All posts by hellabass

Wood & Trade Practice Day

Unlike previous years, I only made it to WI to practice one day for my first two club tournaments, so Sport & I split are day between the lakes.  We spent about the first 5 hours on Trade & less then 2 hours on Wood.  We got out around 8am on to Trade.  We jumped around and fished a bunch of different areas in both Big & Little Trade lakes.  Sport struck quickly with his new hand poured stick bait (senko) that he poured at home this winter while the rest of us were at the office

I went on to catch several fish in a row before Sport responded with another fish.  The water temp was around 60 when we started the day and many smaller bays had much warmer water.  In total between the two lakes, I caught 16 bass, 5 keepers and Sport caught 3 keepers total.  He mentioned something about quality over quantity.  The majority of my fish came on a baby ring fry, pic below.
  I rigged it weightless with just a bead or two in front held in place with a bobber stop.  I fished this on a spinning rod with 10lb flourocarbon.  The beads add just a touch of weight for casting and a little extra flash and clicking noise.  The other two baits that produced best were a small single colorago Secret Weapon Spinnerbait & a XCalibur xr50 Lipless crank in a craw pattern.
 
Couple things to note here, I did not employ a trailer hook on my spinnerbait while prefishing, but I will surely have one on during tournaments this weekend, and the red sure-set hook on the lipless crank seemed to help the fish take the bait well.  Sport caught his two other fish on a jig & a regular size ring fry.

All our fish on both lakes came in water less then 6ft.  We saw, John Atkins, Ron Smith & the Brant boys all over at Wood in the afternoon.  Here is a picture of Atkins big practice fish at Wood Lake.
 I could be mistaken, but it looks like a swimbait hanging next to his windshield on the left side of the picture……   Also, I think Ron helped John pulled an embedded hook out of his thumb that morning

Rich
RichLindgren.com 
Rich’s Bassin’ Forum
Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

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MN Fishing Opener is Here

That means its time for me to head to WI and do some bass fishing.  I can honestly say, I do not think I have ever fished in MN on the MN opener…..

Tomorrow Sport (fellow Gopher club member) & I are heading to Grantsburg, WI to spend a couple hours on each of two lakes that I have tournaments on May 19-20.  I have fished both lakes before in club tournaments and have done well, but I feel the need to get over there and see what stage the lake is in so I can have a clue where to start come race day.

Should be fun, we are having great weather so I expect the fishing to be good.  The two lakes are Big Wood Lake and Big & Little Trade lakes.  I expect we will do a lot more driving around and looking rather then fishing.

Sunday, I plan to get my boat out on a local lake in Lakeville to make sure everything is firing on all cylinders   I am chomping at the bit, because I have not been on the water since my trip to Amistad.  I really intended to get our on the river this spring, but that has just not worked out.

Check back on Sunday or Monday for a report on my practice.

Rich
RichLindgren.com 
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Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

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Focus on the Winners

First an Apology for no entries of late, I could give you lots of good excuses but I will not bore you.

Clarks Hills a.k.a J. Strom Thurmond Lake
Winner – Mike McClelland
Here is how he did it:

McClelland said he fished “extremely shallow” water. “I never caught a good fish in water deeper than 4 feet. They were all very shallow places, but they did have deep water close to them. They were all clay points with scattered rock mixed in. That was the key.”

He added that “99% of them were post-spawn fish, but they weren’t in an area they should be in. The points they were on were very susceptible to wind and weather. They were waiting on the blueback to show up. “I think that’s the reason the jig worked so well. They weren’t schooling yet on the blueback. They were up there trying to find something to eat, and that 1/2-ounce football jig was the perfect morsel.”

Technique Notes
A football-head jig, by design, is meant to catch on rocks. About how he worked his jig, McClelland said: “I did it a number of different ways, but probably the most consistent bite was dragging the jig on bottom until it hit a rock. Then I’d almost try to shake it in place. I’d just raise my rod up high, shake it as much in one place as I could, then snap it off the rock.”  Most of his bites came on the shake, but plenty also came as he snapped it off the rock.

Photo: ESPN Outdoors

One part of McClelland’s success was he let his fish rest and reposition.

Winning Gear Notes
He used two different rods – a 7′ heavy-action Falcon Expert and a 7’3″ medium-heavy Falcon Mike McClelland signature series. “You had to have that long rod to make a pretty aggressive hookset,” he said. “Typically, when you’re fishing deeper and dragging the jig more, you can get away with a more sweeping hookset. But these fish weren’t eating the jig good. They’d suck it in quick, and if you didn’t hit them then, you’d miss them. When they’re shallow, they do that.”

 He used a Quantum Tour Edition casting reel with a 6.3:1 gear ratio. He noted that the 7:1 Quantum “Burner” would have probably been better, but he hadn’t fished with it yet and was more comfortable with the 6.3:1. The high gear speed was important, he added, because a lot of times the fish ate the jig and swam toward him, and he needed to take up line quickly before the hookset.  He spooled up with 15-pound Seaguar InvizX fluorocarbon.

> His primary jig was the same one he used to win at Grand – a 1/2-ounce Jewel Heavy Cover Finesse football jig in peanut butter and jelly, tipped with a green-pumpkin/purple Zoom Super Chunk.

 He also threw a 3/8 oz. Jewel finesse jig on occasion.

 He used the stock finesse-style skirt that comes with the 1/2-ounce football, but often removed it and went with a bulkier skirt. Notable is that Hite won last year with an oversized skirt on a Mop jig.

 About the bigger skirt, McClelland said: “The gentleman I fished with the first day was a local, and he got the first bite on a jig. He was using the Mop jig. And I actually caught my first 6-pounder on the finesse skirt, but he was getting a few more bites than I was, so I bulked up and it made a difference. I caught fish on the finesse-style skirt all week – probably five or six that I weighed – but the bigger, bulkier jig was the key to getting quality bites.”
For Video  CLICK HERE

Lake Norman – FLW Tour
Winner – Larry Nixon
Here is how he did it:

Everybody knew the Norman FLW Tour would be an event predicated on razor-thin margins & just about everybody fishes docks. They’re everywhere on Norman’s highly developed shoreline, and fish in all stages of the spawn utilize them at this time of year.

It took an angler with the savvy of Arkansas legend Larry Nixon to come up with something a little bit different. He primarily stayed away from the docks – and the crowds of anglers that gathered around them – and caught quality fish off isolated pieces of structure.

Nixon went to Norman with an idea to target spawning bass, but not the ones that could easily be seen by other competitors.

He looked for isolated stumps and made long casts to them with light line, a 1/16oz. jighead and a Berkley PowerBait Wacky Crawler. If he got closer than 20 feet, the spooky fish would usually swim away, and would in all cases refuse to bite.  Accuracy was paramount, and the pattern was much more effective if the sun was shining and he could clearly see his targets.

All 4 tournament days unfolded pretty much the same way for Nixon. He fished a swimbait in the mornings until the sun got on the stumps, and then he went about culling everything he’d caught to that point.

“I went to the same area and did the same thing every day,” he said. “I never really changed up anything.  He was in 32nd place after day 1, and then jumped 22 spots on day 2 despite catching just one more ounce. He got into the cut with 3 ounces to spare.

Photo: FLW Outdoors/Rob Newell

A 4 1/2-pounder he caught on the final day was Nixon’s biggest fish of the tournament.

He vaulted to the top of the leaderboard on day 3, and then formulated a specific strategy for the final day – he wouldn’t go near his best stuff until about 10:00, when the sun was high enough for him to see beneath the surface.

“I tried everything I knew to keep from going in there early. I knew I’d get discouraged if I didn’t get a bite for a couple hours, and I didn’t want to do that. I just stayed away and fished some other areas until the time was right.”

His stumps weren’t productive on that last day, so he caught his fish from adjacent logs and pieces of brush. A 4 1/2-pounder – his biggest fish of the tournament – was his fifth keeper, and he improved his bag with a couple of afternoon culls.

Pattern Notes 
 He prefers a straight-tailed worm for fishing beds due to its vertical fall.   He caught a few key fish on a Texas-rigged worm, but has more confidence in one rigged on a jighead when targeting spawners. “They’re notorious for missing baits, and you get a higher percentage of hookups on a jighead.”

Winning Gear Notes 
 Jighead worm gear: 6’6″ medium-fast Fenwick Techna AV Spinning rod, Abu Garcia Cardinal 804 spinning reel, 8-pound prototype Berkley Trilene fluorocarbon line, 1/16- or 1/32-ounce Japanese-made jighead, Berkley PowerBait Wacky Crawler (green-pumpkin).

 Texas-rigged worm gear: Same rod, Abu Garcia Revo casting reel, 14-pound prototype Berkley Trilene fluorocarbon, 1/8 oz Tru-Tungsten colored sinker (green-pumpkin), 2/0 Gamakatsu worm hook, 7-inch Berkley PowerBait Shaky Worm (green-pumpkin).

 He threw a 6″ Basstrix Fat Minnow swimbait (blueback herring) in the mornings.

Main factor in his success – “Spotting some things that maybe other people missed, and staying far enough away to where I could catch those fish.”

Performance edge – “My Solar Bat sunglasses. If I couldn’t see what I was throwing at, I wouldn’t have been able to catch them.”

Guntersville a.k.a “Big G”
Winner – KVD – Kevin VanDam
Here is how he did it:

VanDam started day 2 with a spinnerbait on the shad-spawn bite, but there were a number of boats on his starting area.   

He said: “It just wasn’t happening, so I just kept moving. After a little while, I hit a spot and was able to catch three or four decent ones on a spinnerbait, and ended up with a limit.”
After that, it was upgrade time. He visited a few of his crankbait spots (but not the one he was saving). One that he “sort of snuck into” produced seven fish in seven casts. He then exited quickly and quietly.  

VanDam started day 3 with a spinnerbait again, out on a ledge, and never got a bite. Then he moved to another piece of structure and didn’t get bit where he expected to.

“They’d moved a couple hundred yards,” he said. After he contacted them again, he and his partner caught a “handful, and lost a few, and moved around to a couple of other places and just kind of scrounged them out.”

He noted: “One of the things that I think really helped me was my Biosonix. I was running it with an active shad pattern up into the day, and it seemed I could keep them on my spinnerbait all day long. The other guys said their shad were done at 10:00 or whatever, so I think the Biosonix was a big plus here.”

That was pretty much his day 3. He caught 19-10 – which put him 4th again, but just 1-11 behind Butcher – and his co-angler, Bryan Talmadge, won the amateur division.

Day 4 delivered a drastic change in conditions. Gone were the clouds and wind, and most of the field struggled with the morning bite. The sun and dead-still conditions ended the shad-spawn party almost before it started.

VanDam started slow too. He didn’t get bit on his first stop, then lost a few on his second stop. “They weren’t biting the bait real good,” he noted.  That’s when he picked up and headed to his cranking spot that he’d been saving.

Pattern Notes
VanDam caught all his fish on two baits – a 1/2-ounce 1/2-ounce Strike King Kevin VanDam Tournament Series spinnerbait, and a Series 5 Pro Model crankbait.

About his areas, he said: “I was fishing main-river ledges, main-lake points, and humps near the main lake. A lot of the water I was in was on the main river channel. The fish had spawned and pulled out to there. The areas had a mix of hydrilla and milfoil – the two together.

“I also fished some at the mouths of creeks. One of my best places was at the mouth of a creek where the fish were coming out to after spawning. That’s where the shad are, and that’s where the bass want to be – closer to the current.”

Technique Notes
About how he worked the spinnerbait, VanDam said: “I’d pretty much throw it up top (on the hump, ledge or point) and slow-roll it off the edge. When it got caught in the grass, I’d kind of rip it free. And I’d kind of have to shake the spinnerbait a little to get them to eat it. The main thing was to get it (ticking) the tops of the grass.”

With the crank, he took more of a quartering approach to the grass, meaning, if his boat was parallel to the grass, he’d cast ahead of the boat (toward the grass) at a 45-degree angle.

Photo: Strike King/Bass Pro Shops

VanDam’s crankbait was the Strike King Series 5 Tour Grade, which is a regular Series 5 with a high-test paint job (color not shown).

“I’d try to get it just in the (deep) edge of the grass and rip it free,” he said. “The Series 5 really runs about 10 to 12 feet (deep), but I was throwing it on 17-pound fluorocarbon to help rip it out of the grass, and make it run a little shallower.”

He added that most of his crankbait bites came in the 5- to 12-foot zone, and that the bite got a lot better when it was flat-calm and bright. Still, he switched between the two baits all 3 days.

“You could get them to react to that better (in those conditions), but I alternated both baits. I’d come across a school with a spinnerbait and throw it until I got no more bites, then I’d throw the crank and catch a few more.”

Winning Gear Notes 
 Spinnerbait gear: 6’10” medium-heavy Quantum Kevin VanDam spinnerbait rod, Quantum PT Tour Edition 1160 casting reel (6.2:1), 20-pound Bass Pro Shops XPS monofilament, 1/2-ounce Strike King Kevin VanDam Tournament Series spinnerbait (blue shad, double willow-leafs in various combinations of gold and silver).

 The spinnerbait is made by Strike King, but is available exclusively through Basspro.com. It comes with a Perfect Skirt and pre-rigged Mustad trailer hook – upgrades not found on the traditional KVD Pro Model spinnerbait.

This is a picture of the actual 1/2 ounce spinnerbait that KVD used during the final day of his victory.

 On why he threw the spinnerbait on mono, he said: “With fluorocarbon, there’s too much sensitivity for me, and the rod is so sensitive, that I end up not letting the fish get the bait as well. Mono also has a little more give, and I like a little bit of stretch there.”

 Crankbait gear: 7′ medium-heavy Quantum Tour Edition fiberglass cranking rod, Quantum Energy PT 750 casting reel (5.1:1), 17-pound Bass Pro Shops XPS fluorocarbon, Strike King Series 5 crankbait (shad color).

 He swapped out the stock hooks on the crank for No. 2 Mustad Extra Strong Ultra Point trebles.

 Performance edge – “It would be between my Biosonix unit and having a GPS that’s accurate. The Biosonix unit was a big key in keeping the shad active to where I could catch them all day long. I just have a lot of confidence in it. And the places they were on were so precise – to be able to go back to an area after you fish it, without a doubt, that was (critical). I’m not sponsored by Lowrance, but those units are very good. Pair that with a Biosonix and a good spinnerbait, and it’s pretty hard to beat.” 

For Video CLICK HERE

Felt good to do a little blogging, thanks for the recent subscribers (up to 32), they had not got much for their subscription to this point, but that should end because I intend to get on the water this weekend

Rich
RichLindgren.com 
Rich’s Bassin’ Forum
Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

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I am a Winner!

Even though I picked KVD to win in Super 6 and had him on my BASS Fantasy Fishing roster, it was my FLW picks that gave me a 16th over all at Lake Norman, which entitles me to a Free FLW T-Shirt   The guy that is running our group has been giving out prizes for winners in our group and I won that as well.  Does it really get any better then this? 

Yes it does!  Because I scored 40 points in Super 6, I won $5 from Mr. Veech!!!! 

Overall I am still hanging in the overall standing for BASS Fantasy at 23rd overall.

 PCT  RANK  NAME, GROUP  POINTS
99.9 23  Lakeville HellaBass, Gopher BASS 2835

I need to start thinking about who I am going to plug in at the #5 spot for the next major tournament……

I plan on doing some summaries of patterns and lure for the last two Elite Series tourneys on Clarks Hills & Guntersville, so look for those soon.  Also, thanks to email subscriber #29, they are joining fast & furiously these days.
Rich
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What does this have to do with Bass Fishing?

That is what you are probably asking yourself….
Well, now that my house is on the market, I will have more time for fishing and keeping new content on this Blog

So here is what I have been working on to get ready for market since I got back from Amistad.  So check it out, maybe you have some friends looking for a great house in Lakeville.  It has an extra deep finished & insulated garage that fits my 19′ bass boat with no problem & you can get your tow vehicle inside right next to it.

And it is located to 3 great bass fishing lakes, Marion, Crystal & Orchard and a stones throw from Prior.

If you really interested, check out the actual listing as well as the Virtual Tour!!!

Last night I actually spent time, digging out my boat, sorting & organizing my fishing stuff, felt good!

Wish me Luck….
Rich
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Monday Bass Fishing Randomness April 23rd, 2007

I think Monday Bass Fishing Randomness could be a regular feature….

Let’s start by congratulating Mike McClelland on running down Chris Lane on the final day at Clarks Hills Reservoir.  Sounds like Mike’s Jewel jig strikes again, to give him his second win in as many years.  Also, of note Derek Remitz aka the Wolverine or Next Big Thing turns in another solid Top 5 and anchors my fantasy team when the likes of Steve Kennedy & KVD let me down a little this week.  On the flip side, consistency of Skeet Reese and the late addition of Casey Ashley helped me maintain a 13th best overall in the nation, as well as close the point margin to #1

I have decided to leave my roster as is for Guntersville, my top 4 guys are & have been studs and I do not see any better options then Mr. Ashley for his $ value, plus he is supposed to be a damn good singer.

Team   Totals   Value
ANGLER HOMETOWN   RANK POINTS   MARKET LOCKED
VanDam, Kevin Kalamazoo, MI   4 398   16.6 15.7
Remitz, Derek Hemphill, TX   2 493   5.3 4.4
Kennedy, Steve Auburn, AL   3 425   9.6 10.0
Reese, Skeet Auburn, CA   1 575   16.5 15.3
Ashley, Casey Donalds, SC   30 195   4.8 4.4
Total Rating   52.8 49.8

On the flip, side my Super 6 has not been stellar this year, so here is my guys for Guntersville….

1 Kevin VanDam (edit) 1
2 Gerald Swindle (edit) 2
3 Steve Kennedy (edit) 3
4 Michael Iaconelli (edit) 4
5 Timmy Horton (edit) 5
6 Alton Jones (edit) 6

Hopefully these guys will help me run down Mr. Veech!

Let’s talk about some cool bass websites that I have found of late:
ToyotaFishing.com – follows the Toyota Tundra team on the tour, they have web video episodes that are pretty cool.  Scroggins, Hack, Wolak, Ike, KVD & More
BassZone.com – This site is top notch, live chat, blog & video updates during competition days at Elite Series events, plus video wraps ups with the winners and more!

Also, thanks to those that made my seminar on Saturday, many of you were very interested in the flipping snell knot, see this post!  Also, two more subscribers hopped on board over the weekend, thank you #26 & #27!

Rich
RichLindgren.com 
Rich’s Bassin’ Forum
Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

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Milestone

Believe or not, today I reached 25 subscribers, that have subscribed with their email on the upper left corner of the sidebar.  I do not know who it is or who any of you are, as I do not get to see your emails or IP’s.  So thanks to all of you.

Also, I will be doing a free seminar this Saturday morning at 10am at the Medina Ballroom on Bass Fishing & Tungsten.  This will be right before the actual MN Bass Federation Nation meeting, open to public and also free.  At 9am, Dale Richardson will be doing a seminar on boat performance.

myLot User Profile

Rich
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My Bad

I want to apologize for not having any posts of late, but work schedule and trying to get our house ready to sell has kept me swamped    Give me a holla, if you know of anyone looking for a home in Lakeville….
Hopefully once we are up on the market, I can get back to my routine, plus WI bass opener is only about 18 days away.  I was hoping to get to the river for some bass fishing in April sometime, but that is not looking good right now.  I feel bad for my boat, it keeps looking at me with a sad face wonder when we are going out this spring.

On another note, had a couple minutes to freshen up my main site (RichLindgren.com), got a new header on all the pages with some help from Rick over at AIG Outdoors, (Thanks, Rick), and also updated some pics and other info.  Let me know if you like the changes.

In case you missed, the Toyota Texas Bass Classic was this past weekend on Lake Fork, TX.  It was put on by the PAA, looked like a great event, did not get to watch much of it.  Check Bass Pundit, he had some time to write a few blurbs about it.

Rich
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Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

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Breaking Down Clear Lake Elite Series

Huddleston Swimbait in Rainbow TroutSwimbaits were a bigh part for almost all of the Top 12, much of that is probably due to the large bass and the hitch, which is a minnow that’s endemic to central California and looks similar to a golden shiner. It can reach a length of 14 inches.
Show available picture(s) for Lavinia exilicauda
There was a point during the first day of practice for the Clear Lake Bassmaster Elite Series when Steve Kennedy was convinced that California’s largest natural body of water harbored no bass under 4 pounds. He started out throwing a swimbait, and it took him awhile to catch anything that didn’t meet that standard.  He eventually discovered that 3s – and even 2s – did swim there, and he was forced to bring a couple in that class to the scales on day 1. But over the final 3 days, his average weigh-in fish went nearly 7 pounds.

The Alabamian caught 122-14 to set a new BASS total-weight record en route to his first Elite Series victory. He overtook 3-day leader Greg Gutierrez of California with a 32-10 stringer on the final day.  His total over the last 3 days was a preposterous 102-14. Had he skipped day 1 entirely, he still would have finished in 6th place in the greatest slugfest in tour-level tournament history.   Click here to view and awesome video compilation from BassZone.com

Below you will find a compilation of reports from BassZone.com, BassFan.com, Bassmaster.com and what I witnessed on the web & TV coverage.

Practice
The first day of practice was overcast with intermittent rain, and Kennedy had no trouble getting quality bites on a swimbait – a lure he used for the first time at the season opener at Amistad. He went through the Narrows, which divides the upper and lower portions of the lake, and quickly caught five that he estimated would weigh about 23 pounds.

In hindsight, he thinks that stringer probably went 28 to 30 pounds. His initial guesses were based more on length than girth, and just about every Clear Lake bass would be deemed obese by the people who put together those body-mass index charts. Their weight-to-length ratio might be higher than anywhere in the world.

He continued to get bites that day, and bent down his hook at 11:30 so he wouldn’t put anymore fish through the stress of being boated.  Wind that topped 30 mph at times showed up on the second practice day, so he stayed in the northern part of the lake near the launch at Lakeport and fished shallow tules and willows with a football-head jig.  Steve caught plenty of fish, but the north end’s quality did not match that of Day 1’s practice on the South end.

The wind laid down for the final practice day, and he went south again and ran all new water. He didn’t get a single bite on the 6-inch Basstrix swimbait that had been so productive 2 days before.  With similar conditions in the forecast, he determined that the jig would be his best bait for the first day of competition.

Days 1 and 2
> Day 1: 5, 20-00
> Day 2: 5, 29-13

Kennedy said the jig-in-vegetation pattern produced 60 or 70 bites on day 1, but the best five averaged just 4 pounds each. Again, he couldn’t get bitten on the swimbait.  He admitted, in the wake of a 61st-place finish at the California Delta, that he began to think he might be in a slump.  Kennedy was afraid that some might view last year was a fluke of sorts.

He caught another 20 pounds on the jig on day 2, then had a joyous reunion with his swimbait fish from the first practice day. He culled up to 29-13 and climbed 39 places to a tie for 12th with a 49-13 total.  Late in the day, he pulled up on a rocky point in the Narrows that dropped into 50 feet of water. It was flat on one side and steep on the other, and on the flat side he could see 15 fish that ranged from 5 to 10 pounds.

“I already had almost 30 pounds, so I didn’t want to catch a 5- or 6-pounder – that wouldn’t help me. I wanted one of the big ones.”  He’d been buying swimbaits, both large and small, throughout the western swing, and he began experimenting with some of the bigger models on that pod of huge fish. He tried an Osprey in two different colors, and a couple of brutes bumped it, but wouldn’t commit.

“I finally tied on the big Huddleston rainbow trout. I had a 9 swim up behind it and suck it down, but I missed her.” That was a bit of a downer, but the foundation was in place for a glorious day 3.

Photo: ESPN Outdoors

Steve Kennedy got help from BASS tournament director Trip Weldon (left) and emcee Keith Alan in holding up his tournament-best 40-07 limit on day 3.

Days 3 and 4
> Day 3: 5, 40-07
> Day 4: 32-10
> Total = 20, 122-14

Kennedy went straight to the rocky point to begin day 3, and those giants were still right where he’d left them the previous afternoon.  

He caught a 9-08 and an 8 on back-to-back casts. On his first seven heaves with the 5-ounce Huddleston, he boated seven fish that combined to weigh an estimated 35 pounds.

“Once I had (five of those) in the boat, I went out looking for more big fish. I put the trolling motor on high and covered tons of new water.”

He hit a few more points, then switched his focus to docks once the sun got high. He culled a 6-03 with a 6-06, and culled the 6-06 with another 8-pounder.

The 40-07 bag was easily the biggest of his career, and it cut the nearly 17-pound margin between him and 3-day leader Greg Gutierrez to just 1-10.

Naturally, he went back to the point in the Narrows to start day 4, but it had lost its magic. Between the boats that followed him, the helicopters circling overhead and the fact that he’d put a big whacking on the fish the previous day, it was all but barren. He caught a 3 1/2-pounder but, in accordance with California state regulations, had to release it because it was hooked outside the mouth.

He moved south to the next point and caught a 5-plus, but it was foul-hooked too. He didn’t put a fish in his livewell until his fourth stop, which was another point.  He switched to a the jig for a while and caught a few 2 1/2- to 3-pounders that left him one fish shy of a limit. He arrived on a dock in the south end, where he’d seen three fish of 5 pounds or better the day before, at about 10:30.

He threw the Huddleston down the deep-water face of the dock and caught a 9-pounder on his first cast, which ended up being his 5th fish and gave him the confidence to stick with the huge swimbait on the final day.

The next cast produced a bite that he said was considerably bigger than the 9. That fish pulled the split-ring off the hook that held it and was gone. He’d obtained larger split-rings from Bill Smith the night before and put them on most of his big swimbaits, but for some reason had neglected to make the switch on that one.

After another missed bite followed by a lull in the action, he moved to another spot where he’d found fish and caught some on the Basstrix that improved his bag. He then went back to the dock at 1:00 and caught a 5 and an 8 on his first two casts with the Huddleston.

“At that point I knew I’d broken the (4-day weight) record and I was pretty excited about that, but I didn’t think I’d won. Then a couple minutes later, I hooked a 10-pounder.”

But like his first fish of the day, that one was hooked on the outside of the head and had to be thrown back. With just a few minutes left to fish, he caught a 5-pounder to complete his 32 1/2-pound bag.  “What a roller-coaster that day was. I had the biggest fish I’d ever caught in my hands (the 10-pounder) and had to let it go, and I had one that was even bigger pull the split-ring off.

Gear Notes
1 – A Huddleston Swimbait in Rainbow Trout
Huddleston Swimbait in Rainbow Trout
Most of the big fish came on this lure. This was also the lure that Steve recovered from the bottom of Clear Lake after breaking off a 10 pounder.

2 – A BassTrix 6″ Fat Minnow in the Hitch Color
This lure was used when the bass did not respond to the BIG swimbait.

3 – A 3/4 Ounce PJ’s of Arkansas Football Jig with a Kinami Double Tail Grub
All 20 pounds the Steve brought to the stage on day one, were caught on the football jig.

> Big swimbait gear: 7’11” heavy-action Kistler Helium 2 LTX rod, Shimano Curado casting reel, 30-pound P-Line Fluoroclear line, 8″ Huddleston Deluxe swimbait (rainbow trout).

> Small swimbait gear: 7′ heavy-action Kistler Helium 2 LTA rod, same reel, 15-pound Seaguar fluorocarbon, 6″ Basstrix Paddle Tail swimbait (hitch).

> Jig gear: Same rod, reel and line as small swimbait, 3/4oz PJ’s Finesse Baits football jig (green-pumpkin), Kinami Double-Tail grub trailer (green-pumpkin).

While the other top finishers relied on swimbaits for their primary pattern, their back-up patterns varied greatly, though. While Kennedy relied on a football-head jig, his closest pursuers used everything from a small finesse worm to a big topwater bait.

2nd: Skeet Reese has fished well everywhere he’s gone over the past 6 months – he now has five consecutive Top 10s on his ledger, including three runner-up finishes. He has more than two decades worth of experience at Clear Lake, and he was a popular pick to win this event.

He would have won, too, had Kennedy not gone bonkers and weighed in more than 72 pounds over the last 2 days. Reese was the most consistent angler in the field over the tournament’s entirety. He was the only one who never weighed a bag under 25 pounds.

He employed a combination of a swimbait, a jerkbait and a shaky-head worm.

> Swimbait gear: 7’6″ medium-heavy Lamiglas XFT764 rod, Abu Garcia Revo STX casting reel, 20-pound prototype Berkley Trilene fluorocarbon line, 8″ Osprey swimbait (hitch).

> Jerkbait gear: 7′ medium-action Lamiglas SR705R Skeet Reese signature series rod, same reel, 15-pound prototype Trilene fluorocarbon, Lucky Craft Jerkbait (ghost minnow).

> Worm gear: 7’3″ medium-action Lamiglas Skeet Reese signature series dropshot rod, Mitchell 308Xe spinning reel, 1/4oz unnamed darthead jig, 7″ Berkley Power Shaky Worm (watermelon-red).

3rd: Greg Gutierrez, another Californian, had originally planned to fish shaky-heads around docks to catch 15 to 17 pounds, and then go try to flip up a couple of kickers.  “Then I saw where some giants had moved into a creek,” he said. “I thought if I could get in there early, I could catch those fish.”

Those fish (which he caught on a swimbait), some other big ones that were hanging around rockpiles and the ones that fell to the flipping stick later in the day allowed him to weigh the biggest bags on days 1 and 2. He had an 11-pound lead at the midway point.

He couldn’t sustain the momentum, though. He caught just 41-07 over the final 2 days, which was just a pound more than the charging Kennedy weighed on day 3 alone.  His swimbait fish had completely run out by the end of day 3, so he resorted to a Zara Spook to get his initial limit on the final day.

“My pre-spawn fish had morphed into spawners, and I wasn’t prepared for that. I was so locked into fishing offshore structure, and I just couldn’t make the changes I needed to in the time frame I had.”

> Swimbait gear: 7’11” heavy-action and medium-heavy Okuma Guide Select rods, unnamed casting reels, 20-pound Yo-Zuri Hybrid fluorocarbon/copolymer line, 8″ Osprey and 5 1/2″ California Swimbabes Baby “E” swimbaits.

> Jig gear: 7′ heavy-action Okuma Solaris rod, Okuma IDX 150 casting reel, 15-pound Yo-Zuri H2O fluorocarbon line, 3/4oz homemade football-head jig (black/brown), unnamed twin-tail trailer (purple/blue flake).

> Flipping gear: 7’6″ heavy-action Okuma EVX flipping stick, Okuma IDX 150 casting reel, 20-pound H2O fluorocarbon, 3/4oz Tru-Tungsten weight, 5/0 Gamakatsu EWG hook, Zoom Brush Hog (black/red).

> Spook gear: 7′ medium-heavy Okuma Solaris rod, Okuma VS casting reel, 15-pound Yo-Zuri Hybrid line, Zara Super Spook (clear with blue head).

Photo: ESPN Outdoors

A tip from Scott Rook put Gerald Swindle on his way to a Top-5 finish.

4th: Gerald Swindle caught a mediocre bag on day 1, but was solid as a rock the rest of the way. The key to his improvement was a bit of advice from 10th-place finisher Scott Rook.

“I was fishing swimbaits in the morning and then switching to a shaky-head, but Rook came by and tipped me off,” he said. “He told me the fish were suspended, and I should keep throwing (the swimbait) and not let up.

“After that, I put the worm up. I was done with him.”

> Swimbait gear: 7’4″ Quantum Finesse Flipping Gerald Swindle signature series rod, Quantum PT casting reel, 20-pound Spiderwire G-String line, 6″ Basstrix swimbait (hitch).

> Worm gear: 6’6″ Quantum spinning rod, Quantum GT 30 spinning reel, 10-pound G-String, 1/4oz unnamed jighead, 5-inch Zoom Finesse Worm (green-pumpkin).

Main factor in his success – “Persistence in staying on the dock pattern with the swimbait. It might take you all day to catch a big bag on it. If you get 30 to follow it and one to eat it, that’s fine.”

Performance edge – “The swimbait, absolutely.”


5th: John Murray spent the vast majority of his time on a spot that had been productive for him over the years. It’s a stretch of docks in the southern end that has a major breakline, and fish stage there in preparation for the spawn.

“It’s a place I’ve always fished over the years, and I fished it in the (Bassmaster Open) 2 years ago and caught them really good,” he said. “I was excited when I got there and nobody else was there.  He alternated between a swimbait and a finesse worm. One or the other was highly productive each day, but usually not both.

> Swimbait gear: 7’6″ medium-action Powell 765CB rod, Abu Garcia Revo STX casting reel, 17-pound prototype Berkley Trilene fluorocarbon line, 1/2oz jighead, 6″ Basstrix swimbait (rainbow trout).

> Worm gear: 7’3″ medium-action Powell 733 spinning rod, Daiwa Sol spinning reel, 3/32oz jighead, 5-inch Yamamoto Slim Senko (green-pumpkin).

Main factor in his success – “Really working over that one area that I had all to myself.”

And a quick summary of 6th through 12
Kelly Jordan (6th place, 102-10, Mineola, Texas)
Lures and patterns? “Pattern was fishing staging fish, trying to find the areas where they do their last little feed before they spawn. I’ve been throwing a swimbait and just hope to find an area where they are smoking.”

Biggest factor? “The swimbait is my predominant deal. Every fish I’ve weighed in but one was caught of a swimbait, a Basstrix.”

Paul Elias (7th place, 101-15, Laurel, Miss.)
Lures and patterns? “I’m fishing different than anybody else in the tournament. I’m crawling a lipless crankbait slow, slow, slow. “

Biggest factor? “Slow. And having patience.”

Peter Thliveros (8th, 99-4, Jacksonville, Fla.)
Lures and patterns? “I threw a Storm swimbait most of the week early. After that I slowed down and was throwing a Zoom super fluke. I was working it slow around boat docks, rocky banks.”

Biggest factor? “Slow. I was fishing leftovers, I think, fish that other people weren’t able to catch. All these prespawn fish that were getting ready to move up. That was the only way I could get any bites.”

Jared Lintner (9th place, 97-4, Arroyo Grande, Calif.)
Lures and patterns? “A shad rap to start off the morning, a Basstrix swimbait and an Osprey swim bait. I’ve got like four or five areas. This afternoon when the winds picked up a little bit, they started just biting them.”

Biggest factor? “As soon as we get this afternoon wind, they bite. If I don’t get wind, as soon as that surface clarity gets broken up, they bite.”

Scott Rook (10th place, 97-1, Little Rock, Ark.)
Lures and patterns? “I started out fishing on the banks. Swimbaits in between docks. They started piling up underneath the docks.”

Biggest factor? “If you hit the right (dock), you catch 20 pounds.”

Pete Ponds (11th place, 96-7, Madison, Miss.)
Lures and patterns? “I’m throwing an Osprey. The color meant a lot. A clear one or clear chartreuse. I’m sitting in one area that’s flowing into a little pocket and the fish are chasing the little hitch, the baitfish.”

Biggest factor? “Line size.”
Glenn Delong II (12th place, 80-9, Bellville, Ohio)
Lures and patterns? “I’m fishing a jig and a jerkbait. I’m actually fishing the Clear Lake Oaks, canal systems.”

Biggest factor? “Working the jig out all the way to the boat, instead of everybody else just throwing to the bank and not getting bit. All the bigger fish are out in deeper water.”

Rich
RichLindgren.com 
Rich’s Bassin’ Forum
Bass Fishing Tackle Blog


2nd Annual St. Jude’s Banquet Benefit

Hey all,

Here is a great event that helps an even greater cause.  This is a banquet that is a pre-cursor to the annual St. Jude Children’s Hospital annual Bass Fishing tournament that is held every year down on the river.  Many of us do not have the time to fish the tournament, but most of can get away for one night.  I went to the event last year and it was great.  Most if us are not fishing yet, so this is a great way to get our and talk with a bunch of other people about fishing and win some great prizes.  Last year, everyone that went left with a prize!

Hope to see several of you there!
Rich
RichLindgren.com 
Rich’s Bassin’ Forum
Bass Fishing Tackle Blog

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