Liam Tyding’s First Fish! — 28 Fish, Stillhouse, 12 Aug. 2014

This morning I fished with Ed Tydings of Pflugerville, Texas, and his five year old son, Liam. As they did for Eddie, Liam’s older brother, the Tydings treated Liam to his first fishing trip to celebrate his fifth birthday.

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Ed Tydings and 5-year-old Liam Tydings with the very first fish of Liam’s fishing career.

We met at 7:00 AM and by 7:20 AM already had two fish in the boat.  I was a bit concerned about the fishing today due to the arrival of a weak cold front yesterday afternoon, which left northerly winds, clear skies, and high pressure in its wake. Although we saw next to no top water action today, the action on suspended white bass held up very well. We caught an even dozen white bass using three-armed umbrella rigs equipped with Pet Spoons in our first hour and 15 minutes of fishing, along with one channel catfish.

I’ve learned a lot in my years spent fishing with literally hundreds of kids.  A few of those thing are 1) kids’ attention spans are short, 2) novelty wears off quickly, and 3) making intentional transitions to new techniques, species, and/or locations extends kids’ interest.

That said, by around 8:15 AM or so the novelty of the downrigging technique was wearing off for Liam, despite the excellent results. Dad and I agreed that a change of scenery and a change of tactics were appropriate. Thanks to the cold front conditions and falling water, plus a strong crop of hydrilla growing in the shallows, my ability to catch sunfish easily enough for small children to stay interested very long has slowly diminished over the summer, but, we gave it a try anyway using long poles with fixed lines and slip bobbers.  We fished in the “salad” of hydrilla in the back of a cove and picked up one bluegill sunfish and one green sunfish in fairly short order.

Liam then began asking questions about the “big net” (my landing net) on the boat. Ed and I told him that the big net was used to land big fish. So naturally, Liam asked if we could catch big fish so we could use the net. This allowed us to return to the white bass we had left behind still biting earlier in the morning and continue to catch them on the downriggers for the sake of introducing Liam to the finer points of netting big fish. We wound up catching an additional 13 white bass, with six of them coming on the downriggers and the remainder coming on slabs worked vertically after finding a heavy concentration of bottom oriented white bass at a break line in about 28 feet of water.

As the novelty of this third transition begin to wear off, as the sun began to beat down on us, and as the winds went slack, Liam’s interest level dropped sharply, and Ed and I knew that it was to a good time to end the trip so as to keep the memory of this trip a good one for Liam.  A lot of well-intentioned parents and grandparents make a big mistake at this point, insisting that kids stay out longer for the full duration of the trip, perhaps thinking that builds patience or character.  Actually, what it does is leaves a bad taste in kids’ mouths and is the last (negative) memory of what, up to that point, was a positive experience.  So, Ed made a good call here putting his boy first.  I have no doubt that Liam’s interest in the pursuit of fish has been kindled and that he’ll continue to look forward to outings with his dad and big brother.

Our catch of 28 fish today consisted of 25 white bass, 1 channel catfish, and 2 sunfish.  For landing the first fish of his life, Liam will receive a Texas Parks and Wildlife Dept. “First Fish Award”.

 

TALLY = 28 FISH

 

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TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 7:00am

End Time:  10:38am

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start:    74F

Water Surface Temp:   85.7F

Wind Speed & Direction:    NW0-4

Sky Conditions:    Fair with 20% high, thin, white cloud cover.

Other: GT=15

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 912 to 1133 to 1417 gave up suspended white bass at 27-31 feet early and late this morning

**Area  1416 held a few sunfish

 

 

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Salado, TX

What do fishing and music have in common? — 50 Fish, Stillhouse, 11 Aug. 2014

So, what do fishing and music have in common?  Here it is … are you ready … scales!!  Okay, that’s hokey, but music and fishing did come together this morning as I finished with Ray Johnson and Stephen Kirkpatrick on Stillhouse Hollow Reservoir in pursuit of white bass. Ray and Steven first got to know one another through Ray’s participation in the Central Texas Master Singers choral group which is conducted by Stephen.  Ray invited Stephen out for a relaxing morning of fishing, giving him a break from his many roles as husband, father, conductor, math teacher, worship leader, and golf coach.

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L to R:  Ray Johnson and Stephen Kirkpatrick with a sampling of the white bass action this morning.

We departed the boat ramp around 7 AM and were hooked up on our first fish by 7:20 AM. The first fish of the day we found suspended between 24 and 28 feet over a deeper bottom. Such fish are particularly prone to a downrigging approach, and that’s exactly what we used. We had a pair of three-armed umbrella rigs tied on, each equipped with a set of three Pet Spoons selected to imitate the size of the young of the year shad which the white bass are feeding heavily on at this point in the season.
As we continued downrigging the action continue to intensify, and, eventually we began to see largemouth bass and white bass feeding on shad at the surface and terns begin to dip down and feed on crippled shad. This was our indicator that things were about to get really good, and so as we down rigged I look even more closely at sonar in an attempt to find heavily schooled white bass holding tight to the bottom. Such bottom oriented fish typically respond well to a vertical jigging tactic. By 8:30 we were into our first large group of bottom oriented white bass, and they struck our TNT 180 slabs in silver, three-quarter ounce size very well. We caught the majority of our fish at this one stop over about a 40 minute span.
Eventually, the wind went slack in advance of the wind shift to the northwest on the lead edge of an approaching cold front.  When the wind went slack the fishing went downhill quickly and never did bounce back much. We put about 10 more fish in the boat in the last 90 minutes just picking up a few here and there at a milk run of about three different areas.
We called it a day right at 11:00am with exactly 50 fish boated this morning, including 48 white bass, 1 largemouth bass, and a single channel catfish.

 

TALLY = 50 FISH

 

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TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 7:00am

End Time:  11:00am

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start:    79F

Water Surface Temp:   86.4F

Wind Speed & Direction:    SSW5-6 @ trip’s start and until ~9:00am, then going slack for ~30 minutes, then picking up from the NW at 8-10 on the lead edge of a mild cold front.

Sky Conditions:    Fair with no cloud cover.

Other: GT=0

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area triangulated by Area 1134, 196, 863 gave up suspended fish early on the downriggers

**Area   883 smoking for bottom-oriented white bass

**Area   829 – 869 downrigging

**Area  1419 – 907 downrigging

 

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Salado, TX