Sunday, June 19, 2016

The highs and lows of spring time fishing



A recent trip to the lake was going to be a welcome getaway.  I booked a cabin for three days and my only plan was to fish.  It’s springtime and the bass should be shallow and on the beds.  I had visions of sight fishing in two to three feet of water and casting lizards and buzz baits at bedded hogs.  Springtime fishing has a reputation for being the easiest time of year to catch bass, and to catch big ones at that.  It is with that very optimistic mindset that I left for the lake.  I was rigged up and ready to rumble.

I’ll save you, the reader, a lot of time at this point.  Nothing went as planned.  The weather turned into a high pressure system with clear blue skies, and the wind always blowing stronger than forecast, and from the wrong direction.  The fishing was difficult to say the least, but it forced me to do some learning.  I changed tactics, I used my electronics to find grass beds, I threw finesse baits, I did a lot of things I didn’t plan on doing.  

My three day trip to the lake can be boiled down to a “tail” of two fish.  These two individual fish represent the highs and lows of bass fishing...BOTH of which drive me to continue coming back for more.  

Fish 1

My first morning on the water, the air temperature was 55 degrees.  I awoke to gorgeous sunrise on the Tennessee River, pointed my boat toward the gold rimmed eastern skyline, and dropped the hammer.  15 minutes later I was pulling into my first spot of the day, a beautiful cove that transitions from sheer ledges at the mouth, to steep gravel bars lining it’s sides, and finally a mud/grass/timber section in the back that’s wide and shallow.  This cove has everything a bass could ask for...everything.  It has everything an angler could ask for as well...it’s like a match made in heaven. 

I entered the cove as the sun crested the hills behind me, and the early morning light revealed wispy, swirling sheets of vapor rising from the water like ghosts.  Under this thin veil of fog I could occasionally see fish hitting on top.  This ghostly hollow is where the day would begin.







The tough part was figuring out where to start.  I idled to the back of the cove and began throwing my favorite lure...the Lizard of Oz...at obvious structure.  The ghosts swirled around the boat as I cast to a spot where the point of a small pocket hit the main cove.  The water grew darker as it entered the forested pocket.  Branches overhung the muddy, grassy bank, and my lizard plopped into the water just inches from dry ground. 

In between drags on my lizard I studied the area.  The back of the cove was maybe two feet deep, with bright green weeds and brilliant yellow flowers that gave way to sparse clumps of vegetation in the water.  I eased the lizard another few inches toward me.  A trio of Canadian geese flew into the cove, honking as they lowered themselves into the mist and glided toward the shallow yellow flowers in the back.  I dragged the lizard again.  I heard the geese splash down and go silent.  The air was cold enough to make you ball your fists trying to keep your fingers warm.  Nothing was touching the lizard here.

I eased across to the other side of the cove, taking a quick glance to the east, praying the sun would climb faster and warm me up.  As I crossed the cove I retired the Lizard of Oz for the moment and picked up a swim-bait.  It was a compact, heavy lure that I could throw a long way, and that would help me cover water. 

This side the cove was a long gravel bank, overhung by the forest that grew downhill right to the edge of the water.  The long tan ribbon of gravel offered a very small bit of shallow water before dropping off to 12, and then 20 feet.  This is a scary place for a swim-bait...ANYTHING could be down there.  I’ve caught largemouth, smallmouth, catfish and drum on sections like this.  There is literally nowhere for a swim-bait to hide on this gravel bar.

I threw a long cast to a half submerged log, overhung by willows 40 yards up the bank.  When my swim-bait hit the water my plan was to hop it twice then reel in the slack.  Hop, hop, reel.  Hop hop, reel.  That was the pattern I’d use as I searched for active fish.  

The cast was perfect, it hit within 6 inches of the log.  Hop, hop, BAM!!!  I got hit hard on the second hop.  I waited for a moment, and with the rising sun to my front-left I could easily see my line shining as it cut to deeper water.

I reeled in the slack and dropped the hammer on him.  The rod loaded up but the fish darted toward me, taking all the tension off the line.  I reeled at about 9,000 RPM trying to catch up with him.  When I got tension back on him he began to fight.  He wasn’t coming any closer to this boat on his own.

The line ran sideways in the orange glow of sunrise with wispy ghosts flowing around it.  He ran for deeper water but there would be no safety there today.  I cranked on him hard now, and the line began to rise...he was making a run for the top.  

I pushed my rod tip down into the water in an attempt to keep him from breaching.  The last thing I wanted was for him to shake the hook.  My efforts were futile, he breached in a spectacular display of largemouth behavior.  That fish launched itself two feet into the air as it tried to shake the hook.

What I saw in that perfect orange glow of sunrise was a picture of nature in all it’s beauty.  A big aggressive predator launched from the depths, shattering the peaceful calm that existed in this otherwise silent cove.  When he breached he came out sideways, and quickly went upside down, thrashing violently through his entire flight.  Backlit by the sunrise, the water it threw off it’s glistening white and green body looked like diamonds shattering into millions of orange and white crystals that fell back into the lake.  

I was almost stunned when he re-entered the water.  I couldn’t believe what I had just seen.  

It was surely only in the air for a moment, but from my point of view it seemed like he was in the air for an eternity.  It reminded me of the scene from ET where he and the kid flew the bike in front of the moon.  It was just like that except it was a bass going in front of the rising sun.  My morning had gone from a very slow, quiet search, to a full on drag race.  

Now he’s back in the water, he played his first set of cards but it didn’t work out.  His next move is to go deep and fight.  Sideways he went, trying to pull the rod from me the whole time.  I had good tension, the drag wasn’t slipping, I was confident I’d land this fish. 

After 30 seconds or so I had him along side the boat, and calm enough to get a hand on him.  I plucked him from the water with my semi-frozen hands, unhooked him, and admired him for what he was...a predator.  He hunts, kills, and eats...that’s it.  He was a stout, dark-green assassin, and he was now in my boat.  

As I looked at him and wondered at the hard charging, acrobatic fight he had put up, a thought hit me; the only thing that could make a breaching thrashing largemouth any more spectacular would be if he bugled like an elk while he did it.  Can you imagine hearing that elk bugle starting out, getting louder and louder, and then peaking right when the bass bursts through the surface, flies through the air and spits the hook out at you?  It would be unbelievable. 

So that one fish condensed everything I could ever want from a bass into one fight.  It was one of those fights that captures the essence of what a largemouth bass is, they hit hard, they run, they breach with stunning acrobatics, they fight some more, and they do it all with some of natures most beautiful backdrops.  If it was the only fish I caught the entire trip, I could find a way to be happy with it.

Fish 2 

This was my last full day.  With a high pressure system wearing on me and the fish both, I decided a change of venue was in order.  I abandoned the beautiful ledges and coves of the past two days, and decided to look for thicker cover where a bass might try to hide.  I needed to find some weeds.

I found a smaller creek that fed into the main lake and decided to try it out.  After half an hour of finding no fish in the shallows, I pulled back a little deeper hoping to find signs of  aquatic life.  Using my sonar I pushed deeper into the creek, which was a few hundred yards wide.  I found a pocket near the rear that had a deep bowl dropping to 15 feet right next to a huge flat that was only 3 feet deep.  It looked like a nice transition area on the map, and a sonar run was in order.  When I got there I started seeing something “cloudy” on my Side Imaging.  “Hmmmm” I thought...”that looks like it might be weeds”.  

I turned the boat to investigate and what I saw gave me a very good feeling about this place.  As I turned toward the area I wanted to investigate, my Side Imaging showed a ditch running from the bank toward the deep water....and in that ditch were a few fish.  
Next, my Down Imaging began showing long orange lines stretching up from the bottom; coontail was growing all over in this deep water pocket.  It was just the type of cover that a bass would bury himself in on a blue sky day.

My sonar had just shown me a lot of clues.  This spot held enough promise that I vowed to fish it thoroughly.  I broke out the Lizard of Oz, rigged on a spinning reel, and began my investigation.

The centerpiece of this area was the tip of a dead tree that stuck up about a foot above the water.  I’d use this as a reference point, driving circles around it with the trolling motor and casting into the center of the weeds.  

It took a few minutes with the Texas rigged lizard to get a feel for the bottom.  There are times when you hit that grass and you could talk yourself into thinking you got bit...especially since the bites in this weather had been so light to begin with.

After casting around for 15 minutes I had a pretty good feel for where the underwater obstacles were.  I was convinced that if I dragged this lizard through the weeds long enough...that I’d catch something.  

Eventually, it happened.  I was dragging the Lizard of Oz through the weeds when I felt a bump.  It wasn’t a strong hit at all...but there was definitely something down there determined to beat up my lizard...and NOBODY beats up my lizard.  

I swept back hard to start the fight.  When I set the hook I felt the drag slip a little bit.  I didn’t think much of it at the time because I felt another hit...this one bigger.  Then I saw the line coming up toward the top.  I had to keep tension on this line...I could NOT let him shake this hook.  I lowered my rod tip, pulled back, and cranked on the reel.  The line was picking up speed like a rocket...it was going to breach.  

To my absolute HORROR, the more I cranked the more the drag slipped.  If I swept the rod, the drag slipped, if I tried to crank on him, it slipped.  It was like living a nightmare.  This fish was heading to the surface like a Saturn 5 rocket and I had no way to keep things under control.  Then it happened.  

When this fish came out of the water I thought it might be a dragon...it was that big.  The  only reason I don’t believe it was a dragon is that it didn’t have wings...other than that it was just the type of giant, green, scaly vision you get when you think of a one.

I could not believe how big this fish was.  The great beasts belly was toward me, flashing white with red gills and the giant unmistakable shape of a largemouths head.  It’s mouth was wide open as it flailed, quickly sending my wide gap hook on a return flight to my boat.  It’s mouth was so big it looked like a carnival game where I was supposed to throw a basketball at it.  But in this case, there was plenty of room for the ball to go in.  

CRASH!!!! The beast was gone.  I stood alone on the deck of my boat, mouth agape, brain trying to figure out what went wrong.  How in the world had the drag been set so light on my reel?  As the awe wore off I was left with the bitter reality...it was entirely my fault.  My gear wasn’t squared away and I had just cost myself what would likely have been the best fish of my season.  

Determined to make up for my failure I cranked the drag down, checked it by pulling some line, and fired the lizard back into action.  I fought the urge to work it quickly, knowing that the great beast had hit me on a slow retrieve earlier.  Would he hit the lizard again?  Should I try a different lure as a follow up?  On the next cast BAM!  Fish on.  This fish was smaller, and he was the unfortunate recipient of my over zealous drive to make up for my prior mistake.  With the drag tightened down I horsed that bass out of the grass so fast that he probably forgot where he was.  

Small consolation prize, a 2 lb. bass.  I released him quickly and got back to the hunt.  I switched to a spinnerbait, no luck.  Back to the lizard, nothing.  I sliced that area to pieces with my casts, but the big one appeared to be gone.  ‘Nonsense’ I thought...‘It’s not gone...it’s probably still within 100 yards of this very spot.’

I cast like a man possessed, the light faded, and the handwriting began to appear on the wall.  I was all alone, but I thought I could hear the fat lady singing.  It was over.  This lunker gave me one shot and I had blown it.  I fished until it was pitch dark, and vowed to be back before the sun.





Although I made a lot of jokes about crying myself to sleep, or not sleeping at all, the reality was just the opposite.  I’d sleep well that night because now I KNEW without a doubt in the world, where at least one big fish lived.  I’d get a good nights sleep, hit the water early, and be ready to fight.  I told my nephew that night “I hope that fish sleeps well tonight, because when the sun comes up, I’m gonna punch it right in the mouth.”

I get an “A+” for trash talk, but the fish won again in the morning.  I fished hard for three hours in that area, but caught only a single bass for my efforts.  

Conclusions

As much as the first bass in the story represents all that is great about a bass, this fish that got away represents all the potential that fishing for bass holds...all that COULD BE.  The hope of great fish to come is one of the things that keeps us coming back, it’s what makes the struggles worth it.  We fish in the heat, in the cold, the wind, the rain, sometimes we even fish longer than we should near lightning.  Why?  Why would anyone get up early and stay out late, casting hundreds of times with no results?  We grind ourselves down with lack of sleep and exposure to the elements.  We feel the stress of failure when things aren’t going right, but still we keep coming back.  Why?  It’s partly because of the first  fish in the story, and partly because of the second.  The joy of accomplishment, along with the emotional roller coaster of missing the big one combine to keep us hooked.


I missed the big one this weekend, I failed, it was all my fault.  I was beat up, tired and frustrated at times...but I can’t wait to get back out there and try it again.  This is what bass fishing is all about.   

Plans Change



After months of stress with no down time I called a time out.  I made the decision that everyone in the world could live without me for a day and a half while I escaped to the lake.  It’s spring, the weather forecast looked perfect for fishing and camping, and I needed to go see my old friend...the green fish.  

The plan was to fish Thursday afternoon, camp at dark, and fish all day Friday.  It would be a day and a half of some of the best spring time bass fishing one could imagine.  I had just read my latest Bassmaster magazine and they said to use square bill crankbaits, spinnerbaits, buzz baits, and swim jigs.  Perfect, that’s the plan I’ll use the whole trip.  

A day of omens

I had a short 5-mile run to my first spot after launching the boat.  I idled halfway back in the creek before cutting the outboard and deploying the trolling motor.  Quietly I glided toward the highly anticipated first spot of the trip.  In my right hand was a spinning reel tipped with a 3/8’s ounce white/chartreuse spinner bait.  This would be my primary bait for the trip.  Plan A was to throw this thing until my arm fell off.  

With no hesitation I picked a spot where the point of a secondary creek met my path, snapped my rod forward, and POW!  My line broke and sent my best spinnerbait flying untethered through the air and into the lake.  The report was sharp, like a .22 rifle crack.  I was dumbfounded...the line just broke on the first cast of this trip.  It did not feel good.

Luckily though, I’m a very accurate caster, and the spinnerbait travelled to the exact spot where I had been aiming.  It landed on a flat black shelf in about two feet of water.  Even from here I could see it shining like Gollums ring.  I eased up with the trolling motor, reached into the water, and easily recovered “my precious”.

With that very unnerving start out of the way, it was time to get down to business.  I had a day and a half to fish, and I was going to put a beat down on some spring time spawning bass.  I retied with a stout Palomar knot, and cast across the mouth of the feeder creek.  Two or three casts in I felt something, I pulled...and my line came up with no spinner bait!   The line had either broken again, or I had simply forgotten how to tie a knot.  This was perhaps my first big omen that this trip was not going to go well for me.  I wasn’t even 10 minutes into fishing and I had lost the primary lure I intended to use for the entire trip. 

Less than 100 yards down the bank I saw my next omen.  There was a heron at the waters edge and it looked like it was hung up in something.  I eased closer to see if I could help get the great bird untangled, but when I got close I realized it wasn’t stuck...it was choking on a fish.  “Isn’t that just perfect” I thought, ”we’re both choking out here.”

I worked that creek from 10 feet of water back to a foot or less and I never found a fish.  I saw no beds, I saw no fish, nothing.  It was like a ghost town. I couldn’t believe it.  This is spring time bass fishing!  The water temp is in the low 60’s, it’s overcast, slight breeze...it’s perfect conditions and I can’t get bit to save my life.  

This was only one creek though, and I had other options.  Soon I jumped up on plane for a 3 mile run to a really fishy looking place that just flooded.  When I got there I was astounded at how beautiful it was.  It was a wide expanse of shallow water with an endless series of weeds, grasses, bushes and trees sticking up.  Picture the African savannah...but for fish...it’s like that.  You expect to see great  herds of fish migrating across this thing, and lounging in the shade of the vegetation that dots the landscape.  If buzz baits could dream...this is what they would dream about.  All I could see in my mind was huge sows blowing up on my buzz bait as I buzz-buzz-buzzzzed it past their isolated cover.  BAM!  POW!  SPLASH!  I was seeing broken rods and trophy photo’s...this was going to be epic.

Cast after cast along weed lines and bushes built the tension to almost unbearable levels.  Then it happened.  On a long cast parallel to the tree line in 2 feet of water...my buzz bait got hung in a tree.  I know, it’s not what you wanted to hear, but it’s what happened.  The next two minutes of cursing and grumbling saw the skirt blow into a million pieces, and the bare metal of the bait return to the boat.  I was not happy.  It wasn’t so much that I had travelled a long way to get here, it’s that the DREAM of this  place was now confirmed dead.  It wasn’t the aquatic paradise it looked to be, it was simply a flooded area devoid of fish...which is what a lot of places turn into when I show up with a rod.

Ultimately I tried one or two other spots but nothing worked.  I was ending the first day with my confidence badly shaken.  What I thought had been perfect, was in fact awful.  I lost two of my primary lures, caught no fish, and was left wondering what I could possibly try next.  Normally I fish until dark, then find a place to camp, but tonight my spirits were so beat down that I quit with enough light that I could see to set up camp. 

I’d have a fire, eat dinner, think about the next day, and start again in the morning.  

Fish camp

That night I camped on a gravel bar that forms the mouth of a protected cove nestled between some steep, rocky, forested hills along the Tennessee River.  The gravel bar is a spur that comes off the base of a big ridge and is basically a small peninsula.  My campsite was surrounded by water on three sides.  Here on this gravelly point I’d make camp, have a fire, eat dinner, and plot the next mornings trip.  I decided that in the morning I’d head south to Bear Creek.  It’s a body of water that I know very well and I have plenty of history of catching fish there.  

The fire cast a warm flickering-orange glow, the frogs chattered late into the night, a barge lumbered by in the dark, and the whole time the Tennessee River rolled on to where ever it goes when it leaves here.  Tomorrow will be a better day.

As I watched the last of the coals shimmering in the cool air I took one last look up to the sky.  The clouds above the ridge had broken, and the moon was out.  Maybe that was a sign my luck was changing.  I crawled into my tent with high hopes for the morning.  As I drifted off to sleep I could hear fish jumping all around me in the dark.  Yes sir, tomorrow will be a better day.  





Wind, waves

At 6 AM I awoke to the sound of waves lapping the shore.  The wind was shaking the tent, and the sound outside was like breaking surf.  I couldn’t wait to open the flap and see what the day had brought.

The wind forecast had called for 5 to 10 MPH from the east, but at 6 AM it was already at least 10 MPH.  There was a foot and a half of chop with whitecaps as far as I could see in the direction I needed to go.

The morning began with a rough 5 mile run to my first spot.  It was a big cove halfway down a large creek.  I spent the first 30 minutes of the day working the shallows with a crankbait and a swimbait.  Spawning bass should be shallow...they should be in the backs of coves and on flats, they should relate to cover...this should be the easiest fishing OF THE YEAR.  

The wind made things a little difficult but it wasn’t a deal killer...there were just no fish here.  OK...not that big of a deal.  I’ll just move.  I hear that’s the key...cover water.  Jump from one spot to the next and use lures like crankbaits and spinnerbaits to cover as much water as possible.     

So I moved.  The next big cove down produced the same thing...zero.  A big goose egg.  I saw no fish, I had no hits.  I jumped on the big motor again, screaming across the creek to the far back of a big wide shallow cove.  I recall reading KVD saying that he wants as big a spawning flat as he can find...so with that in mind I went to one.  

I saw exactly three gar.  No bass, no beds, nothing hit me or bumped me.  I decided to move out to the first break...maybe they’re holding deeper there.  About this time I’d been “running and gunning” for about 2.5 hours.  It felt like an exercise in futility.  I was running all over the lake throwing at empty water.  I realized that I was now adrift.  I had no plan, and was just hastily going through random motions that I thought might work.  I was seriously contemplating heading to the truck at this point.  I was tired, hungry, frustrated, and deeply disappointed. 

I sat there in the boat, frustrated, beat up by the wind and the waves, not knowing what to do.  The only thing I could think of that would end this pain would be to leave.  I looked the map on my sonar unit, and I convinced myself to stop at two or three small coves on the way back to the truck, just to make sure I’d tried everything.  

I also took a moment to tie on a Texas rigged lizard.  It would be a dramatic departure from what I had been doing, but it felt like maybe I should try going back to the basics before quitting.

I got up on plane and rode the jolting waves, and had water thrown in my face, and got beat up the whole way to my next spot.  I forced myself to pull into my next target rather than run for the shelter of my truck.  What I saw when I got there was amazing.  I left the absolute bone jarring, wind beaten, lead-grey sky of the main lake, and entered a small feeder creek that looked like the land that time forgot.  Nothing here was grey and windy...it was spring time back in here.  Everything was a shade of green, and it was all serenely calm.




When I looked back over my shoulder at the main lake I could see the angry current and wave action waiting for me.  It looked as if it had been simply locked out of this place.  This little creek wasn’t 30 yards wide, and maybe 150 yards  long.  It’s placid green water was reflecting the bright green foliage that hung above it, and it’s edges were lined with slick black rocks covered in thick green moss.  It was absolutely tranquil and beautiful back here.

I looked down this creek, and thought “If I can catch one fish here...just one...I will have figured something out today.”  I stood and cast my newly-tied lizard to a black shelf sitting in 6 inches of water.  What lay below the shelf I didn’t know...it just dropped off into darkness...I’d send the lizard to figure that part out.




With a twitch or two the lizard slid over the edge.  I watched it’s arms and tail wiggle as it dove, then saw the line go dead when it hit the bottom.  I paused, then twitched the tip...but the lizard didn’t come up...and it was way heavier than when I sent it down there.  PULL!  I pulled hard upward on the rod and heard my line tightening around the spool...tink tink tink!  The rod bowed and got heavy, and the first fight of the trip was finally on.  

There in that emerald cathedral, protected by hardwood hills on both sides, with the wind held back by the narrow mouth of the creek, I fought that bass from along the sheer rock drop out to the middle of the creek.  The line sliced and darted, and the rod stayed heavy.  This was sooooo...much...fun!

In 30 seconds I had in my hand the fish I had worked so hard to find.  The first largemouth bass of my trip.  I quickly released him and looked around.  What just happened?  That was my first cast in this spot with this lure.  I had literally fished for 8 hours previously without a single bump.  Eight, long, bitter, frustrating, fruitless hours.  Then on my first cast here I got nailed.  

For the first time in two days I was smiling.  Something had gone right.  I reeled in my lizard, and eagerly cast to a spot on the opposite side of the creek where three logs were laid down in the water.  I felt nothing on the first cast.  The bottom of the creek felt absolutely smooth.  





The next cast was a little further, a little closer to the logs.  At this point I am still in absolute awe of this place.  It is the greenest place I’ve seen in a long time.  It’s full of forest green, emerald green, and most importantly...largemouth green.  I twitched my line and felt a small bump.  I watched the line intently and saw that it was slowly moving to the right.  Something hit the lizard and was running to the middle of the creek with it.  Sweep back, “tink tink...tink” as the spinning reel loaded up...another fish ON!  

Back and forth the bass cut across the creek, staying deep with the lizard.  The surface of this water remained perfectly calm despite the fight going on above it and below it.  This was the total opposite of the main lake whose surface was furious despite no fight taking place at all.  In short order I had my second bass in hand.  It was an interesting fish with a solid black upper lip, not much green to him, and a single black patch on his side.  Again I released the fish, and again I stood and pondered...eight hours with no fish, then two fish in two minutes.  That’s quite a reversal.  

This creek felt like it was a hundred miles long, and every bit of it calm and green, lined with slate rock, and full of gently sloping timber.  All my previous frantic fishing with flashy/crashy lures had run me ragged for nothing, and when I finally slowed down I heard what the fish wanted.  I don’t know how many fish I caught in that creek, but it was enough to make me forget about all the frustration that had built up on this trip.  In fact it made me forget about all the frustration that caused me to come on the trip to begin with.  In a world of hurt, this creek had become an oasis.  I don’t know how long I stayed, but I know I was angry when I arrived, and totally relaxed when I got to the back.  Eventually the creek ended in a jumble of downed trees and shallow water.  Sadly the time had come to turn around.  

I turned the boat around and began to slowly fish my way back out.  To my surprise the wind shifted again and had filled the front half of the creek with choppy water.  It was already losing it’s serene feel.  The mouth of the creek was filled with such contorted violent water that it looked like a giant garbage disposal was turning it.  The creek offered me a lesson, a glimpse of how an alternate fishing trip could be.  I didn’t have to “run and gun” and try to force my original plan on the lake.  If I could find another place like this creek...maybe the lizard could again work it’s magic.

I reentered the main lake with more purpose than at any other time on this trip.  I now knew what to do.  About 4 miles away, just a bit from where I camped the night before, was a perfect spot where I could find shelter from the wind.  It was time to run there and try the lizard.

The water was so rough that I needed full rain gear to stay dry.  My sonar cables got knocked out of both units, and I think I broke a mounting bolt for my trolling motor, but I got to the next spot in due time.  I came off plane at the rocky mouth of a creek that fed into the main river.  With a hard wind chasing me I ducked behind a big hill that fortified one side of the creek mouth.  As soon as I passed behind it, the crashing waves were left on the rocks behind me, and I entered into an eery calm that was reminiscent of the creek from earlier.  

I jumped from my seat and was casting within 10 seconds.  My first cast hit some floating sticks near the bank and in instinctively jerked to keep from getting hung up.  As soon as I jerked, the lizard slammed under.  BAM!  A bass hammered my first lizard cast on this spot as well.  WOOOOHOOOO!  This was unbelievable.  This lure is magic...I’m going to start calling it the Lizard of Oz.  



Cast after cast I made down that sheltered bank and I caught bass after bass.  It was ridiculous how easy it was to catch them.  I was laughing out loud all by myself at the absurdity of how much my luck had changed since I tied on the Lizard of Oz.  One little shift in technique...slowing down...changed everything for me.  I could have been my hard-headed self and fished the rest of the day with the crankbait, wildly and blindly flailing at the water...and I’d have been miserable all day.  Heck I’d have been miserable until the next trip because I would have surely been skunked.  But by listening to what the fish wanted (or what they didn’t want...a lizard in their bed) my luck had changed.

My plan had been to fish all day Friday, but by noon I was so happy with what I had accomplished that I headed home early to get more time with the family.  For me the take away is that I need to be a lot more adaptable on the water.  You always have to have a plan, and I always go to the lake with an idea of what the fish should be doing.  However, I need to get a lot better at finding out what the fish are really doing, rather than what I think they should be doing.  


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Special Forces Fishing? The United States Military is the finest military on the planet. Most Americans are familiar to some degree with our military’s special forces. The Marines have Force Recon, the Navy has SEALs, the Army has Rangers, Green Beret’s, and Delta Force, and the Air Force has it’s Para Jumpers.
Special Forces Fishing

Special Forces Fishing

These institutions have long, illustrious histories showing us who and what they are. They are known for being tough, dedicated men who will give everything they have to accomplish their mission. It is nothing short of astounding to hear their stories of sacrifice and success.
I bring this up to ask you the following: How badly do you want to fish? When your mission is fishin’, how far are you willing to go to accomplish it?
At this point I need to let you know that this story is not about me. It’s about my good friend Tony. He is by far the most dedicated (addicted?) outdoorsman I know. On the exterior you will find a quiet, humble, extremely likable dude. I’ve never X-rayed him, but I imagine on the inside it’s just a strong laser beam focused on hunting and fishing. The guy simply does not know when to quit. I could give you lots of examples defining his determination, but a recent one highlights many of the differences between Tony and the rest of us.
Tony lives in Idaho and it seems like every day for the past month Tony has sent me fishing pictures. Keep in mind that 5 out of the 6 days are work days (he doesn’t fish on Sunday). He rises early, hooks the boat to the truck, drives to the lake, fishes, and is in the office on time later that morning. Most of the days were cold, some had snow, some had sleet, they all had wind, and they all started long before the sun came up…but he went anyway. The line between a special forces mission and one of Tony’s fishin missions should now be starting to blur. While their target species is different, there is no amount of bad weather or early start times that will dissuade either group.
Special Forces Fishing
On this particular fishin’ mission, Tony would have to tow his boat with his Buick sedan because his pickup truck was in the shop. Some of you might stop and re-read this last sentence. Yes, he has a backup plan and it’s to use the Buick as a tow vehicle. Having your primary vehicle go down is no excuse for mission failure. Fishing WILL occur.
So at 0530 in the crisp, cold darkness of southern Idaho, we find our man Tony silently backing the Buick up to the boat. He’s done this a million times before. No neighbors will hear him, there will be no trace that he was ever here. However, when he gets out to hook up he realizes he left the ball hitch on his truck. The same truck he dropped off at the garage to get worked on yesterday.
I need to interrupt the story at this point to let you know I would have immediately put the car in park, then cussed and grumbled my way back to the front door. I’d have quietly let myself in, leaving the cold and the darkness outside, and crawled back into a warm bed with my wife. Case closed. However, Tony is on a fishin’ mission, and he doesn’t quit.
Standing there in the dark, his breath hanging before him in frozen clouds as he exhales, Tony immediately knows what he has to do. Go to bed? No. He jumps in the Buick and races downtown to the garage where he left his truck. It’s a fairly small town so there’s no traffic at this hour. There are perhaps 20 vehicles being worked on so it won’t take any time at all to grab his hitch, run back to the house, and hook up. This will be a minor delay.
He drives through town with silence and darkness as his only companions. He passes home after home whose occupants are sleeping warmly in their beds. They are all dreaming of something while they sleep, but Tony is wide awake and dreaming of fishing.
In short order he finds the lot and quickly pulls off the quiet street leading him here. He parks, jumps out, and begins a hasty search in the dark for the item he’s come to snatch. Even in the pitch black he can tell somethings wrong, his truck isn’t here. He runs through the shadows to the big rolling doors of the garage, and then he sees it. Of the twenty or so vehicles there, his is the ONLY ONE locked inside for the night! He can see his truck 18 inches away, on the other side of this door, but there is no way he can get to it. It would appear the game is over. The mission is a bust. I would have gone home, cursing and grumbling under my breath. I might have slammed the door behind me, then plopped down out of frustration and tried to get some sleep.
Not Tony though. Remember, this guy has the dedication of a Tier 1 spec ops fisherman. Like a Green Beret creeping through Baghdad trying to infiltrate Sadam’s castle, Tony knows there’s a way; he just has to find it.
As his hopes of reclaiming his hitch go up in smoke, he immediately switches to the next best option for mission success. Across the street is a junkyard owned by a friend of his; surely one of those vehicles will have a hitch he can borrow. While the town continues to slumber, Tony dashes across the street. An astute observer might have noticed something moving from one dark shadow to the next. At this time of night, dashing through the shadows with a wild eyed “need to go fishing look” he might have even been mistaken for an enormous raccoon. When he gets to the junkyard he creeps over and around the skeleton of every dead and wrecked vehicle on the lot hoping to find a hitch. The clock is still ticking, there is still time to fish, there is still time to complete the mission, if he can only find a hitch.
Murphy’s Law is alive and well at this early hour. There is no hitch in site. What are the odds that this many junkyard trucks and SUV’s in Idaho wouldn’t have a ball hitch on them?!?! The mission is a bust. At this point I’d have driven home, cursing loudly, running stop signs, and trying to run over possums as I went. But not Tony…his fishin’ mission is still on. No matter how bad the odds are stacked against him, he doesn’t quit. His mindset never leaves the “positive” setting where all things are possible. I don’t think his brain even has a “negative” setting. There is no part of his thought process that says “this can’t be done.’ He just keeps going, and going, and going, until it gets done or it fails. He always sees a path to victory.
Special Forces Fishing
At this point his truck is inaccessible, the junkyard has nothing for him, and the clock is still ticking. The earth is turning, the sun will be rising, and the fish WILL be biting…he must get to the lake. Now Tony recalls his buddy Ron has a hitch on his Suburban. Obviously Ron won’t mind if he borrows it for the morning, so he jumps in the Buick again and sprints across town. The house is dark, and everyone is asleep. Ugh! The Suburban isn’t there!!
With the sun soon rising, this Suburban is Tony’s last hope. He MUST find this vehicle for mission success. Where could it be? Ron has been remodeling a house nearby, surely the Suburban is there! He hits the gas and zips across to the other side of town. As his headlights sweep the driveway it’s obvious that this is another dry hole, the Suburban isn’t here. At this point I’d speed home, blowing through every stop sign in my way, burn my boat when I got there, slam the door, and just watch a fishing show because I’d be way too angry to sleep.
But not Tony. His mind is focused like a laser on this mission. Find the Suburban and you get to fish. This Suburban is now being chased harder than Osama Bin Laden. There is no place it can hide. Suddenly he remembers that Ron has a building lot for a new house not far from here. On the gas again. Sun rising, fish getting active, Tony is in a desperate race against natures clock. Not once since this cascade of problems began has he considered quitting. His only focus is on fishing. Find a hitch, you get to fish; so he continues his quest.
When he arrives at the building site, his fourth target of the morning, he scores. The Suburban is here and hooked up to a trailer!! It took him a few minutes to get everything unhooked, but once he did he was on his way! He blasted back to the house, installed the hitch in the Buick, backed up, and discovered it was the wrong size. This is where the story gets ugly. In Tony’s words, “All these early mornings are killing my ability to think these things through properly.”
There isn’t enough foul language in all the languages combined that would satisfy my requirements in this situation. I’d cuss until the steel melted the hitch right off the boat, then I’d walk to the lake, wade in, and begin punching fish in the face. It would be an ugly, ugly scene. But not Tony. He’s the type of guy who will look at it quietly, and after careful consideration say something like “Aw man…that’s not good. I guess we’ll just get ‘em tomorrow.”
After he realized all of his efforts were for naught, he simply drove back to Ron’s place and returned the gear to its prior place and status. Most of us would have gone home to get some well needed rest. As you’ve learned though, Tony sees things differently. Despite all the setbacks, the fishin’ mission was still possible. He went to work a few hours before normal so he could justify leaving early and fishing before the sun set.
This is a dedicated fisherman my friends. As they say here in my part of the world “He’s eat up with it.”
So when I say someone is on a “fishin’ mission”, that’s what it looks like. He pursues it like a wolf chases a rabbit. It’s not going to stop. You’d have to kill the wolf to keep it from chasing the rabbit, and there are days I’d swear nature would have to kill Tony to keep him off the lake or the mountain.
How dedicated are you my friends?
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