Jump to content

Bluebasser86

Global Moderator
  • Posts

    34,994
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    709

Everything posted by Bluebasser86

  1. My wife and I go to kids movies all the time and we don't have any kids. Don't know if I'll ever outgrow cartoons. It would be way different if it were just me though. I'm the same age as you and would probably wait for it to come out on dvd instead of going by myself.
  2. Points and treelines along channels should be good. My friend catches his on clay points in about 4-10 feet of water most of the time it seems. He fishes places I'd never guess there would be bass but that's probably why I don't catch bass at Hillsdale, along with the fact that I rarely fish it.
  3. Wish I would have had a camera several times on that trip. Chris' first muskie hit his buzzbait about 2 feet from his rod tip and threw water on both of us from the initial strike, just incredible. Me dead lifting a big tree and then dunking myself to get ahold of that bass would have been funny. I bet that whole ordeal lasted between 1 and 2 minutes, a long time to try to get a fish unstuck from a tree. The muskie that missed my topwater the last day was one of the coolest strikes I've ever seen. That chopper bait is like a 7" bucktail with a big wooden head and a single blade on the back of the head that makes a "plop plop plop" noise as you reel it. The fish must have rocketed straight up from the bottom in 7 feet because it almost came clear out of the water and knocked my bait over our heads in the process. If you ever get the chance to fish it I would highly recommend it. Be ready to drive some nasty, dusty dirt roads and then fish a 500+ acre lake that you can only use your trolling motor on though.
  4. If you have some Dynamite handy you might have a chance to get a big bass at Hillsdale I've had my best luck there this time of year with a 10" blue fleck worm or blueberry colored brush hog. Friend of mine fishes the weeknight tournaments out there and fishes a rusty colored finesse jig with a green pumpkin colored trailer and wins them pretty often with it.
  5. Deep, clear water, post frontal conditions after extreme heat. I'd be looking deep with drop shots or shakeyheads around structure or cover. If that doesn't work try fishing a moving bait fast for a reaction strike.
  6. They're both good C-rig baits.
  7. I've also been using the BPS Magna EWG hooks and have been very impressed so far. Once in awhile I'll roll a point if I snag a rock or stump but at about $8 for a 20 pack I can afford it. They're similar to Gammy superline EWG's but at about 1/3 the price.
  8. That's what happened to me. I was trying to lose about 25 pounds and was doing really good, until I took a couple days off. Now I've gained back 6 of the 12 pounds I've lost and have no motivation to get back on track.
  9. The ones we catch at La Cygne run around 6-8 pounds at that length. They sure are a blast to catch!
  10. People eat longnose gar around here. Had a guy try to explain to me how he cleans them as he was hauling off a bunch of gar I'd just shot bowfishing. I was trying to pay attention and listen to him but when he got to "Then you put them on the bandsaw to fillet them" he kind of lost me. Any fish that requires a bandsaw to clean is too much work.
  11. No reason it wouldn't work as long as the hook gap is big enough. I've used the tiny brush hogs on sliders for stream smallmouth and they love them.
  12. T-rigged with a 1/4 bullet weight in rocks or wood, pegged 3/8oz in grass. I use the Rage trailers on my jigs, or cut down ones I've already T-rigged with.
  13. 4 pounder is a heck of a nice smallmouth in my book! Yeah it's just north of Kirksville a few miles. They stocked muskie in there in the 80's or 90's and have been stocking them since, that's originally what drew me to the lake in my quest to catch my first muskie. I'd been there 4 or 5 times and caught 2 in all those trips. Not sure if they've just been stocking a bunch or if they were just biting good this trip but it was sure a great bonus to catch them.
  14. ll Chris and I got back from Hazel Creek this afternoon. We're tired and our thumbs are torn up and even a little cut up. We got out before dark Tuesday morning and tried some bowfishing. The wind was already bad and it was tough to see in the murky water. I shot 2 grass carp in the 40lb range but both of them pulled off. Once the sun started to get up we started getting to the main attraction. We caught several fish that were much smaller than I expected but it didn't take long before I got one of the healthy bass that we were after on a pit boss. I was getting quite a few small ones on a LC RC 2 squarebill but on one small point the fish I thought was a little nicer bass turned out to be a pretty little muskie. The fish of 10,000 casts proved to not be very finicky this trip. Moving on, I missed a good fish on a tube and we caught a few more small ones when I got the first keeper of the trip off a tree in about 8 feet of water. 18" and a little over 3 pounds. It got tough from there as the sun came up. I caught another muskie on a spinnerbait about the same size as my first but it squirted out of my hands and back into the water before we got a picture. We decided to get off the lake until the afternoon when it cooled off a little. Once we got back we started about the same speed. We got a few small ones flipping trees. I pitched to a laid down tree with a 7" Rage Andaconda and got thumped. Stuck a good fish that pulled like it was twice it's size. Chris lipped her for me, got a weight and a couple pictures and put her back. 19.5" and 5 pounds even. We tossed some deep runners on a flat and caught a couple dinks and I had a muskie chase mine to the boat and follow for 3 or 4 figure 8's before it sank out of sight. It was starting to get dark and Chris was throwing a spinnerbait in a cove between some stumps while I was doing the same with a spinnerbait. Right as his buzzbait got to the boat it sounded like he tossed a brick in the water and mayhem set in at boatside as his first muskie ever strained his bass gear while he tried to keep it out of the trees. He did a great job keeper her away from all the obstacles and I slid the net under her. We didn't really plan on catching any muskie so we didn't have anything to measure any longer than my 22" measuring board but it was probably 30-32 inches and 7-9 pounds. Not sure what had happened to its gills but it didn't seem to be hurting it any as it swam away with no problems. There's 1 island on the lake I wanted to try as it was about dark because it has deep water all around and then gets really shallow quickly around it but doesn't have any cover. I was thinking maybe they'd be up there pushing shad towards the shallows and feeding. Sticking with the same baits, Chris tossed his buzzbait up shallow and a huge head and mouthful of teeth engulfed his bait and it was on again . This one was obviously bigger and much thicker than the first and Chris got to enjoy the fight a little more in the open water. This one was probably around 32-34 inches and 10-12 pounds. Next day with the memory of Chris' buzzbait muskies fresh in my mind I decided to try a big chopper bait for muskies, I was not expecting the 6" bass that pulled my bait down at all. We got some small ones when I picked my cranking rod back up. I was tossing a LC RC 1.5 when I got slammed. Thought it was a good bass, turned out to be this 28-30 inch, 7lb muskie. We got back to the same area Chris caught his first muskie the night before when he tossed a 10" power worm at a stump and slammed into a good fish. She steam rolled to some other stumps and got his line around them. Luckily he had a great guy on the trolling motor that got him over there in time and we got her in the boat. Another stout fish that rang up 5lbs even. She looked like she had just done spawning with her bloody tail Another long spell of a few small fish here and there when I pitched into a brushpile with a 7" BPS Stick-O and got thumped. She wrapped me up in the brushpile and wouldn't budge. While I was pulling on her she came up and got wrapped higher in the brushpile. I took my hat and sunglasses on and laid on my stomach and reached as far as I could but all I could grab was her tail. She ca me off of that limb and swam further down in the tree. I could lift the tree so I just started pulling the tree up and Chris lifted it high enough I could see her again. So I leaned in head first up to my chest and finally got a grip on her and pulled her out. Don't think I've ever worked that hard for a fish. 20 1/2 inches and 5 1/2 pounds was my biggest bass of the trip. After going back to the hotel to wait out the mid-day lull we were back at it. I started off fast, catching this this fish out of a culvert on a Yum Wooly Bug. It was 3lbs 6 ozs. It was a slow evening for bigger fish after that. Chris was pitching a tube and got thumped when he tried to reel in. Thought it was a nice bass but turned out to be another little muskie. The fish had the line wrapped around it's teeth, not sure how it didn't cut him off. That was it for bigger fish that night. Last morning we were greeted by much nicer fishing weather. Clouds, drizzle, much less wind, and 10 degrees cooler than it had been had the fish biting. About 30 yards down from where I'd caught my first 5 pounder I pulled my Rage craw over a lay down and got popped. She was one the top almost instantly before she dug back down for the tree. It's crazy how strong the fish in that lake were but I still managed to keep her out of the tree. 20" and 4lbs 14ozs and super thick and healthy looking. I still had my big muskie chopper bait when we got back to the flat that I'd had a muskie chase my crankbait to the boat the day before so I thought I'd toss it. First cast I cranked about 15 feet when it blasted. One of the coolest and most exciting strikes I've ever seen but it didn't connect with my bait, just knocked it about 10 feet in the air . With the perfect weather I wanted to go to the island where Chris had caught his biggest muskie and toss my topwater around it. We made a lap around with no love for my chopper. I knew there had to be fish up there so I switched to a black and orange bucktail. I made a few casts before I launched one up to the same spot Chris' fish was at. I looked away when I started my retrieve and right when I looked back a huge wake kicked up behind my bait. I sped up my retrieve and her dorsal and tail fin popped out of the water when she threw water and sped forward and smashed it. It was obviously the biggest one we'd seen this trip and my biggest I'd ever hooked. After an intense battle and some debating with each other if it would fit in the net, Chris got the net under her and just barely got her to fit. She was super thick and heavy, around 38-40 inches and 15 pounds. Finally my first legal sized muskie in Missouri! I haven't shaken that bad during and after the fight with a fish in a long time. ] Shortly after that the sun came out and started to get humid again. I jumped off a bass around 4lbs and Chris finally got a good fish to eat a crankbait, probably the only one over 2 pounds of the dozens we caught on a cranks. After that we started cranking and I got slammed, another little muskie, my 5th and our 8th of the 3 day trip. I hooked and lost another muskie on the same crankbait that was a little bigger and Chris had another 30 incher chase his worm over a lay down and almost to the boat but didn't eat. It was a great trip despite the wind and hot weather.
  15. Well Chris and I got back from Hazel Creek this afternoon. We're tired and our thumbs are torn up and even a little cut up. We got out before dark Tuesday morning and tried some bowfishing. The wind was already bad and it was tough to see in the murky water. I shot 2 grass carp in the 40lb range but both of them pulled off. Once the sun started to get up we started getting to the main attraction. We caught several fish that were much smaller than I expected but it didn't take long before I got one of the healthy bass that we were after on a pit boss. I was getting quite a few small ones on a LC RC 2 squarebill but on one small point the fish I thought was a little nicer bass turned out to be a pretty little muskie. The fish of 10,000 casts proved to not be very finicky this trip. Moving on, I missed a good fish on a tube and we caught a few more small ones when I got the first keeper of the trip off a tree in about 8 feet of water. 18" and a little over 3 pounds. It got tough from there as the sun came up. I caught another muskie on a spinnerbait about the same size as my first but it squirted out of my hands and back into the water before we got a picture. We decided to get off the lake until the afternoon when it cooled off a little. Once we got back we started about the same speed. We got a few small ones flipping trees. I pitched to a laid down tree with a 7" Rage Andaconda and got thumped. Stuck a good fish that pulled like it was twice it's size. Chris lipped her for me, got a weight and a couple pictures and put her back. 19.5" and 5 pounds even. We tossed some deep runners on a flat and caught a couple dinks and I had a muskie chase mine to the boat and follow for 3 or 4 figure 8's before it sank out of sight. It was starting to get dark and Chris was throwing a spinnerbait in a cove between some stumps while I was doing the same with a spinnerbait. Right as his buzzbait got to the boat it sounded like he tossed a brick in the water and mayhem set in at boatside as his first muskie ever strained his bass gear while he tried to keep it out of the trees. He did a great job keeper her away from all the obstacles and I slid the net under her. We didn't really plan on catching any muskie so we didn't have anything to measure any longer than my 22" measuring board but it was probably 30-32 inches and 7-9 pounds. Not sure what had happened to its gills but it didn't seem to be hurting it any as it swam away with no problems. There's 1 island on the lake I wanted to try as it was about dark because it has deep water all around and then gets really shallow quickly around it but doesn't have any cover. I was thinking maybe they'd be up there pushing shad towards the shallows and feeding. Sticking with the same baits, Chris tossed his buzzbait up shallow and a huge head and mouthful of teeth engulfed his bait and it was on again . This one was obviously bigger and much thicker than the first and Chris got to enjoy the fight a little more in the open water. This one was probably around 32-34 inches and 10-12 pounds. Next day with the memory of Chris' buzzbait muskies fresh in my mind I decided to try a big chopper bait for muskies, I was not expecting the 6" bass that pulled my bait down at all. We got some small ones when I picked my cranking rod back up. I was tossing a LC RC 1.5 when I got slammed. Thought it was a good bass, turned out to be this 28-30 inch, 7lb muskie. We got back to the same area Chris caught his first muskie the night before when he tossed a 10" power worm at a stump and slammed into a good fish. She steam rolled to some other stumps and got his line around them. Luckily he had a great guy on the trolling motor that got him over there in time and we got her in the boat. Another stout fish that rang up 5lbs even. She looked like she had just done spawning with her bloody tail Another long spell of a few small fish here and there when I pitched into a brushpile with a 7" BPS Stick-O and got thumped. She wrapped me up in the brushpile and wouldn't budge. While I was pulling on her she came up and got wrapped higher in the brushpile. I took my hat and sunglasses on and laid on my stomach and reached as far as I could but all I could grab was her tail. She ca me off of that limb and swam further down in the tree. I could lift the tree so I just started pulling the tree up and Chris lifted it high enough I could see her again. So I leaned in head first up to my chest and finally got a grip on her and pulled her out. Don't think I've ever worked that hard for a fish. 20 1/2 inches and 5 1/2 pounds was my biggest bass of the trip. After going back to the hotel to wait out the mid-day lull we were back at it. I started off fast, catching this this fish out of a culvert on a Yum Wooly Bug. It was 3lbs 6 ozs. It was a slow evening for bigger fish after that. Chris was pitching a tube and got thumped when he tried to reel in. Thought it was a nice bass but turned out to be another little muskie. The fish had the line wrapped around it's teeth, not sure how it didn't cut him off. That was it for bigger fish that night. Last morning we were greeted by much nicer fishing weather. Clouds, drizzle, much less wind, and 10 degrees cooler than it had been had the fish biting. About 30 yards down from where I'd caught my first 5 pounder I pulled my Rage craw over a lay down and got popped. She was one the top almost instantly before she dug back down for the tree. It's crazy how strong the fish in that lake were but I still managed to keep her out of the tree. 20" and 4lbs 14ozs and super thick and healthy looking. I still had my big muskie chopper bait when we got back to the flat that I'd had a muskie chase my crankbait to the boat the day before so I thought I'd toss it. First cast I cranked about 15 feet when it blasted. One of the coolest and most exciting strikes I've ever seen but it didn't connect with my bait, just knocked it about 10 feet in the air . With the perfect weather I wanted to go to the island where Chris had caught his biggest muskie and toss my topwater around it. We made a lap around with no love for my chopper. I knew there had to be fish up there so I switched to a black and orange bucktail. I made a few casts before I launched one up to the same spot Chris' fish was at. I looked away when I started my retrieve and right when I looked back a huge wake kicked up behind my bait. I sped up my retrieve and her dorsal and tail fin popped out of the water when she threw water and sped forward and smashed it. It was obviously the biggest one we'd seen this trip and my biggest I'd ever hooked. After an intense battle and some debating with each other if it would fit in the net, Chris got the net under her and just barely got her to fit. She was super thick and heavy, around 38-40 inches and 15 pounds. Finally my first legal sized muskie in Missouri! I haven't shaken that bad during and after the fight with a fish in a long time. ] Shortly after that the sun came out and started to get humid again. I jumped off a bass around 4lbs and Chris finally got a good fish to eat a crankbait, probably the only one over 2 pounds of the dozens we caught on a cranks. After that we started cranking and I got slammed, another little muskie, my 5th and our 8th of the 3 day trip. I hooked and lost another muskie on the same crankbait that was a little bigger and Chris had another 30 incher chase his worm over a lay down and almost to the boat but didn't eat. It was a great trip despite the wind and hot weather.
  16. Chris and I will be enjoying the hot, windy weather on Hazel Creek Lake in northeastern Missouri for the next few days chasing that DD bass that broke my heart a few years ago. Hopefully we'll have lots of pics and stories when we return
  17. Get some cheap 12-15lb mono and take it fishing a few times so you can get the hang of it and decide if you like fishing a baitcaster. Some people never get the hang of it and decide they don't like using them. Braid is tough to cast with, I still have problems casting with it after 15 years of using a baitcaster. Nothing wrong with an older reel if it's in good working order but a newer one makes things so much easier.
  18. I'd second going home until evening when it starts to cool off. If you're set on fishing I'd go with finesse stuff, shakeyheads with a trick worm, split shot rig, wacky rig, something natural looking that they're more likely to eat if it falls on their nose. A C-rig can be good from the bank on a hot day because you can launch it a long ways and cover a lot of water.
  19. I have the Cabela's super magnum Advanced Angler series and I really like it. I broke one of the pull strings on the zippers but replaced it with a heavy duty zip tie and it's good as new. I pack mine to the gills and it's probably overloaded so that's probably why the zipper broke in the first place when I was trying to close it. Very nice bag with tons of room and a great price.
  20. I've tried doing everything by the book with circle hooks and it just doesn't seem to matter, even bought a rod with a softer tip so it would load more evenly, still just really inconsistent, even with the best circle hooks. Just one of those things that works well for some and not for others. One of my favorite parts of catfishing is laying the hammer down on a big fish anyways so using circle hooks takes that away from me too.
  21. Milford already has algae warnings, don't think it's blue-green algae but still harmful stuff I guess. I'm afraid that Perry may not be far behind. The water out there was bright green last time I was there, like a golf course green green. That was only in the marina by the dam that it was that green but we only had 1 bite back there so it must have been affect the fish too.
  22. Looks like a nice, healthy Perry largemouth. How was the water out there? Is it still looking really green? I'm afraid it may have another bad algae bloom like last year.
  23. Some kind of slippery attractant will help a lot too. I use Smelly Jelly and just rub it on the bait. It helps the bait slide through the fishes teeth so they don't tear the bait up as bad. A dab of superglue on the nose of the bait after you screw the hook in will make it tougher to rip out also.
  24. I like a shakeyhead or football jig for that kind of stuff. A crankbait banged around in the rocks can be really good too.
  25. Give it a shot, we mostly did it during the daytime. They'll come a long ways to eat a grub if there is enough competition for it. It's very entertaining for sure.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.