Sailing Away — 56 Fish with the Adolph and Alex Mares, 26 May ’17

This past Friday morning, May 26th, I fished with Dr. Adolph Mares and his daughter, Alexandra, of Salado, Texas. Alexandra will graduate from Holy Trinity High School in Temple this weekend and then heads to college in New York thereafter. Father and daughter spent some time on the water before she heads out of the nest.

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Dr. Adolph Mares and his daughter, Alexandra, celebrated her high school graduation by landing a school of hybrid this morning — 56 fish in all.

Based on the school’s reputation for their pre-med program and competitive sailing team, Alexandra has chosen to attend Hobart and William Smith Colleges in the Finger Lakes region of upstate New York, right near Seneca Lake.

We got going around 6:45 AM and immediately got into some surface feeding white bass that we’re trapping young of the year shad against the surface making both an audible and visible cue to home in on. Using grubs on jig heads, father and daughter landed 19 white bass before the sun brightened, and the fish pushed down and quit feeding.

Next, it was off to search for hybrid striped bass using live shad. Our first stop we made at an area that has been consistently productive over the last two weeks. That streak ended this morning, as I gave it a fair shot and did not draw anything but blue cat and white bass despite thumping and chumming.

The second area we headed to in search of striper was a whole different story. Although it got off to a slow start, after about 25 minutes’ worth of effort trying to draw fish in, we got to enjoy a steady stream of strikes on the 4 rods we fished with, each of which was rigged with live bait.

We stayed right on top of this area for the entire remainder of this four hour trip steadily plucking hybrid striper from 18 to 22 inches for the entire time.

Alexandra had plans to head back to school one last time for some staff and faculty yearbook signatures, so we wrapped up right at 10:30 with exactly 56 fish boated for our efforts.

TOTAL = 56 FISH, all caught and released

Wx SNAPSHOT:

26MAY17

 

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:45a

End Time: 10:35a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 77F

Water Surface Temp: 74.3F

Wind Speed & Direction: SSE14 all morning

Sky Conditions: 100% cloud cover all morning

Water Level: 0.96 feet above full pool and falling; 45 cfs release at Belton Dam

GT = 0

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 562-1359 – schooling white bass on surface with grubs through 7:15a

**Area 1380 – spent balance of time at this location adding 37 fish to our tally; 6:1 hybrid to white bass ratio

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

Just a Little Bit Competitive — 62 Fish, Lake Belton, 23 May ’17

This past Tuesday morning, May 23rd, I fished with Mr. David Baird, a Temple, Texas, native now living in San Antonio, and his eight-year-old grandson, Huck Trottmann. The pair came based on a referral from long-time client Mr. Steve Niemeier, also of Temple.

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David Baird and his grandson, Huck Trottmann, landed 62 fish this past Tuesday, May 23rd, on Lake Belton.
We started our trip under cool and cloudy skies with an ambient temperature of 65°. Although it looked like it could rain at any time through around 10:45 AM, we never did see a drop.

We started our morning in pursuit of hybrid striped bass using live shad in around 42 feet of water with our baits suspended slightly above bottom. We managed to catch 15 hybrid in our first hour. At that time, the easterly winds we had began to settle to near calm.  As we prepared to move on to our second area, Huck gave a summary of our success, clearly communicating that he had landed more fish than his grandpa – my first clue that this young man was a tad competitive.

We moved on to a second area in pursuit of hybrid on live shad, again in 40 to 42 feet of water and put another 17 fish in the boat of which roughly 1/3 were hybrid. This bite ended when the winds begin to abruptly blow at about 8 to 9 mph from the northwest as a storm cell passed to the north of us.

The bite weakened a good bit and we finished our pursuit of hybrid at that time, choosing to pursue white bass using slabs instead of putting young Huck through a live bait waiting game that appeared to be materializing with the weather change. This turned out to be a good choice. We were able to find fairly active white bass in 50 to 52 feet of water and used a smoking retrieve to take our fish count from 32 fish up to 51 in about 45 minutes’ time.

Around 10:45 we experienced yet another weather change. The wind went calm once again and our cloud cover burned nearly completely off. This did not bode well for the slabbing bite we were into, so, based on a comment made by Huck earlier in the day expressing interest in trolling, we wrapped up our trip using downriggers to put a final 11 fish in the boat.

That brought our tally to 62. Huck was shooting for 62 fish today because he had read my report about Steve Niemeier and his granddaughter, Macy, catching 62 fish and he wanted to do likewise.

It took a bit more than 4 hours, and there was some doubt that it might happen at all, but, by trip’s end we had “mission accomplished”!

 

TOTAL = 62 FISH, all caught and released

Wx SNAPSHOT:

23MAY17

 

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 7:00a

End Time: 11:35a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 65F

Water Surface Temp: 73.9F

Wind Speed & Direction: Variable, see report text above

Sky Conditions: 100% cloud cover until ~10am, then clearing rapidly to <20% cloud cover

Water Level: 0.9 feet above full pool and falling; 45 cfs release at Belton Dam

GT = 70

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 1297/150 – 15 hybrid on live shad by 8a

**Area vic 1269 – 17 fish with a 3:1 mix of hybrid to white bass by 9a

**Area 1945/1290/1325 – spot hopping for “patches” of schooled white bass on bottom with slabs

**Area 1945– downrigging at 30′ over a breakline cresting at 33′ for 11 whites coming as singles and doubles on a pair of tandem-rigged Pet Spoons

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

Quest for Kraken – 39 Fish with the Sandersons, 22 May ’17 (PM)

This past Monday afternoon, May 22nd, I fished with Mr. Jeff Sanderson and his two sons, 19 year old Kyle, and 16 year old Blake.

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Jeff Sanderson with one of the numerous hybrid striper that helped “front-load” this afternoon’s trip.

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Newly minted Aggie Kyle Sanderson with the longest hybrid we landed this afternoon.

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Blake Sanderson with a mini-kraken.

Jeff is a professional landscaper, self-confessed workaholic, and has a desire to discipline himself to work less and fish more as he moves through his 50’s.  Kyle is an athletic college student studying at Texas A&M at the main campus in Bryan-College Station, and Blake is a pro-indoors gamer to the core.  On a number of occasions he attempted to draw parallels between our fishing endeavors and aspects of gaming, one of which was the pursuit of large, mythical sea creatures called “kraken”.  He proudly pointed out how he has disciplined himself to wash his hands before touching his video game controller without fail.

We started off the trip in pursuit of hybrid striped bass using live bait in deep, clear water. We hung our baits at 38 feet over a 42 foot bottom and enjoyed steady action for two hours. Live baits were the ticket at the beginning and end of the bite.  During the peak between these two times, cut bait proved quite effective.

Jeff expressed an interest in learning how the Cannon electric downriggers I have on the boat work, as he had a pair of manual downriggers on his previous boat which he has yet to transfer to his new boat due to a poor first experience when he first got the set of manual downriggers he owns.

I explain the circumstances under which I typically use downriggers, the season in which I use downriggers, and how I go about rigging up for suspended white bass and hybrid striper. We did a quick demo while it was still light out, and then actually closed out the trip doing a number of downrigger passes with the balls suspended at 16 foot over a 20 foot bottom.

Between the demo and the close of the trip, I searched unsuccessfully for white bass to vertical jig for using slabs, however, we did find some light subsurface schooling which occasionally broke to the surface. This action was caused by a white bass pursuing young of the year shad. In the area in which we witnessed this, we found fish from less than 2 feet of water up on the bank to out over the submerged river channel in over 70 feet of water. These fish cared nothing about depth, nor about topography; they were simply focused on the food and the food was near the surface.

For as much surface activity as we saw between 6:30 and 7:30, there was disappointingly little such action near sunset when such feeding is typically most common. It was for this reason that we closed out the trip by downrigging when surface feeders to throw grubs rigged on jigheads to never materialized as I hoped they would. We closed out this afternoon’s trip with 39 fish landed, of which 22 were legal sized hybrid striped bass.

TOTAL = 39 FISH, all caught and released

Wx SNAPSHOT:

22MAY17

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 4:30p

End Time: 8:50p

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 72F

Water Surface Temp: 74.7F

Wind Speed & Direction: Light ENE breeze at ~6 the entire trip

Sky Conditions: Fair skies with 40% cloud cover in the west

Water Level: 0.9 feet above full pool and falling; 45 cfs release at Belton Dam

GT = 20

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 1269/1392 – hybrid on live shad

**Area 188/153 – downrigging demo

**Area vic 1636 – throwing grubs to subsurface whites feeding on young-of-the-year shad

**Area 1681– downrigging at 16’ over a 20’ bottom for sluggish 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