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Opening Day MTC
Long and winded!!!
Thursday night - After traveling the "few" minutes (dad's estimated trip time) to the Wally World to pick more Magical, Incredible, Irresistible Red Shad Senkos and necessary liquid refreshments, we returned to the lodge room...er..meeting room..um...parking lot, yeah, that's where we socialized, and spoke of previous Classic's, previous gut busting boat trips, and taunts of how many fish we were guaranteed to catch. After having a "couple" longnecks and brats (Dan will tell you how much he liked our special brats, all through the next morning :) ouch!) , lying about fish as much as possible without automatically going straight to hell, and feeling extremely bad about it, Drew and I went to bed, separately I might add, so stop the snickering! Knowing I was on 'em, hitting 'em hard just a few hours ago made the visions of bass dancing through my head much easier to sleep with. Until the freight train named Drew decided to start up. Now I forgot to add that we both bought ear plugs at a sporting goods store the previous day, as both of us accused the other of a restless night before, along with my father yelling at both of us for keeping him awake. Well it was happening again. I obviously did not have enough "pops" to fall asleep fast enough. I knew I was under my recommended daily allowance, but wanted to be bright eyed and bushy tailed for Tournament Morning, and now I was paying for it. I made a somewhat half mental note to not let it happen again the next night!! Friday - Sun gently rising, burning the wisps of fog from the mirrored finish of the lake, loons calling out as the gentle breeze rustled the newly greened leaves......I know that was probably happening somewhere but it was definitely not happening at Center Hill!!!!!! It was more like lightening brightening the skies, white caps burning the finish off the boat, and Drew crying out as the leaves were pelting our faces. And that was just at the launch!! Actually it didn't quite start out that bad but it certainly became that way just hours after blast off, or in our case, putter off. Of course this was after Drew donned his rectangular Day-Glo yellow life vest, you know, the ones 5 year olds have to wear!! I hope someone got a picture of that!! Drew and I started off to one of the inlets from the first day. Not the one where I had pulled so many fish from the day before but the one that stopped producing the previous day. Did I forget to mention we had had a few adult beverages the night before, which must have clouded our judgment? But surprise, a fish was back. That's right, A fish. Drew's first cast of the morning and a nice spot has fallen for what else, the green tube. Well according to Murphy's Law, this fish must not make it into the boat. First cast fish never make it into the boat!! And sure as shinola, that nice 2 lb fish came unbuttoned as easy as...as....well you know what I mean. Not totally upset because it's a good sign, we begin what I call the lost hour. Not another tap in the whole inlet. About that time we realized we needed to get to the next spot. So down the shore we go, to our own personal part of the creek shore, the one we hadn't seen anyone else fish in two days. As we waited for a stiff tail wind to speed us along, we began to notice another boat veering slightly off from the main channel, slowly beginning to put itself on a direct line with where we would be but only in significantly more time than it was going to take them. Not good. We watched from afar and afarther and afarther until the boat finally began a turn to take them away from our Black Bass paradise. Close one! We pulled up about the time Mother Nature decided she could no longer hold back. The rain came down so hard it almost stung the skin, but that's what happens to you when your boater decides you have use the water closet facing the wind. We began our assault on the shore and just like the beginning of the previous day, shot blank after blank! NOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!! Not again, this can not be happening to me again. They no longer wanted the automatic fish catching Red Shad Senko. Every spot that held a fish the previous day was barren, at least as far as the stupid Red Shad Senko was concerned. We cruised the shoreline for a few hundred yards, throwing that Senko, praying a straggler was leftover. Nothing! Well, they have to be here I told Drew, they just want something else. My next favorite bait, Watermelon Red Trick Worm, was in the bag behind the Senkos. That's about as far as my ability to pattern a bass goes, what ever is next in line in the bag. And it just so happens that those tightlipped little so and so's became hen's in a henhouse once they saw that worm come fluttering down. They couldn't keep their mouths shut!! I pulled three keepers into the boat within the next 50 yard stretch. Pulled being the operative word here as again, in our infinite wisdom, we decided that along with not bringing a lake map, we really didn't need a net to bring in the fish. We decided right then and there that Real Men lip their fish!!! Nothing like trying to stick an already shaky thumb into a very uncooperative mouth. Not recommended for the elderly or those three weeks out from knee surgery!!!! Thanks Anheiser Busch and Drew for that mistake. Speaking of which, my partner, the one I'm counting on to also put a few in the livewell as this is a "team" event, decides his tube looked somewhat similar to my Trick Worm, in a distinctively dissimilar way and rebuffed my repeated and hostile attempts to hold him down and put one on his hook. We turned the boat and moved back up the same short stretch, and again I pulled in fish, this time shorts, but fish nonetheless. About this time, Drew relents and puts on the Trick Worm, but only after I have taken the rest of his tubes away and threaten to dunk them. Five minutes later, what do you know, he sets the hook and brings his one and only fish into the boat. I love the man like a brother but that is one "special" boy there! Can I get an Amen on that Randy? Back to fishing. Drew's beginning to worry the many many many lightening strikes will eventually cause us harm and through his whimpers I hear him ask if we should head back. Well, I reply, we can either go screaming ( as in vocally scream, you already know about the 60 horse motor) across the lake, in a metallic object, while also being the highest object out there or we can stay right here, tucked into the mountains, and continue to catch fish. Faulty reasoning I know, but it doesn't take much with him. We turn around once more and again begin to pull fish off the bank. I put a couple more in the well, and with one barely over the 12" mark begin to anxiously await the fish that will let me cull for the first time in my illustrious fishing career. I prepared for this momentous occasion by putting the culling egg on the smaller fish, but only after a five minute discussion on how we thought it should be attached. We continued to fish, could not put anymore in the boat and uneventfully had to return back to the docks, still a virgin to the cull. |
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