Day 4: Nautical
My first thought was, “I’m in trouble. I’m in serious, serious trouble.”
I hit the water about 8 this morning and made a run to a few creek channel points that I was told were promising. I caught a 15 incher off the second point when I noticed some lily pads.
I can’t resist throwing a frog over lily pads so I took off in that direction. The wind was behind me blowing a steady 10-14 mph, so I couldn’t set up where I wanted and had to loop around the other side.
But first I hit the narrow, hydrilla filed creek channel behind it. I got one hit on a spinnerbait but it didn’t hit the hook. The wind was pushing me all over the place and I briefly got stuck on a low point. It was a pain trying to fight the wind, find deeper water, actually cast and fish, and having my depth warning alarm go off every 30 seconds.
I headed over to fish the pads again, set my spot lock, and wasted far too much time casting at nothing.
So I headed back to the ramp, loaded up, and went to fish an area the guide told me about yesterday.
I launched and the wind really started picking up. now blowing closer to 20 mph. I’ve fished in winds like that before, and I know to be careful.
There’s a ton of flooded timber where I was headed, but if you follow the buoys there’s a clear shot most of the way. But it’s a circuitous route that would take me over an hour to get there. The other option is to cut across a minefield of flooded timber
I followed the buoys most of the way, then cut across the timber to a submerged road bed. I push deeper into this wide creek channel and as the water gets shallower (3-8 ft) the wind picks up even more, now blowing 25 mph. The waves are even bigger in these shallows.
I decide to head back, which means heading south. The wind is blowing south east, but heading directly south would put me into a thicket of even more timber.
Now the waves are coming in stacked, so if I head west to the buoys the waves are hitting me broadside. My only choice is to head northwest, taking me further away from the ramp.
I’m looking towards the sun, so it’s even harder spotting timber. I could use FFS to try and spot timber, but I also risk shearing off the mounting plate again. So I pull my FFS transducer pole out of the water.
Another problem is I can’t run the motor too slow because the wind and current would push me all over the place, so I run between 4 and 5 (out of 10).
Next thing I know I’m hung up on some timber, but with the aid of the motor and my paddle I get free.
I make it a few hundred more feet and BANG! The motor crashes into timber, pops up, and spins the head around.
Now the wind and waves are hitting me broadside and pushing me fast. I have to get out of my seat to get to the trolling motor to reset it, but it’s jammed. So I have my short paddle in my left hand trying to make sure I don’t slam into more timber while trying to free the motor with my right hand. I’m on my knees near the bow with water crashing over me.
I finally get the motor freed and seated, fire it up again, and kind of idle and look around. That’s when I realize I’m in trouble.
I didn’t panic, but I knew things were not looking good. There were no boats around and I’m still far from the buoys and even farther from shore. I have no choice but to keep going.
The next thing I know a wave lifts me up and sets the stern down on a stump. So now the back of my kayak is in the air and the bow is in the water getting thrashed. That makes the kayak tip far from side to side, then spin so I’m no longer taking waves on the side. A bigger wave comes, lifts the stern a bit, and I paddle hard and get free. What seemed like an eternity later I made it to the buoys and the safe boat passage lane. Thirty minutes later I’m at the ramp.
So, a poor decision on my part to fish shallow, timber laden waters on a windy day put me in jeopardy. Lesson learned. As I said, I’ve fished windy days like this before, but in narrower creek channels with deeper water and no imminent hazards.
Thankfully, the forecast is calling for much less wind the next three days. My kayak is in one piece with no real damage. I have a few nicks in my prop that I need to sand down.
I think I’ll fish mostly open water tomorrow and avoid the timber if I can.