A 131 Fish Doubleheader — Belton, 13 May ’17 (AM & PM)

This past Saturday, May 13, I fished a doubleheader with Jim Rogers and his nephew, Lucas Tavill, who is currently stationed at Fort Hood as a newly minted West Point second lieutenant in the Quartermaster Corps. Jim traveled in through DFW from the San Diego area where he works for a private banking institution.

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Second lieutenant Lucas Tavill was treated to a full day of fishing on Lake Belton by his uncle, Jim Rogers, of San Diego.  The pair landed 131 fish, including hybrid striped bass, white bass, largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, and blue catfish using a variety of tactics.  We fished live bait, downriggers, slabs, and subsurface baits.

MORNING BITE
Given our bright, low wind-speed forecast, I planned to immediately head for deep water this morning in pursuit of hybrid striped bass using live shad. Live bait and deep water are often a hedge against the ill effects of postfrontal weather.

Although we were the first to arrive at the area I chose as our first stop, it didn’t take long for company to join us once our rod started bending. However, thanks to the fact that we had already pulled fish in, the fact that we were using a thumper, and the fact that we were chumming, we continued to catch fish while the other boats, several of which came inconsiderately close to us, just got to watch the fishing show we put on. As often happens in such situations, it didn’t take long for our uninvited guests to move on.
We wound up fishing three very similar deep water areas this morning all in roughly 42 feet of water. The first and the last area we hit had some slope which attracted the fish holding there, and the second area we hit we stopped at only because of an abundance of nomadic fish roaming over this fairly flat area. We were able to pull in a few fish here, but after they moved on, they were gone for good. We spent about 2.5 hours at our first area, about 30 minutes at the second area, and about an hour at our last area.

The morning’s final tally was 46 fish, about 75% of which were keeper hybrid, with our largest going right at 4.25 pounds. The balance consisted of white bass, three short hybrid, one blue cat, and a single smallmouth bass.

By 11:40 we were seated in the air conditioning of the Sol de Jalisco making plans to link back up in the afternoon.

 

EVENING BITE

The afternoon portion of the trip began at 4:15 PM; our plan was to jig for white bass, then target hybrid in the last hour of light.

I searched a number of deep water areas looking for fish that could be worked over with the slab, found little, but noticed some very consistent suspended fish holding down around 24 to 28 feet over a 40 to 50 foot bottom out from a large point. Since Jim was was interested in how downriggers work, I saw this as an opportunity to kill two birds with one stone. We set out two tandem rigs, each equipped with two Pet Spoons on the twin downriggers. Our results were immediate – – three sets of doubles followed by more singles and doubles thereafter, and one bonus hybrid to put icing on the white bass cake.

As this bite waned, we begin looking once again with sonar for deep, bottom hugging white bass that we could jig for. This time, we were a bit more successful. We got into a nice bunch of fish holding right on bottom and 42 feet of water. Both Jim and Lucas were able to work the kinks out of the smoking tactic that we were using which set them up nicely for the next several areas we would visit which produced even more fish. We made three or four “short hops” just a few yards apart in order to stay in contact with this second group of bottom hugging white bass we found. As we took our tally through the 70s, and into the 80s, things went a bit quiet despite good numbers of fish still showing on sonar.

It was just then that Jim hooked a nice hybrid on his slab. As I observed sonar as he reeled that fish in, I saw a number of similarly sized fish ghosting along with his hooked fish. This told me there were more hybrid down there then white bass. This understood, we quickly transitioned away from slabs and white bass and got re-rigged with four live bait rods out all hung with large threadfin shad.

We took our count up to and beyond 100 fish, including a mix of white bass and hybrid striper with a nice 4.5 pound largemouth thrown in for good measure, as we stayed in this vicinity and worked the fish over with bait as sunset approached.

With our tally now at 105 fish on the day, I suggested that we could close out our trip with yet more variety by casting to subsurface fish feeding on shad. We moved and found next to no pressure at this final area we would fish, despite being out on a pleasant Saturday evening. The fish showed up as I hoped, and I got Jim and Lucas both casting paddletale grubs with jigheads to the boils which the largemouth, smallmouth, and white bass  created when they rose to the surface to sip shad.

In the final 30 minutes we spent on the water, we put another 26 fish in the boat to bring our grand total on the day to 131 fish.

TOTAL =   131 FISH, all caught and released

Wx SNAPSHOT:

13MAY17#2

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start/End Times:  6:45a – 11:15a, then 4:15p – 8:35p

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 63F AM, 81F PM

Water Surface Temp: 73.7F AM / 78.6 PM

Wind Speed & Direction:  NW12 at trip’s start, increasing to NW16

Sky Conditions: Clear, post-frontal skies with NW breeze at <8mph all day, occasionally dropping to just 2-3mph

Water Level: 0.76 feet above full pool and falling; 45 cfs release at Belton Dam

GT = 105

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

PM BITE

**Area 150 – 75% hybrid, 25% white bass; 27 fish total

**Area 1944 – nomadic roamers – 5 hybrid

**Area 835- 75% hybrid, 25% white bass; 14 fish total

PM BITE

**Area 1909-1940 downrigging

**Area vic 295 – whites on slabs

**Area vic 387-1362 – slabs for whites, then bait for hybrid

**Area 1828 and to shore – low light subsurface work for mixed bags surface feeders

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

Twitter: www.twitter.com/bobmaindelle

Kneer Family Adventure — Belton, 68 Fish, 12 May ’17

This past Friday morning I fished with Mr. Doug Kneer, his son Tyler, and his daughter Breanna. Only the two kids fished while Doug took it all in trying to glean some lessons for their future bank fishing expeditions.

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Tyler Kneer with one of many cooperative hybrid he landed this morning as a cool, dry front moved in and stirred the fish into a feeding mood.

 

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Breanna Kneer got the hang of using circle hooks very quickly and missed very few opportunities this morning.
The shad situation was sort of odd this morning in that I caught only a handful (literally six shad) before first light in about an hour’s worth of effort, yet, just yards away after sunrise, spawning shad loaded the bank thus allowing me to catch what I needed for the trip.

Because the hybrid striped bass bite has been reliable, I thought I would put the kids on hybrid first and for as long as the hybrid would bite, then chase white bass using slabs in whatever time remained.

As it turned out, we had a 2.75 hour long bite on the hybrid which produced 27 legal hybrid and two shorts as well as six white bass. Right around 10 AM, the fish shut down at the second of two areas we successfully fished for hybrid at, using live bait.

From roughly 10:15 to 11:10 AM, we used three-quarter ounce slabs retrofitted with Hazy Eye Stinger hooks to score on white bass in exactly 42 feet of water. These fish were in classic deepwater array – – heavily schooled together and tightly hugging bottom.

In this closing chapter of our trip, we took our tally up to 68 fish, catching mainly three-year class white bass.

As was the case two Thursday mornings ago, the incoming, dry cold front really spurred on the fish behavior this morning.

TOTAL =   68 FISH, all caught and released

 

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time:  6:45a

End Time:  11:15a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 70F

Water Surface Temp: 72.6F

Wind Speed & Direction:  NW12 at trip’s start, increasing to NW16

Sky Conditions: Clear cold front skies

Water Level: 0.76 feet above full pool and falling; 20 cfs release at Belton Dam

GT = 5

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area vic 1012 –  strong hybrid bite

**Area 1295 – moderate hybrid bite

**Area 1941 – white bass by smoking

 

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

Twitter: www.twitter.com/bobmaindelle

A Whole College of Hybrid — 73 Fish, Belton, 11 May ’17

This past Thursday morning, May 11, I fished with the Campbell kids from Gatesville, Texas. Joining me today were David who is about to be 12, Dalton, Shiloh, and Nicole.  This trip was in celebration of David’s birthday.

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From left: Nicole (16), David (12), Dalton (10), and Shiloh (14).

We took a multi-species approach this morning and fished for what was most eager to bite. The first thing we found were very willing hybrid striped bass in 42 feet of water with next to no white bass intermingled with them. We enjoyed two hours and 45 minutes of continuous hybrid action and during that time put 38 legal hybrid and 4 white bass in the boat on both live shad and on some special cut baits I prepared.

There were times when I wasn’t sure if David or Dalton had a fish, or if the fish had them! These hybrid stripers were a good bit larger and much more aggressive than the largemouth bass, catfish, and sunfish they are accustomed to catching from the bank.

At one point, the hybrid were so numerous beneath the boat that I pointed out their signatures on sonar to the kids.  David said, “Wow, there must be a whole college of them down there!”   When Nicole asked if he meant to say “school”, David replied, “No, these fish are too big for school.”

About the time the hybrid stopped hitting both live and cut bait, the wind was beginning to ramp up beyond a level I was comfortable in keeping kids out in open water, so, we retreated to the protection of one of the tributaries, and searched out bottom hugging, tightly congregated white bass. The first area we located fish at gave up a few whites, but the fish were pretty nonchalant about chasing our baits. I gave up on this in hopes of finding some better action, and I was glad I did.

In 44 feet of water at the base of a gentle slope, I found hundreds of white bass within 3 feet of the bottom. Using the Minn Kota’s “Spot Lock” feature, we hovered right over top of these fish, got our three-quarter ounce slabs complete with Hazy Eye Stinger hooks down to them, and began using a smoking tactic to land fish after fish. We took our tally from 42 fish up to 73 fish in the final 50 minutes on the water fishing two distinct areas just a few boat lengths apart, but over the same group of fish.

At the close of the trip I was sure to mention to Mr. and Mrs. Campbell how respectful and well-behaved their kids were. All four are homeschooled and, given that they are growing up on a 40 acre ranch, all have responsibilities to tend to regarding schoolwork and livestock. Wish all of our kids in America could be like this crew.

TOTAL =   73 FISH, all caught and released

Wx SNAPSHOT:

11MAY17

 

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time:  7:00a

End Time:  11:15a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 71F

Water Surface Temp: 73.5F

Wind Speed & Direction:

Sky Conditions: 40% white clouds on a fair sky

Water Level: 0.66 feet above full pool and falling; 0 cfs release at Belton Dam

GT = 45

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 150/1012 –  38 legal hybrid & 4 white bass by 9:40a

**Area 1942 – 31 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

Twitter: www.twitter.com/bobmaindelle