Met up with tubin' buddy, Lee this morning. We got our tubes launched by 6:30...still darkish. Shoulda stood in bed. First fish came after 8 am.
Air temp 50 and water temp 67. Water fairly clean...but dropping. Absolutely glass calm most of the morning. Shadlets popping hatching midges all over the lake. Terns and gulls swooping down to pick off one here and there. No fishy boils and the only splashes were carp. Only downer to the day was the hazy horizon. Thanks California.
Lotsa bait balls outside the harbor. Saw small schools in water from 8' to 18'. The fish must be spoiled and not have to work hard for their meals. All the ones I kept and filleted had plenty of visceral fat. And the bites were a lot more tentative than usual. When cats hit baited fligs they usually smack them hard and hook themselves on the strike. Not today. The first few bites I got I thought might have been perch...tap, tap, rattle rattle. But then I started finessing them a bit and went bendo...with kitties.
Got the first couple of cats in shallow (8') water off Eagle Beach. Then I worked out deeper and back toward the channel outside the harbor. Found an area in 15 - 17 feet that held a few cautious kitties. But I put some hooks in their lips too. However, I missed a lot of tentative bites and had a few fish come off on the way in. That almost never happens on fligs.
The two best colors were blue-back silver and my chartreuse perch. Fished them with small chub minnows. That is usually my best offering for the big perch, but there didn't seem to be any around yet. Water needs to cool off a bit more.
My last cat of the day came inside the marina. I wanted to see what the depth was and whether or not anything was hanging out inside. Saw very little on sonar and when that last cat bounced the rod tip as I was getting ready to boogie it was a pleasant surprise. Water depth inside the marina has dropped to 8-9 feet and will be lower before the real cold sets in. That makes me think the big perch might stay outside this year. They seldom come inside unless there is at least 11-12 feet of water...or more. Also, it is a lot tougher for floating anglers to fish some of the best areas of the marina now. They have strung a long line of buoys out off the east shoreline...NO BOATS. That pretty much eliminates a lot of the late season fliggin' which produced so many hefty perch last year.
Met FatBiker as we got out of the water. He was just heading out with a couple of other folks in a small kayak. But no fishing rod. Silly. Why would anybody go afloat on Willard without a fishy pole?
I ended up keeping about 6 cats for a couple of fish fries. As I recall, Lee donated about 2 dozen minnows to the persnickety bait stealers without bringing any to the tube. Bummer. But you gotta admire his sense of conservation and all that.
Air temp 50 and water temp 67. Water fairly clean...but dropping. Absolutely glass calm most of the morning. Shadlets popping hatching midges all over the lake. Terns and gulls swooping down to pick off one here and there. No fishy boils and the only splashes were carp. Only downer to the day was the hazy horizon. Thanks California.
Lotsa bait balls outside the harbor. Saw small schools in water from 8' to 18'. The fish must be spoiled and not have to work hard for their meals. All the ones I kept and filleted had plenty of visceral fat. And the bites were a lot more tentative than usual. When cats hit baited fligs they usually smack them hard and hook themselves on the strike. Not today. The first few bites I got I thought might have been perch...tap, tap, rattle rattle. But then I started finessing them a bit and went bendo...with kitties.
Got the first couple of cats in shallow (8') water off Eagle Beach. Then I worked out deeper and back toward the channel outside the harbor. Found an area in 15 - 17 feet that held a few cautious kitties. But I put some hooks in their lips too. However, I missed a lot of tentative bites and had a few fish come off on the way in. That almost never happens on fligs.
The two best colors were blue-back silver and my chartreuse perch. Fished them with small chub minnows. That is usually my best offering for the big perch, but there didn't seem to be any around yet. Water needs to cool off a bit more.
My last cat of the day came inside the marina. I wanted to see what the depth was and whether or not anything was hanging out inside. Saw very little on sonar and when that last cat bounced the rod tip as I was getting ready to boogie it was a pleasant surprise. Water depth inside the marina has dropped to 8-9 feet and will be lower before the real cold sets in. That makes me think the big perch might stay outside this year. They seldom come inside unless there is at least 11-12 feet of water...or more. Also, it is a lot tougher for floating anglers to fish some of the best areas of the marina now. They have strung a long line of buoys out off the east shoreline...NO BOATS. That pretty much eliminates a lot of the late season fliggin' which produced so many hefty perch last year.
Met FatBiker as we got out of the water. He was just heading out with a couple of other folks in a small kayak. But no fishing rod. Silly. Why would anybody go afloat on Willard without a fishy pole?
I ended up keeping about 6 cats for a couple of fish fries. As I recall, Lee donated about 2 dozen minnows to the persnickety bait stealers without bringing any to the tube. Bummer. But you gotta admire his sense of conservation and all that.