Celebrating Independence from Slow Fishing — 202 Fish, 03 July ’14

This past Monday evening, July 3rd, I fished with Jordan Miller, his wife Kathleen, and a friend of the family, Sam Garrell.  All were camped out at Union Grove for the long Independence Day weekend.

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From left: Jordan Miller, Kathleen Miller, and Sam Garrell with a sampling of the 202 fish they landed the evening of July 3rd.

Jordan’s parents, Mike and Luanne Miller of Harker Heights, were on grandbaby duty, thus giving Jordan and Kathleen a few hours to themselves.

Because of the heat and how the afternoon bite has been trending, we decided to scale back on the normal four hour trip, and launched at 6 PM instead of the normal 4:45 PM start.

Fishing was really on this evening. We drove directly to deepwater white bass holding in the lower 4 feet of the water column in about 46 feet of water and, from the first slab we dropped and until we reeled the last slab in at around 8:15, the fishing was nonstop for white bass in the one, two, and three year classes, with a few largemouth bass and drum thrown in. Over this span of time, we put exactly 186 fish in the boat.

Around 8:15, as the shadows began to lengthen and the air started to cool, these deepwater fish turned off as the light dimmed at that depth. We made a clean break from this area and moved back into 28 to 35 foot water and downrigged with a pair of ‘riggers, both equipped with three armed umbrella rigs equipped with Pet Spoons. My hope was that we could put a final 14 fish in the boat in order to make it a 200 fish night.

As I scanned the area I intended to downrig with sonar upon our arrival, I liked what I saw. Multiple 20-30 fish schools of white bass were holding at around 21 to 27 feet, up about 7 to 10 feet off of bottom.

I showed everyone how to rig up the downriggers and we got baits in the water.

During our final 30 minutes on the water, we picked up singles, doubles, and one triple, and finished up the evening at exactly 8:46 PM with 202 fish boated.

TALLY: 202 FISH, all caught and released

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:00p

End Time: 8:45p

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 97F

Water Surface Temp: 87.5F

Wind Speed & Direction: SSE10-11

Sky Conditions: 10% clouds on a fair sky

Water Level: 0.38 feet high and steady; 0 cfs release at dam

GT = 40

Wx SNAPSHOT:

03JUL17

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 933/878 – 186 fish on smoked slabs in a prolonged feed

**Area 176 – downrigging for singles, doubles, and a triple for a total of 16 fish in the final 25 minutes before dark

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

 

 

Family Fishing with the Riveras – 123 Fish, 03 July ’17

This past Monday morning, July 3, I fished with the Rivera family of Salado.

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Jana and Andrew landed this pair of 2-year class white bass within seconds of one another.

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Samuel kept quiet, stayed focused, and was the most consistent angler of the family today with quiet intensity working for him.

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That grin says it all!

Mr. Richard Rivera is a cabinet maker who now serves as stay-at-home dad to his two boys, Samuel, age 15, and Andrew, age 10. Jana Rivera is an anesthesiologist working at Baylor Scott and White. The boys are home schooled and are also a part of the Providence Academy in Belton.

The family had been on one previous fishing trip – – an Alaskan salmon fishing trip some time ago. So, fishing warm water and locally was a new experience for them. We met at 6:15 AM and, after adjusting equipment to their preferences and a word of prayer, we launched out in search of fish.

We got our first hookup on downrigger number one before downrigger number two ever got sent down to depth. During our first 90 minutes on the water we landed singles and doubles and tallied a catch of 32 fish before the lowlight bite broke down, sending us looking elsewhere.

I headed deeper at this point and begin searching for large congregations of white bass in 40 to 60 feet of water. We stopped five different times over five different loose congregations of fish before finding a group that was really fired up and ready to feed. At each of the stops we picked up at least a drum and perhaps one or two white bass, but the fish never really got excited, even when hooked fish were being reeled up.

At our last location, in 48 feet of water, we put exactly 85 fish in the boat in our last 2 1/2 hours on the water, taking our tally up to 123 fish for the morning. All of these fish from deepwater came on a Redneck Fish’n’  Jigs Model 180 slab, in white, three-quarter ounce, and retrofitted with a Hazy Eye Stinger hook.

TALLY: 123 FISH, all caught and released

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:15a

End Time: 10:30a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 80F

Water Surface Temp: 83.7F

Wind Speed & Direction: SSE9 at trip’s start, tapering up to SSE11-14

Sky Conditions: 10% clouds on a fair sky following the passage of morning storm cells

Water Level: 0.38 feet high and steady; 0 cfs release at dam

GT = 0

Wx SNAPSHOT:

03JUL17

 

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 799 downrigging early for 32 fish

**Area 879 slabbing for 91 fish

 

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

Pure Enthusiasm!! — 156 Fish, 01 July ’17 (PM)

This past Saturday afternoon I fished a four hour afternoon trip on Stillhouse with Drew Gresham, his four-year-old so, Wynn, a client of Drew’s, Harris Rose, and Harris’ eight-year-old son, Ethan.

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Drew and Wynn with one of the many white bass we tracked down this morning.  Wynn was enthusiastic about every single fish we caught over a full four hours.  I’ve never seen a kid that young stay so excited about one thing for that length of time.

 

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Harris and Ethan with a “schoolie” largemouth.  Largemouth regularly show up mixed in with white bass when both species hunt young-of-the-year shad in the heat of the summer .

I was a bit reluctant to even book this trip given the forecast heat and the age of these two boys, but didn’t have a morning opening anytime in the next three weeks to offer as an alternative, and, with an assurance from Drew that his son could hang with us the whole time, we went ahead and scheduled the outing.

Both men let me know that as long as the boys were having fun, they, too, would be having fun and so I was free to focus on the boys.

In the interest of “instant gratification” so as to keep the boys attention, I went shallow for sunfish right off the bat and, in under an hour’s time, enabled the kids, aided by their fathers, to put 32 sunfish in the boat including bluegill, longear, and green sunfish.

Chapter 2 of our four-part trip involved downrigging over a mid-depth breakline that topped out around 34 feet. This downrigging allowed us to cover a good bit of water and catch fish while at the same time continue watching sonar for heavy concentrations of bottom oriented fish that could be jigged for. Although many people don’t think of downrigging as engaging, I choose to teach my clients to set up their own rigs, so the process of getting baits down to the fish is very hands-on. So, both father and son teams worked well together and we put a steady stream of fish over the side of the boat including singles and doubles until I was able to find fish we could jig for.

This opened the third chapter of our trip – – working slabs vertically for heavily congregated white bass. This was by far the most productive of all of our attempts this afternoon. I do believe that the unstable weather of the morning which put the bite off significantly, caused the fish to feed more heavily than normal this evening. We sat in one boat sized area and kept the fish jazzed for nearly 2 hours and put almost 100 fish in the boat from this area alone.

When this bite began to soften about an hour before sunrise, we downrigged for a few more fish in this vicinity and then moved to our final location to downrig once again in water about 35 feet deep with balls set around 24 feet deep.

We finished the trip with 156 fish landed. Both dads said that the variety of techniques was just right for their sons.

 

TALLY: 156 FISH, all caught and released

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 4:45p

End Time: 8:45p

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 94F

Water Surface Temp: 85.7F

Wind Speed & Direction: SSE14 at trip’s start, tapering down to SSE10 by trip’s end

Sky Conditions: 10% clouds on a fair sky following the passage of morning storm cells

Water Level: 0.35 feet high and slowly falling thanks to evaporation; 0 cfs release at dam

GT = 120

Wx SNAPSHOT:

01JUL17

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 176, Area 649, and Area 1564 – downrigging under murky skies with a slow, steady bite in the first 90 minutes

**Area 915, 921, and 915/889 – slabbing in deep water for bottom-hugging whites

**Area 534 and 189 – sunfish on slipfloats

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

Fishing Reconnaissance – 58 Fish, 01 July ’17 (AM)

This past Saturday morning I fished on Stillhouse with Lieutenant Colonel David Bowers, his four year old son, Kayden, and family friend, Trent Tate.

 

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From left: David, Kayden, and Trent with a pair of 3-year class white bass that fell for our slabs from out of deep water at mid-morning before incoming storms dampened the bite.

 

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Largemouth are routinely mixed in with deeply schooled white bass all year.  This summer the size of those largemouth has been much improved over the smaller, 12-14 inch “schoolies” typically encountered in such scenarios.

 

David just moved from Ft. Bragg, NC, to Georgetown, TX, where he’ll commute to Ft. Hood after just taking command of an intelligence battalion.  Beyond catching fish, one of David’s intentions was to understand the tactics required for our local waters, given that Stillhouse and Lake Georgetown fish very similarly.

The fishing was a bit lower key this morning then during this past week, thanks to unstable weather. The entire morning oscillated between cloudy and bright, dry and rainy, calm and windy.

Under low light conditions, with the sunrise only slightly obscured by haze, we experienced a short, but strong bite on the downriggers, working them for suspended fish in 22 to 27 feet of water over a deeper bottom. Even during this lowlight time, things were a bit more subdued, as I only found fish holding in groups of threes or fours, not big schools roaming all over the place as they had been earlier in the week in this first locale we fished in this morning.

We moved to a second, then a third area and continued downrigging, with slow, limited success.

By around 8:30, and with 14 fish landed, we made a big move into deeper, clearer water, as I began to seek out congregations of bottom hugging white bass in deep water holding on irregularities in the bottom, in hopes of working slabs over these fish.

After enjoying only limited success in the first three areas we stopped at, we finally got into a group of fish that remained under the boat for quite some time and bit readily. We put exactly 30 fish in the boat taking our tally up to 44. A rainshower moved in from the southwest on a windshift and killed the bite for a while, but, the fishing bounced back as the weather cleared and we were able to put a final seven gamefish in the boat before wrapping up by taking Kayden up shallow to enjoy some sunfish action.

Using a slip float in worm, Kayden managed a bream pole very well for a four-year-old and put seven sunfish in the boat in short order. With another, stronger cell of weather headed our way as indicated by weather radar, we decided it was a good time to call it quits right at the 4.25 hour mark.

We ended the trip with 58 fish.  This was the first trip of the last seven that did not produce at least 100 fish, underscoring the impact that stable versus unstable weather has on the fishing. Fortunately, the forecast for the week of July 3rd-8th looks like stable, “cookie-cutter” weather which should see fishing bounce back again.

TALLY: 58 FISH, all caught and released

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:15a

End Time: 10:30a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 80F

Water Surface Temp: 83.3F

Wind Speed & Direction: Winds varied in speed and direction this morning with some instability in the wx.  We began with SE winds at under 9, saw a swing through to the S with an increase to 12, then a wild swing through the west, then NW with winds at 13-14 on the lead edge of two storm cells that passed through in rapid succession

Sky Conditions: 100% cloudy conditions, with murky skies in the first 90 minutes hampering the bite.

Water Level: 0.35 feet high and slowly falling thanks to evaporation; 0 cfs release at dam

GT = 85

Wx SNAPSHOT:

01JUL17

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 176, Area 649, and Area 1564 – downrigging under murky skies with a slow, steady bite in the first 90 minutes

**Area 915, 921, and 915/889 – slabbing in deep water for bottom-hugging whites

**Area 534 and 189 – sunfish on slipfloats

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

Catch Rate Soars with the Atlanta Falcons — 133 Fish, 30 June ’17

This past Friday morning I fished with Jerry Morgan and his son and daughter-in-law, Chris and Holly Morgan.

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From left: Chris, Jerry, and Holly Morgan with a sampling of the deepwater white bass we found in ~56 feet of water slowly combing over bottom with sonar.

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Holly landed a triple early in the game — catching 3 fish on each of the Pet Spoons on a 3-armed umbrella rig.

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Chris landed a multi-species double by catching a largemouth bass on the treble hook of a slab and a white bass on the Hazy Eye Stinger hook I retrofit all of my slabs with.

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Jerry landed the big fish of the trip — a 3.3 pound largemouth which hit his 3/4 oz slab.  We lost several like this one right at the boat as they rose quickly from the depths and did the characteristic “largemouth head shake” right at the surface.

Jerry worked in the grocery business most of his career and then, for the last ten years before retiring, taught high school students at Shoemaker High School in Killeen. Chris is the offensive line coach for the Atlanta Falcons and graduated from Killeen High School.  He met Holly during his college years.  They have twin 4-year old boys and an 8 year-old daughter.

I was a bit concerned about how today’s trip would pan out because, for the last several days, much of our success came on fish feeding on young-of-the year shad at the surface.  Today’s high winds were not going to allow for spotting such activity if it even developed.

As we got going, we began downrigging in the same vicinity that has produced fish all week in the opening hour of the trip.  Today, the action was just as strong as before, but, as the skies brightened, the time at which top water feeding began on Monday through Thursday saw a downturn in action today.  We enjoyed a brief spurt of action using slabs in a vertical presentation, but after that dried up, the entire area went quiet.

We went about 45 minutes without fish from about 7:45a to 8:30a before I moved us to the most wind-exposed area I could find, hoping the moving water would have some deepwater fish stirred up.

With just a little bit of sonar effort, we found what we were looking for.  Atop Area 1956 we put over 100 fish in the boat over a 2 hour span, including 1, 2, and 3 year old white bass,  largemouth up to 3.3 pounds, and even a few freshwater drum for variety’s sake.

TALLY: 133 FISH, all caught and released

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:15a

End Time: 10:30a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 80F

Water Surface Temp: 83.1F

Wind Speed & Direction: SSW winds at 13 at trip’s start, building to SSW18 by trip’s end

Sky Conditions: 100% cloudy conditions slowly cleared to 50% clouds by trip’s end

Water Level: 0.35 feet high and stable; 0 cfs release at dam

GT = 85

Wx SNAPSHOT:

30JUN17

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 1043-1908-1951 – downrigging under low light conditions for aggressive, suspended white bass, yielding singles, doubles, triples on Pet Spoons; 32 fish

**Area 1956 – 2 hours’ worth of slabbing for 101 fish; mixed back of whites, blacks, drum

 

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

Doctors Find Cure for the Fishing Blues — 107 Fish, 29 June ’17

This past Thursday morning I fished with Dr. Ron Grimwood and retired physician Dr. John Greene.

 

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From left: Dr. Ron Grimwood and Dr. John Greene with a sampling of the largemouth we caught on small, shad-imitating paddle-tail grubs as they fed heavily on the surface for the first several hours of this morning’s trip.  Although there were certainly average-sized “schoolies” as are typically found feeding in topwater schools, there were also quality 3-4 pound fish like these mixed in as well.

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After the surface bite died, we went deep and found more 2-3 year class fish than we did yearlings holding in deep schools in over 60′.  Slabs worked vertically did the trick for these heavily congregated fish.

I’d first met John, a retired pathologist, back in 2013 when he arranged for a summertime fishing trip for his two grandsons from Kentucky.  This was the first time I’d met Ron, a dermatologist at Baylor Scott & White.  A friend of his, Dr. Chad Housewright, presented him with a fishing gift certificate for two last year, and so today was the day to redeem it.

We had stable, grey, mild conditions this morning which were, once again, just right for topwater action.

After a brief, but action-packed, downrigging session in which we landed 17 singles, doubles, and triples of white bass on 3-armed umbrella rigs equipped with Pet Spoons, we transitioned right into casting to surface-feeding fish once they appeared in force on the surface just a few minutes before 7am.

We stuck with this aggressive, engaging surface activity for about 2.5 hours until it finally died.  During the frenzy, we cast paddle-tail grubs on jigheads and used a fast retrieve to imitate escaping young-of-the-year shad.  When the surface went temporarily quiet, I’d use sonar to find bottom-hugging schools of white bass (which seemed to be everywhere), and we’d fish slabs vertically with a smoking tactic until more surface action erupted.

Around 9:30am, the topwater bonanza ended and we searched for deeper schools of white bass in water as much as 62 feet deep and closed out the trip catching these fish on smoked slabs.

TALLY: 107 FISH, all caught and released

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:15a

End Time: 10:15a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 73F

Water Surface Temp: 83.1F

Wind Speed & Direction: SSE6 most of the trip

Sky Conditions: Once the sun cleared a grey cloud bank in the east, we had increasingly clear skies to ~30% cloud cover by trip’s end

Water Level: 0.34 feet high and slowly rising; 0 cfs release at dam

GT = 100

Wx SNAPSHOT:

29JUN17

 

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 723-781 – downrigging under low light conditions for aggressive, suspended white bass, yielding singles, doubles, triples on Pet Spoons

**Area 781-1908 – 2.5 full hours of casting to topwater action

**Area 915 – last 45 minutes spent working slabs with smoking tactic for deep, heavily congregated 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

While Dad’s Away, the Kids Will Play — 101 Fish, Stillhouse, 28 June ’17

This past Wednesday morning I welcomed Mrs. Amanda Lincoln and two of her three kids, Philip Eleanor and Hannah Schumacher, aboard for the 7th SKIFF program fishing trip of the 2017 season.

LINCOLN SKIFF

 

Hannah Schumacher and Philip Eleanor enjoyed a SKIFF program trip provided free of charge to military kids whose parents are away from home serving the nation.  The kids landed 101 fish under ideal topwater weather conditions.

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My thumb after a morning of taking off 101 fish, more than half of which were largemouth bass.

US Army Staff Sergeant John Lincoln is currently away from Fort Hood training cadets at Fort Knox, KY.  SSG Lincoln has been in the military for 12 years.  He got to join us briefly via Facetime as the kids were catching fish near the end of our morning trip.

It was a really ideal morning for topwater action.  The winds were calm, the sky was grey, and the fish stayed in a strong feeding mode for an extended time this morning.

We began the morning downrigging by, by 6:40am, multiple schools of mixed white bass and largemouth bass could be seen crashing shad on the surface.  We quickly transitioned to casting grubs on jigheads using light spinning gear and the kids proceeded to “wear ’em out” for the next 3 hours.

After the surface bite died, we pulled out a little further from shore where sonar revealed mainly white bass holding in large schools of 40-50 fish.   We worked these fish over until the kids’ wrists were sore and took our tally to 101 fish landed before calling it a good morning.

Small, shad-imitating presentation in natural hues are key to the presentation.

 

TALLY: 101 FISH, all caught and released

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:15a

End Time: 10:15a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 73F

Water Surface Temp: 83.3F

Wind Speed & Direction: E0-3

Sky Conditions: Low grey cloud bank in the east turned to a thin fog, then cleared to grey clouds again, allowing us to fish a full 4 hours without direct sun on the water

Water Level: 0.31 feet high and slowly rising; 0 cfs release at dam

GT = 60

Wx SNAPSHOT:

27JUN17

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 770-176-1951 – low light downrigging for singles, doubles, and triples

**Area 1908 – extended topwater action thanks to grey, low light conditions late into the morning

**Area 1908-1043 – slabbing after topwater action ended

 

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

Neck and Neck — 114 Fish with the Wells Brothers, 27 Jun. ’17

This past Tuesday morning I fished with Ethen and Alex Wells of Temple, accompanied by their mom, Sabrina.

Alex Triple

Alex set the tone for our 114 fish trip with a triple on the very first downrigger set we put down this morning.

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Just past the mid-point of our trip, we found some deep white bass in the lower fourth of the water column and got them worked up into a frenzy, allowing for a catch of over 50 fish from an area the size of my boat.  Ethen shows one of the 2-year class fish common in this congregation of fish.

Both boys had prior fishing experience and were both capable with spinning gear. Most of their prior efforts had been made casting from the bank. Before we shoved off from the courtesy dock, I went over how to hold and reel a baitcaster – – the kind of reels I use for downrigging, and how to hold and cast a spinning rod in case we ran into fish feeding on top water.

A very light easterly wind continued today with about 30% cloud cover on an otherwise fair sky. These near-calm conditions made for excellent sighting of any fish breaking the surface. Several minutes before the sun rose, I saw individual white bass dimpling the surface in a fairly small patch of water and, after seeing suspended fish down around the 20 foot mark on sonar in the same vicinity, decided we would attempt downrigging to start the day.

As I put the first downrigger down and explain to the boys how to do so in order that they could rig up their own downrigger for the remainder of the trip, we got Alex’s rod down and his rod went off with a triple before we could even get Ethen’s rod in the water. Over the next 25 minutes we landed 22 fish including three sets of triples and a number of doubles and singles. To satisfy the boys’ bent for competition, Sabrina “kept score” of how many fish each boy caught by using her cell phone as a counter.  All of these fish came on my summertime favorite – – a three armed umbrella rig equipped with Pet Spoons. These Pet Spoons do a very good job of imitating the young of the year shad so prevalent in the white bass diet right now.

After this area settled down, we moved to deeper water and began seeking out large schools of fish that we could hover over top of and jig for. We made one stop over a fairly sparse school of deep white bass and I hoped we could get them to coalesce beneath us using the thumper and by creating our own commotion by jigging, but, that did not pan out. After going back to downrigging for a bit in order to cover water and catch fish as we did so, we found a nice school of fish in the lower 7 feet of the water column in about 54 feet of water.

Using the Spot Lock function on the Minn Kota Ulterra, we hovered right over top of these fish and they stayed put long enough for us to get our first presentation of slabs down to them. Once the first fish was hooked, the school went on a frenzy. We sat over top of these fish and put 53 in the boat over about an hour’s time.

Eventually these fish played out and we returned to downrigging only to mop up a few more fish in the same general area before it became clear this bite was over. On the now glassy, calm surface, there were no baitfish nor gamefish apparent whatsoever.

Knowing that our most likely option for success from this point forward would be downrigging, and knowing that the boys had already done a good bit of that, I offered that we could pursue sunfish up in the shallows given that was a skill they could immediately apply to make their own bank fishing efforts more successful. The boys seemed genuinely interested in doing this, so, we headed up shallow to cover-filled water to pursue sunfish.  Up to this point the boys’ fish totals stayed “neck-and-neck”, but Alex got his mojo on when it came to sunfish…

We used slip float rigs on poles baited with worms and very quickly took our count from 75 fish to a final tally of 114 fish as the boys very handily got the hang of using poles to present our finesse offerings to sunfish of various species.

As we wrapped up our efforts right around 10:15, Sabrina commented that a trip to Academy for sunfish poles was most likely in their very near future!

TALLY: 114 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: 83.1F

Wind Speed & Direction: E0-3

Sky Conditions: Low grey cloud bank in the east obscured sunrise, but once sun cleared that, ~30% cloud cover

Water Level: 0.30 feet high and slowly rising; 0 cfs release at dam

GT = 0

Wx SNAPSHOT:

26JUN17

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area 337-252 – downrigging for 22 fish

**Area 1954 – deep white bass on smoked slabs for 53 fish

**Area 189  – shallow sunfish on slipfloats for 39 fish

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

Goal-Setting 101 — Snelgrooes Party, 101 Fish, 26 June ’17

This past Monday evening I fished Stillhouse with Californian-soon-to-turn-Texan Rick Snelgrooes, his 13-year-old son, Sean, and Rick’s friend, Stuart Gehrke of the Austin area.

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Rick Snelgrooes and his son, Sean, with a pair of 3-year-old Stillhouse Hollow white bass.  We downrigged until we found strong congregations of fish on bottom, then hovered over these fish using Spot Lock to then work slabs through the school.

Rick, a sailor at heart, decided to sample the area’s angling opportunities as he and his wife consider buying a home and property in the Georgetown area.

Our time on the water was pretty evenly split tonight between downrigging and smoking slabs.  The downrigging allows for a continuous catch of fish while at the same time allowing for a methodical sonar-search of fish-holding areas.  When solid concentrations of bottom-hugging white bass were found on sonar, we immediately set up over top of them in a hover to work them over with slabs.

Using the trolling motor/sonar connection known as i-Pilot Link allows me to touch the screen of my Humminbird sonar, place a crosshairs over fish schooling together on bottom, then give the trolling motor a “go to it and stay on top of it” command.  As the trolling motor does its job, I have a few moments to clear the downrigging equipment and get slab rods in everyone’s hands so we are all ready to drop slabs on top of the fish once the boat is in a hover over them.  Tonight, with 4 rods working, this put a lot of fish in the boat.

As we caught our 50th fish, then our 60th, Sean asked what the average catch was on such a trip.  I told him last year’s average was ~72 fish per trip.  Once he heard that and realized we were still just short of 72 fish, he redoubled his own efforts to help get us to that mark.

After steadily landing fish and exceeding the 72 fish mark, Sean then asked if it would be possible to catch 100 fish.  With about an hour’s time left, I told him that would be possible, but that we’d have to work at it.  Due to the sun being obscured behind a thick bank of clouds in the west, “sunset” came earlier than normal this evening, thus cutting down on the time we’d have to make good on our pursuit of 100 fish.  After the deep slabbing bite died, we revisited the area where we’d first contacted fish with the downriggers shortly after launching.

Long story short, as 8:44 rolled around, Rick’s rod and Sean’s rod both went off within seconds of one another as they sat positioned in the downriggers’ rod holders.  In came two yearling white bass — #100 and #101.  We celebrated a bit with that milestone reached and, as we drove in, I told Sean about the truth of Proverbs 29:18 which says, “Where there is no vision, the people perish…”.  In this case, had we not set a goal of 72 fish, then of 100 fish, we most likely would not have seen that many fish landed as the inclination to stay focused and work towards that goal just would not have been there.

This was a great trip with great folks and we wrapped up with exactly 101 fish landed on the evening.

TALLY: 101 FISH, all caught and released

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 4:45p

End Time: 8:55p

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 92F

Water Surface Temp: 84.9F

Wind Speed & Direction: E0-3

Sky Conditions: 100% thin, grey cloud cover still allowing for “squinting brightness” until an early sunset caused by a thick bank of clouds to the west

Water Level: 0.30 feet high and slowly rising; 0 cfs release at dam

GT = 185

Wx SNAPSHOT:

26JUN17

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area  1716 to 067 – downrigging for suspended white bass at ~24 feet which led to one episode of smoking for bottom-huggers; 31 fish

**Area 1112 – smoking for 54 fish

**Area 067-1498 – twilight downrigging for a final 16 fish

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

Bass on Top; Whites on Bottom — 106 Fish on SKIFF Trip #6

This past Monday morning I fished the sixth SKIFF (Soldiers’ Kids Involved in Fishing Fun) program trip of the 2017 season with returning guests Charley and Addison Elgin.

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We found willing white bass from the surface to the bottom this morning with largemouth bass pointing the way to them as they thrashed shad in the upper 4 feet of the water column.

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Charley really got good at sight casting accurately with both a lightweight grub on a jighead and with a heavier slab to cover distance.  He worked over the largemouth up high, while Addison worked the white bass down below.

 

These siblings joined me previously while their dad, US Army Specialist Sean Tinkelenberg, was deployed to Southwest Asia.  After being on the ground a few months at Fort Hood he was assigned to train cadets at Fort Knox, KY, this summer.

After some pretty turbulent weather over the weekend, the sun cleared from behind a low deck of clouds in the east right around 6:30 and, with calm wind conditions, topwater action by largemouth bass and white bass was easy to spot. This surface feeding behavior has just taken on the first bit of consistency in this summer season and we should see it continue in all but turbulent weather conditions.

We fished just one area this morning about 4 to 5 acres in size and caught largemouth bass in the upper 4 feet of the water column on both slabs and grubs, and we caught white bass throughout the water column down to as much as 68 feet deep on slabs using a smoking tactic.  It is clear that no thermocline has yet set up.

Because the kids came into this trip with prior experience under their belt, they were able to capitalize on all the potential the fish offered this morning. Charley and Addison wound up landing 106 fish this morning with very few fish hooked and missed. Honestly, most adult clients don’t demonstrate such a good hook-to- land ratio.

I told the kids’ mom I would have them back to the dock right at the 4-hour mark, around 10:15, and for better or for worse, the fish tapered off right around 9:50, so we were able to head in punctually without leaving the fish biting.

TALLY: 106 FISH, all caught and released

TODAY’S CONDITIONS/NOTES:

Start Time: 6:10a

End Time: 10:15a

Air Temp. @ Trip’s Start: 74F

Water Surface Temp: 83.9F

Wind Speed & Direction: ENE0-4

Sky Conditions: Low grey cloud bank in the east obscured sunrise, but once sun cleared that, ~30% cloud cover

Water Level: 0.25feet high and slowly rising; 0 cfs release at dam

GT = 0

Wx SNAPSHOT:

26JUN17

AREAS FISHED WITH SUCCESS:

**Area encompassed by 1259 through 1953 through 945 through1694 –  this ~ 5 acre area produced all of our fish this morning

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