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Fish that break the rules
Nice pics Rich. I don't think it was the tiny bait though. I think it was the hat! ;)~ Doc
================================================== ============= "RichZ" wrote in message ... Way back in April, in 46 degree water, I caught a 7-14 on a tiny (2.5"), smoke, Lunker City grub on a 1/8 ounce jig head, just nudging it around a rock pile at the base of a drop off in 18 feet of water. The color was smoke. Small, slow, low-viz. Not exactly the kind of stuff most bass fishermen would throw for big fish. The drop-off this fish came from might just be the single best spot in the lake. It gets fished pretty hard, and it turns out a lot of big fish. It's a big fish spot, and most of the guys who fish it fish it with big lures. After all, big lures catch big fish, don't they? I got a big fish off an isolated boulder in 18 feet of water a couple hundred feet south of that rock pile on 4th of July. I got it drop shotting an insignificant little 3", smoke Reaper. This fish wasn't quite as heavy as that last pig, but it was still over 7 pounds. I thought it was interesting that my two biggest fish of the year from a lake where big baits usually rule, had come on the tiniest of offerings. It wasn't until the next day, when I printed out a photo of the fish and hung it on my office wall, next to the other one, that it jumped at me. The same split anal fin. Identical markings along the flank. Even the same irregularity in the scale pattern on the side of the belly. A bit skinnier, to be sure, but there was no doubt it was that same fish. Lighter by the load of eggs and extra fat it had been carrying prior to the spawn, but already starting to put some weight back on, despite its exhibited preference for small meals. It's certainly not the first time I've caught the same fish over again, or the first time I've recaught a fish very close to where I'd caught it before. But what strikes me most about this fish is that both times I caught it, it had ample opportunity to hit a "full size" meal before it succumbed to a presentation that very few bass fishermen would bother employing in this lake, because neither is a "big fish" technique. This particular fish doesn't seem to share the same behavior traits that MOST bass do. If it did, it would have been eating crawfish and yellow perch along the edge of the vegetation in 10 to 12 feet of water. Its unusual forage size preference and possible preference for deeper water may insulate it from the efforts of most bass fishermen. The question is, how many more big ones are there not getting caught because they don't follow what we accept as the big fish rule book? I believe that every significant fish we catch has something to teach us, and this fish is no exception. It's telling us that sometimes, the way to the big might just be to separate ourselves from the crowd, and fish with techniques that MOST of the fish tell us are wrong. Or at least that not all big fish get that way eating big meals. There's a composite of the two photos at http://www.richz.com/fishing/images/samefish.jpg for those interested in comparing them. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
Fish that break the rules
Nice pics Rich. I don't think it was the tiny bait though. I think it was the hat! ;)~ Doc
================================================== ============= "RichZ" wrote in message ... Way back in April, in 46 degree water, I caught a 7-14 on a tiny (2.5"), smoke, Lunker City grub on a 1/8 ounce jig head, just nudging it around a rock pile at the base of a drop off in 18 feet of water. The color was smoke. Small, slow, low-viz. Not exactly the kind of stuff most bass fishermen would throw for big fish. The drop-off this fish came from might just be the single best spot in the lake. It gets fished pretty hard, and it turns out a lot of big fish. It's a big fish spot, and most of the guys who fish it fish it with big lures. After all, big lures catch big fish, don't they? I got a big fish off an isolated boulder in 18 feet of water a couple hundred feet south of that rock pile on 4th of July. I got it drop shotting an insignificant little 3", smoke Reaper. This fish wasn't quite as heavy as that last pig, but it was still over 7 pounds. I thought it was interesting that my two biggest fish of the year from a lake where big baits usually rule, had come on the tiniest of offerings. It wasn't until the next day, when I printed out a photo of the fish and hung it on my office wall, next to the other one, that it jumped at me. The same split anal fin. Identical markings along the flank. Even the same irregularity in the scale pattern on the side of the belly. A bit skinnier, to be sure, but there was no doubt it was that same fish. Lighter by the load of eggs and extra fat it had been carrying prior to the spawn, but already starting to put some weight back on, despite its exhibited preference for small meals. It's certainly not the first time I've caught the same fish over again, or the first time I've recaught a fish very close to where I'd caught it before. But what strikes me most about this fish is that both times I caught it, it had ample opportunity to hit a "full size" meal before it succumbed to a presentation that very few bass fishermen would bother employing in this lake, because neither is a "big fish" technique. This particular fish doesn't seem to share the same behavior traits that MOST bass do. If it did, it would have been eating crawfish and yellow perch along the edge of the vegetation in 10 to 12 feet of water. Its unusual forage size preference and possible preference for deeper water may insulate it from the efforts of most bass fishermen. The question is, how many more big ones are there not getting caught because they don't follow what we accept as the big fish rule book? I believe that every significant fish we catch has something to teach us, and this fish is no exception. It's telling us that sometimes, the way to the big might just be to separate ourselves from the crowd, and fish with techniques that MOST of the fish tell us are wrong. Or at least that not all big fish get that way eating big meals. There's a composite of the two photos at http://www.richz.com/fishing/images/samefish.jpg for those interested in comparing them. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
Fish that break the rules
Hey Rich! The fish got skinnier & you got, well...
This stuff shouldn't suprise an old salt like you buddy - big fish get big by being smart! Warren "RichZ" wrote in message ... Way back in April, in 46 degree water, I caught a 7-14 on a tiny (2.5"), smoke, Lunker City grub on a 1/8 ounce jig head, just nudging it around a rock pile at the base of a drop off in 18 feet of water. The color was smoke. Small, slow, low-viz. Not exactly the kind of stuff most bass fishermen would throw for big fish. The drop-off this fish came from might just be the single best spot in the lake. It gets fished pretty hard, and it turns out a lot of big fish. It's a big fish spot, and most of the guys who fish it fish it with big lures. After all, big lures catch big fish, don't they? I got a big fish off an isolated boulder in 18 feet of water a couple hundred feet south of that rock pile on 4th of July. I got it drop shotting an insignificant little 3", smoke Reaper. This fish wasn't quite as heavy as that last pig, but it was still over 7 pounds. I thought it was interesting that my two biggest fish of the year from a lake where big baits usually rule, had come on the tiniest of offerings. It wasn't until the next day, when I printed out a photo of the fish and hung it on my office wall, next to the other one, that it jumped at me. The same split anal fin. Identical markings along the flank. Even the same irregularity in the scale pattern on the side of the belly. A bit skinnier, to be sure, but there was no doubt it was that same fish. Lighter by the load of eggs and extra fat it had been carrying prior to the spawn, but already starting to put some weight back on, despite its exhibited preference for small meals. It's certainly not the first time I've caught the same fish over again, or the first time I've recaught a fish very close to where I'd caught it before. But what strikes me most about this fish is that both times I caught it, it had ample opportunity to hit a "full size" meal before it succumbed to a presentation that very few bass fishermen would bother employing in this lake, because neither is a "big fish" technique. This particular fish doesn't seem to share the same behavior traits that MOST bass do. If it did, it would have been eating crawfish and yellow perch along the edge of the vegetation in 10 to 12 feet of water. Its unusual forage size preference and possible preference for deeper water may insulate it from the efforts of most bass fishermen. The question is, how many more big ones are there not getting caught because they don't follow what we accept as the big fish rule book? I believe that every significant fish we catch has something to teach us, and this fish is no exception. It's telling us that sometimes, the way to the big might just be to separate ourselves from the crowd, and fish with techniques that MOST of the fish tell us are wrong. Or at least that not all big fish get that way eating big meals. There's a composite of the two photos at http://www.richz.com/fishing/images/samefish.jpg for those interested in comparing them. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
Fish that break the rules
Go-bassn wrote:
big fish get big by being smart! I don't think of a preference for small, slow moving baits as being smart or dumb. Just different enough to fall outside the target range of presentations that most bass fishermen rely on most of the time. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
Fish that break the rules
Go-bassn wrote:
big fish get big by being smart! I don't think of a preference for small, slow moving baits as being smart or dumb. Just different enough to fall outside the target range of presentations that most bass fishermen rely on most of the time. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
Fish that break the rules
Sure, ok. Don't tell everyone that they're not supposed to finesse fish
though, ok. I don't need the extra competition lol... Warren "RichZ" wrote in message ... Go-bassn wrote: big fish get big by being smart! I don't think of a preference for small, slow moving baits as being smart or dumb. Just different enough to fall outside the target range of presentations that most bass fishermen rely on most of the time. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
Fish that break the rules
Sure, ok. Don't tell everyone that they're not supposed to finesse fish
though, ok. I don't need the extra competition lol... Warren "RichZ" wrote in message ... Go-bassn wrote: big fish get big by being smart! I don't think of a preference for small, slow moving baits as being smart or dumb. Just different enough to fall outside the target range of presentations that most bass fishermen rely on most of the time. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
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