marker in the background.

There seemed to be only limited opportunity for fish here, so I re-located to the very south end of East Bay.  While I've never done much here, I know others have; and it seemed that it offered good potential for successful sight-fishing.  A few other boats thought so, too; this was the only location I had to share all day!  Covering a fair amount of water from 4-7 feet deep, in increasingly good conditions for sight-fishing, I encountered very few active nests down here; and resorted to blind-casting any dark spots (the bigger, the better), as well as taking a few casts into any washout holes at the end of docks.  Fishing was slow, although I occasionally encountered a group of small (less than 14-inch) bass.  Eventually, I caught "keeper" No. 2, a 15-incher, again on Ned.

(I don't know if the nests I saw were done; just started; abandoned during the previous day's cold front; or ravaged by fishermen over the weekend.  Regardless, it didn't seem as productive as I'd hoped.)

These were not the fish I was looking for, the pace was below my expectations, and I was now starting to feel some pressure from the clock. 

I returned to an area where I'd previously caught my largest Traverse Bay smallie; a flat and break near the southwest corner of East Bay.  This area has an added bonus of some fledgling weeds along the flat's edge as it plunges into deeper water.  I searched a number of dark spots on the flats with Ned, to no avail, and then resorted to jerking and cranking the deep edge.  This area proved to be seemingly lifeless.


No. 2 came from a dark spot at the south end of East Bay.  I also caught several undersized bass around here.








I now went back to the Acme Marina channel, with the intent of crawling rattle-baits or cranks through the deeper channel.  While doing so, of course I had a pitch rod (or two) with baits to present to any beds or bass I might see.  Although the first bass I encountered refuse to eat Ned, he eventually fell for a drop-shot Pork Worm; No. 3 was the longest and heaviest bass of the day, so far.


No. 3 fell for an Uncle Josh Pork Worm, presented drop-shot style.  It's my favorite drop-shot bait.











No. 4 represented my Triumph of the Day; this bass, barely noticeable on an incipient  bed, reacted only to baits presented in a specific direction to a specific spot.  I missed it a couple of time on the drop-shot; it would not eat a tube; and mostly just looked at Ned.  However, over the course of time, I could assess the fish's reaction and behavior; when I was quite sure that Ned was in the right position (the fish seemed transfixed as he hovered, nose down, just above the bait), I simply left the bait in place for as long as I could, while pumping the rod grip to maybe make the bait quiver.

Eventually, the fish lowered its head and flared its gills; I'm not sure I felt anything, but I set the hook, and he was on!  

I worked on No. 4 for quite a while; he finally succumbed to a Ned Rig, dead-sticked for an agonizingly long time in a specific location.

After working so hard for the first four, and especially so for the last one, No. 5 was rather anticlimactic.  I quickly noticed a "glowing", large nest, with a dark black bass vigorously patrolling the area.  He intercepted Ned quickly; and at a solid 17-inches, was my biggest bass of the day.  It was also, perhaps, the most beautiful fish of the day.



No. 5 came quick and easy from a glowing nest; he raced out and intercepted Ned on the first cast.  This fish gets my nod for good looks, this day.

Nos. 3, 4 and 5 had all come rather quickly from 6-8 feet of water to the south of the marked channel into the marina; there's a rather large flat here that might offer lots of good sight-fishing in the future.

With perhaps an hour left to fish, I returned to Deepwater Point with the intentions of upgrading my catch.  I threw rattle-baits, jerk-baits and cranks in 8 to 10 feet of water and along the edge, into deeper water.  I encountered nothing, but I think this was my best bet for running into a giant, pre-spawn bass at this time, as both the sun intensity and wind continued to increase.


What do I have to say about this?

I ended with a virtual limit catch of about 12.5 - 13 pounds, and I didn't leave anything on the table in doing so.  While not a giant bag, it's respectable enough; and the fishing was not easy.  That adds up, for me, to a satisfying, quality experience, and to do so in such a beautiful setting on a Monday; Nice!

Looking at my schedule, it will probably be a while before I can return; but I will.  I expect I will be giving my drop-shot techniques a workout when I do.  Of course, there should also be opportunities for top-waters, jerks, cranks and tubes...


Empirically, there were no bass here; but it's so beautiful, that's okay.

Saturday, June 17, 2017

Up North 2017

NumenOn the Water

Date:  6-9-17

Body of Water:  Crystal Lake (Benzie County)
Boat:  Numenon
With: BL
Target: Smallmouth Bass
Time:  8:30 AM - 4:30 PM
Conditions:  Water was 63 degrees F and very clear.  Weather was overcast, calm and 60 but becoming clear, bright windy and 85 degrees F.  This was the day of the Full Moon and the bass were in full spawn mode.



My former C's co-worker, DS, had a fine fishing report from the day before, as shown above.


Numenon's first splash at this new-ish launch on Crystal Lake; conditions are looking good!


My Cabela's buddy, DS, had been fishing this lake for a couple of days prior, and based on his reports, I arrived at the ramp with high expectations.  We all convened at the ramp and DS advised me to start on the north side of the Lake.  With BL aboard, we crossed the lake and went directly (fortuitouslyalthough accidentally) to the finest collection of spawning bass on the lake, or that we would encounter for the rest of the weekend.  A couple of dozen brown bass to trophy size offered an initially slow bite, but when I got the first one to eat a Canadian Craw Ned Rig after 10 minutes or so, this area offered an excellent bite.  We had five legal-sized bass (all between 16 and 18.5 inches) landed before 9:25 AM.  The largest bass were not interested in eating, and we saw many pairs of bass, some of which were actively spawning.  This was a very cool experience!


First Fish to the Net for the Weekend!



More sight-fishing action



Love their phenotypic variety!  That might be a bass bed just off my right shoulder.

BL started to score with a PB&J Ned Rig.

After a few more fish, we went down the shoreline and hooked up with DS.  He jumped a dandy bass while his son landed his part of the double.  There were small groups of bedding bass scattered down the shoreline in about 3.5 feet of water.  With these conditions, they and their beds stood out like sore thumbs.  Most occupied beds coughed up a bite and a chance at a very decent bass.

When the beds petered out to the east, we went back to our original spot.  Rested and possibly replenished, we had to work harder for bites, but got rewarded with the biggest smallie of our trip (BL), while I had to settle for a mere 18.75-inches as my largest bass of the day.  We also caught an individual bass again, recognized from the morning by a conspicuous scar, just proving the value of catch and release fishing!


BL caught our largest bass of the day and the biggest smallmouth (over 19 inches and about 4.5 pounds) of our trip.
My largest smallie of the day was 18.75 inches and fat; she ate a white, Neko-rigged Senko after ignoring several other baits.

From here, we started to expand and explore.  The rock reef just to the east of Railroad Point looked awesome, and it did provide a couple of bass as well as a few Rock Bass (one of which was monstrous.) There was no sign of bedding here, but there were plenty of hiding spots, and working Ned through the glacial striations between the piles of rocks revealed these fish.

We crossed the lake and went to the conspicuous point and bay where M-22 veers to the north.  I knew this area was rocky from previous trout-fishing experiences, and while the bite here was slow, we caught a couple of larger bass, and BL got broken off by a possible lunker.

We found our last group of fish in very shallow water (less than 3 feet), associated with docks and strewn logs.  This got us to 19 bass for the day, and of course we wanted 20!  We collectively missed a few chances, but I finally got her with another relocation and a nice cast right next to an isolated, shallow log.

The last couple of hours had been a grind, and DS had long given up for the day; this fish was a nice way to end a long day.  Plus, we had a bit of a drive to our accommodations on our way towards Douglas Lake.

All fish were released, of course, but our largest 5 would have weighed over 15 pounds, and maybe as much as 17 pounds.


***


NumenOn the Water

Date:  6-10-17

Body of Water:  Douglas Lake
Boat:  Numenon
With: BL
Target: Smallmouth Bass
Time:  8 AM - 4 PM
Conditions:  Water was 70 degrees F and clear, but naturally stained brown.  Weather was overcast, calm and 65 but becoming clear, bright, super windy (well over 20 mph, from the south) and 90 degrees F.  


We chose to go to Douglas for a few of reasons: I had been so impressed by it last Fall; I expected it to be fairly quiet and wind-resistant compared to many of the other, larger and more populated lakes; and it's above the 45th Parallel, so I thought perhaps the spawn would not be quite as advanced.

I was pretty much acquitted on all counts, but stage of spawn was confusing.  We arrived to 70-degree water, much warmer than expected.  That said, it is a tannic, stained lake that obviously absorbs and holds available heat.  We didn't encounter any occupied beds for the day, and those we did see seemed either old, abandoned or under construction.  Still, I thought our starting point for the day was a solid choice; the south edge of a massive flat that plunges into the lake's deepest water.  Plus, I'd caught some fine fish there last year, and I just knew that the weeds along the edge could hold bass of either color in any stage of the spawn.

BL started with a grub or Ned, while I chose to run through a variety of presentations, including a top-water, a jerk-bait and cranks (both shallow and deep.)  I enjoyed some pretty quick action on a crank just off the deep weed edge, but these were small brown bass, certainly not the size we were looking for.  After 45 minutes or so, having not seen any indication of pre-spawn or spawning fish, I switched to a post-spawn favorite, a perch-colored F11 Rapala.  After a few small misses, a fish took it confidently off the top (above the very inside weed edge), and I was super-pleased to land this unique, pre-spawn specimen:


This 16-incher might be the most memorable fish of the weekend.  She was almost too fat to move, but she managed to explode on a floating, perch-like Rapala.

We never got into a hot groove of catching, but all of our success focused on various inside weed edges in a few feet of water.  I caught additional, keeper largemouths (both 16+ inches) on a slow-rolled spinner-bait and a bluegill-colored chatter-bait.  Smallish pike kept us busy between bass bites, but by Noon, we were struggling and the wind was really building.

We went back to our original starting spot; I had the most confidence here.  I also switched to a Texas-rigged Senko, which I felt I could fish slowly and deliberately in our most successful contact zone.  This proved to be a solid choice, because I quickly scored a 13.99-inch smallmouth, filled by a solid 16-inch smallie and then our biggest fish of the day, this 19-inch bucket-mouth:


My biggest bass of the day sucked in a weightless, Texas-rigged Senko along an inside weed-edge.  With that attentive eye, she looks like she's taking names and writing them down!


Whew!  We had our virtual limit (probably between 14 and 15 pounds), and when these fish petered out, we decided to explore some new parts of the lake.

The wind was now blowing over 20 mph, and we chose our spots as much based on potential boat control as anything.  But BL started to hit his stride and caught all the fish of consequence for the rest of the day.  He had no problems dragging Ned and a Big TRD through the weeds, while I continued with my weightless, weedless Senko.

BL fought through the wind and landed his first bass of the day in a new area for us.

Another nice, inside-edge Green Bass to end the day

A couple of strange things about the day to note; I swear that a couple of largies pulled the bait-and-switch ploy on me, and one can never assume what one has hooked.  With one keeper to our credit in the day, we switched locations and I chose to slow-roll a spinner-bait through some thick cabbage.  On an early cast with this bait, I detected a faint tick and swung the rod; it loaded heavily and I carefully played the fish towards the boat.  While BL readied the net, what seemed to be a very large bass came up, jumped, looked at us, landed and seemed to throw the lure.  After expressing a moment of frustration, I reeled in my slack, but a fish was still there!  The bass we landed (16 inches) did NOT seem to the bass that I'd been fighting.  Had it picked up the bait after the apparently larger bass had thrown it?

Finally, I lost a dandy largemouth near the end of the day as I reeled in what I thought was a small bass; there was just no fight to it!  This bass and I saw each other at the same moment as it approached the boat, and then it took off!  It peeled off considerable line against my drag before the hook pulled.  I'd been sloppy and I'd paid this price.  I'd have loved to have landed that fish!


***



NumenOn the Water

Date:  6-11-17

Body of Water:  Crystal Lake (Benzie County)
Boat:  Numenon
With:  Alone
Target: Smallmouth Bass
Time:  7:30 AM - 1:30 PM
Conditions:  Water was still 63 degrees F and very clear.  Weather was clear and about 75, with southerly winds diminishing from about 20 to 10 mph; temperatures rising to about 90 degrees F.

I would fish alone this day, and the wind was still the biggest factor in how to approach the day. There was no way I could control the boat or effectively look for beds on the lake's north side, so I thought I would prospect for some aggressive bass in the beautiful rock reef off Railroad Point.  

I had just enough success to keep me there too long.  After marking the two ends of the reef with marker buoys, I used the wind and the electric motor to repeatedly control-drift over and around the reef.  I gave baits two drifts to produce; more, if they produced a bass.  I did catch a smallie on a Shadow Rap jerk-bait; this fish provided a visual chase and I tricked it into a cool, boat-side strike.  Other than that, though, the reef produced nothing but rock bass.  They managed to eat chatter-baits, spinner-baits, jerk-baits, tubes, and their apparent favorite, a 1/4-ounce gold and yellow Rooster Tail French spinner.



No. 1 for the day hit a jerk bait over a rock reef.  My hat's on backwards to help prevent the wind from catching it and taking it away.


I spent some time searching the south side of the lake for beds, spawners or cruisers. Any dark spot or visible rock edge produced more rock bass, but I found no bass.

By 11 or 11:30 AM, I thought the wind had died down enough to try the lake's north side.  Nobody was home (at all) at Friday's best spot, but I did manage to find and catch a few, scattered bed-guarding males further to the east.  I used the marker buoys to good effect to stay on these fish and help me present my bait (PB&J Ned.)



After a lengthy hiatus from the bass, I ventured to the north side and found a few spawners.  This is No. 2 for the day.  The buoy marker (right background) key to me being able to relocate these fish and present a bait to them successfully.
No. 3

No. 4; I could feel a "limit" coming on.  But I never found No. 5.
Stuck on four virtual keepers between 14 and 16.5 inches, totaling perhaps 8 pounds, I searched the entire east end and a good chunk of the south shore, too; but I never had a chance at No. 5.  Either the moon phase, the hot weather, or the probable tournament pressure had knocked most of the fish off their beds.

Hot, tired, but satisfied, I pulled the boat and headed home.


What do I have to say about this weekend?

A couple of good buddies; good accommodations; no problems; lots of fish; proximity to some very large fish; loons, deer, eagles; some quite, undeveloped shoreline; and fishing challenges met with pretty decent execution; all add up to a great long weekend!

Perhaps next year I shall focus on the few days preceding the Full Moon, or sneak in another weekday prior to the weekend.  But, I know that I will take what's available given weather and schedules.

A note on the Alba-Elmira area: you're not going to be on the water, but whether you choose to drive 30, 60 or 90 minutes, you can be on your choice of trophy smallmouth water.  Not a bad option to have in one's back pocket!



I know these guys catch a lot of nice fish, and so I was pleased to see that they were selecting the same body of water this day as I had.  I'm pretty sure I saw their boat on Friday, too.



Friday, June 16, 2017

Mixed Bag Fun

NumenOn the Water

Date:  June 5, 2017

Body of Water:  Kent Lake, Kensington Metropark
Boat:  Numenon
With: A and K
Target: Bites!
Time: 9 AM - 1 PM
Conditions: Overcast, about 60, NE winds about 10 mph, water temperatures about 70 -71 degrees F

We launched on perhaps Michigan's busiest lake, but a gloomy weekday kept the traffic down, and a 10 mph speed limit and a good ramp made conditions very fishable.  This was my first time on this water body, so we drove the entire lake.  Where the Huron River enters, I encountered lots of matted weed and a little current, so I tried throwing some Frogs.  Nothing happened in the first half hour, or so. When I pulled into the bank and saw some panfish beds, I quickly rigged a small jig under a float.  I missed a bunch of bites before I hooked up, and I was a bit chagrined to land the first fish, a tiny bluegill.


First fish of the day was not exactly big...


The next colony yielded some of better quality.


But bluegills mean action, so we continued down the shore and found plenty of other spawning colonies.  The bluegills and pumpkinseeds reached decent size and provided for some simple Fun Fishing.  We collectively landed at least a dozen decent "keeper" panfish while sorting through lots of smaller ones.  We even got a couple of bonus perch, remarkable for their lack of size; they were both smaller than my pinky.


They are beautiful.


K was quite sure that this would qualify as a Master Angler entry.

After a couple of hours of this we switched gears and casted channel edges and weed beds for predators.  Either bass or pike would have been acceptable.  Both A and I got bit pretty quickly (Fat Rap crank for her, a large spinnerbait for me).  A got most of the bites on the crank bait, and in a hour we landed 5 small-to-about-legal-sized pike.


My first Kent Lake pike

My lake map revealed another shoreline of interest.  Here I found some bigger and deeper nests (bass?), but I only caught a couple of rock bass and a few more gills.


This attractive, undeveloped shoreline hosted several nice beds and plunges off into some of the lake's deepest water.

It was still pretty gloomy and the girls had had enough; it was time to go!


What do I have to say about this?

All in all, the lake was interesting enough to make my return probable.  It's probably a nightmare during a nice summer weekend, but I bet she fishes well during the Fall and
Spring.

If the cottonwood seeds are flying, the bluegills really are spawning!  My new home accumulated wind drifts of the stuff while K simply enjoyed catching a few fish.  A really likes her new, left-handed casting outfit (Shimano Curado 70 reel on an Abu Garcia Volatile rod), and I really enjoyed having them both back in the boat!


More Family Fishing Fun!