Oh all the brush and trees that we clean up after the winter makes it way
over to the lakes, or at least some of it does. As for the picture, coming
soon at an a.b.p.f near you
"Dan Krueger" wrote in message
ink.net...
A customer I had in WI had a small pond in his back yard. He kept an
aerator running in the winter to keep it from freezing over. I don't
remember the depth but I'm sure it was less than 14'. He stocked it a few
times and to keep the fry from being eaten, he took six pallets and nailed
them together to make a cube. He sunk that in the deepest part and it
seemed to work for him. If you will frequent this lake, you might want to
consider that. Discarded X-mas trees are another option. Up north, people
toss them out onto the frozen ice and let them sink when it thaws.
I'd love to see a shot of the RLM on the car in AFB!
Dan
alwaysfishking wrote:
Decided it had been long enough since I went to the samll lake here. I
fished it once in late April but the launch area has prevented me from
fishing it again. That and the quality fish I have been catching on the
bigger lakes.
I woke at 4 a.m and got my nephew up to help load the RLM on the car. We
took the minute and 30 second drive, carried the boat up to the lake and
launched. I figured since there has not been a boat out there besides
mine, that the fish would definetly turn on when we got out there. First
cast produced a 1-2 lb Lm on a tiny brush hog, my nephew then landed one
in the same size range on a speedworm. I started chucking the speedworm
and landed about 3-4 pickerel, my nephew also got a few, then the bite
died, no bass, no pickerel. Spinnerbaits, flukes, senkos etc. Nada.
This is definetly your Bill Dance pond, very very small, could not
launch a bass boat on it and you can troll from one end to the other in a
matter of minutes. Loaded with everything a bass would need to grow big
except space. The lack of size limits the bass size. The biggest fish
caught out of there since I moved up here was a little shy of 5 lbs. The
average is 1-2 lbs but there is a good population of 2-3 lber's as well.
The deepest part I have come across was about 14 feet, most of the lake
is wood and lilly pads in the 3-5 foot depth range.
Seeing as we could not produce any more bass we decided to fish the
deeper area. I tied on a jig and my nephew a hard jerkbait, believe it
was a rebel in gold and black. His first cast produced a nice lm in the
2+ range. His second cast produced another around the same size. Hmm time
to throw on a jerkbait. I opted for the Rapala Tn shad, It was just the
ticket as we both caught a few more decnt bass, not to mention perch and
pickerel. It was time to head in and we decided to fish the shallows
again with the jerkbaits and sure enough, same areas we were fishing the
soft plastics held some more bass as we each boated about 3 more
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