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#1
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So here's now the day went.
Started off at Tyler in the morning twilight. On Tyler, the west and north sides of the lake are bordered by a bog, the east and south sides are rocky and developed. I generally start out on the bog side. This was no different. Got a short on a spinnerbait, then a keeper on a spinnerbait, then one close to 4 on a 5.75" Golden Shiner Fin-S Fish, all before full light. In the half hour or so after the sun peeked over the horizon, I got a few 13" fish and one about 2 on the Fin-S, all from the bog side of the lake. There's some dense cabbage beds that extend out a good distance from the bog on the northern part of the lake, and with the conditions, I though I should get some on the Fin-S or a spinnerbait over the top. Not happening. I did get a couple of 13" fish on a bubba shot rigged Ozmo feeling around for the outside edge of the cabbage. Then I tossed my light worm rod with a T-rigged Ozmo and broke off what felt like a good fish. But who knows, it might've been a pickerel. Then I went continued around to the rocky side and got another 'near four', this one on a T-rigged Ozmo on the outside edge of the cabbage. There was enough light to take a picture, so I put it back in the water to swim around while I set the camera up. Should have left more than 4 feet of line off the rod tip, I guess, because the @#$!@ thing dove and snapped the line. It's OK, the camera batteries were dead anyway. But that was two time the line broke on that rod already. Brand new 10 pound Hybrid. Only caught one more fish (a short) off the rocky side of the lake. By now the wind was getting pretty stiff, so I went back to the bog side to get out of the wind. Caught 9 more fish there, including another couple in that heavy-three, not quite four class. All caught working the fin-s real slow in pretty close to no water, around pads and wood, tight to the bog banks. When the skiers started buzzing within 20 feet of me even on that side of the lake, I decided to change lakes. Tyler's like that unless it's a pouring rainy day. The skiers are residents and weekenders, so they can come out at a moment's notice when the weather breaks. Dog Pond is only a couple miles away, so I headed there. It's never been one of my favorites, but I do have one spot I like there. A nice pad bed right where a large creek comes in out of a bog. Went right to it, and caught a fish in the first 5 minutes, on the Fin-S Fish, of course. When I was done working the pad bed, I was out of 'favorite spots'. So I pulled the boat out and headed for West Side Pond, about 5 miles away. Put the boat in the water, electric motored out to the edge of the vegetation, threw the Fin-S fish, and caught a two pounder on my first cast. Worked over the top of the weeds with the Fin-S, in the weeds with the T-rigged creature and outside the weeds with a drop shot rig for the next half hour or so with nary a bump. Back to the trailer! Pulled out and went to Mudge. Stopped for lunch on the way and got there about 1pm. Given my experience at Tyler and Dog, I expected to kill 'em in the pads. NWith the amount of dragonfly eating going on as I worked my way out through the pads, I really expected to get 'em. But I never had a hit in the pads! I did however, did catch quite a few fish (7) out in front of the pads in 8 to 10 feet of water, mostly dead drifting a sinking Slug-Go. Also got 8 on the drop shot rig. Biggest fish from Mudge was only about 2-1/4 pounds. On the way how, I almost pulled in at Hatch Pond and went for 5 different lakes, but it had been a long day already, and I was just plain tired. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
#2
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You sound a lot like me Rich, when I get those days out I'm likely to hit
three or four lakes up here in a day "RichZ" wrote in message ... So here's now the day went. Started off at Tyler in the morning twilight. On Tyler, the west and north sides of the lake are bordered by a bog, the east and south sides are rocky and developed. I generally start out on the bog side. This was no different. Got a short on a spinnerbait, then a keeper on a spinnerbait, then one close to 4 on a 5.75" Golden Shiner Fin-S Fish, all before full light. In the half hour or so after the sun peeked over the horizon, I got a few 13" fish and one about 2 on the Fin-S, all from the bog side of the lake. There's some dense cabbage beds that extend out a good distance from the bog on the northern part of the lake, and with the conditions, I though I should get some on the Fin-S or a spinnerbait over the top. Not happening. I did get a couple of 13" fish on a bubba shot rigged Ozmo feeling around for the outside edge of the cabbage. Then I tossed my light worm rod with a T-rigged Ozmo and broke off what felt like a good fish. But who knows, it might've been a pickerel. Then I went continued around to the rocky side and got another 'near four', this one on a T-rigged Ozmo on the outside edge of the cabbage. There was enough light to take a picture, so I put it back in the water to swim around while I set the camera up. Should have left more than 4 feet of line off the rod tip, I guess, because the @#$!@ thing dove and snapped the line. It's OK, the camera batteries were dead anyway. But that was two time the line broke on that rod already. Brand new 10 pound Hybrid. Only caught one more fish (a short) off the rocky side of the lake. By now the wind was getting pretty stiff, so I went back to the bog side to get out of the wind. Caught 9 more fish there, including another couple in that heavy-three, not quite four class. All caught working the fin-s real slow in pretty close to no water, around pads and wood, tight to the bog banks. When the skiers started buzzing within 20 feet of me even on that side of the lake, I decided to change lakes. Tyler's like that unless it's a pouring rainy day. The skiers are residents and weekenders, so they can come out at a moment's notice when the weather breaks. Dog Pond is only a couple miles away, so I headed there. It's never been one of my favorites, but I do have one spot I like there. A nice pad bed right where a large creek comes in out of a bog. Went right to it, and caught a fish in the first 5 minutes, on the Fin-S Fish, of course. When I was done working the pad bed, I was out of 'favorite spots'. So I pulled the boat out and headed for West Side Pond, about 5 miles away. Put the boat in the water, electric motored out to the edge of the vegetation, threw the Fin-S fish, and caught a two pounder on my first cast. Worked over the top of the weeds with the Fin-S, in the weeds with the T-rigged creature and outside the weeds with a drop shot rig for the next half hour or so with nary a bump. Back to the trailer! Pulled out and went to Mudge. Stopped for lunch on the way and got there about 1pm. Given my experience at Tyler and Dog, I expected to kill 'em in the pads. NWith the amount of dragonfly eating going on as I worked my way out through the pads, I really expected to get 'em. But I never had a hit in the pads! I did however, did catch quite a few fish (7) out in front of the pads in 8 to 10 feet of water, mostly dead drifting a sinking Slug-Go. Also got 8 on the drop shot rig. Biggest fish from Mudge was only about 2-1/4 pounds. On the way how, I almost pulled in at Hatch Pond and went for 5 different lakes, but it had been a long day already, and I was just plain tired. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
#3
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You sound a lot like me Rich, when I get those days out I'm likely to hit
three or four lakes up here in a day "RichZ" wrote in message ... So here's now the day went. Started off at Tyler in the morning twilight. On Tyler, the west and north sides of the lake are bordered by a bog, the east and south sides are rocky and developed. I generally start out on the bog side. This was no different. Got a short on a spinnerbait, then a keeper on a spinnerbait, then one close to 4 on a 5.75" Golden Shiner Fin-S Fish, all before full light. In the half hour or so after the sun peeked over the horizon, I got a few 13" fish and one about 2 on the Fin-S, all from the bog side of the lake. There's some dense cabbage beds that extend out a good distance from the bog on the northern part of the lake, and with the conditions, I though I should get some on the Fin-S or a spinnerbait over the top. Not happening. I did get a couple of 13" fish on a bubba shot rigged Ozmo feeling around for the outside edge of the cabbage. Then I tossed my light worm rod with a T-rigged Ozmo and broke off what felt like a good fish. But who knows, it might've been a pickerel. Then I went continued around to the rocky side and got another 'near four', this one on a T-rigged Ozmo on the outside edge of the cabbage. There was enough light to take a picture, so I put it back in the water to swim around while I set the camera up. Should have left more than 4 feet of line off the rod tip, I guess, because the @#$!@ thing dove and snapped the line. It's OK, the camera batteries were dead anyway. But that was two time the line broke on that rod already. Brand new 10 pound Hybrid. Only caught one more fish (a short) off the rocky side of the lake. By now the wind was getting pretty stiff, so I went back to the bog side to get out of the wind. Caught 9 more fish there, including another couple in that heavy-three, not quite four class. All caught working the fin-s real slow in pretty close to no water, around pads and wood, tight to the bog banks. When the skiers started buzzing within 20 feet of me even on that side of the lake, I decided to change lakes. Tyler's like that unless it's a pouring rainy day. The skiers are residents and weekenders, so they can come out at a moment's notice when the weather breaks. Dog Pond is only a couple miles away, so I headed there. It's never been one of my favorites, but I do have one spot I like there. A nice pad bed right where a large creek comes in out of a bog. Went right to it, and caught a fish in the first 5 minutes, on the Fin-S Fish, of course. When I was done working the pad bed, I was out of 'favorite spots'. So I pulled the boat out and headed for West Side Pond, about 5 miles away. Put the boat in the water, electric motored out to the edge of the vegetation, threw the Fin-S fish, and caught a two pounder on my first cast. Worked over the top of the weeds with the Fin-S, in the weeds with the T-rigged creature and outside the weeds with a drop shot rig for the next half hour or so with nary a bump. Back to the trailer! Pulled out and went to Mudge. Stopped for lunch on the way and got there about 1pm. Given my experience at Tyler and Dog, I expected to kill 'em in the pads. NWith the amount of dragonfly eating going on as I worked my way out through the pads, I really expected to get 'em. But I never had a hit in the pads! I did however, did catch quite a few fish (7) out in front of the pads in 8 to 10 feet of water, mostly dead drifting a sinking Slug-Go. Also got 8 on the drop shot rig. Biggest fish from Mudge was only about 2-1/4 pounds. On the way how, I almost pulled in at Hatch Pond and went for 5 different lakes, but it had been a long day already, and I was just plain tired. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
#4
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You sound a lot like me Rich, when I get those days out I'm likely to hit
three or four lakes up here in a day "RichZ" wrote in message ... So here's now the day went. Started off at Tyler in the morning twilight. On Tyler, the west and north sides of the lake are bordered by a bog, the east and south sides are rocky and developed. I generally start out on the bog side. This was no different. Got a short on a spinnerbait, then a keeper on a spinnerbait, then one close to 4 on a 5.75" Golden Shiner Fin-S Fish, all before full light. In the half hour or so after the sun peeked over the horizon, I got a few 13" fish and one about 2 on the Fin-S, all from the bog side of the lake. There's some dense cabbage beds that extend out a good distance from the bog on the northern part of the lake, and with the conditions, I though I should get some on the Fin-S or a spinnerbait over the top. Not happening. I did get a couple of 13" fish on a bubba shot rigged Ozmo feeling around for the outside edge of the cabbage. Then I tossed my light worm rod with a T-rigged Ozmo and broke off what felt like a good fish. But who knows, it might've been a pickerel. Then I went continued around to the rocky side and got another 'near four', this one on a T-rigged Ozmo on the outside edge of the cabbage. There was enough light to take a picture, so I put it back in the water to swim around while I set the camera up. Should have left more than 4 feet of line off the rod tip, I guess, because the @#$!@ thing dove and snapped the line. It's OK, the camera batteries were dead anyway. But that was two time the line broke on that rod already. Brand new 10 pound Hybrid. Only caught one more fish (a short) off the rocky side of the lake. By now the wind was getting pretty stiff, so I went back to the bog side to get out of the wind. Caught 9 more fish there, including another couple in that heavy-three, not quite four class. All caught working the fin-s real slow in pretty close to no water, around pads and wood, tight to the bog banks. When the skiers started buzzing within 20 feet of me even on that side of the lake, I decided to change lakes. Tyler's like that unless it's a pouring rainy day. The skiers are residents and weekenders, so they can come out at a moment's notice when the weather breaks. Dog Pond is only a couple miles away, so I headed there. It's never been one of my favorites, but I do have one spot I like there. A nice pad bed right where a large creek comes in out of a bog. Went right to it, and caught a fish in the first 5 minutes, on the Fin-S Fish, of course. When I was done working the pad bed, I was out of 'favorite spots'. So I pulled the boat out and headed for West Side Pond, about 5 miles away. Put the boat in the water, electric motored out to the edge of the vegetation, threw the Fin-S fish, and caught a two pounder on my first cast. Worked over the top of the weeds with the Fin-S, in the weeds with the T-rigged creature and outside the weeds with a drop shot rig for the next half hour or so with nary a bump. Back to the trailer! Pulled out and went to Mudge. Stopped for lunch on the way and got there about 1pm. Given my experience at Tyler and Dog, I expected to kill 'em in the pads. NWith the amount of dragonfly eating going on as I worked my way out through the pads, I really expected to get 'em. But I never had a hit in the pads! I did however, did catch quite a few fish (7) out in front of the pads in 8 to 10 feet of water, mostly dead drifting a sinking Slug-Go. Also got 8 on the drop shot rig. Biggest fish from Mudge was only about 2-1/4 pounds. On the way how, I almost pulled in at Hatch Pond and went for 5 different lakes, but it had been a long day already, and I was just plain tired. RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
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