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Yup, we fished today. It was overcast all day and uncharachteristically
cool. Very unusal weather for Yuma. On the other hand we all caught fish. Joe caught the most, but unfortunately the one picture I took of him with a fish didn't save on my camera. I think I turned it off to quick. Oh, well I posted one of me and Lannes on ABPF. Joe nailed three keepers today. All on Secret Weapon Spinner baits. I have to say he proved his product. I threw a spoon for my one keeper, and Lannes nailed his on a Senko. Hey Charles, Hey Bob... Ask Joe to see those frogs I sent him home with. I gave him one each of Gilbert's Moss Frogs and Flippin' Frogs. -- Bob La Londe www.YumaBassMan.com All about fishing in Yuma, Arizona Promote Your Fishing Website FOR FREE www.DiyComponents.com Buy professional quality components for DIY Projects |
#2
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Lannes Brock is the picture with the smaller fish. For anybody who wants to
know he is the owner of Sportsmen's Hide-A-Way. They only really well stocked tackle shop in Yuma. -- Bob La Londe www.YumaBassMan.com All about fishing in Yuma, Arizona Promote Your Fishing Website FOR FREE www.DiyComponents.com Buy professional quality components for DIY Projects |
#3
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I ordered some more of those from Gil, but I haven't heard from him yet. I
think they're great and I can't wait to try them out at the Southern Classic on Okee. "Bob La Londe" wrote in message t... Yup, we fished today. It was overcast all day and uncharachteristically cool. Very unusal weather for Yuma. On the other hand we all caught fish. Joe caught the most, but unfortunately the one picture I took of him with a fish didn't save on my camera. I think I turned it off to quick. Oh, well I posted one of me and Lannes on ABPF. Joe nailed three keepers today. All on Secret Weapon Spinner baits. I have to say he proved his product. I threw a spoon for my one keeper, and Lannes nailed his on a Senko. Hey Charles, Hey Bob... Ask Joe to see those frogs I sent him home with. I gave him one each of Gilbert's Moss Frogs and Flippin' Frogs. -- Bob La Londe www.YumaBassMan.com All about fishing in Yuma, Arizona Promote Your Fishing Website FOR FREE www.DiyComponents.com Buy professional quality components for DIY Projects |
#4
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After driving five hours though increasingly arid desert to meet Bob and
Sportsman's Hideaway, I was beginning to have my doubts about Arizona as a fishing destination. However, Bob and Lanny made a believer out of me! The Colorado River channel and sloughs shape up to be a great fishery, with a bonus of bordering in one of the most starkly beautiful states in the country. I called Bob as I drove into Yuma, asking him where I could pick up a $3 Colorado River permit for my license. (Actually, not a license, but a scrap of paper with my 1-day license number scrawled on it, which in AZ is the same thing, evidently.) After a swing through Wal-Mart, I arrived at Lanny's tackle shop a minute or so before Bob pulled up towing his boat. Ten minutes later, Secret Weapon prostaffer and regional American Bass Association director Dave Willhide joined us for a jaw session. Lanny listened for awhile, rang up my purchases, and then heard Dave say a cold would prevent him from joining us as a third on the boat. Lanny couldn't stand it any more and told Bob and me to wait up while he grabbed his rod, a small tacklebox, and his PFD. The three of us chatted as we drove Bob's comfortable Chevy crew cab over gravel roads between fields of lettuce and other produce at all stages of growth, often with an irrigation canal paralleling the road. The canals looked pretty inviting for an old bank-fisherman like me, and Bob and Lanny assured me that they were well-stocked with largemouth and smallmouth bass, stripers, and even an occasional walleye. Our destination was Little Senator Wash, a slough divided into two small lakes joined by a narrow boat path through otherwise impenetrable patches of tulles, reeds, and rushes. Bob was as generous as Dave had proven to be earlier when he gave us two bags of a closely guarded "secret" flipping bait that has performed well for him (despite the fact that Bob would be competing against Dave in this weekend's bass tournament). Bob handed me a rigged rod with one of his favorite spoons, and he put his whole arsenal of rods and tackle at my disposal. After a half hour of fruitless casting in the first pond, we made our way through the twisting path to the second lake. I took advantage of the lull to swap my spoon for a spinnerbait and requisitioned a second rod fitted with a smoke Senko-like bait as a follow-up lure. Bob connected first on his spoon with what was easily the largest bass of the day for our boat. He and Lanny had me ready at every cast for its big sister to glom onto my spinnerbait, but the action was unusually slow. Maybe it was the weather.... I just happened to be there the one cloudy day of the year, evidently. When my white shad spinnerbait failed to get a sniff, I switched to a darker bait (a chartreuse shad, I think), from which I removed the front Colorado blade so that I was fishing with just a single, gold Indiana. As clear as the water was, I wondered if I was creating too imposing a target, but three bass didn't seem to think so. They, like the other two we caught, were buried in weed patches in open water and ambushed the lure as it fluttered by overhead. Rattling and swaying tulles anywhere from one to fifteen feet back from the waters edge convinced us that the big-shouldered bass we had come looking for were burrowing back in the thick stuff, and unless we wanted to take turns using Bob's flipping stick, we weren't going to reach them or have a chance at jerking them out. Before the day wound to a close Bob suggested that we take a quick run up the river so I could get a better feel for the lay of the land. We ran a couple miles at about 50-60 knots -- plenty fast for 46 degrees weather since I was dressed for Arizona weather with just a light fleece -- until I'd seen most of the typical river features. At one point we passed a huge mound of sand and gravel on one end of a bar. It turned out that was a monument to Lanny's navigational skills. He had spent a productive hour or two there the day before extracting his boat from its gritty perch, and he claimed his poor catch today was the result of his being still stiff and sore from the exercise. It did explain to me, though, why a shovel is standard equipment on any Colorado River angler's boat. I told Bob and Lanny that they had just seen the Nile, for at that point in its path, the Colorado resembles nothing so much as that famous river. Instead of papyrus reeds and Nile perch, the water we covered today was lined with tulles and more familiar fish cruised its currents, and the Colorado was narrower and swept along faster on the stretch we explored, but the same date palms marked its course. In both cases the river was the lifeblood of the region, with arteries and veins carrying water that slakes the thirst of parched yet fertile valleys. Too soon we had to return to the ramp so I could begin my return journey and reach Ft. Huachuca, southeast of Tucson, at a reasonable time of night. I thoroughly enjoyed meeting Lanny and getting better acquainted with Bob and Dave. They told me that once one drinks of the water in Yuma, they never want to leave. Wisely, I stuck to root beer, but I can see why one might want to return regularly to this area. They invited me back and suggested that the best time of year for bass fishing is March and April, but that if you can take the summer heat, fishing is to be had all year long. I believe it, and I'm already thinking of how I can manage a return visit. Thanks, Bob, for your hospitality. Joe Haubenreich www.secretweaponlures.com Only real spinnerbait innovation in 50 years! "Bob La Londe" wrote in message t... Yup, we fished today. It was overcast all day and uncharachteristically cool. Very unusal weather for Yuma. On the other hand we all caught fish. Joe caught the most, but unfortunately the one picture I took of him with a fish didn't save on my camera. I think I turned it off to quick. Oh, well I posted one of me and Lannes on ABPF. Joe nailed three keepers today. All on Secret Weapon Spinner baits. I have to say he proved his product. I threw a spoon for my one keeper, and Lannes nailed his on a Senko. Hey Charles, Hey Bob... Ask Joe to see those frogs I sent him home with. I gave him one each of Gilbert's Moss Frogs and Flippin' Frogs. -- Bob La Londe www.YumaBassMan.com All about fishing in Yuma, Arizona Promote Your Fishing Website FOR FREE www.DiyComponents.com Buy professional quality components for DIY Projects |
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