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A couple more firsts at St. Mary's Lake, 3/15

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  • A couple more firsts at St. Mary's Lake, 3/15

    I went for a quick 2 hour trip after work this evening. I planned on hunting for crappie, but I got distracted by some bass action. I thought I'd throw some bigger lures to see if I could scare up any more decent bass. I had bought a chatterbait last fall for snakeheads, so I thought I'd give that a try. On the second cast, a 15" pickerel nailed it, which surprised me. It was really skinny for its size and had kind of an overly large head. Anyway, it was the first fish on a new type of lure for me:



    It looked like an eagle or osprey took a shot at it. There were several scrapes and punctures along the side. I had a couple more hits that didn't connect, but they were probably smaller fish that couldn't get the hook in their mouth. As a side not, chatterbaits aren't as snag-proof as the packaging claims. I've gotten cavalier about throwing lures into brush piles, and my new lure with only 7 or 8 casts on it was irretrievably snagged after casting into a relatively sparse submerged tree top. I even got out of my yak and pulled up the little tree that I snagged on, but the lure wasn't there. Weird.

    I talked to a guy at the boat ramp who had been slaying the bass on an unweighted fluke/bass assassin. I left all mine at home in my saltwater tackle, but I had a couple paddle tail assassins with me. The bass took that pretty eagerly:



    I caught 8 bass in fairly short order. This was the first time I had used an unweighted lure like this. It was pretty cool. I missed three other fish and lost 2 at the boat. All were the typical small bass found in the lake. Is there a trick to maintaining contact with the lure? I was using a jerk-pause retrieve, and the fish were hitting it on the pause. I couldn't tell there was a fish on it until I jerked it for the next sequence, which jerked it out of the fish's mouth or resulted in a lame hook set. Any tips?

    Even though it was cloudy and the sun was setting, I couldn't draw any strikes on a popper, which was unexpected. I struck out with a bigger spinnerbait, too.

    Anyway, it was good evening out, and it was cool using different techniques. All the fish were caught in 3ft of water or less. I forgot to look at the temperature on my fish finder, but wading to launch the yak wasn't too bad. I would guess the water temp was at least 50*, if not more.
    Yellow Hobie Revo Rube Goldberg
    Yellow Tarpon 120

  • #2
    Looks like a great day on the water and way better than working!

    As for the flukes.... With the paddle tails it's good just to slooooowly reel them or do the pause thing you were talking about. You have to watch the line carefully and set the hook with some authority when you see it twitch or start moving. Tough with smaller fish! For the normal flukes I have a few different techniques I use but all center around some sort of twitch / pause. The weighted shank hooks really make a difference- check out the owner ones that you can move the weight to the front or back of shank to change the way the bait falls. The horizontal falling fluke in front of a sight casted fish is pretty much a guarantee. Baby bass pattern on the Potomac is my favorite for lmb and white ice or opening night is the best for rock for me.

    I need to get out on the kayak!
    Used to fish more.

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    • #3
      Nice work Bill, congrats on the 1sts!!

      I had some 1sts today too I'll post up in a little..

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      • #4
        Awesome! Way to get out on a weekday.

        but the lure wasn't there.
        Cause you weren't snagged... you had a huge fish!! Find that fish, find your lure.
        Mike S.
        Hobie Outback
        Chesapeake Bay Kayak Anglers
        3D Printed Hobie Hatch Bucket

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        • #5
          Michael--I forgot about watching the line. The wind was blowing, so it helped to cast into the wind, which kept the line taut, but watching it is a good idea. I did a couple monster hooksets, and that definitely made a difference. I'm not used to doing that because sharp hooks and braid combined with a slight jerk of the rod usually works with most of my saltwater lures. I have some of the Owner hooks, so I'll give those a try.

          Matt--I have to try my new tricks at a place with some bigger bass.

          Mike--That would be awesome, but I think there was a stump down there, too. I felt around with my rod tip but couldn't seem to get the lure to back out of the snag.
          Yellow Hobie Revo Rube Goldberg
          Yellow Tarpon 120

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