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#1
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It was tough for us. We seemed to start out the day plagued by minor
mishaps. I'ld snag up in a tree, and Robert would snag up in the opposite direction. Finally I nailed a 2 pounder on top only to find out the drain valve was jammed in the open position on the livewell. I turned all three pumps (recirc, aerate, fill) on continuous to keep some water on the fish and proceeded to try and fix it. I pulled the control out of the dash (after breaking off the control knob) and the cable wouldn't move. It didn't feel jammed in the sleeve though so I figured the valve itself was stuck. A look at the valve determined I didn't really want to try and work on it or pound on it down there in the bilge. Finally I decided to just plug that opening in the well, use just the recirculation pump, and use the pump out and fill pump periodically during the day to get fresh water in there. Plugging the drain in the livewell wasn't quite as easy as I figured it would be. The plastic screeen that keeps junk out of the valve assembly would not come off. It would turn, but didn't seem to be losssening up any. Finally I drove a screwdriver through it and tore it off. Of course nothing in the boat was the right size to plug that opening, but by tightening down a compartment drain plug really tight and mushrooming the rubber I was able to get it to work as a passable plug in the hole. We had a working livewell finally. I don't know how long that took, but it was a while because by the time I picked up my rod and started to throw that popper again all of shadows over the areas I was casting to were gone, and so was my topwater bite. I made some efforts to work the areas where there were still a few shadows and went nowhere. We started working senkos to pockets and outside points. Robert and I both caught several shorts, and I picked up a 4 pounder on the a long cast to straighten out my line. We stayed with it for a little while, but finally we decided that all we were going to catch doing that was little fish. On the way up to one of our flipping spots we pitched a senko up under some dark cover in another area and picked up another 2 pounder, but that was the only bite in the area. Flipping was slow. A 3 1/2 came on our first flip spot. It was the only bite, but it was a quality fish. A couple more like that would have really done the trick for us. I hit my second flip spot. An area where I had lost a 4-5 pound fish last week, and proceeded to cuss and swear at the trolling motor. It would quit working periodically. Finally I determined it had to be a loose connection in the head. I could step on the peddle and swing the motor left to right and it would start woking again for a while. I fought it for a while and finally determined I could work it like that, but not while pulling the current and trying to maintain the best flipping distance from the bank we were working. With 4 (we fish for a five fish limit here) fish in the well I decided to gamble on catching one decent kicker fish in a back water lake. A deep lake (for here that's ten feet) that doesn't usually grass up thick in the summer time. We actually spooked several keeper fish in the 2 pound range on our way in, and if things had worked out a little better I planned to keep throwing blindly to those spots in reserve for the trip back out. Finally we got to the mouth of our little lake, and I dropped the trolling motor. I'm pretty familair with the lake and often pick up a fish on certain cover right at the mouth so I had angled the boat to the other side... just a little too much. The nose of the boat was back in the brush before I could step on the switch to correct position. I knew better than to try to and muscle the boat with the trolling motor. I just let it bounce back and driftout a little first. Unfortunately when I stepped on the trolling motor peddle it just went flop. It broke a steering cable. Dang it. I wasn't going to quit though. I figured we had between 11 & 12 pounds of fish, and any decent fish might give us a respectable limit. I pulled the TM up and taped the shaft up hard with electrical tape so it wouldn't turn at the swivel point in the shaft. Then I loosened up the clamp on the mount so I could turn the whole motor by hand. It worked sort of. We wallowed our way down my deep section throwing senkos blindly at the cover we wanted to fish. I managed to keep us at the ideal range about 1/4 of the time. LOL. We did pick up one 12.5 inch fish. That proved to me there some fish there if we could have just controlled the boat better and sliced and diced the area more effectively. It was tough. Hoping for a hail mary fish I motored up wind to the top of the area and tried lobbing crank baits at the cover, and then did it again trying to work a drop shot along it, but the wind just wasn't giving us the optimal drift. Finally with 30 minutes left we headed in. We had only 4 fish. Our limit weighed 11.49 pounds, and our big fish was 4.06 pounds. It was a tough day, but I can't complain. We had all that adversity we still caught plenty of fish. If we count the shorts we probably caught 20 fish yesterday, and I managed to boat 4 keepers for a middle of the field total finish. We just kept swinging. I doubt if we really fished effectively for more than 3 hours out of the day, but we did ok. I'm actualy kind of proud of us for our efforts. I recall days not that long ago when nothing broke, everything worked the way I thought it should except the fish, and I came in from summer tournaments with one 13" fish ashamed to even bring it to the scales. We even still even had a couple sodas left in the ice chest at the end of the day. The ride back isn't so bad when you've got good company and yer sipping on an ice cold cola. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#2
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Good story, Bob, and a good lesson to keep in mind.
Joe ---------- "Bob La Londe" wrote in message .. . It was tough for us. We seemed to start out the day plagued by minor mishaps. I'ld snag up in a tree, and Robert would snag up in the opposite direction. snip |
#3
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"Bob La Londe" wrote in message
Its not so bad.... I found the intermitent cut out problem on the TM. One of the light bulb wires to the indicator light had broken and was shorting out periodically. Whenever it shorted out the motor would shut itself off. Still have a broken cable though. Actually both cables need to be replaced as I can see the other is frayed. That's really my own fault though for letting the cables sag coming out of the head of the motor for a long time instead of putting the strian relief back in place. I can get by though. Took maybe ten minutes to change the cables in the back of the boat to 24V configuration and put the 82 pound motor off the little boat onto the big boat. That part is ready for my next outing. Now to order the cables. As to the livewell. It looks like the "switch" itself was at fault. I pulled it off the cable, and the cable moves about as hard or easy as it always did. The darn plastic sleeve was frozen inside the lever mechanism. If I had spent a few more minutes looking at that part I could have saved myself some headaches yesterday. I just assumed the valve was stuck. Oh well. As to the filter screen. It looks like it should go back on easy enough. Maybe a little super glue to hold it in place just to be safe. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com It was tough for us. We seemed to start out the day plagued by minor mishaps. I'ld snag up in a tree, and Robert would snag up in the opposite direction. Finally I nailed a 2 pounder on top only to find out the drain valve was jammed in the open position on the livewell. I turned all three pumps (recirc, aerate, fill) on continuous to keep some water on the fish and proceeded to try and fix it. I pulled the control out of the dash (after breaking off the control knob) and the cable wouldn't move. It didn't feel jammed in the sleeve though so I figured the valve itself was stuck. A look at the valve determined I didn't really want to try and work on it or pound on it down there in the bilge. Finally I decided to just plug that opening in the well, use just the recirculation pump, and use the pump out and fill pump periodically during the day to get fresh water in there. Plugging the drain in the livewell wasn't quite as easy as I figured it would be. The plastic screeen that keeps junk out of the valve assembly would not come off. It would turn, but didn't seem to be losssening up any. Finally I drove a screwdriver through it and tore it off. Of course nothing in the boat was the right size to plug that opening, but by tightening down a compartment drain plug really tight and mushrooming the rubber I was able to get it to work as a passable plug in the hole. We had a working livewell finally. I don't know how long that took, but it was a while because by the time I picked up my rod and started to throw that popper again all of shadows over the areas I was casting to were gone, and so was my topwater bite. I made some efforts to work the areas where there were still a few shadows and went nowhere. We started working senkos to pockets and outside points. Robert and I both caught several shorts, and I picked up a 4 pounder on the a long cast to straighten out my line. We stayed with it for a little while, but finally we decided that all we were going to catch doing that was little fish. On the way up to one of our flipping spots we pitched a senko up under some dark cover in another area and picked up another 2 pounder, but that was the only bite in the area. Flipping was slow. A 3 1/2 came on our first flip spot. It was the only bite, but it was a quality fish. A couple more like that would have really done the trick for us. I hit my second flip spot. An area where I had lost a 4-5 pound fish last week, and proceeded to cuss and swear at the trolling motor. It would quit working periodically. Finally I determined it had to be a loose connection in the head. I could step on the peddle and swing the motor left to right and it would start woking again for a while. I fought it for a while and finally determined I could work it like that, but not while pulling the current and trying to maintain the best flipping distance from the bank we were working. With 4 (we fish for a five fish limit here) fish in the well I decided to gamble on catching one decent kicker fish in a back water lake. A deep lake (for here that's ten feet) that doesn't usually grass up thick in the summer time. We actually spooked several keeper fish in the 2 pound range on our way in, and if things had worked out a little better I planned to keep throwing blindly to those spots in reserve for the trip back out. Finally we got to the mouth of our little lake, and I dropped the trolling motor. I'm pretty familair with the lake and often pick up a fish on certain cover right at the mouth so I had angled the boat to the other side... just a little too much. The nose of the boat was back in the brush before I could step on the switch to correct position. I knew better than to try to and muscle the boat with the trolling motor. I just let it bounce back and driftout a little first. Unfortunately when I stepped on the trolling motor peddle it just went flop. It broke a steering cable. Dang it. I wasn't going to quit though. I figured we had between 11 & 12 pounds of fish, and any decent fish might give us a respectable limit. I pulled the TM up and taped the shaft up hard with electrical tape so it wouldn't turn at the swivel point in the shaft. Then I loosened up the clamp on the mount so I could turn the whole motor by hand. It worked sort of. We wallowed our way down my deep section throwing senkos blindly at the cover we wanted to fish. I managed to keep us at the ideal range about 1/4 of the time. LOL. We did pick up one 12.5 inch fish. That proved to me there some fish there if we could have just controlled the boat better and sliced and diced the area more effectively. It was tough. Hoping for a hail mary fish I motored up wind to the top of the area and tried lobbing crank baits at the cover, and then did it again trying to work a drop shot along it, but the wind just wasn't giving us the optimal drift. Finally with 30 minutes left we headed in. We had only 4 fish. Our limit weighed 11.49 pounds, and our big fish was 4.06 pounds. It was a tough day, but I can't complain. We had all that adversity we still caught plenty of fish. If we count the shorts we probably caught 20 fish yesterday, and I managed to boat 4 keepers for a middle of the field total finish. We just kept swinging. I doubt if we really fished effectively for more than 3 hours out of the day, but we did ok. I'm actualy kind of proud of us for our efforts. I recall days not that long ago when nothing broke, everything worked the way I thought it should except the fish, and I came in from summer tournaments with one 13" fish ashamed to even bring it to the scales. We even still even had a couple sodas left in the ice chest at the end of the day. The ride back isn't so bad when you've got good company and yer sipping on an ice cold cola. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#4
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Part 3
P.S. I sent an e-mail off to the parts department last night at Bass Cat asking how much for a new valve cable lever for my livwell drain. They are sending me one no charge. These guys are a great boat company. Its a 2004 model boat. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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