I hope to use this blog as an avenue to express my thoughts and adventures of all of my fishing expeditions and any other journeys I may undertake.
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Dry Flies Used to Land Super Size Bluegills
I was on the water today at 6:15 AM with a slight chance of rain and overcast skies
for the day. I knew an approaching cold front, if you can call 70 degrees a cold
front and with rain approaching would mean a better day. I couldn't believe it
but me and another angler were the only ones at the launch, and yes he was
going after the bluegills just like me. I only had 3 to 4 hours to add to my
quest before the wind, which Walker County Lake is famous for would sail me back to the launch.
My first of the morning using my 3 wt and the Wluff dry--I just can't get away from this dry fly verses the popper--I like the silent approach it delivers as it lights gently on the surface
This bull inhaled the Wluff; I fish through 3 of these patterns today, the first two came apart, mainly from removing the flies from the throat of the bluegills, that is how much they loved this little jewel
After the wind picked up the top action stopped, so I went to my trusty Seal Leech, using my 4 wt.
A nice bluegill on the Leech, I am so impressed with this pattern, I like the medium sink rate---thanks to David at the Trout Zone for this pattern
These fish are unbelievable strong on the 3 and 4 wt. they are just coming on the bed and are in excellent shape to produce a super fight
A couple of females thrown in--I will count 9 big bulls out of this group putting me 83 away from my quest
This is where all the action takes place after I get the fish home, I built this table some years ago and equipped it with rollers so I could move it around. The table top is actually a chopping board.
The end result of another great trip with 48 fillets ---I only have a couple of trips left before the spawn is over as far as the fish being on the beds--the cork fishermen will clean the beds in a week or two
Saturday, April 20, 2013
My First Carp on The Fly While Bluegill Fishing
Today was supposed to be my day to increase my numbers for my bluegill quest at Walker County Lake. It turned out to be a morning of fishing behind the cork and bobber fishermen chasing the bluegill alongside me. There was one surprise that really made this trip unforgettable.
This 20" Carp sucked in my tiny Dragon Fly under an overhanging brush right after I launched the boat. What made this trip so unforgettable is the fact I landed this brut on my 3 wt. 8 1/2 ft. --it took nearly 15 minutes to land it. This was the largest fish I have ever landed on my 3 wt.
This little Dragon Fly in size 8 was a winner for me last year with the bluegill, and it proved to be a today.
Sorry for the image quality, the Dragon took this bull, which was left behind by the cork fisherman. It will get more difficult to land numbers as the spawn gets into full swing because everyone knows exactly when these fish spawn.
This monster left behind----- a chore on the 3wt.
After the Dragon topwater action slowed I went to the Seal Leech from David at Trout Zone
Nice female on the Dragon
I ended the trip using the Wluff in a small shaded area close to the dock.
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Poppers-----Not The Only Fly For Bluegills
I selected the cream blunt
face black leg popper to begin my quest. I am drawn more to the black legged
poppers more than white legged. I like to think the black legs relate more to
the black cricket and black spider.
I also fished the black
legged red dot small body popper. I use this popper in the spring and fall,
mainly because of the red wasp that surface the lake water during those periods.
As I fished both of these poppers I notice as they connected to the surface the
fish would spook. The lake was extremely clear, with a slick surface making it difficult
to present the popper without a little disturbance. Normally this would produce
a hit, but today the fish were extremely weary. The light presentation wasn’t
producing. So I felt it was time to gather my thoughts and devise a new game
plan.
As I sit there going through
my fly box I noticed a dry fly that I normally fish indicator/dropper style for trout
on the tailrace. I had two Irresistible Wulff patterns in size 8 pinned in the
fly box; so I decided to give it a try, because of its light presentation. The 5X
leader I changed to worked perfect to compliment the Wulff pattern.
The
first bluegill of the morning was a nice female that made it presents known on
the 4 wt. I noticed as I work a steep bank with the Wulff that its light surface
connection didn’t spook the fish as opposed to the poppers I was using earlier.
In fact the fly would touch the water so light that the fish thought it had
just fallen from the many over hanging limbs that line the banks. Notice how
this bluegill inhaled the fly telling me I had made the right decision to use this
lighter pattern.
Another nice female bluegill
that absolutely exploded on the Wulff, in fact the hit was so hard I actually
thought it was a bass. The fly landed perfectly just under an overhanging limb
and sit there for a few seconds motionlessly before the explosion. I had to
congratulate myself on a great presentation. I actually made a tight loop side
cast to get the fly to its target. I have been practicing this cast for some
time and today it paid off.
Monday, April 8, 2013
Using the Nymph to Fish Deep for Bluegill
I am still in the process of
trying to find 62 degree water at the lake. I thought today I would get on the
water at daylight and see if the action was any better than it has been the
last couple of weeks. Well, daylight was not much better than last week, because
the water temps are still too cold for any shallow activity. I spent the first hour
and half going through my fly box trying to select a pattern that would produce
a hit. I finally landed my first fish at eight and the slow morning continued.
This was a fat butter ball female in great shape loaded with eggs. This fish took the Stonefly at a depth of 8 ft. Sorry no counter here.
The Stone Fly was the fly for the morning. Nothing else produced, I really like this fly because of the Tungsten Beadhead which has a great sink rate. I landed everything in depths of 8 ft. or better.
This beautiful bull gill was landed in a deep cut bank area above 10 ft. deep; the Stonefly was the winner--I am still hoping to land something tomorrow on top---stay tuned guys!!!
This was the end result today for about 4 hours of fishing. These were the keepers after tossing back some smaller bluegills and a few small bass---I am 96 away from that 100 mark
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