Can You Fish While Wearing an Abaya??? — 174 Fish, Central Texas Fishing Guide Report, 04 May 2013






This evening I fished with first time guest Diane H. and her Killeen-based family — Curtis, Riski, and Fit.

(L to R) Curtis, Diane, Fit, and Riski with white bass they caught “smoking” with a TNT180 3/4 oz. slab on Stillhouse Hollow.


Diane and her husband, Chris, are headed to Saudi Arabia where he will work as a pilot, so, this trip was intended to be a way for Diane to visit with family in a fun, outdoor setting before saying farewell and heading overseas.

We met around 4:15p. I anticipated a bit of a slow bite for the first 90-120 minutes as the NW wind was tapering off and it was quite bright out, however, that was not to be the case. Instead we enjoyed solid fish-catching action from start to finish –nearly 4 full hours!

We found our first fish by way of downrigging in the vicinity of Area 702/549. These fish were in 20-21 feet of water up on the flat and were tight to the bottom. We ran the ‘riggers at 18-19 feet down with tandem Pet Spoons and that did the trick. We pulled 11 fish (3 singles and 4 doubles) off this area in 3 passes when I decided the fish were likely active enough to be vertically jigged for. We put the boat into a hover over a solid concentration of fish and went to work with a “smoking” tactic and pulled fish after fish, boating a total of 68 white bass at this first stop.

As the action waned, we moved on to just east of Area 1159 in only 16-17 feet of water and found the same scenario — lots of fish tight to bottom and revved up enough to chase after a “smoked” slab. The majority of the fish here were smallish, so, after boating our 100th fish, we decided to roll the dice and go look deeper for larger fish.

This turned out to be a good gamble, as we definitely upped the average size of our catch by making a break from the shallower water. At Area 1203 we boated another 15 fish. This area played out rather quickly. I’m sure we could have ground it out and jigged for more fish, but the fish had been so aggressive and the fishing so easy, I felt a move would put us on more active fish.

We hopped over to Area 1017/074 and finished up the trip at that location, putting a final 55 fish in the boat. We truly saved the best for last as this last, deepest area (36 feet) held more large (13+ inch) white bass than any of the other previous areas we’d fished.

This was a fun group to be out with — they all clearly enjoyed one another’s company, the nice weather, the fast fishing, and the wonderful sunset the Lord treated us to this evening. The 174 fish we boated tonight made this the most productive trip of the year to date.

Because of their work in the airlines, Diane and Chris have dual citizenship in the U.S. and Canada. I asked what was the most culturally different thing about living in Canada. Diana responded that it was how truly interested the Canadians tend to be about U.S. affairs and culture — evidently it is discussed continually. Then Curtis (half-)jokingly said that that cultural difference would be nothing compared to the cultural difference Diane was about to undergo heading to Saudi. So, Diana shared with us the “rules” she’d been researching for women to cover themselves with an ‘abaya’ (the traditionally black, robe-like dress worn by women there)and how she’d gone shopping for one already.

Diane, I wish you and Chris well in Saudi — you’ll have to Facebook us all a shot of you in your new ‘abaya’!!


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TALLY = 174 FISH, all caught and released

TODAY’S CONDITIONS:


Start Time: 4:15a

End Time: 8:25a

Air Temp: 78F at trip’s start.

Water Surface Temp: 66.7F

Wind: Winds were NNW13 at trip’s start, and stayed at NNW10-11 most of the trip with a rapid calming at sunset.

Skies: Skies were fair with 50% high, thin clouds.

Bob Maindelle

Holding the Line Guide Service

254-368-7411

www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

Salado, Texas








SKIFF Trip #2013-5 — 04 May 2013, 84 Fish, Stilhouse Hollow







L to R: Ivan F., Shyheim M., Tori G., and their “Big Brother”, Mr. James Stevens.

The S.K.I.F.F. (Soldiers’ Kids Involved in Fishing Fun) Program exists to take the children of deployed or deceased soldiers on fishing trips at no charge to the soldiers’ families as a way of showing our support for our troops and providing a respite for their spouses. The following is a note to SKIFF supporters about this most recent outing…

Saturday, 04 May, 2013

Dear Friends of SKIFF,

What a great trip this morning! About two weeks ago, Mr. James Stevens phoned me. He’s retired from teaching in the Houston area and moved to Ft. Hood to be with his sister after experiencing some heart problems. He’s been involved in outreach to kids ever since his fraternity days at Prairie View A&M where was part of Alpha Phi Alpha. After moving to Killeen, he linked up with the local Big Brothers/Big Sisters (BBBS) chapter which (locally) focuses only on military children. BBBS’s stated mission is “…to provide children facing adversity with strong and enduring, professionally supported one-to-one relationships that change their lives for the better, forever.”

As a result of that phone call, James arrived this morning with 3 young men he is a Big Brother to: Ivan Fontenot (whose step-dad is active duty Navy and currently assigned to Seattle, WA), and brothers Tori Golden and Shyheim Matthews (whose father is active duty Army and currently assigned to Fort Benning, GA).

The mercury dipped to a record low this morning — 46F on the 5th of May!! Fortunately, the water is on a warming trend (albeit a slow trend, and several degrees behind given where we are in the season). The boys came pretty well prepared and so we took on the elements in the pursuit of fish.

Our start was a bit slow thanks to bright, clear skies and light winds, but, once the winds picked up out of the west, the fish turned on and stayed turned on for 3+ hours allowing us to boat a total of 84 fish before they went off their morning feed.

We experienced our first success at Area 1202 where, after taking several fish on successive downrigger passes, we hovered over “ground zero” and quickly boated a nice mess of white bass using 3/4 oz. TNT slabs to “smoke” for these very aggressive fish.

After these fish turned off, we did some more downrigging to search for another concentration of fish. We found a few fish atop the hump at Area 055/754, but nothing worth stopping for. I used a tandem rig set up with twin Pet Spoons and we boated several “doubles” today. We found that by reeling in slowly once the first fish was hooked we really upped our chances of bagging a second fish.

We ended our trip adjacent to the Lampasas River channel at Area 1017/074 and again used a “smoking” tactic to put our last 36 fish in the boat in under 45 minutes’ time.

Over the course of the trip, Ivan boated the first fish of his lifetime (for which he’ll get a Texas Parks and Wildlife Dept. “First Fish Award”).

One funny thing happened as I was asking the kids about their family. Tori said his mom was a cook on Fort Hood. I asked him if she did a good job of cooking for him and and his brother. He immediately broke into a big old smile and nodded his head “yes” in a very reserved way as if to say, “Yes, she cooks REALLY well, but I’d prefer to keep that little secret to myself.” James and I perceived his response the same way and had a good laugh about it.

James and I really hit it off and discussed ways we can continue to support one another in our desire to help kids who are in a tough situation.

To all you “Friends of SKIFF”, the words “thank you” just seem inadequate to express my appreciation for how you’ve made it possible for us to help more kids more often than the very small effort that was at work before we all began working together under the SKIFF banner in May of 2009. You guys are great folks!!


Note about Photographs: Due to the limitations of this blog, I can only post so many photos in a given entry, so, in order to share ALL photos from EACH trip, I’ve created a Facebook page. There you’ll find essentially the same trip summary with more photos to document each trip. Click here to visit…

See all photos on Facebook


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TODAY’S CONDITIONS:

Start Time: 6:45a

End Time: 11:30a

Air Temp: 46F at trip’s start.

Water Surface Temp: ~65.7F

Wind: Winds were W5-6 at trip’s start tapering steadily up to WNW14 by trip’s end.

Skies: Skies were cloudless and clear.

Bob Maindelle

Holding the Line Guide Service

254-368-7411

www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

Salado, Texas