Ft. Hood SKIES Program Trip with the Bell Family — 64 Fish, Belton, 28 July 2015

This morning I met Mrs. Shawn Bell and her three children, 12-year-old Morgan, 8-year-old Madison, and 7-year-old Mason for a fishing trip booked through the Fort Hood SKIES program.

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 From left: Madison, Morgan, and Mason Bell with a sampling of the white bass we caught on Belton Lake in the first 3 hours of our morning trip.

 

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Big sister Morgan got big fish honors taking this hybrid striped bass that taped in at exactly 18.25″. Her mom, Shawn, was very happy for her!

Lieutenant Colonel and Mrs. Bell are now stationed at Ft. Hood for the second time in their military career, and live in Harker Heights. LTC Bell is currently serving as a battalion commander.

We met about a half hour before sunrise today, anticipating some topwater action early on, under low-light conditions, and we were not disappointed. Thanks to some low, grey cloud cover, the low-light period was extended this morning, and the morning bite went about 3 hours, allowing us to use downriggers to catch 29 white bass and 1 legal hybrid striped bass before the fish called it quits.

When the white bass and hybrid stripers had dined sufficiently, we changed up our tactics and went up shallow in pursuit of panfish, and caught a mixed bag of largemouth, smallmouth, bluegill sunfish, green sunfish, and blacktail shiners on bream poles for the final hour of the trip, adding another 34 fish to our tally.

I was pleasantly surprised when, as the Bell’s were departing, Mason, Madison, and Shawn provided me with a “farewell in song” which went something like, “Thank (by Mason) … Thank (by Mason and Madison) … Thank (by Mason, Madison, and Shawn) … Thank you! (by Mason, Madison, and Shawn”. Morgan, the pre-teen, did not participate in such antics, but did also thank me.
SKIES Unlimited stands for School of Knowledge, Inspiration, Exploration and Skills. SKIES Unlimited classes are open to children of active duty military personnel, retirees, Department of the Army civilians, and to Department of Defense contractors.
To enroll in SKIES Unlimited activities, children must be registered with CYSS at Building 121 on 761st Tank Destroyer Avenue (right across from the Chili’s restaurant).

There is no charge for registration; parents must bring an ID that shows their affiliation with the military, the child’s shot records, and the report from a recent physical exam. While the SKIES Unlimited programs are not free, many military families are eligible for sizeable credits toward SKIES Unlimited activities. There is a $300 “Army Strong” credit available to each child when their parent is deployed.

TALLY = 64 FISH, all caught and released

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:15a

End Time: 10:15a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 77F

Water Surface Temp: 86.0F

Wind Speed & Direction: SSE6-8

Sky Conditions: A thin. low layer of grey clouds cleared off around 8:45a, leaving <10% clouds on a fair sky.

Note: Lake has dropped 0.11 feet in the last 24 hours and now stands at 595.08 above sea level, with 594.00 being full pool

Other: GT= 0

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 1001/1069 downrigging

**Area 1492 slipfloats for panfish

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Salado, TX

www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

Of Fishing, Hair Whipping, and The Nae Nae — 47 Fish, Belton Lake, 25 July 2015

This morning, Saturday, 25 July, I fished a morning trip on Belton Lake with Mr. Ransom Olds and his two adult children, Brian Olds and Brandi Lujano, all from the Austin area.  This was a belated Fathers’ Day trip, as the original date had to be postponed due to rains and flooding back in June.
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From left: Brian Olds, Brandi Lujano, and Ransom Olds, each with one of the white bass we took today downrigging.

As this past week (during which I fished Belton in the evenings) progressed, the topwater bite and the action in general showed a slowing trend.  I was hopeful that with the lunar cycle waxing toward full, we might see a shift to topwater in the morning instead, but this was not to be.  Although a great quantity of rough fish (mainly smallmouth buffalo) were seen rolling on the surface before, during, and shortly after sunrise, no schools of white bass/hybrid stripers were in the mix.  This is not to say the fish were not present.  On the contrary, we caught them consistently on downriggers, it is just that they never got really aggressive enough to push bait to the surface and feed for very long.

Within 20 minutes after sunrise, and with a breeze developing, it became clear that topwater action would not be the centerpiece of this fishing trip.  So, we leaned on the summertime staple of downrigging for the lion’s share of our catch, hoping to spot some tightly schooled gamefish on bottom as we covered ground, thus allowing us to slab or throw bladebaits.

Although we did happen into 2 very tightly congregated schools of fish in 23-24 feet of water as we downrigged, our subsequent attempts to lure them with slabs and bladebaits did not yield any results.  The fish were just sluggish overall this morning, and, although we landed fish fairly consistently, many were smallish this morning.  The best fishing came from 6:30 to 8:00am, and then again from 9:15 to 11:15am.  There was a definite lull after the low light bite ended up shallow.

Brandi was the conversationalist of the bunch and helped us bypass any lulls in the fishing by engaging the rest of us that way.  Over the course of our 5+ hours on the water, the topics we covered ranged from the quality of Alaskan cruises, eating kale, fishing in Galveston, plagues of locust, the significant differences between blenders, food processors, and juicers, whatever became of Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker, blueberry vodka, Miranda Lambert’s social life, cheap sunglasses, and learning how to “hair whip & nae nae” (just Google it!).

TALLY = 47 FISH, all caught and released

 

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TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:15a

End Time:  11:30a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start:  79F

Water Surface Temp:  84.3F

Wind Speed & Direction: S9

Sky Conditions:  5%  cloud cover under a strong high pressure dome making hot, dry conditions for the past several days

Note: Lake has dropped 0.18 feet in the last 24 hours and now stands at 1.65 feet above full pool.

Other: GT= 35

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 133 to 811 up shallow under low light conditions with downrigger balls set just 11-13 feet down.

** Area 725-816 in 22-23 feet of water with downrigger balls set 2-3 feet above bottom.

 

 

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Salado, TX

www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

First Hybrid Ever — 39 Fish, Belton Lake, 23 July 2015

This past Thursday evening I fished Belton Lake with Mr. Tom Carroll, his adult nephew, Mike Farris, and Mike’s 13-year-old son, Josh Carroll.  This was all arranged by Tom’s wife, Wanda, some months ago, but rains, then floods fell on the primary and alternate dates we selected.  Based on a good outing this past Tuesday, I felt the fish would be doing the same things at the same times given our stable weather.


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13-year-old Josh Farris strains to display his very first hybrid striped bass as his dad, Mike, assists.

Before we officially began fishing, I first showed Josh how to correctly cast a spinning outfit so that if the fish went on a topwater blitz, he could independently catch his fair share.  This skill would also allow him to work bladebaits should the fish require a bit more coaxing.

As we got going, sonar revealed abundant bait and gamefish in the vicinity of Area 165.  We started off using downriggers with a variety of trailers on the 3 arms of the umbrella rigs we were using, just to gauge activity level and see if the fish had a preference on bait size.  We narrowed our selections down to small Pet Spoons and White Willow Spoons and were able to pick up single fish on every 2nd or 3rd pass.  The fish were sluggish and had a ton of natural bait to choose from.

From time to time when I saw a heavy school of bottom-oriented fish, we would stop and fancast bladebaits for some “bonus” fish added to the steady flow of downrigger fish coming over the side.  As we idled over a 23 foot deep section of bottom, the sonar screen lit up with fish and I told the fellows to watch the line closely.  Within 5-8 second of passing over those fish, the starboard downrigger went off in a big way and the rod bent deeply into the butt section.  Josh was connected to his first hybrid.  He did a great job listening to my coaching, keeping the fish away from the outboard, and the line away from the side of the boat.  When the fish came to net, it turned out to be a double — his hybrid’s struggle had attracted an average white bass, and that white bass latched on to one of the other 2 spoons on the 3-armed umbrella rig.

As sunset approached, the action slowly drifted to the south and up shallower until we were up in 12-14 feet casting shallower and working bladebaits slowly to get bit consistently.  There was very little action actually on the surface this evening.

When all was said and done, we boated 37 white bass up to 13.75 inches and 2 hybrid, both between 3 & 4 pounds.

 

TALLY = 39 FISH, all caught and released

 

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TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 5:15p

End Time:  8:55p

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start:  99F

Water Surface Temp:  86.0F

Wind Speed & Direction: S11

Sky Conditions:  5%  cloud cover under a strong high pressure dome making hot, dry conditions for the past several days

Note: Lake has dropped 0.24 feet in the last 24 hours and now stands at 1.85 feet above full pool.

Other: GT= 0

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 165 downrigging and bladebaits

** Received credible report from TB of similar sunset action at Area 024 with similar results

 

 

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Salado, TX

www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

Belton Bouncing Back — 47 Fish, 21 July 2015

This past Tuesday afternoon I fished Belton Lake for the first time since the recent flooding.
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From left: Jase Mayo and his Papaw, Phil Moore pose with our largest fish of the trip, a hybrid striper in the 3 pound class.

 

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Phil’s older grandson, Avery Moore of Dawson, TX, grins as he displays his 14″ white bass — quite a large white bass for Belton these days.

As my guests tonight, I took long-time Killeen resident Phil “Papaw” Moore and his two grandsons, Jase Mayo and Avery Moore.

The afternoon was hot as we began our trip around 4:30pm, with no evidence of fish life on the surface. Our first hour on the water gave up only sunfish and shiners as we targeted these shallow-water species with bait on bream poles.

By 5:30p, we began to see white bass coalescing on the bottom in 20-23 feet of water, but still behaving sluggishly, allowing only single fish to be caught on occasion as we precisely presented our artificial baits using downriggers.
By 6:30p, the first surface activity erupted, albeit briefly and sporadically, as shad began skipping across the surface while white bass grew more active and fed on them from below. Our catch rate increased, and doubles (catching two fish on one rod at the same time) became common.

By 7:30p, there was an all-out assault as hundreds of hungry white bass drove thousands of shad to the surface and fed upon them at will, allowing us to cast into the fray and hook a fish on nearly every cast until the boys ran out of steam around 8:15p.

 

TALLY = 47 FISH, all caught and released

 

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TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 4:30p

End Time:  8:15p

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start:  97F

Water Surface Temp:  86.0F

Wind Speed & Direction: S11-13

Sky Conditions:  5%  cloud cover under a strong high pressure dome making hot, dry conditions for the past several days

Note: Lake has dropped 0.31 feet in the last 24 hours and now stands at 2.30 feet above full pool.

Other: GT= 0

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 185, 184, and 663 panfishing with slipfloats

**Area 164, 165, 788 downrigging & sight casting for white bass

 

 

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Salado, TX

www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

Free Fishing Trips for Soldiers’ Kids (and Teens!) — 18 July 2015, 37 Fish

This morning I conducted the seventh SKIFF trip of the 2015 season, taking Andrew Barnes out on Stillhouse Hollow Reservoir for a few hours of multi-species fishing.
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Andrew Barnes of West Fort Hood, TX, with a slab white bass that fell for a downrigged bait at around 21 feet this morning.

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Triple!!  Three white bass on the umbrella rig at the same time.

Andrew, his sister, and his nephew all live on West Fort Hood, TX, with his mom, Kelli Hutcheson and his step-dad, Sergeant (E-5) Sean Hutcheson.  Sean is currently at the Army’s Advanced Leader Course (ALC) in Fort Sill, OK.  The ALC is a course that consists of both a 90-day online phase and a roughly 8-week resident training phase which teaches soldiers to lead squad- and platoon-sized elements, and prepares them for promotion to Staff Sergeant (E-6).  Andrew is planning on going into the military, as well, but hasn’t decided whether he’ll go Army or Air Force.  Once his braces come off (you can’t go to basic training with braces on), he’ll start doing some soul-searching to figure all of this out.

Since he only has a driver’s permit right now, Andrew’s mom dropped him off and we got right down to business.  We started off with some more simple panfishing using bream poles up in the flooded vegetation that was growing on dry land until the recent flooding covered it over.  In about 30 minutes’ time we landed a total of 23 green sunfish, bluegill sunfish, blacktail shiners, and juvenile largemouth bass, all while reserving a few of the sunfish and shiners for use a live bait for largemouth if conditions warranted later in the trip.
Next. we downrigged with our downrigger weights set at 21-23 feet for scattered, suspended white bass that were 23-25 feet deep.  We enjoyed 2 hours of moderate, but steady action, catching singles, doubles, and even one triple, for a total of 14 white bass boated just prior to 9:45.  Andrew brought a spinning rod of his own, so, we rigged it up with a KastMaster spoon and trolled it on a flatline behind the boat as we downrigged, but to no avail.
With about an hour remaining and the white bass fishing getting slim, we switched over to bait fishing over some hydrilla in 17-20 feet along a windblown shoreline.  We “jogged” 3-4 times by a few boatlengths to cover the bed well, but did not get any bites on the bait.
As we fished we got to talk about fishing, of course, but also about making the transition from under mom and dad’s roof into a life of your own.
Andrew boated exactly 37 fish today.  I appreciate the efforts and support of the Austin Fly FIshers who work to generate the funds to make opportunities like this available for Andrew and other military kids.

 

SKIFF (Soldiers’ Kids Involved in Fishing Fun) trips are provided free of charge to families whose children are separated from a parent due to that parent’s military service, thanks to the Austin Fly Fishers and a network of supportive individuals from all over the U.S.  All it takes is a phone call from a parent to me at 254-368-7411 to reserve a date.  SKIFF is open to children in elementary and middle school, as well as teens in high school.

 

 

TALLY = 37 FISH, all caught and released

 

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TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:45a

End Time:  10:45a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start:  76F

Water Surface Temp:  85.1F

Wind Speed & Direction: S9-13

Sky Conditions:  5%  cloud cover under a strong high pressure dome making hot, dry conditions for the past several days

Note: Lake has dropped 0.06 feet in the last 24 hours and now stands at 622.46 above sea level, with 622.00 being full pool

Other: GT= 0

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 667 shallow sunfish

**Area 074-402 downrigging white bass

**Area 1571/1198 downrigging white bass

 

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Salado, TX

www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

Tough, with a continued chance of tough — 17 July 2015, Stillhouse, 20 Fish

This morning I was joined by father and son team Beau and Travis Nickel for an “instruction heavy” white bass fishing trip on Stillhouse Hollow Reservoir.
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Travis Nickel with the 2 largest white bass we took by downrigging this morning on Stillhouse Hollow.

Beau, the operations vice-president with Keith Ace Hardware in the Lorena area, contacted me a few weeks back wanted to do some fishing on the front end of a Belton Lake camping trip he and his family had planned out at Cedar Ridge.  As we corresponded by email and spoke over the phone, Beau emphasized his desire to learn how to catch fish over catching fish, so he and Travis could go out in the family boat and be more consistent.  Travis, aged 16, is a quiet, hard-working kid.  He mows lawns, does odd-jobs on a 400 acre farm for his boss, and works for that same boss at a local pharmacy where Travis makes home deliveries as a service to the community.  As I introduced Beau and Travis to the various pieces of equipment on the boat, Beau would ask how much these items cost, and would then divide that cost by the price Travis charges per lawn so as to present the cost in a tangible for to his son.  For example, a $180 manually operated downrigger divided by $25 per lawn = 7+ lawns.

Fishing continued to be really tough and sporadic.  I thought we had an improving trend headed our way as the releases at Stillhouse have slowed to a trickle, as last Friday’s trip saw an uptick in my white bass catch, as some topwater action was witnessed on Saturday during a sonar training session, and as both high pressure and a new moon dominated the skies.  In addition to this, I received very credible reports of topwater action on Belton from two friends early this week.  Things were really looking good.  On Thursday, I conducted yet another sonar training session on Belton beginning around 6:30am, and, thanks to the cooperation of the fellow I was training, got to use that as a bit of a scouting trip to determine if I’d be fishing Belton or Stillhouse with Beau and Travis.

Around 8p Thursday I made the call to head to Stillhouse based on the fact that I only saw 3 very briefly appearing schools of surface feeding white bass/hybrid stripers in 3.5+ hours on Belton Thursday, and no sustained topwater action around sunrise.  Additionally, the winds were supposed to be 9-11 at sunrise, which would make it tough to spot surface feeding fish even if they were there on Belton.  For these reasons, I went with Stillhouse.

As we met at Stillhouse at 6:30am, the first part of the instruction was to show Beau and Travis my technique for catching sunfish in shallow cover using bream poles and slipfloats.  They caught onto this very quickly including some of the fine points about how best to set the hook, how to use the wind to your advantage for bait placement, and how to bait the hook for a good strike to land ratio.  We put 14 fish in the boat in short order, including bluegill, longear sunfish, and blacktail shiners, and retained these for use a livebait for largemouth bass later in the trip.  I pointed out that if they chose to pursue hybrid on Belton and could not find shad, or simply did not want to put the effort into collecting shad, that this approach can serve as an alternative to those high-maintenance fish, especially in the heat and/or if a specialized shad tank was not a part of the boat’s equipment.

Next, we headed out to open water where I gave an overview on sonar.  Since Beau’s NauticStar center-console is equipped with a Humminbird, I ran my Humminbird 1199 and my Lowrance HDS-12 Gen3 side-by-side so he could observe the difference in resolution between the two.  We covered  how the sonar works, how sensitivity and colorline adjustments impact the readings on the screen, and we identified bait, gamefish, bottom, the downrigger ball, and the developing thermocline.  As we downrigged at the first location, gamefish were in short supply — we managed only 2 juvenile largemouth bass — one on each umbrella rig.

We covered four different areas with the downriggers, seeing bait at all locations, but precious little in the way of gamefish.  We made a stop in the vicinity of Area 401/402 and encountered some scattered white bass at 21-23 feet deep over a deeper bottom in open water and worked these over for all it was worth, coming up with the only 4 white bass of the entire trip in that vicinity, consisting of 2 singles and 1 double that came as our baits went through the only solid school of fish we witnessed on sonar all morning — a large, suspended school of about 80-120 fish.  I backtracked over our GPS “snail trail” and turned on the Humminbird 360 Imaging after we found that school to try to maintain contact with it, but to no avail.

During the entire morning we saw occasional fish breaking the surface chasing after shad, but never any sustained action in terms of either time or location.  The fish continue to be scattered and suspended with pods of baitfish just everywhere from just below the surface down to around 30 feet.

Next, we shifted gears and I introduced Beau and Travis to my style of livebait fishing with linecounter reels as the centerpiece of this effort.  We found a few gamefish signatures on a hump topping out in 23′ of water and put some sunfish and blacktail baits down among them.  We “jogged” a few boatlengths/boatwidths to cover this area well, but only had 2 attempts on  our baits with no serious pulldowns and no fish landed.

We attempted downrigging at several more locations, extending the trip an extra 1.25 hours, but did not add any finny creatures to our count despite the extra effort.

We ended the day with 20 (mostly small) fish landed, but, only 4 of those were the white bass that I had planned to be the lion’s share of our action this morning.  In that, it was a bit frustrating, but, Beau really appreciated the detailed explanations I gave as to how and why I did things.  After the trip I actually had them follow me back to my home and I supplied them with what they needed to rig up bream poles of their own using some Shakespeare Wonderpoles I had on hand.

For their upcoming week on Belton, I suggested looking early and late for topwater feeding fish, and, to this end also supplied them with some small, shad-imitating baits that would cast well on light spinning outfits in order to help them take full advantage of any topwater action they discovered.

 

TALLY = 20 FISH (including 4 white bass)

 

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TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:30a

End Time:  11:45a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start:  76F

Water Surface Temp:  86.3F

Wind Speed & Direction: S9-13

Sky Conditions:  5%  cloud cover.

Note: Lake has dropped 0.06 feet in the last 24 hours and now stands at 622.54 above sea level, with 622.00 being full pool

Other: GT= 40

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

 

**Area 239 (sunfish on bream rods)

**Area  207 (juvenile black bass on downriggers)

**Area 401/402 (white bass on downriggers)

 

 

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Salado, TX

www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

Shootin’ You Straight — 4 Fish, Stillhouse, 09 July 2015

This morning I was joined by returning guest Ray Johnson, a retired U.S. Navy flight surgeon now living here in Central Texas with his wife, Linda.
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Retired United States Navy flight surgeon Ray Johnson with the largest of the white bass we took by downrigging this morning on Stillhouse Hollow.

I let Ray know ahead of time that the fishing was slow, and slow it was.  We never caught more than a single fish at any of the 10 areas we tried. and 6 of those areas failed to produce, despite solid sonar returns revealing at least a few white bass at 9 of these 10 areas.

The fish we caught all came on downrigged bait fished at 22-28 feet deep, approximately 2-3 feet above the fish we observed on sonar.  Although the exact depth varied from place to place, at each location we fished the fish we saw on sonar were all holding in a 2-3 foot deep horizontal band between top and bottom and typically showed only in small packs of 2-5 fish — not the larger 30-50 fish schools common for this season.

Those of you who have fished with me know I’m a stickler for details, including exactly how many fish are caught on your trip.  To that end, I have a “clicker” I use to track exactly how many fish come over the side — there is no “about”, “around”, or “nearly” used in my reports.  So, when I tell you we caught 204, you can know we caught exactly 204.  And, like today, when we caught just 4 fish, that, too is accurate.  I post it all, good or bad, so you can know what your are in for, how the fishing is trending, and whether we are on the kind of fish you like using the techniques you like, or not.  To me it is a credibility issue that I feel I owe to you, my clients.

There is no other way to put it — fishing is just tough right now.  As I try to put my finger on it, I know what differences I am observing right now versus a “normal” summer.  Those differences are: 1) murky, brown water caused by flood waters making vegetation (both shoreline and deep hydrilla) rot versus clear, green water of typical years, 2) an abundance of small, 3/4″ long baitfish all over the lake, now found at 21-27 feet deep, and 3) relatively cool water for this point in the season — we were at just 82.9F today near noon, but typically see 85-87F water by now.  I’ve also made observations about the fish … 1) the white bass are very scattered and suspended, 2) in the last 4 weeks I have not encountered any white bass congregated on or feeding near the bottom, 3) in what is normally peak topwater season, almost no topwater feeding has been observed so far this summer season, and 4) there seems to be far fewer fish using the deep, main basin of Stillhouse where a majority of summertime activity usually takes place.

I take this as a challenge and a puzzle to be solved, not a problem to fret over.  I continue to try different areas, different presentations, different lure combinations, and will eventually fine tune things to maximize the catch as the lake continues to settle, clear, and stabilize.

And that’s the way it was…

 

TALLY = 4 FISH, all caught and released

 

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TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:45a

End Time:  11:15a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start:  77F

Water Surface Temp:  82.9F

Wind Speed & Direction: S11-14

Sky Conditions:  70%  cloud cover.

Note: Lake has dropped 0.09 feet in the last 24 hours and now stands at 623.21 above sea level, with 622.00 being full pool

Other: GT= 0

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

 

**Area 207

**Area 040

**Area 1431

** Area 1428

 

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Salado, TX

www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

SKIFF Trip #6 of the 2015 Season — The Darsam Boys

This morning I conducted the sixth SKIFF trip of the 2015 season, taking Evan (age 10) and Johnny (age 8) Darsam, accompanied by their Uncle James, out on Stillhouse Hollow for a morning of fishing.
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From left: Johnny Darsam, Uncle James, and Evan Darsam with the best of the bunch of fish we caught today on a combination of downrigging in open water and slipfloat fishing in shallow water.

SKIFF (Soldiers’ Kids Involved in Fishing Fun) trips are provided free of charge to families whose children are separated from a parent due to that parent’s military service, thanks to the Austin Fly Fishers and a network of supportive individuals from all over the U.S.  All it takes is a phone call from a parent to me at 254-368-7411 to reserve a date.
 With their father just recently deployed near the end of the school year, the boys’ mom, Jenn Darsam, decided to take advantage of every summertime program she could find in order to fill the boys’ schedule so none of them had time to sit around and sulk and dwell on dad’s absence.
We enjoyed 45 minutes of solid white bass action on downriggers worked over 35 feet of water until this area dried up on us.  We looked over another open water area for white bass and found little there.  To avoid any long fishless spells, I opted at this point to break out the bream poles, and we went to work up shallow catching sunfish on livebait under slipfloats.  Later, we gave largemouth bass fishing a try on livebait over deep hydrilla, but struck out on that.  We wrapped up with one more unsuccessful shot at downrigging for whites bass, and, in order to end on a strong note, finished up shallow in pursued of the ever-willing bluegill.
The boys boated exactly 37 fish today.

 

TALLY = 37 FISH, all caught and released

 

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TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:45a

End Time:  11:00a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start:  77F

Water Surface Temp:  83.4F

Wind Speed & Direction: SSW11-14

Sky Conditions:  80%  cloud cover.

Note: Lake has dropped 0.08 feet in the last 24 hours and now stands at 623.29 above sea level, with 622.00 being full pool

Other: GT= 0

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

 

**Area 1570 downrigging white bass

**Area 515 shallow sunfish

**Area 1265 shallow sunfish

** Area 200 shallow sunfish

 

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Salado, TX

www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

Making Memories — Millican Party, Stillhouse, 03 July 2015, 37 Fish

This morning I welcomed aboard Mr. James Millican and his sons, 7-year-old Thomas and 6 -year-old Matthew.  Megan Millican (mom) was also supposed to join us, but succumbed to a bad case of poison ivy and opted to stay out of the sun and heat.  So, it was “just us boys” enjoying the trip Megan presented to James back on Valentine’s Day this year as a gift certificate.

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Thomas (left) made some memories today for everyone with the 20+ pound monster smallmouth buffalo he landed with no small amount of effort.

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 Despite pretty tough conditions, a few white bass still cooperated for us, allowing everyone to hookup on these sporty, line-sided fish of open water.  From left: Thomas, James, and Matthew.
 

Fishing is still very much “off” versus the normally stable, predictable, consistent fishing that Stillhouse typically affords in the summer months.  The water is definitely off-color, having a tea-like brownish cast to it caused by decaying vegetable matter instead of the clear green cast it normally has.   White bass seem not to be using the bottom much at all — I suspect this is because much of the bottom they would normally occupy at this point in the season (25 to 35′) still has remnants of dying hydrilla on it.  This hydrilla died as a result of the rising water leaving it growing too deep for sunlight to reach.

So, scattered, suspended fish are the norm, and also quite apparent is the abundance of young-of-the-year shad present.  The flooding had flushed ample food into the lake for all newly hatched fish, and has offered shallow cover which enhances survivability of cover-loving species like largemouth and sunfish.

Since the fish are scattered and suspended, downrigging is the go-to option, allowing consistent, efficient coverage of the horizontal band of water the fish are using.  Today, that band was 21-24′ below the surface over deeper bottoms ranging from 37-50 feet.

We began our day downrigging and, within minutes had both rods bent, allowing both Thomas and Matthew an opportunity to put into practice the “theory” we’d discussed at the dock about how to use the equipment.  Not long after this twin hookup, Matthew brought in a single and Thomas countered with a double (2 fish on 1 rod at the same time).  Despite seeing abundant fish life on sonar, the fish were relatively inactive — a result, I suspect, of the abundance of natural forage in the area.

Seeing a change of pace was in order, we left the downrigging behind and headed to shallow, protected water and targeted sunfish using slipfloats and live bait.  The boys wore out the sunfish population bringing both bluegill sunfish and green sunfish as well as a single juvenile largemouth bass into the boat on their poles.

I appreciated that James showed up with a great, fatherly mindset of being there to help me help the boys versus being there to catch a bunch of fish of his own.  This allowed me to focus on the boys’ success and to be on the lookout for opportunities for him to come alongside his sons and enjoy some real highlights.  The highlight of the day, by my estimation, came around 9:50am.

We decided we’d leave the successful panfishing behind and head back out to open water where we’d previously encountered abundant, but reluctant, white bass.  As we idled into the area, sonar looked good, again showing both bait and suspended gamefish around 24 feet.  We got our downriggers in and both boys landed an additional white bass right off the bat.  Then it happened … as we reset our rigs and trolled another 50 yards or so, Thomas’ rod sprung up, indicating a fish large enough to pull the line out of the downrigger release clip on its own accord had struck.  The rod looked like it was going to be ripped right out of the downrigger’s rodholder before we got our hands on it and began to fight the fish.  Several minutes (literally) passed as Thomas battled the big fish, during which time I maneuvered the boat with both the outboard and trolling motor to keep us from blowing aground thanks to the wind now blowing at around 13mph.

James helped move equipment out of the way to keep the fish from contacting anything abrasive, and he also made ready with the net.  Finally, we saw “color” off the port gunnel and there it was — a smallmouth buffalo nearly too big to fit in my net.  In fact, as James scooped the fish with the handle of the net, I grabbed the front rim for extra support due to the fish’s weight and size.  My 15 pound BogaGrip scale maxed out, but, I estimated the fish’s weight at about 23 pounds.   Towards the end of the trip James and I both agreed that catching a fish so big while being so young had the potential to spoil a kid!!

When all was said and done, we wound up boating a total of 37 fish today.  As we beach the boat, I called out to another long-time Stillhouse angler who is very good at finding and catching both black bass and white bass.  He zeroed today, confirming my observations of how mixed up the ecosystem on Stillhouse is right now.

 

TALLY = 37 FISH, all caught and released

 

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TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:45a

End Time:  10:45a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start:  75F

Water Surface Temp:  84.5F

Wind Speed & Direction: S7 increasing to S13 by trip’s end

Sky Conditions:  60%  cloud cover in the first hour, steadily decreasing to 30%

Note: Stillhouse is at 623.75 and is being held steady due to the need to drain water off of other Brazo River reservoirs

Other: GT=50

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

 

**Area 1570 downrigging for white bass

**Area 189 for sunfish

**Area 1430/1435 downrigging for white bass

 

 

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Salado, TX

www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com

Back in the Saddle Again — 40 Fish, Stillhouse, 02 July 2015

After returning from our week-long 20th wedding anniversary trip to Maine, I got back on the water Tuesday morning to do some scouting in advance of a host of trips now scheduled for the balance of July.  This morning I conducted the first of those trips, a Ft. Hood SKIES program trip with 10-year-old Gweneth Marroquin of Killeen.
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This was Gweneth’s largest fish of the trip, a nice 13.75″ white bass that fell for a 3 armed umbrella rig equipped with Pet Spoons.  This was one of a 2-fish “double” in which Gweneth landed 2 fish one one rod at the same time..

I don’t want to reveal too much, as Gweneth should be featured in my Killeen Daily Herald column this coming Sunday, 05 July, but, she did really well, landing exactly 40 fish in her 4 hours on the water, including 7 species of fish.  We were primarily downrigging for white bass and fishing slipfloats up shallow for panfish.

 

TALLY = 40 FISH, all caught and released

 

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TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:30a

End Time:  10:35a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start:  75F

Water Surface Temp:  84.5F

Wind Speed & Direction: S11 increasing to S14 by trip’s end

Sky Conditions:  80%  cloud cover in the first hour, steadily decreasing to 40%

Note: Stillhouse is at 623.82 and is being held steady due to the need to drain water off of other Brazo River reservoirs

Other: GT=0

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

 

**Area 239 for sunfish

**Area 1570 downrigging for white bass

**Area 876 downrigging for white bass

**Area 189 for sunfish

 

Bob Maindelle

Owner, Holding the Line Guide Service

254.368.7411 (call or text)

Salado, TX

www.HoldingTheLineGuideService.com