Got my January fish!
Joe and I launched on the warm side around 10:30 and fished until 3:30. Water temperature was between 53* and 55*.
We spent most of the time trolling Joe's bass colored deep diving Normal crankbait. We trolled depths ranging from 12 to 50ft. Most fish seemed to be suspended between 15 and 20 in the deeper water. There were scattered marks on the bottom in 45-50ft, but we couldn't jig them up using a variety of lures. I also tried nightcrawlers on a bottom rig and had some nibbles but no full takers.
I ended up with two bass, and Joe ended up with one bass and at least four perch. All Joe's fish were caught trolling, and I caught one bass trolling and one casting. The bass were in the 14-16" range but really fat. The perch were 7-9". I lost a really nice bass (based on the fight) hooked while trolling, and Joe lost a few as well. All fish were hooked on the crankbait.
Here's Joe's bass:
Here's the perch:
The coolest part of the day was a bunch of sea gull diving on bait, then the largemouth bass showed up just like stripers in the Bay. I got my second bass casting the Norman crankbait into fracas.
It was a pretty awesome day, and it was good to fish with Joe again. Plus, he was kind enough to give me the perch he caught so I could share them with my folks for lunch on Sunday.
I got to play with the Revo some. I could only manage 5.3mph sprinting, and maintaining 4.0-4.5 seemed like a lot more work than in the Outback. It could just be that it's winter, and I'm out of shape. However, I think the lay out of the seat and pedals is different than the Outback because different muscles were burning. Even when I was out of shape, I seldom felt burning leg muscles in the Outback. I guess I'll have to build up the speed generating Revo muscles now. It does cut through chop nicely, though.
Joe and I launched on the warm side around 10:30 and fished until 3:30. Water temperature was between 53* and 55*.
We spent most of the time trolling Joe's bass colored deep diving Normal crankbait. We trolled depths ranging from 12 to 50ft. Most fish seemed to be suspended between 15 and 20 in the deeper water. There were scattered marks on the bottom in 45-50ft, but we couldn't jig them up using a variety of lures. I also tried nightcrawlers on a bottom rig and had some nibbles but no full takers.
I ended up with two bass, and Joe ended up with one bass and at least four perch. All Joe's fish were caught trolling, and I caught one bass trolling and one casting. The bass were in the 14-16" range but really fat. The perch were 7-9". I lost a really nice bass (based on the fight) hooked while trolling, and Joe lost a few as well. All fish were hooked on the crankbait.
Here's Joe's bass:
Here's the perch:
The coolest part of the day was a bunch of sea gull diving on bait, then the largemouth bass showed up just like stripers in the Bay. I got my second bass casting the Norman crankbait into fracas.
It was a pretty awesome day, and it was good to fish with Joe again. Plus, he was kind enough to give me the perch he caught so I could share them with my folks for lunch on Sunday.
I got to play with the Revo some. I could only manage 5.3mph sprinting, and maintaining 4.0-4.5 seemed like a lot more work than in the Outback. It could just be that it's winter, and I'm out of shape. However, I think the lay out of the seat and pedals is different than the Outback because different muscles were burning. Even when I was out of shape, I seldom felt burning leg muscles in the Outback. I guess I'll have to build up the speed generating Revo muscles now. It does cut through chop nicely, though.
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