I Need a Break! — 137 Fish, Stillhouse Hollow

This afternoon I fished with Rev. Eric Whitfield and his wife, Kris, of Round Rock, TX.  Eric sent me a pre-Easter e-mail with the subject line: Chaplain Needs a Break!  So, today, I did my best to provide a little respite from the rigors of dealing with the terminally ill and their families and concerns.

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This afternoon’s trip offered up both quality and quantity for Eric and Kris Whitfield — 137 fish, with many 3-year-class fish beating the 14″ mark in the mix.

 

Eric is a U.S. Army veteran who left the military following a parachute malfunction during his attendance at Ranger School near Dahlonega, Georgia.  Kris recently sold the financial services business she had built and now volunteers as a volunteer coordinator and as president of the Round Rock Arts Council.

 

The two had above average prior fishing experience, both with spinning and fly gear, which helped reduce their learning curve and increase their catch this afternoon.

 

When I arrived early to launch, Eric was already walking the banks with light tackle in hand casting an in-line spinner.  I commented as I prepared the boat for launching about how I really liked the weather conditions — balmy, breezy, and with solid grey cloud cover.  I covered the two foundational techniques I felt we’d need to use today: jigging and easing, and then we were off to hunt for fish.

 

We didn’t have to hunt long.  After finding no active fish at our first stop, I moved us after just 5-6 minutes to a second area.  I got very excited seeing fish blanketing the bottom over a span of about 30 yards in about 36 feet of water.

 

The first unsuccessful stop we made had already allowed us to work out the kinks on technique, so now Eric and Kris were primed and ready to take full advantage of the potential the situation offered.  Long story short, we sat on one boat-sized patch of water for over 2 hours and boated fish continually using both the jigging and easing tactics we’d practiced.  By 6:00p, when these fish finally let up, our count stood at 114 fish.

 

Given the heavy clouds and strong bite we’d experienced, I felt our final 45 minutes would provide lesser results and I communicated that to Eric and Kris so they’d have reasonable expectations.  In our final 45 minutes on the water, we jigged at two locations and tried casting blade baits up in shallower 10-15 foot water.  The blade baits were ignored, but both areas at which we tried jigging gave up fish.

 

As the light failed, the fish moved up surface-ward to take advantage of the light still penetrating there.  This level was higher than our easing tactics could reach, so, we actually began using a slow form of my “smoking” technique to access these fish.  We finished the evening with exactly 137 fish, including over a half-dozen freshwater drum with the balance consisting of white bass.

 

TALLY = 137 FISH, all caught and released

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TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 3:45p

End Time:  7:50p

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 69F

Water Surface Temp:  66.1F

Wind Speed & Direction:  SSE10-12 the entire trip

Sky Conditions:  100% grey cloud cover to the point of misting.

Water Level: 623.73 and falling with 622.0 being full pool.  Water being released at 1135 cubic feet per second.  Lake fell 0.15 feet in the past 24 hours

Other: GT= 0

Wx SNAPSHOT (a graphical look at the forecast that faced us today):

29MAR16

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area vic 1720/088 deep vertical jigging for mixed 1-3 year class white bass
**Area vic 1048 vertical jigging for mixed 1-2 year class white bass
**Area vic 1725 vertical jigging and slow smoking for mixed 1-2 year class white bass at last light
 

 

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Website: www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

E-mail: Bob@HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/bobmaindelle

Genuine “Old Navy” — 44 Fish, Stillhouse

This past Tuesday morning, 29 March, I fished with retired U.S. Navy Captain Ray Johnson or Harker Heights.  Ray served our country as a physician and flight surgeon, and I’ve had the good fortune of fishing with him a number of times over the past several years.

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This morning’s trip with retired U.S. Navy Captain Ray Johnson yielded a mixed bag including largemouth, crappie, drum, and (mostly) white bass.

Ray is now in his late 70’s, so I looked for a weather forecast that wouldn’t have us rocking and rolling in the wind and wherein the temperatures would be bearable.  Last week around Thursday, I saw this morning’s forecast and bounced it off of Ray.  He was ready to go!
As we got going a bit before 7:30a, the skies were overcast to the point of light drizzle, and the winds were calm.  I thought we might see some topwater action, but only single fish could be seen here and there — no definitive schooling or aggressive, sustained topwater was noted.
We kind of picked at the fish for the first 90 minutes or so, only putting 11 fish in the boat by 9am.  I left the more murky, shallow water we started the morning in for deeper, clearer water, and, in 63 feet of water, we found our first good concentration of fish.  We vertically jigged with 3/4 oz. white slabs for right at 75 minutes, enjoying consistent success, although the intensity level of this feed was pretty low.  We observed a lot more fish chasing our lures on sonar than were willing to commit to actually overtaking them and biting as we watched things play out beneath us on sonar.  Eventually this bite died to nothing, requiring a move.
We moved to a similar, but shallower area, in 36-38 feet of water and found a more aggressive school of white bass eager to bite.  These fish were, on average, a bit larger than we’d found in deeper water.  By now the time was around 10:50a, and I suspected the bite wouldn’t go much longer given that the wind, which had peaked around 10mph, was beginning to slow a bit.  Indeed, these fish stayed fired up for only a short 10-12 minutes and then sulked with little response to our jigging after that, despite being readily identified on sonar directly beneath us.
We looked over 2 more areas with sonar, dropping slabs at one of them, but, the bit was over and so we called it quits around 11:50a with a total of 44 fish boated, including 1 crappie, 3 largemouth, 2 drum, and 39 white bass.

 

TALLY = 44 FISH, all caught and released

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TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 7:25a

End Time:  11:50a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 58F

Water Surface Temp:  65.5F

Wind Speed & Direction:  Calm at start, picking up to SSE7-9

Sky Conditions:  100% grey cloud cover.

Water Level: 623.73 and falling with 622.0 being full pool.  Water being released at 1135 cubic feet per second.  Lake fell 0.15 feet in the past 24 hours

Other: GT= 0

Wx SNAPSHOT (a graphical look at the forecast that faced us today):

29MAR16

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 116 shallow blade bait bite at (obscured) sunrise — 4 white bass
**Area 764 shallow blade bait bite in low light – 2 white bass
**Area 1724 shallow Rippin Rap bite in low light – 1 white bass, 1 largemouth bass, 1 crappie
**Area vic 947 deep vertical jigging for mixed 1-2 year class white bass
**Area vic 803 deep vertical jigging for mixed mainly 2 year class white bass

 

 

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Website: www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

E-mail: Bob@HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/bobmaindelle