txsuperman Posted October 31, 2016 Posted October 31, 2016 Fished all week last week. 1st time on lake. Found fish from 1ft to 30 ft. Yellow magic shallow early worked best. But you had to work it painfully slow. Subtle twitch, then let it sit for 5 seconds........that's when they hit. We did good in indian creek, halfway up on right. Also found fish just outside mudd on the left in a little pocket doing the same thing. Lots of fish schooling, but had to hit them in the head. Late in the day we found a few schools on ledges by the canyons on 10in worm in plum. Biggest fish was 4-5lbs. 3 Quote
RCCA Posted November 5, 2016 Posted November 5, 2016 Headed that way in the mornin' if I can find an out of state license. Hadn't been in over 20 years. A lil rusty lol. It will be a nice change of scenery. Quote
Dink2 Posted November 6, 2016 Posted November 6, 2016 Every Fall we head back to the Piney Woods with life-long friends for our annual fishing/camping trip. We went to back to Rayburn for the first time since 2009. Since we live north of Dallas, we have to "pre-fish" using Texas Fishing Forum and BassResource.com, and always appreciate the tips and recommendations received. We spent Tuesday-Friday (Nov. 1-4) on the lake, so I thought I would return the favor and post how our trip went. LODGING/BOAT RAMP/RESTAURANTS: We stayed at Dixon Cabins just outside of Harvey Creek Park (3 minute truck ride from the boat ramp). We stayed at Dixon Cabins over the years and recommend it if you are looking for a cabin and fishing mid-lake -- and especially if you are putting in at Harvey Creek. Clean, spacious cabin with 2 bedrooms and 1 bath and fairly easy access with your boat. Old man Dixon passed away and now it's his son that runs it. I think there is only a couple of cabins that are used to rent out. Harvey Creek boat ramp has really deteriorated over the years (been putting in there since the mid-90's when I was at SFA). However, it is still a usable 1 lane ramp -- but really dark, which makes it hard to launch before daylight or after the sun goes down. I have always loved that little road thru the forest and into Harvey Creek Park. We were disappointed to hear that Catfish Junction and the Mexican food restaurants (both in Broaddus) went out of business since our last trip in 2009. We ended up eating at Bear's Country Diner, which was very good - especially the catfish and had great service. FISHING: Lake was down 3'. Water clarity was average most places, except the actual Harvey Creek cove which was very stained. Water temps were 75-77 (a little warmer than we expected). Overall the bass fishing was very good. Our boat (2 people) averaged about 30-35 fish per day. Most fish were *** pounds with a few in the 4-6 pound range. Our Top 5 would have been 17-20 pounds each day. We love throwing TX-rigged worms, but we just couldn't get on that bite. The hydrilla wasn't near what its been over the years, so we struggled a little there. Where we found hydrilla, we found fish. I got a lot of pre-trip reports about the fish relating to the hay grass (which was new in the lake since we've been), but we either don't know how to fish it properly or the fish just weren't there. If there was hydrilla next to the hay grass, then game on. Same for the lily pads. No fish unless there was hydrilla near them. We primarily fished the Harvey Creek area, which for us is defined as Indian, Hog Branch, Harvey Creek, Bird Islands, and 147 Bridge. The best advice I ever got for Fall fishing was this.... break the cove down into 3 sections (top/main lake, middle, and back/mouth of creek... then determine where the shad are, as the fish will follow the shad to the back of the cove, then back out to the main lake when it gets colder. Being the first week of November, we thought we would find the shad and bass in the back of the coves. However, we caught 90% of our fish in the middle of the coves. That helped a lot, as each time we fished a different area, we just eliminated 2/3's of the cove and focused on the middle third. We would drive the boat about 30% into the cove and start fishing at the first point we could find. The fish were either on these secondary points or just on the backside of them -- fish those areas really hard. In the morning, we did really well on Yellow Magics. The bass were destroying that thing. By the end of Day 2, they knocked off all the paint on one side of my lure, but they kept hitting it - so I kept throwing it If it stayed cloudy midday, or even when the sun dipped behind a big cloud, they would hit the Yellow Magic all day long. If the sun came out, you had to go down a little. Our best lures midday were a rouge (we were using chrome/blue back and gold/black back and they hit them the same, so not sure color mattered) and also a watermelon or pumpkin seed fluke and sinko with a small split shot weight. All fish on the Yellow Magic, fluke and sinkos were caught throwing up tight to the bank and working it out 15-20 feet from the back. Again, focus on points and anywhere with hydrilla. For some reason, the better fishing side of every cove we hit was on left side. Most likely because it had deeper water nearby. On the last day, we got into a crankbait bite behind Bird Island. There are several humps back there and the fish were stacked in there. Most fish were caught on the side of the humps in approx. 10 foot of water using crankbaits that swam about 5-6 feet down. I side-hooked 2 really nice size catfish in there as well that I thought were HUGE bass before I finally fought them to the boat. Got my heart racing...lol. Fish the crankbait slow. Crank it really hard 6 or 7 turns to get it down, then fish really slow. Most of these fish were 1-2.5 pounds, but there were a lot of them in there. I wish we would have found this spot earlier in the trip, as it was a great midday place to stop. We also caught fish on the corners of the 147 bridge on the crankbait. Alright, my fingers are hurting from all the typing. While I gave some details that will help, I didn't give all the exact specifics. If you are headed to Rayburn and want more info, shoot me a PM with your cell number. I'm glad to help out. Tight lines, Alan 4 Quote
Bass_Fanatic Posted December 11, 2016 Posted December 11, 2016 Finally got back on Rayburn today. Fished from 10-5. Caught 31. Top 5 a little over 20lbs. Also dropped 3 good fish. One felt like a monster, but wrapped me in a pile and couldn't get her to swim out. All fish were caught from 12-25ft. 1 Quote
Joshybadnames Posted January 9, 2017 Posted January 9, 2017 Fishing Rayburn for the first time tomorrow or Wednesday. Launching from Mill Creek. Like to the fish the grass (Florida native). Can anyone point me to some good hydrilla/hay areas near Mill Creek? I have a slow boat and my club tournaments launch from there in the future so I'd like to get comfortable with something near to it. Quote
Adamsnyder Posted January 10, 2017 Posted January 10, 2017 Fishing tournament this weekend and need the most help we can get.. any ideas where and what the fish want? Quote
Acefishing18 Posted January 11, 2017 Posted January 11, 2017 I'm new to this whole forum thing so I might need a few pointers HA. I'm in college and heading to Big Sam this coming weekend and have never even seen the lake. I'm planning on launching from Cassels-Boykin and looking for a few pointers to get me on some fish. Not looking to travel too far but am willing to go anywhere to catch fish. Quote
shaneus Posted January 11, 2017 Author Posted January 11, 2017 what size boat are youin acefishing? there are 4 good areas close to the boat ramp..... julie creek, bird islands, canyons and deerstand Quote
Bass_Fanatic Posted January 12, 2017 Posted January 12, 2017 Honestly, I'd fish shallow this weekend. Warming temps and good grass means most bass will be up there. Chatterbait and traps 2 Quote
jacob2000 Posted January 15, 2017 Posted January 15, 2017 Posted just now · Report post So we have a HS bass tournament on Rayburn, tomorrow, and does any one have some tips or maybe suggestions as to where to launch or a general area to start? Quote
Bass_Fanatic Posted January 15, 2017 Posted January 15, 2017 I fished basschamps on Rayburn today. Finished 10th out of 397 boats with 21.28lbs. I fished deep, but most of the checks were caught shallow. I never found a single school of fish all day. I had to just slow down and methodically fish each spot to pick up a fish or two, only got 6 bites all day. 2 Quote
RCCA Posted January 27, 2017 Posted January 27, 2017 Congrats. Them college boys are whackin em! Quote
shaneus Posted February 1, 2017 Author Posted February 1, 2017 Got to go out on Sam rayburn Monday to try a few new areas. Caught a few fish from 6 ft to 20 feet with no real pattern. Blue bird day with lows @35 and highs @75 caught them on Carolina rigs and crankbaits..... beats working though, water temps were around 56 2 Quote
Ohio Archer Posted February 5, 2017 Posted February 5, 2017 Be careful out there when the winds come up... http://www.itemonline.com/sports/outdoors-anglers-fight-for-survival-after-boat-sinks-in-tournament/article_8cc1f13f-7c14-5eeb-98b2-878bf54e537f.html Quote
Super User Team9nine Posted February 5, 2017 Super User Posted February 5, 2017 @Catt Not sure if you guys have seen this old Al Lindner Rayburn video he posted, but thought I'd share just in case. Neat footage from back in the 70s. Old Rayburn video footage -T9 1 Quote
RCCA Posted February 13, 2017 Posted February 13, 2017 I went Saturday to duck the Bass Champs on The Bend. Only been twice recently. Where is the grass??? Please tell me. Pm me if you don't want to tell the world...please Quote
SharkmanDMM Posted February 14, 2017 Posted February 14, 2017 Hey guys, I've been following your thread for a while and finally signed up because I'm finally gonna make it out to Rayburn next month, early March. Anybody been out recently that knows what pattern they are in? Water temp, clarity mid lake. Also good places to stay and eat near Jackson Hill would be helpful, I'd appreciate it. It's been warm recently and I'm not sure where to focus my attention with one day of practice before my next tournament. Thanks in advance Quote
Wesley Posted March 9, 2017 Posted March 9, 2017 There is grass in Canyons, Deer Stand, Harvey Creek, Veach, Caney, five fingers, and just about any creek in the south end. 2 Quote
Tonto Posted March 14, 2017 Posted March 14, 2017 Was able to get up and fish Saturday morning. We cleaned up in little farmers cove. Fishing both shallow and deeper towards the entry into the deeper part of the cove. Caught em on rage craw & senkos-any of the watermelon with red combos in 3-5 fow. Caught a couple in 8-10 fow, including a real nice size one throwing some random swim and crank baits in the middle. But the better action was 3-5 fow around the grass. Heading back up this weekend and will likely get 3 or 4 trips out there so we're gonna try that, then head up to Veach and that area and see how it's hitting. 2 Quote
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