10-21-2010, 10:54 AM
[cool][#0000ff]Was feeling a bit exploratorial yesterday. Set off to remove a couple of ponds from my "bucket list" for this year. They both made the "suck-it list".[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]I officially made Yuba "dead to me" last year. Gave it a eulogy and all that. And there has been little happening this year to change my feelings. Add that Jeff Rasmussen...manager of the Yuba State Parks just spent a 7 hour session searching for perch and walleye with nothing...except one lousy 35 inch pike to show for it. But hey...I am the master of Yuba perch...and other lost causes...so I made it Part A of my Masochists Anonymous session.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]Launched off the gravel near the ramp about 7:30 AM. Air temp mid 30's and water temp 56. It was clear as I launched but swirls of mist soon turned into a couple of interesting mini fog banks. Kinda neat as the sun poked over the hills.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]Lots of carpkind jumping and splashing all over the surface. And there were lots of carpish marks on the sonar screen in the upper layers of the water. Not much at all showing in perchville...near the bottom. Worked in and out all around the big basin between Oasis and the dam. [/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]Water is still low...deepest spot I found was only 35 feet. During the best (past) years there is 55 to 60 feet of water at this time. One of the pics shows a clean, flat bottom in 32 feet of water. That is what my sonar screen showed most of the way across between the bluffs on the south side and the ramp coming back. No perchlet schools (like in the past) and no fishies.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]I know there are still perch in Yuba. I caught and returned one. But, I don't got a clue as to where any others might be hiding. The one fish I got showed up on sonar in the middle of the fishless underwater desert...at 29 feet deep. I dropped down to him, finessed him and got the desired chomp. But that was it friends. No mas.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]I had allotted myself until 10 AM to prove that Yuba was as bad as I suspected it might be. Loaded up my gear and headed to DMAD. After the DWR netting survey results of a couple of weeks ago I was optimistic that I might be able to score a few unmolested species from that little pond.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]They call it DMAD. But when I saw it all I could say was DAMN. It was a mudhole. The DWR boys must have pulled the plug as they left because it had flat been drained. You could see the recent high water marks about 8 - 10 feet higher along the shoreline and it was WET MUD along the banks. Didn't look like I could even launch a float tube. And indeed when I tried walking down to the water in a couple of spots I just about got bogged down in the sticky mud...several feet before I reached the water.[/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]Call me an optimist. Call me silly. Call me a dedicated fisherman. Whatever. I was determined to at least get my tube wet and see if there might be some spot deep enough to hold fish. I suspected that most of the fish had boogied upstream in the Sevier River and were now waiting it out in the deeper holes. [/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]I found a low muddy gravel bar covered with critter tracks. If it was good enough for them maybe I could launch from it. I could and did...without my motor. It was a little hike down from where I parked my vehicle. I wasn't worried about getting back up the steep access "path" but I for sure didn't wanna have to dig out of the soft mud. Even with 4X4 you can bury a vehicle in recently exposed lakeshore mud. Don't ask me how I know that.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]DMAD ain't a big pond. I kicked all over and around it a couple of times...looking for ANY spot deeper than the deepest hole I found...3.5 feet. It averaged about 2.5 feet and I left a trail of kicked up mud wherever I went.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]I didn't expect much...and I didn't get much. But, I warded off the striped kitty with a couple of the species you might expect in such sucky surroundings. I got lots of pecks and twangs on the small jigs I was pitching and managed to put the hook into a small carp...toothless golden walleye. I also had lots of pop and drops on the mini minnows I brung along for the potential of finding a kitty or two. Finally, after finessing them a bit longer before the hookset I managed to hook a few bitty bullheads. Yee hawwww. [/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]I pulled the plug on my enthusiastic enjoys early in the afternoon and headed home. Two bad beats in one day. But at least I got them off my list. Now I can go back to fishing friendlier waters for more accomodating fish...hopefully.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]I combined the report and pictures on one thread. Should be easy enough to figure out which is which is.[/#0000ff]
[signature]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]I officially made Yuba "dead to me" last year. Gave it a eulogy and all that. And there has been little happening this year to change my feelings. Add that Jeff Rasmussen...manager of the Yuba State Parks just spent a 7 hour session searching for perch and walleye with nothing...except one lousy 35 inch pike to show for it. But hey...I am the master of Yuba perch...and other lost causes...so I made it Part A of my Masochists Anonymous session.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]Launched off the gravel near the ramp about 7:30 AM. Air temp mid 30's and water temp 56. It was clear as I launched but swirls of mist soon turned into a couple of interesting mini fog banks. Kinda neat as the sun poked over the hills.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]Lots of carpkind jumping and splashing all over the surface. And there were lots of carpish marks on the sonar screen in the upper layers of the water. Not much at all showing in perchville...near the bottom. Worked in and out all around the big basin between Oasis and the dam. [/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]Water is still low...deepest spot I found was only 35 feet. During the best (past) years there is 55 to 60 feet of water at this time. One of the pics shows a clean, flat bottom in 32 feet of water. That is what my sonar screen showed most of the way across between the bluffs on the south side and the ramp coming back. No perchlet schools (like in the past) and no fishies.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]I know there are still perch in Yuba. I caught and returned one. But, I don't got a clue as to where any others might be hiding. The one fish I got showed up on sonar in the middle of the fishless underwater desert...at 29 feet deep. I dropped down to him, finessed him and got the desired chomp. But that was it friends. No mas.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]I had allotted myself until 10 AM to prove that Yuba was as bad as I suspected it might be. Loaded up my gear and headed to DMAD. After the DWR netting survey results of a couple of weeks ago I was optimistic that I might be able to score a few unmolested species from that little pond.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]They call it DMAD. But when I saw it all I could say was DAMN. It was a mudhole. The DWR boys must have pulled the plug as they left because it had flat been drained. You could see the recent high water marks about 8 - 10 feet higher along the shoreline and it was WET MUD along the banks. Didn't look like I could even launch a float tube. And indeed when I tried walking down to the water in a couple of spots I just about got bogged down in the sticky mud...several feet before I reached the water.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]Call me an optimist. Call me silly. Call me a dedicated fisherman. Whatever. I was determined to at least get my tube wet and see if there might be some spot deep enough to hold fish. I suspected that most of the fish had boogied upstream in the Sevier River and were now waiting it out in the deeper holes. [/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]I found a low muddy gravel bar covered with critter tracks. If it was good enough for them maybe I could launch from it. I could and did...without my motor. It was a little hike down from where I parked my vehicle. I wasn't worried about getting back up the steep access "path" but I for sure didn't wanna have to dig out of the soft mud. Even with 4X4 you can bury a vehicle in recently exposed lakeshore mud. Don't ask me how I know that.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]DMAD ain't a big pond. I kicked all over and around it a couple of times...looking for ANY spot deeper than the deepest hole I found...3.5 feet. It averaged about 2.5 feet and I left a trail of kicked up mud wherever I went.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]I didn't expect much...and I didn't get much. But, I warded off the striped kitty with a couple of the species you might expect in such sucky surroundings. I got lots of pecks and twangs on the small jigs I was pitching and managed to put the hook into a small carp...toothless golden walleye. I also had lots of pop and drops on the mini minnows I brung along for the potential of finding a kitty or two. Finally, after finessing them a bit longer before the hookset I managed to hook a few bitty bullheads. Yee hawwww. [/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]I pulled the plug on my enthusiastic enjoys early in the afternoon and headed home. Two bad beats in one day. But at least I got them off my list. Now I can go back to fishing friendlier waters for more accomodating fish...hopefully.[/#0000ff]
[#0000ff][/#0000ff]
[#0000ff]I combined the report and pictures on one thread. Should be easy enough to figure out which is which is.[/#0000ff]
[signature]