Saturday, April 27, 2019


Cold Water Period - Small Mouth Bass – Swim Jig

With winter like start to spring, late ice-out, snow, rain, low water levels and a busted tow vehicle it seems I’m spinning my wheels lately trying to hit the open-water season. The only option I have right now is a couple shoreline spots. With a 8ft drop down in water levels vacating the fish from those locations. Just recently the dam has been tightened and water levels have recovered somewhat. So has the fishing a bit… a few pike at first and now the SMB’s are starting a comeback. 

Today I split a short trip between the tail end of a Minor.Period and the beginning of a Major.Period uptick nearing the dusk period. I tag into my first smallie of the year… swim jigging. Only one fish on this short trip… but felt great! 

Keep those lines tight! 

Slip


https://youtu.be/qL5zxBFORT4



Thursday, April 25, 2019

Beating the Skunking with (2) N.Pike

Beating the Skunking with (2) N.Pike

Spring was late showing up with ice-out less than two weeks ago… I finally found some time to do a little shore fishing to test the pulse out on the reservoir. Using an eight ounce jig/swim bait combo I search for the bite during the solunar Minor.Period I nearly come up empty but just one fish on/off.

I head to another shore access in town and cast thru the rest of the Minor.Period with just one catch… a zebra mussel!

Returning to the original lake later that after-noon the bite finally starts to pick up with 3 fish on and two landed as the Major.Period starts to kick in.

Water temps zoomed up to upper 50’s to low 60’s with a couple 70+ degree days. Fishing will get better as the season progresses of course.

Keep those lines tight!



Thursday, April 18, 2019

Smell your way to Bedding Blue Gills


Smell your way to Bedding Blue Gills

I grew up living on the lake during the summer vacations and weekends. I slept next to the window 70 ft away from the lake edge. During times when I awoke during the late spring and summer days I would be hit with that particular scent… those same times I would notice bedding gills sometimes many hundreds in numbers spawning in the shallows in front of our sea wall.

The lake was near eutrophic in identity with muck approaching several feet in thickness… our cottage shore line was kept free of muck by constant swimming and boating use as well as maintenance with raking. The bluegills apparently loved it bedding on the firm sand bottom. So through the years I always associated the smell with spawning gills … but never knew the reason.

Recently through some digging and research I learned it is a pheromone released by male and female bluegills to attract others to the colony to spawn.


It is the pheromones being released into the water that some of us smell… but many of us fail to recognize the odor or even detect it.

Many times I’ll be motoring out on the lake and will detect the scent… following wind direction source to the shoreline lead me right to them.

I can smell it and hound down the areas of the spawning gills. If you know your lakes like I know mine… you know where these potential areas are and they vary slightly from season to season. I do perimeter checks… visual checks with the outboard motor close to shore often on my BOW during the fishing Lull.Periods during the day… visually as well as side scan imaging. I feel confident in finding the areas that need to be fished.

To add I believe there is a right way to fish a spawning area… if you visually spot nests with single male B.Gills guarding it’s center… the big females are just a short distance away… usually on the 8-10’ weedy flats or on the first breakline to deeper water. These are the fish to target while leaving the big bulls to finish the process of passing on the large fish gene to future generations.

Fishing the beds is literally biting the hand that feeds you. Future generations will thank you not too!

So when you are out this spring search the scent… it’s curious many I have taken fishing aren’t able to recognize it.

Good Fishing Everyone

check me out on YouTube... plenty of tips and vids...
https://www.youtube.com/user/kensobanski

-----------------------------
Picture from PondBoss.Com
quote from In-Fisherman Magazine