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everythingthatswims

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Everything posted by everythingthatswims

  1. They eat hair jigs too, but it's a hair jig that is about 10x bigger and 10x heavier!
  2. Tournaments can make a good day of fishing bad, and a bad day of fishing good!
  3. I had quite the time with the coosa spots when I went down there last June!
  4. I caught an 18.5", an 18.75", and a 19" out there last time I went, all pretty lean, not sure why. There were also lots of 12" schoolers that I played with for a while out in the middle of the lake.
  5. Strike king KVD 1.5 is one of the best squarebills on the market. I would start with them, you can't go wrong. Fish them around shallow cover, and make sure to cover as much water as you can. This can be difficult from the bank but if you have a place with lots of bank access, that would be a good place to try!
  6. Your PB grew a pound in this thread
  7. No pictures from this one, and you will soon learn why! I fished a kayak tournament, where you photograph fish on a measuring board to submit to an app for scoring. I didn't have good cell service on the lake, so I had to wait until I got off the water to submit my fish. At 10am on the day of the tournament, I was making a 1 inch upgrade, and had a very energetic bass in my lap. I made sure to hold him down securely, so he wouldn't jump in before I got a picture. The problem arose when he got his tail underneath my phone and somehow flipped it completely across my lap and out of the kayak. So I lost all of my photos from the tournament, and I would have made money with them!! Don't do what I did!!!
  8. Maybe I'm just lucky, but I tend to land most musky that I hook on bass gear. Seems like all you have to do is take it easy on them, they aren't very strong for their size. I've caught tons on a spinning rod with 10lb fluorocarbon leader, usually you can feel if the line is in their teeth and in that case I back my drag off even more, seems to work!
  9. tell that to the 20lb I flip with
  10. Watching those guys lose fish makes ME sick! It would be like if a perfect touchdown pass was made but the ball suddenly hit an invisible wall on its way there. Nothing you can do about it sometimes.
  11. Qualified for both FLW and BASS college national championships this season, that was my main priority! I have also been working on my offshore fishing skills, my decision making, and time management on the water. This season I made a last minute cull at Pickwick lake on an offshore spot that had not given up a big fish but had the ingredients to, and that fish was part of a 21lb bag
  12. My spot that was producing nice smallmouth (and a few largemouth) on a swimbait when the water was in the 40s and 50s is now home to many largemouth. Catching them in 20-30' on a drop shot, Carolina rig, football jig, and a 6xd! I don't have a boat with me right now, so I am floating around fishing blind from my kayak. I have spent enough time there that I don't really need electronics anyway . Let me tell ya, longlining a 6xd from a kayak is an interesting procedure.
  13. I know big fish come from up lake, but my brain has a hard time accepting the fact that in a herring lake there isn't a population of big fish down in the lower end. They HAVE TO BE THERE! I want to find some anyway
  14. For me, when I go fish, I try to always learn more that will help me for tournaments in the future (and bass fishing in general). I have yet to learn anything on the cold side of Lake Anna that has helped me anywhere! The bass are so weird there. I catch fish all over the country and it all makes sense. Not Anna. The hot side on the other hand, is my go-to place when I need to learn!
  15. Only thing will be line retrieve with those reels from that depth. Your hands will get sore! Lotta cranking! I fish a ton of bass tackle for saltwater fish, if you know how to fight a fish it's pretty reasonable to land most fish on them, and if you're in a boat, you can always chase them if running out of line becomes a concern! I caught mahis on a ML spinning rod a few years ago, many big false albacore on my swimbait rod with a 400 Cardiff, an amberjack on a flipping stick (ACCIDENT!), and I sheepshead fish with a MH and 50lb braid. Lighter stuff makes it way more fun, and it shows you how pitiful of a fight a bass really is!
  16. I got back from the FLW college National Championship on the Red River this Friday, and I was ready to go remember how it felt to catch some fish! I needed one rest day, but Sunday's forecast was rainy with a high chance of topwater. Lake Anna isn't a lake I enjoy fishing at all, I rarely go there besides in the winter, but with the fish being post spawn, and the conditions that I would be fishing, I decided to fish in a Sunday morning tournament that one of the marinas hosts all summer long. Lake Anna in the summer is pretty much a topwater for an hour then go finesse fish on brush piles from what I can figure, and I don't like that. The rain and clouds meant I could throw moving stuff the whole time which I committed to completely, I didn't even have a spinning rod rigged up. Our first stop of the morning after takeoff was at a marina for gas, the one we launched in didn't have ethanol free! After filling up, I put the trolling motor down and started fishing. I put a 2lber in the boat on a super spook within 10 minutes, and got on a pretty good bite for the next half hour, landing 4 decent fish in the 1.5-2.5lb range. They were all on two flat main lake points, which made perfect sense for herring eaters. I fished a couple more similar places after that with no love, so we headed to a creek to fish two pockets that historically have held nice fish this time of year. I always see the bass in these pockets, but can never catch them. I figured the conditions may give us a shot at getting them to eat. On the way into the pocket, we saw a 3lber cruise by that showed no interest in a senko, pretty typical for that spot. I then looked towards the bank and saw a bass lying motionless on the bottom, nosed up to a seawall. I told my buddy Ethan to cast to it, he had a senko in hand already. The fish moved towards the seawall when it heard the senko hit the water, but still didn't know where it was (behind his tail). Ethan twitched the senko a couple of times and the fish spun around, two more twitches and the fish bit. He was a little ugly, but ended up being our 2nd best fish of the day and our 5th fish. I bet most people wouldn't have thought to sight fish in the rain, but you can almost always stumble across a sight fishing opportunity if you are observant! I hooked up on the spook on my very next cast after netting his fish, which was a decent upgrade, putting us at about 10-11lbs. 10 will get a check almost all summer in the Sunday morning tournaments, so at this point we needed to go find a big one. It was 8am and we weighed at 11, so we had a good chunk of time to make it happen. I stuck with the super spook and decided we would stay on the main lake, I knew we could catch a bunch staying in creeks and pockets, but in a 5 hour tournament, you don't want to be looking for upgrades of ounces. Fishing for kicker bites is something I need to improve on in my tournament fishing, so this was good practice for that. From 8:00 to 11:00 I had two bites on the super spook, and hooked one of them. It was almost a 5lber, and was big fish of the tournament! We ended up with 15.15lbs, getting edged out by less than half a pound. It felt great to get back in the groove after a brutal week in Louisiana. Red River gets a 2/10, would NOT recommend!
  17. I have now been fishing Clearlake for 3 days. My visions of giant football shaped bass have not yet become a reality, and unfortunately I don't think we have a shot at more than a couple of them. Weights for tournaments have been way down lately, and we have not heard of anyone catching big fish consistently (although I'm sure someone is). There has been a ton of pressure on the lake recently (maybe it's always that way, I'm not sure) and that combined with other factors that I can't pinpoint seem to have the larger fish in a funk! That being said, we are having a ball with the smaller fish, 20+ bites a day in the 2-3lb range, however nothing over 3.5 in THREE DAYS! It would only take an 18"er to be 4 or even 5 pounds too, these fish are built like nothing I have seen before. We have caught bass all over the lakes on a wide variety of baits, I can't figure out how we haven't at least stumbled across a big one. One more day of practice and then it's showtime!
  18. Yup that's what they did, half shell and a dream shot all 3 days. Sounds like they found a point holding fish that everyone overlooked!
  19. I just got back from the third stop of the BASS college tour this year, which was held on Cherokee Lake in Tennessee. Cherokee doesn't have particularly large fish to begin with, and the entire lake was pretty much post spawn, so it made for a very stacked leaderboard at the end of each day, with ounces separating the places, and multiple three way ties. The event also had 263 boats in it, so there was plenty of pressure on the fish. We practiced for two and a half days, as usual, and it was TOUGH! We tried fishing for smallmouth with a ned rig on rocky points like we did last year, and they really weren't having it, which was surprising to me. We caught some fish, but there wasn't much size to them, and there is a 15" minimum on Cherokee. We spent most of our time looking for smallmouth. We caught fish pretty much everywhere we went, but most were 14"ers. I threw a jerkbait quite a bit, and we caught several fish on a 3.8" swing impact. We spent some time largemouth fishing up the lake in the dirtier water, and caught some fish flipping bushes, and on a chatterbait, but still could not crack that 2.5lb mark. A third bite we discovered was a floating dock bite. We could catch largemouth and spots fairly consistently down the lake in the clear water on a senko once the sun got up, but still not much size. All we wanted was one or two 3lb bites to tell us which technique we needed to focus in on. During practice, our buddies from Virginia Tech had been sending us photos of 3lb+ smallmouth with astonishing regularity, and saying they were on a really solid, EASY bite! My old high school partner Ethan fishes for Tech now, and he didn't get to practice until the last day, when we were only allowed on the water until 1:30. That morning at 8am, he already had caught a nice 3lb+ smallmouth, and every time I talked to him on the phone, he said they were catching them pretty well. Around 11am, we still had not caught a keeper smallmouth, and finally Ethan called me, and came and found us on the water to show us what to do, and what he showed us definitely saved our tournament. The way they were catching them was on a 2.8" keitech on a 1/4oz jighead, casting it at the bank, letting it sink, then starting a SLOWWW retrieve back to the boat. The fish either hit on the drop, or within the first three turns of the handle. All you had to do was find a 45 degree bank with chunk rock or boulders. I had TWO 2.8" keitechs sitting in the bottom of my boat, and a couple 1/4oz heads small enough to fit them. I tied one on, went and found what he said to find, and had a keeper within 10 minutes. My partner Casey put a 3" swing impact on a drop shot, and had a 3lb smallmouth fishing behind me about 10 minutes after my fish! We ran to one more spot, caught another 3lb smallmouth, and then just started running around marking waypoints, we didn't have enough practice time left to do much fishing. I tried a 4" swing impact, I even cut it down an inch, and they wouldn't eat it. I still can't believe how small of a bait they were keyed in on. That night, we went and bought more 2.8" keitechs, and I found the last 2 packs of the jighead I was using in Bass Pro. My partner was looking for 3" swing impacts, but the smallest we found were 3.5", which I figured would work too, because stuff like that is usually in our heads and not a big deal to the fish. Back at the hotel, we scrounged around for any 3" swing impacts we could find. I had half a pack of them in my boat, and one of our buddies from Kent State had three 3" easy shiners on an a-rig in his truck, so he took them off the jigheads and gave them to Casey. We had a very late boat draw on day 1, boat 236 out of 263. We knew we wanted to be in the creek where Tech was, but decided not to start there, because they showed us the bite and the fish, so we went to a couple of islands and one point that had produced fish in practice. In our first hour and a half, we had one bite and didn't boat any fish. We then headed to the creek and prepared to get in line to fish behind people, and that's exactly what happened. Despite the crowd, the only people really catching anything were us and Virginia Tech. We got a limit, and my buddy Ethan also had 5. I caught two of them on the 2.8", and Casey caught three of them on the drop shot, all of them were on the 3" easy shiners from my buddy's a-rig! Due to bluegill, snags, and keitechs falling apart because that's what happens, Casey was out of 3" baits once we got our five fish, and had to use a 2.8" and a 3.5" for the rest of the day. I made one good cull, and he didn't catch any more keepers. We started to realize that the necessity of a tiny bait probably wasn't just in our heads. We didn't have to check in til 4:45, but the last hour of our day got very interesting when I received a phone call from my buddy who had broken down with five fish in his livewell, wayyyyy up the lake. I made a 30 mile round trip with the pedal to the floor and got their fish in with 30 seconds to spare for their 4:15 check-in. We already qualified for the championship this year, but they had not, and I knew those fish would be crucial for them so I didn't think twice about giving up the last hour of our day for them. Day one had us tied for 55th place with 11-14. Big fish out of 263 boats was 3lbs 14oz, if that says anything about what we were dealing with. There was no "looking for a kicker" at Cherokee, you had to fish hard for as many bites around 3lbs as you could get. Casey went to a couple stores that night and found some more 3" swing impacts, so we were feeling a lot better going into day two. We ran straight to the good creek after takeoff, and I put one in the boat within minutes. We started to realize that even though we were fishing long stretches of rock, the bites came on the same places every time. Knowing that, we bounced around in the creek, fishing very small areas, and catching fish almost every time. We had five fish at 7:40am, four smallmouth and one spot. I jumped off a 3lb smallmouth, which I knew was going to cost us, no matter how positive we stayed or how well we fished! We kept after it, and made one cull, getting rid of the spotted bass with a smallmouth. We had two around 17/18", and three around 16", very similar to day one. We talked to our buddies from Tech around 10am, they only had one fish, and said the bite had completely died once the sun got up. We hit a couple more key areas, and after not getting any bites, got out the flipping gear and made a run way up the lake to look for some largemouth. We ended up getting on a really hot bite flipping bushes in the back of a big creek, and caught about 15 in the last 2 hours of our day, but the only cull we made was a 17" skinny largemouth for one of our smallmouth which was just under 16". In a game of ounces, it was definitely still important. After the scales closed we sat in 35th place with a two day total of 23lbs 11oz, we missed the final day top 32 cut by 2oz. Like I said, I knew that smallmouth jumping off was not going to be good for us. We were still very pleased with how things turned out. We had a terrible practice and pretty much had to start from scratch once my buddy showed us that weird 2.8 keitech stuff. The good news is that another WVU team qualified for the championship! They were in 42nd place, but there were 10 double qualifications ahead of them. The guys we gave a ride in on day one had to fish with no big motor on day two, and they put up 11lbs 8oz, which will be sending them to the championship in combination with their points from the events held at Toledo Bend and Pickwick this season. Casey and I are sitting in 4th in points for Team Of The Year, and at the end of this week will be hopping on a plane headed for Clearlake, California, where we have somehow secured a boat and truck to borrow during our time there. We are gonna have to bring our A-game if we want to take this thing home, but who doesn't like a little challenge? Thanks for reading guys, I'm having the time of my life doing this college fishing stuff, and I love writing these and reliving the experience!
  20. I also want to know if anyone has used one, seems like the live target sunfish all over again but not as much promotion!
  21. The best bass lake in WV is FULL of BIG muskies. Only two bass over 18" can be weighed in, and it takes 20+ to win in the spring, every time. I have heard there would be upper 20s and maybe even 30lb bags if the size limit was changed!
  22. If you are releasing them, best to photograph on the net or in a wet hand. Grass is rough on a trout, they aren't the toughest critters out there. Nice fish!
  23. Some WV multitasking this morning
  24. Honestly it's good to hear comments like this, it's why BR is such a great place with such great people. Quite a few here at school would end it after your first line I'm always happy for other people catching fish, but it makes some people angry!
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