MN’s Best Jr. Bass Anglers to Take the Water


BASS Federation Nation – Minnesota
Minnesota’s Bass Federation Nation Youth Tournament of Champions Set For June 30th

(Minneapolis, MN)… Minnesota’s best junior bass anglers are set to compete on Lake Washington near Mankato, MN, the site of the Minnesota Bass Federation Nation’s Youth Tournament of Champions.

The Minnesota’s Bass Federation Nation Youth Tournament of Champions (TOC) is an event where competitors qualify from youth clubs all over the state to vie for top honors and a birth to the B.A.S.S. Junior World Championships (JWC). On June 30th, 2006, two young anglers will punch their ticket to the Junior World Championships to be held in February on Lake Logan Martin in Alabama. Along with the earning a birth in the JWC, each winner receives plaques and product packages from every sponsor.

The tournament headquarters and weigh-in site will be Westwood Marina and Grill on the shores of Lake Washington. Weigh-in and awards ceremony will begin at 2:00pm. This is the 5th year that Minnesota will crown Junior State champions. Forest Lake was the site of Minnesota?s inaugural youth championship in 2002. This is the second time it will be held on Lake Washington.

The 53 contenders in this event are split into two age groups, 11-14 and 15-18. They fish two anglers in a boat captained by an adult federation member. The contestants qualified from their respective junior clubs. Minnesota has seven Junior Bassmasters clubs ranging from as far south as Fairmont and as far north as Bemidji.

Several state champions from previous years are trying to repeat and make a return visit to the Bassmasters Junior World Championship (JWC). Last year’s State Champion, Don Brennhofer, in the 15-18 age group, is from nearby Belle Plaine, MN. He is anxious to return to the JWC. This is no easy task, as several other strong youth anglers have the same goal. Dave Saterbak, Maple Grove, who represented Minnesota at the JWC in 2005 in the 11-14 age group, is now moving to the 15-18 group and has his mind set on winning again.

“The great thing about the Minnesota Junior State Championship is that none of the kids walk away empty handed. Our junior sponsors have really stepped up big for the kids,” says Youth Director Todd Saterbak. “We really appreciate the support we get from Berkley, MG Lures, All-Terrain Tackle and Mojo Rods.” If you are interested in seeing Minnesota’s best young anglers, Lake Washington is the place to be Friday, June 30th.  Find more info @ www.MNBF.org

About Minnesota Bass Federation:
The Minnesota BASS Federation is committed to promoting fishing for all ages and skill levels. We offer our assistance to the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources to improve fishing opportunities, habitat, water quality & preservation of public access to Minnesota?s waterways. We work with state and local government, lake associations and other outdoor organizations to protect our fishing heritage. Through our youth initiatives, we provide education and on the water experiences to foster youth involvement and sustained interest in our sport.  www.MNBF.org

Get out there and check out the weigh in this Friday!

Rich
www.richlindgren.com
basstournament.blogspot.com

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Top 5 Patterns for Champlain FLW Finale

 

Prior to practice for the Champlain FLW Tour, Tracy Adams didn’t know whether he’d focus on largemouths or smallmouths. Tournaments at the long lake on the New York/Vermont border can be won with either, so it often pays to keep an open mind in regard to species.

He eventually settled on the green fish, and the decision produced the first tour-level win of his career. He went into day 4 with a 2-ounce deficit to leader Dion Hibdon, but caught the biggest bag on the final day and won by 1-06.  Here’s how the Top 5 got their fish.

Practice
Adams, a 32-year-old from North Carolina, had practiced in the Ticonderoga area of the lake, about 70 miles south of the launch.  This time, the big largemouths that reside down there were in a biting mode. Dion Hibdon, who led the first 3 days, and Curt Lytle, another Top 10 finisher, were also onto them.

The thickest concentration he located was in a milfoil bed that was 7 to 9 feet deep and 150 yards off shore. He found two other similar beds, but those got muddied up by the wind and were of no use when the tournament started.   He also found some fish in willow bushes along the bank, and those would be crucial on day 4.

Competition
Adams milfoil bed was extremely productive on the first 2 days. His fish bit throughout the day, and he tried to manage them as best he could so the spot would continue to be fruitful.  The hefty largemouth were suckers for a Brush Hog (green-pumpkin).

His day 1 limit was nothing extraordinary, and it landed him in 33rd place. As always at Champlain though, a few ounces here and there lead to big moves in the standings, and he was the epitome of that phenomenon on day 2.  His second-day bag was just 1-03 bigger, but it moved him up 26 places. He made the cut in 7th.

The milfoil fish continued to bite on day 3 – but only until about 9:30. The wind had changed directions and began blowing from the north instead of the south, and that apparently triggered the shutdown.

Weights had been zeroed after day 2, and his 16-12 bag put him 2 ounces behind Hibdon, who’d also experienced a downturn with his own fish in a nearby grassbed. The Missourian’s stringer was more than 3 pounds lighter than the ones he’d brought in on the first 2 days.

The milfoil fish bit early again on day 4. But when they turned off again, Adams only had about 11 pounds in his well. He knew he needed a lot more, and it was time to make a move.  He went to the bank and began flipping a 3/8oz jig into the willow bushes that had harbored some fish in practice. They were still there, and they were of sufficient quality to win.

He ended up combining four willow fish with one he’d caught in the grass, and together they equaled his best bag of the tournament. He quit fishing at about 1:00 to take some of the stress out of the long ride back to the launch.  

Pattern Notes
> The milfoil fish were feasting on bluegill and yellow perch. “Like Dion said, just about every one of them had a tail sticking out of their mouth.
> He worked the Brush Hog a little slower than under normal conditions. “If you just threw it in there and hopped it right back, they wouldn’t bite. You had to shake it a little bit gently on the bottom.
> When he moved to the willows on day 4, he flipped the jig as far back into the shade as he could.

Winning Gear Notes
> Brush Hog gear: 7′ heavy-action G. Loomis 844IMX rod, Shimano Chronarch casting reel, 20# Gamma High Performance Copolymer Line, line (green), 3/8oz Tru-Tungsten Sinker, 5/0 Gamakatsu Worm Hook, Zoom Brush Hog  (green-pumpkin).
> Jig gear: Same rod and reel, 25# Gamma High Performance Copolymer Line, 3/8oz Hotshot Lures jig (black/blue), Zoom Super Chunk (blue sapphire).
> Main factor in his success
– “Definitely going to the grass bed, staying with it and beating the fish out of there, and then moving to the willows on the fourth day when it gave out on me.”  


2nd: Kevin Vida
is a threat to win at any venue that features big numbers of smallmouth, and he came up just 1-06 short of his first tour victory here.  His preferred pattern was sight-fishing for bedding bronzebacks, but that was difficult on the middle 2 days due to clouds and wind. But even when he couldn’t see the fish, he could still catch them because he had their locations pinpointed.

His bags consisted of 18 smallmouths and two largemouths. He caught both largemouths on day 3 (they were fish on a flat that he’d seen earlier). Vida relied on two baits – a Mizmo Bad Boy Tube & a Berkley Power Jerk Shad .

> Tube gear: 6’6″ medium-heavy Fenwick Techna AV rod, Abu-Garcia Cardinal 503ALB spinning reel, 10-pound Berkley  Vanish fluorocarbon line, 1/4-ounce Bite-Me jighead, Mizmo Bad Boy Tube (green-pumpkin surprise).
> Jerkshad gear: 7′ medium-heavy Fenwick Techna AV rod, Abu Garcia Torno 3006 casting reel (6.3:1 gear ratio), 17-pound Berkley Vanish fluorocarbon, 3/0 Gamakatsu Hook , Berkley Power Jerk Shad (pearl).
> Main factor in his success – “My new Solar Bat Sunglasses – I have to give them credit. I got a new pair with high-contrast yellow lenses, and they opened up a whole new world for sight-fishing. Even on cloudy days, I could find fish. It’s an amazing lens.”

3rd: Dion Hibdon’s plan for this tournament has been well-chronicled: He came in 75h in the points and wanted to move into the Top 48, which would give him his first berth in the FLW Tour Championship (FLWTC) since 2003.

Along with his father Guido and Northeastern Stren roommate Ricky Doyle (Champlain local), he determined that his only chance to achieve that goal was to catch some big largemouths from the Ticonderoga area at the southern end of the lake.  He fished a jig in milfoil beds and whacked the biggest sacks of the first 2 days. His bite slowed when the north wind arrived on day 3, but he’d already accomplished what he set out to do.  The bucketmouths in the milfoil were eating bluegill, and he threw big jigs that mimicked that forage.  (Hibdon ended up 43rd in the points).

> Jig gear: 7’6″ heavy-action American Rodsmiths flipping stick, Shimano casting reel (6.3:1 gear ratio), 20-pound Seagaur Carbon Pro Flourocarbon line, 5/8oz Luck E Strike or 1-ounce Terry Odom jig (bluegill), Luck E Strike Guido Bug trailer (green-pumpkin).
> Main factor in his success – “I fished for big fish with a big bait and I never gave up on it.”

4th: Scott Martin has made three straight Top 10s here and won in 2004. He loves to catch Champlain’s smallmouths and tries to avoid largemouths entirely – unless he finds a spawner that might help him.

He sight-fished for bronzebacks the majority of the tournament and caught them on a Berkley Power Tube. His first 2 days went precisely according to plan, and he went into day 3 with considerable confidence that he’d gain his second straight victory here.

He stumbled a bit on day 3 though, and attributed it primarily to “bad note-taking.” He hadn’t accurately kept track of which bedding fish had been caught by himself or someone else, and wasted some time running to a few that were no longer there.

> Sight-fishing gear: 6’10” Kistler Magnesium tube rod, Abu Garcia Cardinal 803 spinning reel, 8-pound Berkley Vanish fluorocarbon line, 1/4- or 1/8oz Matzuo rattling jighead, 4″ Berkley Power Tube (watermelon seed).

> He switched to a 7’6″ medium-heavy Kistler Helium rod when the wind was at its worst. “It was made special for me 2 years ago, but now it’s a production rod.”

> Like Vida, he said his sunglasses made a big difference. His were made by Panoptx. “They have a lens that’s called copper, and it really enhances your sight-fishing ability. The clarity is that much better.”

> Main factor in his success – “A 55-gallon drum of confidence and a plan – a plan for fishing and a plan with God.”

5th: Shinichi Fukae of Texas made his third Top 10 on the strength of finesse worms. He spent a little bit of his practice time pursuing largemouths, but the bulk of it was devoted to bronzebacks.

He fished for smallmouths exclusively during the tournament and primarily targeted humps. He didn’t sight-fish.

> Worm gear: 6’6″ medium-light St. Croix Legend Elite Spinning Rod, Shimano Stella C3000 spinning reel, 6-pound Duel (Yo-Zuri) fluorocarbon line, 3/32- or 1/8oz unnamed jighead, 5″ Gary Yamamoto Cut Tail or Shad-Shaped Worm (both green-pumpkin).
> Main factor in his success – “It’s a lake I like a lot and I was able to use my finesse skills.”

It will be interesting to see how the weights compare when the Bassmaters Elite Series visits Champlain in a few weeks.

Rich
www.richlindgren.com
basstournament.blogspot.com

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Catch “Big Cash” – Tagged Bass Challenge

Early Times has launced a Tagged Bass Challenge!  All you have to do, is catch a tagged bass out of these Participating States and Lakes and enter it in the month of July.  Sounds like a sweet deel, too bad I will not be anywhere near any of these lakes until October.   Maybe I will lobby Leinenkeugels to do something like this in the Upper Midwest!

Find Contest description and The Official Rules  at www.earlytimes.com

Good luck to all of you that have access to these lakes!

Rich
www.richlindgren.com
basstournament.blogspot.com

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Bluegrass Brawl Patterns

Deep Stuff Dominated at the recent Kentucky Lake Bassmaster Elite Series was the first event of the season where deep patterns dominated. The majority of the top finishers spent the entire tournament working the vast system of main-lake river ledges.  It was spot-on-spot fishing that demanded exacting presentations and a knack for timing.

Here’s how the winner, Morizo Shimizu, and the rest of the Top 5 caught their fish.

Winner: Morizo Shimizu fished shallow on day 1, shallow and deep on day 2, mostly deep on day 3, then only deep on day 4. His deep baits were a Texas-rigged worm and 3/4-ounce jig. He threw them on river ledges that had brush or were near brush.  When he fished shallow, he threw a spinnerbait and jig, and also flipped.
> Jig gear: 7′ medium-heavy Evergreen rod, Shimano casting reel (available in Japan only), 14-pound Sunline Shooter Defier Monofilament, local unnamed football-head jig (brown), Bait Breath Bysclaw trailer (green-pumpkin).
> The Bysclaw trailer is a crawfish-style plastic that he designed.
> His Texas-rig consisted of an unnamed 9 1/2″ curlytail worm (cranapple color) with a 5/0 Gamakatsu Worm Hook and 1/2-ounce weight.
> Main factor in his success – “After I came here from Japan, this is my 4th year fishing the big tour. The 4 years gave me lots of experience. I learned a lot. That brought me this win.”

2nd: Kevin Wirth, Kentucky local, who carried a 3-pound lead into day 3 but ultimately, fell short of Shimizu, targeted river-channel ledges and bars in 19 to 20 feet of water.
> Worm gear: 7′ medium-heavy Airrus Casting Rod, unnamed casting reel, 12-pound Berkley Vanish fluorocarbon, 3/8oz weight, 4/0 Gamakatsu Round Bend w/  Berkley 10″ Power Worm (blue-flake).
> Jig gear: 7′ heavy-action Airrus rod, same reel, 17-pound Vanish, 3/4-ounce unnamed football-head jig, generic double-tail grub trailer (green-pumpkin).
> Hair jig gear: 6’8″ heavy-action Airrus Rod, same reel, 12-pound Vanish, 1/2-ounce hair jig (white, no longer in production).
> Crankbait gear: 7′ Airrus cranking rod, same reel, 10-pound Vanish, Rapala DT16 (white with greenish back).
> Main factor in his success – “Home water had a lot to do with it. I used my knowledge a lot – just knowing when the fish got in a pattern and what the fish were actually doing, and being able to keep up with it.”

3rd: Kevin VanDam also fished the drops and ledges, where he worked a crankbait and jig. But he mixed up his structure to include some points and creeks. On day 4, wind forced him into a temporary shallow move, where he caught a limit and culled a few times on a lipless crank. “I fished a lot of different spots – some creeks, points, drops, shelves – all summer-type structure,” he said. “I fished a little bit of everything.  “He noted he used the crankbait as a search bait. Once he got a bite, he’d slow down and pick the area apart with slower stuff. 
 > Jig gear: 7’4″ heavy-action Quantum PT Series rod, Quantum Energy 1160 casting reel (6.3:1), 17-pound Bass Pro Shops XPS fluorocarbon, 1/2oz Strike King Denny Brauer Premier Pro-Model Jig  (brown and Texas-craw), Strike King 3X – Denny Brauer Chunk  trailer (green-pumpkin).
> Crankbait gear: 7′ medium-action fiberglass Quantum Tour Edition rod, Quantum Energy 750 casting reel (5:1), 12-pound XPS fluorocarbon, Strike King Series 6 Crankbait (powder-blue back/chartreuse belly).
> Main factor in his success – “Persistence. I just really worked the spots thoroughly and worked a lot of places until I hit them.”

4th: Skeet Reese worked a worm out deep, but he was the only one of the Top 5 who dropshotted. Four of his five fish every day came on a dropshot, he said. “I was fishing a new Berkley Drop Shot Power Worm, in oxblood color. “And I caught my biggest fish each day on a 10″ Power Worm.  He said his tournament “boiled down to two spots. That was pretty much where I caught all my fish the last 3 days. If I’d known what kind of fish were there, I’d have done a heck of a lot better than I did. On day 1, I only caught 12 pounds and I was scrambling around all day.” About his spots, he said: “I was fishing outside ledges, and 12 to 20 feet of water seemed to be the best.”

> Dropshot gear: 7’3″ medium-action Lamiglas SR743 Dropshot Special rod, unnamed spinning reel, 8-pound Vanish, 3/16-ounce tungsten weight, 1/0 straight-shank worm hook, Berkley Drop Shot Power Worm (oxblood)
> Lamiglas has had a Dropshot Special rod for a few years, but his was a new prototype. “It’s 7’3″, but the final version might be 7’4″,” he said. “It’s a longer rod with pretty moderate action. The first half of the rod is fairly soft with a lot of flex, but you’ve got a great feel of the bait, and when you go to set the hook, there’s plenty there to drill them.”
> Anglers mostly Texas-rigged their worms this week. “I guarantee more people are going to be dropshotting after what they saw this week,” he noted.
> Texas-rig gear: 7’6″ medium-heavy Lamiglas 764 rod, unnamed casting reel, 14-pound Vanish, 5/0 hook, 3/8oz Tru-Tungsten weight, 10″ Power Worm (green-pumpkin).
> Main factor in his success – “I think for me it was scaling down and fishing the smaller bait. These fish have been extremely heavily pressured. In the areas I fished, the smaller baits seemed to produce better than the bigger baits.”

5th: John Crews cranked and jigged the ledges. About his spots, he said: “Everything had to be close to deep water. Everything I was fishing was within a cast of 25 to 30 feet of water. “I caught fish in a lot of different depths, but the majority were in 12 to 20 feet.”

> Jig gear: 6’10” medium-heavy Shimano Crucial Casting Rods, Shimano Chronarch Super Free 100MG Reel, 14-pound Berkley Vanish Transition Fluorocarbon Line, 5/8oz Spro prototype “football-head-like” jig with a peanut-butter-and-jelly skirt, twintail grub trailer (green-pumpkin).
> He said the Transition Fluorocarbon Line was key for two reasons. One, it allowed him to feel his way along the bottom. “I could feel every little rock and pebble, and I could feel it coming up to a limb. When that happened, I knew not to pull back – I worked it over the limb.” The other bonus came above the water. Transition turns to hi-vis when out of the water. “I had a couple of bites on slack line, and I saw the line jump and set the hook.”
> Crankbait gear: 7’6″ medium-action Shimano cranking rod, Shimano Chronarch casting reel (5:1), 10-pound Berkley Sensation line, Norman DD22 crankbait (shad).
> Main factor in his success – “I’d say that I focused on one section of the lake and tried to find every good deep spot in that section. The section was about 15 to 20 miles. You had to bounce around from spot to spot to find feeding fish. Once you caught one, most of the time you could catch more there.”

Somehow Rojas and his Bronzeye Frog did not make the Top 12 this week, but he did finish 27th and gained on IKE for AOY Race.

Rich
www.richlindgren.com
basstournament.blogspot.com

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Lake Marion – Club Tournament #4 – June 18, 2006

What a difference a day can make!!!  Crystal Lake was a bass bonanza and Marion was tougher than I have ever seen it.  The day started with light winds and bright blue skies.  After making about 10 casts with my carolina rigged Baby Brush Hog on my #1 deep hard bottom spot with a tap, I knew it was going to be a tough day.  It ended up being tougher than I could imagine.  I shortly there after lost a Carolina Rig & a Jig Worm to some northerns.  I covered the area with a DT6 as well, nothing.

With no additional action, we moved to another area with a nice inside turn on a weedline.  After a few minutes with nothing, I moved up on to the flat and threw a bluegill colored SWL Spinnerbait and brown/purple Swim Jig with no action.  My partner Dave tried a Bluegill Swim Blade with no takers.  We moved back out to the turn and I got a good bite, the rod loaded up nice and somehow the fish just came off.  It felt very good, probably a bass, could have been a pike.  I then tried a drop shot in the turn and caught a 10″ bass.  I started to follow the weedline down and pulled a nice 2lb fish out of a coontail clump on a texas rigged Fork Special Baby Ring Fry.  I dropped a buoy as I landed the fish.  We seined this area for about 15 minutes with no additional bites.  We worked this weedline all the way to the original starting area, caught one dink on a Parrot DT6.  I start working my starting area with a drop shot and quickly lose it to a pike.  I then picked up a another nice keeper on a Red Shad Yum Ribbontail Jig Worm and then a few casts later a northern ate that as well.  We continued working this area.  I tried a 4″ chompers worm, drop shot 3″ Fluke, 5″ Reaction Innovations Flirt Worm , mojo, and just about everything else with no bites.

I headed to the East side of the main lake to try some docks, fished about 15 docks without a tap.  I then dragged a carolina rig across a hard to soft bottom transition area, nothing!  I then worked a weed point and turn in the same area with no bites, my partner said he got slammed on his senko, but came up empty.  We then headed into a shallow area with weedy docks, pads and weed mats.  I caught a short fish under a dock, a couple more shorts out of the weed hole.  I could see some keeper fish cruising up in the sand, but could not get any cooperation at all.  We headed back out to my #1 spot hoping for the fish to turn on and tried a variety of lures without any bites again.  We hopped around to a few other weedlines and got no more fish and time ran out.  What a brutal day of fishing.   I think it has been about 6 years since I did not catch my limit in a MN tournament, ouch!  Ryan in our club, was the only guy to get his limit, 10.1lbs fishing shallow around bluegill beds with a Ring Fry.  One one guy had 4 fish and everyone else had between 0 and 2 fish, my total was 2 fish for 4.1 and that landed me in 6th out of 16 anglers.  I think prior knowledge of the lake hurt me, because I kept thinking those deep fish would bite.  Had I had no previous experience, I would have most likely junked fish my way around the visible areas and done better.

See Tourney Results

Rich
www.richlindgren.com
basstournament.blogspot.com

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Crystal Lake – Club Tournament #3 – June 17th, 2006

Crystal Lake ended being a great club tournament, both for numbers and quality of fish.  It started out a little slow for me, there were two local boats on the most prominent spot on the lake, they launched at 5am and 5:30am respectively.  3 of our 8 boats planned to start there; Crystal is only a 250 acre lake.  There was boat on each of the two prime spot on the spot areas.  We sat between them and watched both boats catch several nice fish.  I only managed one 35” musky on my bluegill Reaction Innovations Vixen topwater, but my partner did catch two quality keepers on a watermelon red flake Baby Brush Hog.  I talked to one guy and he estimated between the two boats they landed 15-20 bass before we got there.

 

So I went on the end of the underwater point and started cranking a Parrot DT6, finally a nice keeper in the boat, probably just under 4lbs.  My partner tried his pink Husky Jerk but got no bites.  As we followed the point around I switched back and forth between the Parrot DT6 and a Hot Mustard DT6.  As I hit the inside turn I got another nice fish over 3lb on the Hot Mustard.

 

There was so much pressure on that point that I decided to try some docks.  The first stretch of docks produced nothing as I alternated between a weightless Watermelon Candy Ring Fry and a 3/8oz Lake Fork Mega-Weight Jig (Brown/Blk).  So we hopped across the lake and I got one around 4lbs on the LFT Ring Fry.  We fished this stretch for a long ways, I missed on a Jig that pulled my skirt down and my trailer off and somehow I did not hook it.  I saw the fish afterwards as my boat drifted by, it was probably 2-3lbs.  I tried to circle back, but the bass would not cooperate.  A few docks later one stole my ring fry, but again would not bite on the follow-up casts.  We started entering to an area that had both pads and docks.  This is where I caught a 4.5lb fish on my Bronzeye in practice.  I caught one about 13.5” on the Bronzeye Frog and he absolutely engulfed it.  This fish was kind of small, but it made 4 bass in the well.  3 docks later I got a 3.5lb fish on a Fork Secret Ring Fry which rounded out my limit.

 

After getting no more action on this bank, we made out way back out onto the hard bottom point and I caught two more on a Carolina Rigged Watermelon Candy Baby Brush Hog.  The first fish was about 2lb and culled out my small fish and then the next one was over 3lbs and got rid of the 2lb fish.  We stayed out there for quite awhile hoping that we each would pick up some more fish.  After about 45 minutes without a bite, we headed back to a small boat channel that produced well in practice.

 

My partner John ran the boat back in this area, so he would have the best opportunity to finish out his limit.  We got nothing all the way around on the docks.  We finally got to the “Magic Tree” and John got his 3rd keeper on his Baby Brush Hog.  I threw back in there with my Jig and had one take off with and somehow I missed it as it pulled down the skirt and trailer.  I went back to holding the boat and letting John cast into the tree.  After about 5 minutes he broke off both of his worm rigs, so I casted in there while he was retying and got one around 4lbs on my Ring Fry.  We both continued to cast and I got two more nice fish that I could not use to cull and time ran out as we only had time to make a few casts into the pads by the landing.

 

I ended up with 17.7 lbs for 5 fish and that was good enough for first place.  The next closest guy had 17.2 lbs and he camped out on the end of the deep point all day.  3rd place was 16.8 lbs, he caught all his fish on a weightless ring fry in the pads and he anchored is bag with a 5.1 lb bass that was big fish.  All in all, it was a good day.  I only missed a couple bites, but I do not feel they hurt my weight.  I cut the lead to first place down to a single pound going into Sunday’s tournament on Marion which is just down the road.

 

See full standings.
Rich
www.richlindgren.com
basstournament.blogspot.com

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Crystal Lake & Lake Marion Club Tournament Preview

Well after this weekend, we will be half way through the club season and our seeding for the Match Tournament will be finalized.  I feel pretty good about these lakes, I have been on both many times before, so I feel once I get a feel for what the fish are doing I can react accordingly.  I will be starting on deeper spots on both lakes in the morning.  I may try a topwater, but probably will start out with a crankbait or carolina rig if the topwater does not get any action within 5 minutes.  I think the winning weight will be 12-13lbs if tough bite or if the bite is on at all it may take 17+ lbs on either or both Crystal & Marion.  These are big fish lakes!  I will be somewhat disappointed if I do not crack 15lbs on these two lakes, but hey that is why we fish the tournaments. 

Crystal I am likely to do a little more run & gun approach, especially if I can get some solid 3 lbs fish in the boat early, I have a lot of small areas that have potential for kicker fish.  It will probably a mixture of deep & shallow structure and cover.  The Bronzeye Frog could be a solid way to get a kicker fish on Crystal.  If the guys in club see me running around on Marion, I am either really struggling (junk fishing to fill a limit) or really slaying them (hunting for a kicker).  I may just sneak out on Marion for a couple hours this evening to check a couple deep spots that I did not get to on my one prefishing day.  I may get a blog in tonight, if there is any breaking news from my mini-practice session.

Check back Monday for Results!

Rich
www.richlindgren.com
basstournament.blogspot.com

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How to Swing a Bass into the Boat…

After fishing with a couple of new members in my bass club this year, it reminded me of a simple thing that will save some of you a lot of headaches.  It seems simple, but there really is an art to swinging fish into the boat.  My partner was doing it all wrong, reeling down to about 12” of line and then trying to lift the fish into the boat.  I warned him not to do that and that he is going to snap his rod tip.  Sure enough the next time he went out he busted the tip of his Shimano Spinning Rod.

 

So here are the basic principals:

  1. When you are lifting a fish leave about a 4-6’ of line out.  This lets the line and rod work together, plus when you lift the fish will swing right to your waste.  Only bad things happen when reeling right down to the fish.
    1. Short line puts unnecessary stress on the tip of the rods; this severely shortens the life of your rods by snapping tips off.
    2. The short amount of line focuses the stress on a short section of line, which can lead to line breaking or straightening off hooks, plus it gives the fish a much better chance to throw the hook or tear out of its mouth.
  2. Uses the fished momentum, when you have a fish coming just lift and swing.  Never try to dead lift the fish when it’s just lying next to the boat.  Its basic physics!
  3. Never try to swing too large a fish for your equipment.  If you are using 8lb line on a spinning rod, you probably should net or lip anything over 2lbs.  If you are fishing a frog on 65lb Braid with a flippin’ stick, you can probably handle swinging a 4-5lb bucket mouth in.
  4. Once this fish is in the boat, handle with care, do not let is bounce all over the floor of the boat.  Swing it to where you can quickly grab it and then handle the fish down in the center area of the boat.  If you do drop the fish, it will be less likely to flop out of the boat, like it would if it was bouncing up on the deck area of the boat.  I am sure you have all seen Jim Bitter’s Classic debacle and I just witnessed my non-boater drop a 3lb fish back into the lake up on Le Homme Deu, which probably cost him a couple hundred bucks.

So if you are going to swing your fish follow these guidelines and land more fish and save your equipment.  It just takes a little practice and you can swing them in like the pros.  But remember, netting a fish is almost always a more reliable way to land a fish in a tournament.

Rich
www.richlindgren.com
basstournament.blogspot.com

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Lake Marion – Practice Day – June 11th, 2006

My partner Dave and I arrived at the landing at 6am and fished until about 1:30pm.  It was a mostly overcast day with little breeze.  The wind did pick up right before we left and the sun started to shine.  We started on a small inside weed turn on the main lake, I lost a northern on a DT6 Parrot, no bites on jig worms or mojo rigs.  There was a lot of surface activity up on the flat so I tied on a Baby Bass Sammy and moved up on top.  I did not get any takers but Dave caught a nice 2.75lb bass on a Bluegill Gambler Swim Blade.  We went back out to the edge and had a few sunfish taps, but that was about it. 

We then went out to my favorite hard bottom spot.  I got one close to 4lbs on a Carolina Rigged Green Pumpkin Baby Ring Fry on my 2nd or 3rd cast.  I pulled on another one that felt like a solid fish a few casts later and Dave doubled his rod over using a mojo rigged Ring Fry, but the fish dogged him in a coontail clump.  We each picked up one more fish on jig worms and then I had a good fish on a DT6, but it dogged me in some coontail as well.  We decided to get out of there and check some other areas.

We tried a few weed turns and points, we each caught a few fish, but it was slow.  After that we went over to the shallower side if the lake.  We caught several small bass on a brown/purple Swim Jig, Bronzeye Frog, & 1 on my Sammy.  I then decided to go under the bridge to the west side of 35W.  I had never been over there in all the times on the lake.  I was actually deeper in areas and goes back farther then I thought it did.  I believe there are fish that live back there all summer long.  We idled around back there and fished a couple stretches of slop.  On the 2nd stop, I caught a 4.5lb beauty on my Natural Red Bronzeye Frog and then about 10 casts later I had one in the same size class roll over the top of it, but miss it.  That was about it for the action back there and it was time to head home for a fish fry at my parents.

Tight Lines,
Rich
www.richlindgren.com
basstournament.blogspot.com

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Crystal Lake – Practice Day – June 10th, 2006

My partner John & I fished from 6am – noon.  It was a cloudy and windy morning, air temps were in the low 60’s.  Since I have a pretty solid knowledge of the shallow cover in the lake, we decided to focus on deep water.  Although I had just bought a new frog rod from Fleet Farm and some new Bronzeyes from Sportsman’s Warehouse, so I wanted to go play with that before we left

We started on a hard bottom point area and I quickly caught a 2lb fish on the inside turn where it connects with the main weedline in about 8ft of water.  That fish came on a mojo rigged green pumpkin Baby Ring Fry.  Shortly after that I had a very nice fish on, that I brought to the surface and he shook free, no need to catch them during practice.  So since the fish were there I tried to keep the boat moving, but I wanted to fish some more of the point to see where the fish were positioned and what kind of rocks and weeds were there.  John caught one and lost one on a pink backed Rapala Husky Jerk .  I then caught 3 fish over 3lbs and lost 1 on a Parrot DT6, only fish really ate the bait, the other two were hooked on the outside of the mouth.  That leaves me to believe my color selection is probably a little off.  I tried a Grn Olive Shiner color and did not catch anything on that, but I was switching back to the Parrot and not catch them anymore either.  We hopped around a few other new areas that I had not previously fished and John caught one on Senko and brought a 2lb to the surface on a SWL Spinnerbait(Chart/white double willow). 

We then decided to probe the shallows a bit.  I had a little 12″ bass try to pull down my Natural Red Bronzeye Frog.  I then started tossing in under some docks and on my 3rd dock a 4+ lb bass crushed it and swiftly landed him with my new 7’10” rod that I had bought, spooled with Power Pro Braided Line.  About 5 casts later I had a blow up that I pulled away from, a little rusty on my frog fishing.  I threw back in there with a Fork Special Ring Fry and pulled the fish up where I could see it, minimum 3lb, I decided not to set and just pull it away from the fish.  I caught one more small keeper out of the pads on the frog and another 2.5lb under a dock, i just could not help from setting, too much fun.  It is amazing the leverage you get with a almost 8ft rod on a long hook set

Then it was time to hit some graduation parties   All in all, I would have had a solid 16-17lbs without beating on any spots.  My partner managed 2 or 3 nice fish and lost a couple more that we saw.  Hopefully the bite will be decent next Saturday, this lake can shutdown sometimes.

Tight Lines,
Rich
www.richlindgren.com
basstournament.blogspot.com

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