CLIENTS: This morning, Wednesday, April 30, I fished with returning guest, Mr. John Gossard of Temple, Texas a U.S. Air Force Viet Nam veteran. Joining him were his adult sons, James, a firefighter from Leander, and John, a maintenance man from Texas City.
DATE: Wednesday, 30 April 2025 (AM)
NEXT OPEN DATE FOR FISHING: 12 June (AM)
NEXT OPEN DATES FOR SONAR TRAINING: 21 June (AM)
PHOTO CAPTION: This morning’s crew, from left: James, John, and John Gossard with a few of the 121 fish they landed, primarily working MAL Heavy lures vertically with a “smoking” retrieve.
WHERE WE FISHED: Lake Belton
SUMMARY OF HOW WE FISHED:
High winds for a fourth consecutive day forced us to change from our first choice of launch locations. In hindsight, I’m glad we did that, as the winds got up every bit as high as they were forecast to.
The skies were completely grayed over save for a roughly a 15 minute span around 11:00-11:15 AM. Otherwise, the skies were so gray, squinting was unnecessary.
Having seen fish give a cold shoulder to even live bait yesterday, I re-doubled my efforts at finding and catching fish with artificials, and committed to simply cover water until sonar revealed what I knew would be schools of fish aggressive enough to chase the MAL Lures we presented.
Fortunately, the fish had a much better disposition today, and we were able to catch fish from start to finish. The peak of this morning‘s activity came from 8:50 to 9:40. During that time, I was going from one client to the next, simply taking off fish continuously.
We used the MAL Heavy with silver blade and chartreuse tail exclusively for the first 107 fish we landed. 90% of those were taken fishing the lure vertically using a smoking tactic. The balance were taken using a sawtooth method when I saw an abundance of fish on the port or starboard side, using side imaging as we fished from a Spot-Locked position. The vertical work was greatly enhanced by LiveScope which everyone very much enjoyed using.
At 10:50 AM, a small storm cell moving from southeast to northwest produced thunder and lightning close enough that we decided it prudent to head back to the dock, thus getting off of open water while the storm passed. After a roughly 10 minute delay, we went right back to catching fish using the MAL Heavy vertically. From 10:30 to 11:25 we changed things up and fished live bait after I presented that option to my crew in hope of nabbing a keeper hybrid striper or two. We landed our final 14 fish on bait, including five of the eight hybrid which came aboard today, as well as two blue cat and additional white bass. We wrapped it up at 11:25 AM with exactly 121 fish landed.
RESULTS: 121 fish, all caught and released
TUTORIAL VIDEO ON HOW TO DO “SLOW SMOKING”: Click here for tutorial
TUTORIAL VIDEO ON HOW TO FISH AN MAL LURE USING THE SAWTOOTH METHOD: Click here for tutorial
OBSERVATIONS:
- Threadfin shad spawn continues.
- No helpful bird activity.
- Fish enthusiastically pursued MAL Lures both vertically and horizontally; live bait put fish in the boat in the final hour as the bite got tough.
LATEST WATER TEMPERATURE PROFILE:
This is the most up-to-date water temperature profile for Lake Belton, measured with a FishHawk TD device around 6:40AM on Thursday, 24 April
This was the previous water temperature profile for Lake Belton, measured with a FishHawk TD device around 6:55AM on Tuesday, 15 April…
WEATHER DATA:
Start Time: 7:00A
End Time: 11:25A
Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 72F
Elevation: 3.11′ low (a 0.10′ rise in 24 hours)
Water Surface Temp: 72.0F on the surface.
Wind Speed & Direction: Variable SSE winds from 6 to 16 all morning
Sky Condition: Moderately overcast grey skies all morning with 100% coverage
Moon Phase: Waxing crescent moon at 12% illumination.
GT = 55
Wx SNAPSHOT:
AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:
Area vic B0171C – 4 fish on smoked MAL Heavy Lures with chartreuse tail
Area vic 788 – 18 fish on smoked MAL Heavy Lures with chartreuse tail
Area vic B0172C – 14 fish on smoked MAL Heavy Lures with chartreuse tail
Area vic 328 – 65 fish on smoked & sawtoothed MAL Heavy Lures with chartreuse tail
Area vic B0006G – 6 fish on smoked MAL Heavy Lures with chartreuse tail
Bob Maindelle
Full-time, Professional Fishing Guide and Owner of Holding the Line Guide Service
Belton Lake Fishing Guide, Stillhouse Hollow Fishing Guide
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