06-05-2022, 04:48 AM
TLDR; Talk about my experience on some of our lakes, Pineview, Jordanelle, Rock Port, etc, fish populations, size of fish. Specifically LMB and SMB.
This will be a complete word vomit on my thoughts of Norther UT lake conidiations pertaining to LMB and SMB, so please bear with me haha.
New to the forum, not new to Bass fishing in UT, been doing this religiously since 2008 here and have, (no joke, besides ice fishing), only targeted bass for the last 14 years. I wanna focus on Pineview and Jordanelle, but will mention Rock Port, East Canyon, and some others.
Pineview: Circa 08/09 when I started, Pineview was always a go to, the SMB population was strong, LMB population was strong, routinely caught 8+ inch Perch; Gills and Crappie were super abundant, so we knew what the Bass were eating. As each year came and passed it seemed the Perch and especially the Gill population crashed pretty hard, we always found plenty of crappie in flooded trees or the vegetation that grows to the surface in the back of the middle inlet arm. Used to catch eating size worthy perch on bass gear while going after smallmouth almost as often as I'd catch smallmouth, but that has steadily died, now I hardly see perch in pineview, although I don't target them, just don't catch any while bass fishing. Another species that seemed to die off for a little bit there was largemouth, for a few years in a row I never saw one come out of there, idk if it was due to a couple bad spawn years or what, but now it seems they've returned somewhat? which is weird cause the last few years we've had really bad water levels which would leave LMB spawning areas high and dry. Smallmouth have always been super consistent in the size department, gross numbers I've caught over the years have gone down but the quality never has. My PB SMB was out of pineview at 5 even, then in 2021 I fished a tournament and pulled 2 3's and a 4.6, big smallmouth for the day was 4.8. The kicker though, was on that tournament day, the big fish was a 6.7 largemouth someone caught off one of the points in the middle inlet arm, tournament was in May, so hopefully that fish went on to have a successful spawn, so Pineview can grow the quality, just quantity has dropped, at least for me in the recent years, and obviously the low water years aren't helping anything. Anyone else's thoughts?
Jordanelle: This is the big one, huge smallmouth used to be pulled out of Jordanelle all the time. From what I've seen and heard other people talk about, the Chub population has slowly declined and so has the Perch, which has resulted in the stunted smallmouth population. I haven't caught a smallmouth from there bigger than 15 or 16 inches in a good 5 years or more, it seems the days of the 7 pounders are over? My question, has anyone seen any positive impact on the smallmouth population after the introduction of Koke's, Splake, Wiper and the Tigers? I personally have not, been there every year since 2019 and haven't caught a smallmouth bigger than 14 once. Went to Jordanelle today actually 06/04, water temp 55-60, took the tube today instead of the boat, put in at the Rockcliffs, was probably a mistake for this time of year. Water was pretty cold and very brown due to the river/run off, caught 2, both 8 inches. Maybe would have done better over by Ross Creek?
Deer Creek: Never have done good here for bass, although I think that's a me problem and not putting the time in on the lake, I know there are big ones in here. Fished a tournament last year and some of the guys were pulling out high 4lb largemouth. But from my understanding is DC had a perch crash as well?
Mantua: Don't go here often, but some friends I have who fish tournaments more regularly pull 4s and 5s out all the time, seems to be in good shape. Made a point to go this year, have gone twice already, were a tad early to catch the spawn, caught tons but they were all 12-14 inch males, seems the females hadn't moved up yet, this was at the beginning of May.
Pelican: Haven't been since the treatment to get rid of Carp, hopefully some of the largemouth that got planted from the Arkansas hatcheries can come to rival Mantua and Pineview size, good on the DWR for doing something for a warm water fishery. Anyone have good updates on Pelican?
Rock Port/East: Don't go here as often as Pineview and Jordanelle, but always did really good on both. Caught quantity and quality, although haven't been back for a few years. Regularly pulled 3s out of both, fished a tournament a while ago, big fish on East Canyon was in the 4s.
Forgive me if I'm ignorant here, but do our reservoirs lack bait fish other than Panfish/Sunfish and Crawfish? Like Shiners, Flat head minnows, etc? Has the DWR thought of planting these in some of our reservoirs like Jordanelle to help bolster fish populations and prevent another growth stunt like what happened to the SMB? I'm pretty ignorant on the happenings of the DWR, besides the odd stocking of Tiger Muskie in lakes like Jordanelle and recently Pelican to help curb carp there, does the DWR do much here to help the warm water species in our lakes, or have they all pretty much been left to their own devices? Do the mass stocking of rainbows in a bunch of our reservoirs do anything for the bass populations?
Thanks for reading my rambling, please post any thoughts, Cheers!
This will be a complete word vomit on my thoughts of Norther UT lake conidiations pertaining to LMB and SMB, so please bear with me haha.
New to the forum, not new to Bass fishing in UT, been doing this religiously since 2008 here and have, (no joke, besides ice fishing), only targeted bass for the last 14 years. I wanna focus on Pineview and Jordanelle, but will mention Rock Port, East Canyon, and some others.
Pineview: Circa 08/09 when I started, Pineview was always a go to, the SMB population was strong, LMB population was strong, routinely caught 8+ inch Perch; Gills and Crappie were super abundant, so we knew what the Bass were eating. As each year came and passed it seemed the Perch and especially the Gill population crashed pretty hard, we always found plenty of crappie in flooded trees or the vegetation that grows to the surface in the back of the middle inlet arm. Used to catch eating size worthy perch on bass gear while going after smallmouth almost as often as I'd catch smallmouth, but that has steadily died, now I hardly see perch in pineview, although I don't target them, just don't catch any while bass fishing. Another species that seemed to die off for a little bit there was largemouth, for a few years in a row I never saw one come out of there, idk if it was due to a couple bad spawn years or what, but now it seems they've returned somewhat? which is weird cause the last few years we've had really bad water levels which would leave LMB spawning areas high and dry. Smallmouth have always been super consistent in the size department, gross numbers I've caught over the years have gone down but the quality never has. My PB SMB was out of pineview at 5 even, then in 2021 I fished a tournament and pulled 2 3's and a 4.6, big smallmouth for the day was 4.8. The kicker though, was on that tournament day, the big fish was a 6.7 largemouth someone caught off one of the points in the middle inlet arm, tournament was in May, so hopefully that fish went on to have a successful spawn, so Pineview can grow the quality, just quantity has dropped, at least for me in the recent years, and obviously the low water years aren't helping anything. Anyone else's thoughts?
Jordanelle: This is the big one, huge smallmouth used to be pulled out of Jordanelle all the time. From what I've seen and heard other people talk about, the Chub population has slowly declined and so has the Perch, which has resulted in the stunted smallmouth population. I haven't caught a smallmouth from there bigger than 15 or 16 inches in a good 5 years or more, it seems the days of the 7 pounders are over? My question, has anyone seen any positive impact on the smallmouth population after the introduction of Koke's, Splake, Wiper and the Tigers? I personally have not, been there every year since 2019 and haven't caught a smallmouth bigger than 14 once. Went to Jordanelle today actually 06/04, water temp 55-60, took the tube today instead of the boat, put in at the Rockcliffs, was probably a mistake for this time of year. Water was pretty cold and very brown due to the river/run off, caught 2, both 8 inches. Maybe would have done better over by Ross Creek?
Deer Creek: Never have done good here for bass, although I think that's a me problem and not putting the time in on the lake, I know there are big ones in here. Fished a tournament last year and some of the guys were pulling out high 4lb largemouth. But from my understanding is DC had a perch crash as well?
Mantua: Don't go here often, but some friends I have who fish tournaments more regularly pull 4s and 5s out all the time, seems to be in good shape. Made a point to go this year, have gone twice already, were a tad early to catch the spawn, caught tons but they were all 12-14 inch males, seems the females hadn't moved up yet, this was at the beginning of May.
Pelican: Haven't been since the treatment to get rid of Carp, hopefully some of the largemouth that got planted from the Arkansas hatcheries can come to rival Mantua and Pineview size, good on the DWR for doing something for a warm water fishery. Anyone have good updates on Pelican?
Rock Port/East: Don't go here as often as Pineview and Jordanelle, but always did really good on both. Caught quantity and quality, although haven't been back for a few years. Regularly pulled 3s out of both, fished a tournament a while ago, big fish on East Canyon was in the 4s.
Forgive me if I'm ignorant here, but do our reservoirs lack bait fish other than Panfish/Sunfish and Crawfish? Like Shiners, Flat head minnows, etc? Has the DWR thought of planting these in some of our reservoirs like Jordanelle to help bolster fish populations and prevent another growth stunt like what happened to the SMB? I'm pretty ignorant on the happenings of the DWR, besides the odd stocking of Tiger Muskie in lakes like Jordanelle and recently Pelican to help curb carp there, does the DWR do much here to help the warm water species in our lakes, or have they all pretty much been left to their own devices? Do the mass stocking of rainbows in a bunch of our reservoirs do anything for the bass populations?
Thanks for reading my rambling, please post any thoughts, Cheers!