Saturday, April 30, 2022

7 of 9 Tournament Boats Bring 5-Fish Limits to the Scales Today

With the yo-yo water level we had all this past week, a clearcut decision about where to launch today's event from couldn't be reached until yesterday. And, fortunately, the nine boats with 17 participants were able to go out of our traditional site...West Neck Creek Marina. As a result, one-half of the new ownership husband-wife team of Jimmy and Bethany Vaughan was able to be on hand to greet everyone before we left the boat basin this morning.

As Jimmy would learn, the tournament results revealed a total of 35 bass were brought to the scales, for a total weight of 91.87 lbs., which translates into an average weight per fish of 2.62 lbs. Those anglers who went home with pay envelopes...in some cases, multiple envelopes...included the following:

1st Place, the team of (from left) Mike McCluskey and Rob Peppers, with 17.59 lbs. total weight, and a 5.15-lb. big fish, which also earned them the day's Lunker Award. In addition, this team laid claim to part of the Side Pot.





2nd Place, the team of (from left) Gabe Himmelwright and Mark Ingram, with 15.95 lbs. total weight, and a 4.06-lb. big fish. They also claimed the second of two Side Pot envelopes.











3rd Place
, the team of (from left) Steve Bailey and Dennis Dean, with 14.51 lbs. total weight, and a 4.68-lb. big fish.












Here is how the rest of the field finished in today's competition:

     * The husband-wife team of Andy and Diana Morath, 13.80 lbs. total weight, and a 4.15-lb. big fish.
     * Ken Mathias, 12.87 lbs. total weight, and a 3.94-lb. big fish.
     * The team of Wayne Hayes and Ken Testorff, 8.79 lbs. total weight, and no big fish.
     * The team of Dave Anderson and Gary Coderre, 8.36 lbs. total weight, and a 2.11-lb. big fish.
     * The team of Craig Jones and Rob Chatham and the brothers-team of Allen and Chris Napier didn't weigh any fish.

Congratulations to all of today's winners, and thanks to everyone who came out to participate. For planning purposes, our next scheduled event is next Saturday, May 7th, starting at safe light or about 6 o'clock, with weigh-in at 2 p.m.

Welcome Aboard! to the new owners, too. Looking forward to a long and satisfying relationship. We appreciate your allowing us to continue enjoying our favorite sport in the "playground" we've all gotten so used to over the years.


One Last Cast

As anglers approached the West Neck Creek Bridge in the wee hours this morning, en route to the marina, we all were met with a dense fog bank. It was nearly thick enough to cut with the proverbial knife.

Luckily, though, by the time 6 o'clock rolled around...our start time...the fog surprisingly had rolled out, and everything was able to happen right on cue from the tournament director, Wayne Hayes.

I don't know many anglers who welcome a foggy start to a day's bass tournament. Personally speaking, I've never liked it. In my early days of bass fishing, I used to just try to navigate very slowly and, even then, more times than not, ultimately would find that I had dramatically missed the mark, or simply had gone in circles.

Then, a few years ago, I recall having tried to navigate the North Landing River one tournament morning during densely foggy conditions and incurring, along with my partner at the time, Rob C., one of the eeriest sensations I've ever experienced. We just had turned south out of West Neck Creek that particular morning, when what should we encounter but a tug pushing a giant barge directly at us.

Having once been employed by the Naval Safety Center, I had a lasting deep appreciation for the many mishap reports investigators had to write about foolish people who did foolish things. I certainly never relished the idea of a mishap report having to be done on yours truly. Accordingly, my friend and I did a hasty retreat to West Neck Creek that morning and stayed put until safe passage was possible.

The only other time I ever experienced a similar fog-shrouded disaster was while, as a young Navy seaman, returning to port in Norfolk, VA, from a cruise aboard my first Navy ship, a destroyer. I was standing at quarters on the fantail, along with other divisional shipmates, when our ship's bridge watch suddenly sounded the "emergency backdown" alarm. We subsequently were left scrambling for something solid to grab onto. And then, once we had a chance to look up and see the faint outline of an aircraft carrier so close to our tiny "tincan," let's just say it more or less took our breath away.

The smart man knows that fog is nothing to be taken lightly, and even with a tournament at stake, you're far better off in the long run just waiting for the fog to lift before you try to navigate anywhere.


Current Overall Statistics
(click anywhere on this chart for a full-size model)

Friday, April 29, 2022

We Fishermen Are a Quirky Lot, Don'tcha Think?

Had a note from my kayaker buddy this morning when I rolled out of the sack and powered up my computer for another day. Seems Ron had taken a trip yesterday to one of ol' Charlie Bruggemann's favorite local holes: Stumpy Lake. His note read as follows:

Launched at 5 p.m. and threw Senkos and craws to cypress trees for two hours without a tap. Headed back to the launch site about 7 o'clock and stopped to make a few casts to one last stand of cypress trees, and to my surprise, it seemed like they had just suddenly woke up. Got a 4-5 and a 1-15 in short order, plus lost one. Was very pleased. As I've learned, the bass in Stumpy nearly always are thick and healthy...when I can find 'em, that is.

'Twould appear that Ron's experience last evening lends credence to the idea of "just one last cast." If he hadn't stopped at that last stand of trees, he never would have gotten that skunk out of the kayak.

In a similar vein, I try never to end a fishing day on having a backlash in my reel or losing a lure. If that happens, I feel like I'm doomed for the next trip. Probably sounds crazy to most of you, but that's just who I am.

Reckon it's no worse than those folks who feel it jinxes them if someone brings a banana into their boat. Of course, though, my Dewey's tournament partner eats a banana during most of our trips and still manages to put quality fish in the boat, so maybe that myth has been debunked.

In any event, "good on ya," Ron, for putting a nice finishing touch on your evening on the water.

Thursday, April 28, 2022

Put Your Cellphone Away and Fish

I know of very few anglers today who don't carry a cellphone with them every time they're on the water. After all, it's nice to have a way to call for help in an emergency, check on someone who may be under the weather at home, or to use the phone's camera to snap a shot of a big fish you just landed. That's some of the pros...or blessings, if you will...for taking a cellphone with you when you go fishing.

However, there's another side to this discussion...a curse, if you will. Cellphones have become one of the most powerful distractions we face today. Phone addiction is a real thing. Look around pretty much anywhere in public, and you'll see the powerful pull this device has, with many people taking every spare second to check the latest notifications or to read their latest email.

My personal biggest complaint is with those drivers who pull up to a stoplight and start paying more attention to their cellphone than their driving. That's why I rest one hand on my horn at every stoplight. If you're not off and running when the light goes green, I'm laying on my horn 'til you move.

But let's get back to the fishing aspect. As one angler I read about online learned, it pays to keep a tight grip on the cellphone if you do take it on the water. Better yet, keep it in your tackle box or bag. Here's why.

One sunny and mild December day, a die-hard jerkbait angler and his fishing buddy, a dedicated plastic-worm fisherman, had joined up for a trip to their favorite local lake. On this particular day, a miracle of sorts happened: The jerkbait angler finally was able to cajole his worm friend into trying a jerkbait...a Smithwick Rogue, to be exact...to start the day.

These two anglers were more or less made for each other. As the jerkbait fisherman explained, "My buddy has those positive fish ions that cancel out my anti-fish magnetic field. We always do well when we get together...way better than when I'm fishing solo."

Seems those positive fish ions were having the desired effect this day. Both were catching spotted and largemouth bass. When the worm buddy would start battling another fish, the jerkbait stalwart would whip out his cellphone to document the fight. Each time then, the buddy would toss the fish back into the lake.

Then came the moment, though, when the worm angler got hooked up with a bass, and the jerkbait angler simply sat his rod on the deck to whip out his phone once more to snap another picture. Unfortunately, at the same instant, a bass grabbed the jerkbait fisherman's line and started pulling his fishing rod into the water, causing him to drop his phone like a hot potato. He managed to grab the rod, but when he looked around, the cellphone was nowhere to be found.

Said the jerkbait fisherman, "We checked behind the seats and in every nook and cranny...but nothing. Evidently, I'd knocked it overboard during the rod rescue. Visions of visiting the cellphone store were dancing through my head, as I saw a young clerk who would laugh and say, 'Oh, how we love fishermen!'"

On a whim, though, the fishing buddy suggested checking under the deck, down by the battery and bilge pump.

"There, friends and neighbors," said the jerkbait fisherman, "lay my beloved cellphone. The wave of relief was like a tsunami washing over me. 'Yesss!' I hollered when I picked it up and showed it to by buddy.

"When I dived for my rod, my knee must have sent the phone sailing across the back deck and down into the bilge.

"That was the last picture I shot with my phone," assured the jerkbait angler. "Next fishing trip, I'll bring a regular camera...a waterproof one at that...with a big float attached."

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Reckon You Could Call This an Old Codgers' Fishin' Day

(Left, one of Skip's fish)

Skip and I decided yesterday to have a fun-fishing day today, and true to our plans, we both launched out of West Neck this morning in search of a few fish. With the water level at full pool, both Skip and I headed north to a couple of super shallow creeks that aren't always accessible from a bass boat.

In comparing notes this evening after we both were off the water, I learned that Skip had a decent day in his chosen spot, whereas I couldn't say much for my first stop of the day. Oh, I found fish OK, and I had lots of strikes on my chosen topwater bait, but not a single fish ever got connected. After an hour and a half of swinging and missing, I had had all I wanted from a hole where, a few years ago, I used to spend an entire day catching quality bass. On this day, however, I gave up quickly and returned to West Neck where I found some fish last Friday.

However, the pattern had changed from then until today. The fish I caught Friday came from a cove, whereas today, they all came from a stretch of shoreline just before you reach that cove. I checked out that cove again today but didn't find a single fish...for that matter, not even a strike.

I ended the day with a total of seven fish, with only two keepers in the lot: a 1-4 and a 2-0 (right). Every one of them hit my spinnerbait, just like they did last Friday.

In talking to Skip, I learned he also caught six or seven fish today, with most of them coming on a small plastic swimbait.

Reckon it's a good thing that "ol' codgers" like Skip and me are content just to feel an occasional tug on our line. Otherwise, we would have been vastly disappointed today. As it was, though, we both came home "happy campers."

Monday, April 25, 2022

First-Timers Walk Away With All the Prize Money This Past Saturday


Stateline held its second scheduled tourney of the 2022 season this past Saturday, April 23rd, on the North River. It was pretty much a picture-perfect day, with mild air temperatures and wind, and with water temperatures hovering around 65 degrees. There were 17 anglers in 10 boats vying for the prize money and the bragging rights that go with it.

Eight boats managed to bring a five-fish limit to the scales. Finishing in first place was the new-to-Stateline team of Larry Haywood and Chris Clark, with 14.18 lbs. In addition to the $225 they claimed for that victory, they also secured the big-fish pot, worth another $85, with a 4.18-lb. fish.

Meanwhile, second place went to the team of Don Carter and Rob Peppers, who also were fishing their first event with Stateline this season. They, too, had a five-fish limit, weighing a total of 13.29 lbs., anchored by a 3.91-lb. big fish. They pocketed $115 for their efforts.

Sunday, April 24, 2022

Looks Like Spring Fishin' Is Pickin' Up

'Twould seem that spring finally has sprung, given the fact I've heard from a couple of contributors in the same day. It started this morning with the following note from my kayaker buddy, Ron, who wrote:

Fished Tecumseh Friday morning and caught one 2-4 bass, as well as one catfish. Am still mixing it up between fresh and saltwater, and as you see here, just participated in another one of our annual trash cleanups.

Besides death and taxes, one other thing you always can count on is plenty of trash along all of our waterways...I even accidentally contributed to it on the North Landing this past Friday. As the fishing was coming alive for me in the last hour of my fishin' day, I got so excited and 'het up' over catching four bass in quick succession that I had to come out of my nearly new 3XL Onyx lifejacket. Didn't realize 'til later, when I got home, that the jacket was missing and knew that it had to have blown out of the boat as I ran the short distance from where I finished up fishing in West Neck to the ramp.

Might be mistaken, but I wouldn't doubt if my loss didn't end up being someone else's discovery, in which case I wish whomever well. Fortunately, I found another one online on sale, for about the same price I paid for the original one, and am expecting it to be delivered this coming Wednesday.

Then, this evening, I found a note from contributor dmac, along with some photos of beauties he's been landing over Northwest way. His note read as follows:

Good afternoon, Mr. Ken. Hope all is good and your livewell has been full of 5-lbers...(don't I wish!!!). After getting beat up by the wind for the last several weeks, as I pursued some NW River bass with a rubber worm, I'm happy to report that the frog bite now is ON!!!

Congrats to both of you and Tight Lines!!!

Saturday, April 23, 2022

Local Duo Have an Outstanding Tournament

Carolina Anglers Team Tournament (CATT), Tidewater Division, held a tournament on the Pasquotank River today. Highlight of the day was the impressive numbers of big fish brought to the scales, including four that weighed over 8 pounds and three that weighed more than 7 pounds.

And then there was the matter of the day's lunker prize--a behemoth that came in at 10.92 pounds--caught by Mark Ingram (at left in accompanying photo).

As Mark described the moment he caught that new personal best, he had pitched a soft plastic to a tree laying in the water, and, when he set the hook, said he thought it first might be a giant striper, then maybe a big grindle. But when the fish suddenly flashed alongside the boat, both he and his partner, Bob Clarkson, were able to see that it indeed was a H-U-U-U-G-E largemouth.

They finished the day in 2nd place, with a four-fish total weight of 24.65 pounds.

The team of Mike Evans and Brian Cooper claimed 1st place, with 27.88 pounds, and pocketed a $2,587 payday. Other money winners included the following teams:

     * Rick Plemmons and Chris Pike, 23.62 pounds
     * Jim and Greg Dick, 19.86 pounds
     * Tommy Houlroyd and Brandon Overton, 19.40 pounds
     * Jeremy Gatewood and Charlie Reed, 18.98 pounds
     * Tommy Banks and Jamie Hill, 17.74 pounds
     * Brandon Johnson and Eugene Foushee, 17.45 pounds


This post has been updated with new information I obtained from Mark during a text swap and phone conversation this morning (4/24/2022). As I'm quickly learning, CATT has some mighty good payouts, but the ability of their staff to get the facts straight leaves a lot to be desired.

Friday, April 22, 2022

Decided I Didn't Want To Face Another Saturday Crowd

Rolled out of bed early this morning for a change and got ahead of all but one other boat out of West Neck. Started out really struggling and was afraid another skunk might be in the offing, until I got to the last hour of my day. Then, in quick succession, I managed to boat a total of four bass...my best one weighing 2-11, which was my first fish of the day. Then came a 1-4, 1-0, and about an 11-inch bass...everything owing to the spinnerbait I was throwing.

By the time I got to my last hour on the water, I had migrated back to West Neck Creek, after making stops in four other areas. The scenario in all four of those areas was pretty much the same thing. I would draw a lot of swirls, and even a few short strikes but couldn't find any takers.

It's a miracle I even had enough wits about me to set the hook when I finally felt that 2-11 smack my spinnerbait. With my interest then renewed, I quickly found the next three smaller fish from the same kind of spot I had found the bigger one. Would have liked to have had another hour or two I could fish, but that just wasn't in the cards, especially because I was really feeling the full day I already had put in on the water. I knew I needed to call it a day.

Had a bit of a surprise at my first hole of the day...the graveyard. Was just idling through the maze of stuff in that area, working my way to where I wanted to start, when I glanced up at an old boat that had a "critter" hanging out onboard. Gotta admit I was a little surprised he was sunning himself so early, but then, maybe he's just an "early bird." On first look going in, I wasn't really sure the snake was even alive, but when I saw he had changed positions on the way out, I immediately knew he was very much alive.

Subsequently grabbed my camera and took the accompanying shot. Gotta tell ya, though, I stayed well away from the scene, opting instead to use the camera's telephoto lens. Unlike a neighbor I had during my youth, who would handle any kind of snake as though it were a toy, I give all such critters a wide berth, simply because I don't trust any of them. I've never been a brave man, and I ain't about to start now.

Besides this critter (incidentally, my first one of the season), I saw a number of turtles of varying size but nothing else, besides a few other fishermen as the day wore on. 'Tweren't many of the latter, likely because it was a work day for most.

Have plans to try and get out at least one day (maybe more) next week before our tournament next Saturday, the 30th. Not sure at this stage where I will be heading, but it very well may be a couple spots I haven't taken a look at for a spell. One thing you can be sure of: I'll have at least one spinnerbait tied on. For some weird reason, which I can't explain, that's fast becoming my "go to" bait this year...for the first time in ages. Can't remember the last time I've had any kind of spinnerbait bite to speak of. Meantime, my topwaters continue collecting a little dust, 'cause they simply haven't done anything for me yet in 2022.

One thing I did notice today was that the water temp had just broken 60 degrees when I caught my first fish, and it was 61 when I threw in the towel an hour later.

Thursday, April 21, 2022

Free As a Breeze...Wasteful Swimmers, Though, If You Please

Running on a treadmill in the gym isn't quite the real thing, and now it turns out that fish...bass, in particular...may have the same problem. That was the thinking of David Ellerby, from Wellesley College, USA.

His concern was that experiments in flow tunnels (the fish equivalent of treadmills) had suggested that fish naturally prefer to swim at a speed that consumes the least energy.

According to Ellerby, "Almost all measurements of fish-swimming costs are made at constant speeds imposed by the researchers, not those preferred by the fish. Although this is valuable information, we know very little about how the lab data actually relate to swimming behavior in the field."

As a result, Ellerby and two undergraduate students, Angela Han and Caroline Berlin, decided to get out of the lab and go swimming with free largemouth bass in Lake Waban to find out how realistic lab-based studies were. They devised an impromptu stereo-camera system by strapping a pair of GoPro cameras to a camera head, donned their snorkels, and got in the water.

Back in the lab, the trio estimated the length of each bass from the video and then measured each one's speed, the directness of the path each had taken, and how fast each had beat its tail. However, when the team compared the speeds that the fish had been swimming in the lake, with the most economical speeds that had been recorded in a flow tunnel in the lab, they were astonished by the findings. The majority of the free fish were swimming at slower, less economical speeds than the optimal speeds that had been recorded in a flow tunnel.

Wondering why the free fish might have opted for a more profligate (recklessly wasteful) swimming speed, Ellerby suggested the fish may have to accept a more costly slower speed to increase their chances of snapping up tasty morsels as they move around. Alternatively, he noted that it's possible the fish that were swimming in the flow tunnel when their metabolic rates were measured were not behaving as naturally as the freely swimming lake fish.

Either way, Ellerby warned that the behavior of fish in the real world may be subtly different from that of fish pounding a metaphorical treadmill.

I suggest, however, that maybe the difference is just a reflection that free fish...those in the real world...like to dream a little about swimming "up a lazy river by the old mill run, the lazy, lazy river in the noon day sun," as in the lyrics of that old 1930s song...pardon me for being a bit facetious.

While researching this info, I also happened across some other biological-study data that indicated bass are capable of swimming up to 2.5 times their body length per second. This means that a small fish can swim about 2 miles per hour, while a 20-inch fish may swim in spurts of up to 12 miles per hour.

Wednesday, April 20, 2022

For All the Heartbroken Fishermen

Reprinted with permission of IDNR/Outdoor Illinois magazine and the original author. This article appeared in their October 2008 issue.

                   Story and Photos By
                         Joe McFarland

One summer day when I was a boy, my father walked out into the middle of the front yard and placed an empty coffee can in the grass. He then called me outside.

"Now then," began my father's rite-of-passage speech. "Before you can be a fisherman, first you must learn how to cast properly."

My father handed me a fishing rod and reel. The coffee can was to be my target. If I could consistently cast a fishing lure into the can from across the yard, I would become, according to him, a great fisherman. "It's simple," my father said. He made a few graceful sweeps of his arm to demonstrate the technique. Then he went back into the house.

For years, I had dreamed of being a great fisherman. It was my destiny. At last, my initiation day had arrived.

I stared at the target, imagining the perfect fisherman's cast. Many times, I'd rehearsed this precise ritual in my mind. Leaving nothing to chance, I bent over and picked up a few dry grass clippings and let them fall to the ground, noting the air current. Closing one eye, I sighted down the fishing rod, as one might examine a pool cue for straightness. It was perfect.

Positioning my feet squarely, I raised my official casting arm and pointed the rod skyward. I licked my finger to test the wind once more. The new life I'd always imagined was clearly ahead of me--and it would be a great life, a famous life. I saw myself on Saturday afternoon fishing programs, accepting giant trophies following major bass tournaments I'd won easily, with cameras flashing, women smiling and showering me with champagne.

I was 7 years old. This was my destiny.

With pure confidence, I swung my arm and unleashed my first cast. The line swished, the reel spun. History was being made. Yet, somehow, something astonishingly different happened.

There was a quick motion in the tree across the yard...behold a snag. My lure dangled hopelessly like a failed parachutist suspended in a tree. To retrieve the lure, I pulled the line tight, but it broke--ping!--and so did my heart. Defiantly, I tied on a new lure.

Within 10 minutes, I realized I had the remarkable ability to cast a lure perfectly into any branch on any tree, a trick I could perform, even with my eyes closed.

Occasionally, my father would glance up from his newspaper and look out the window to see a tree branch swaying. The high-pitched whine of fishing line being stretched filled the neighborhood. It reminded me of those incredibly sad country songs, the kind that make grown men cry--yet still beg to hear every note.

This was not the life I had imagined, but I was hooked. Each cast offered a fresh opportunity for redemption and the chance to land a perfect cast and claim my title. Yet, all heartbreaks begin with the promise of a happy ending, and following each new cast, I would always hear the tragic sound of country music.

Eventually, my farther walked slowly out into the yard, head bowed. He looked up at the waving branch in the tree and put his hand on my shoulder. Both of us stared at the tree, as if it held the last of something.

"Just like Hank Williams," my father said quietly. And then he went back into the house.

Weeks passed, I continued practicing, determined to improve my skills. Yet, the heartbreaking sound of fishing line stretching, then snapping, became the soundtrack of my life.

I began to listen to country music, sympathizing with every heartbreaking verse. Broken hearts, broken fishing poles--their tragedy was mine. "So true," I sobbed. "So true."

And then one day, I managed to hit the coffee can. The lure rattled like a chain being dropped. Then I hit the can again--twice in a row. It felt good.

Wiping away tears, I declared myself an expert, my sadness lifted. After weeks of heartbreaking trials, I decided I finally was ready to go fishing.

Balancing my fishing rod across the handlebars of my bike, I immediately rode to Lake Makanda, where I proudly stood on the shore and demonstrated perfect casts, one after another. It was the best day of my life. The sun was shining, and fishermen waved at me from their boats, tipping their hats. A light breeze carried fragrant scents across the water. Everything was perfect.

Suddenly, the water exploded in fury. I saw a huge mouth and dark eyes. On my first day of fishing, I was about to land a monster largemouth bass. It was as if everything finally was coming together. The line screamed from the reel, growing more intense as the bass charged for deep water. It leaped, flipping, then again shaking wildly, as the line stretched and whined. And then the bass leaped once again, twisting and pulling, with its mouth opened wider still.

I was having visions of grandeur when, all of a sudden, the line went ping! The sounds trailed across the water, and, immediately, the fishermen in boats removed their hats and began to cry, the birds ceased to sing, and the skies darkened. I will never forget that day. Yet, I was hooked for life.

I now have spent the majority of my life making casts that ended in tearful tragedy. I've also spent many years listening to country music, enjoying the same results. Last summer, I drove down to Tennessee to find out why.

Even if you've never heard of a bass fisherman named Don Helms (left), the sound he makes with his favorite musical instrument--the steel guitar--is unmistakable. It turns out, this 81-year-old bass fisherman is none other than the last surviving member of an outfit called Hank Williams and the Drifting Cowboys, as in the Hank Williams, country music's legendary, long-departed pioneer.

Although Williams died back in 1953, at the age of just 29, the haunting sounds Helms played in the studio more than 55 years ago continue to make generations of listeners, including fishermen, break into tears.

A short distance from Nashville, I walked up to a pleasant-looking house and knocked on the door.

"Can I help you?" a smiling man answered. It was the man himself: Don Helms.

"Tell me something," I said to him. "Was Hank Williams a good fisherman?"

Immediately, the smile disappeared from his face, and his eyes narrowed. He waved me in and closed the door.

"Let me tell you about fishing with Hank Williams," Helms said, each word increasingly tense. "There's something you should know."

For the next hour, Helms revealed what had been unspoken for decades. Occasionally, his wife, Hazel, would set down her crochet needles and peek through the curtains to see if anyone was watching. The secret ingredient of country music was at stake.

It turns out the man who recorded "Your Cheating Heart" and "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" was a crappie fisherman--a truly annoying crappie fisherman. When Williams would ask Helms to go fishing, he'd make Helms drive for hours up to Kentucky Lake, while Williams slept. The trouble would begin the moment they hit the water.

"Hank liked to use the biggest minnows he could get," Helms recalled. "The problem was that you'd have to duck every time he cast because he was all over the place. He'd rear back, slap you in the face with a big minnow, then say something like, 'Why don't you watch where I'm casting?'"

Country-music pioneer Don Helms (right) explains
the mystery of tangled fishing line to writer Joe McFarland.
Helms, the bass fisherman, fumed in the front of the boat. As each fishing trip progressed, anxiety built.

"Hank didn't own a boat, but he owned an outboard motor," Helms said. When the two musicians would rent a boat at Kentucky Lake, Williams would take control of navigation duties, always maneuvering the boat in his favor, sometimes jamming Helms into brush. Lines would tangle--then snap. The heartbreaking sound of their own music became the soundtrack of their fishing trips.

Finally, at the end of the day, Helms would drive the car back to Nashville, while Williams slept again. "Wanna go again tomorrow?" a refreshed Williams asked after they arrived. He was a hooked fisherman, and so was Helms, who continues to fish for bass today. Yet, the man who continues to play heartbreaking sounds on his beloved Gibson steel guitar has never landed what all fishermen dream about: one monster trophy bass.

"The biggest I ever caught weighed 5 pounds," Helms said, dabbing his eyes. Then he put his hand on my shoulder and said, "Fish long enough, and eventually you'll cry, too."

So true...so true.


The author of this article included a note at the end of his original piece that said Don Helms died in Tennessee on Aug. 11, 2008, at the age of 81. Shortly before his death, Helms received a draft of the author's work and was able to provide additional details of his fishing trips with Hank Williams.

"Not every fishing trip with Hank was that bad," Helms told the OI staff writer, Joe McFarland. "We had some good times."

Incidentally, the "soft" photos with this story are only a reflection of the fact I had to make second-generation scans of the photos that appeared in the magazine article, all of which were crisp. --Ken

Tuesday, April 19, 2022

"Wow! Nice Fish!" I Bet You're Thinking, Right?


That's certainly what I was thinking when my longtime friend, Jim, sent me this photo yesterday of his 10-year-old great-grandson holding a bass he had caught in a neighborhood pond in Deep Creek.

When he first received the photo, no details were provided. It was only after Jim asked for some that he discovered this photo really is the result of some fancy camera angles. The fish actually only weighed about a pound or pound-and-a-half.

Don't know about y'all, but I can't help wondering how many more photos we see in newspapers, magazines, online, etc. that are nothing more than the result of someone who has figured out some fancy camera angles.

Jim went on to explain that his great-grandson also had hooked what appeared to be about a 3-pounder in the same pond but lost it when the fish threw the hook. Seems the lad didn't have the drag set quite right on his baitcaster.

"He's 'ate up' with bass fishing," said my friend. "I guess Grandpa better get the Skeeter ready, 'cause I probably will be hearing from him soon, asking for a ride...'" and he likely will, 'cause, as Jim continued, "I had some good times with his dad at that age in my tin Tracker. Appears to be a 'chip off the ol' block.'"

And while this lad is displaying his angling skills, his older brother is demonstrating his expertise in cornhole competition...both locally and elsewhere. The last time Jim and I talked about him, he already had lined up two or three sponsors, so the boy knows a thing or two about getting those bags in the hole...consistently!

Wishing both lads a lot of success in whatever they do.

Monday, April 18, 2022

"Fishing Lures Are Designed To Catch Fishermen"


We've all heard that saying at one time or another, and now there's some pretty convincing evidence it's true.

Ever since the first artificial lures were developed, people have been working nonstop to improve them and/or develop new ones of their own. The marketplaces are filled today with designs meant to perfectly replicate fish...with photorealistic scales, eyes and finishes.

Maybe, though, we've been overthinking things just a bit. Do we really need to go through all this effort just to catch a fish?

That's a question YouTuber Nate Marling (of Marling Baits) has been thinking about for a spell now...and he even has taken it further. He's into experimenting with some woodgrain patterns in his homemade lures. He keeps things simple by attaching hooks and weights to a simple block of wood, then takes it out for a real-world test: to see if it will catch a fish.

Check out his block-of-wood lure video at this link (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FlKFMwplHGg) and see how Marling turns a simple block of wood into an extremely effective lure.

Outdoor writer Travis Smola lives about 15 miles from Dowagiac, Michigan, where Heddon Lures was founded. He pointed out that a park there is named after James Heddon, who got the idea for his first fishing plug while killing time whittling next to the water. According to local legend, when he was done whittling, he tossed the carved stick in the water, and a bass struck it, prompting his idea for a lure company. It seems this was no secret to the lure makers of the world.

While all those fancy touches added to lures no doubt help, it seems pretty evident by this video that all those extra embellishments don't really matter. In the end, it's the sound and movement of a lure that matters the most for catching fish.

If you're interested in seeing a full list of all things Marling Baits, simply click on this link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCa-xsrfvLmgaUfPFE1TK7OQ/videos. Try it...I think you'll like what you find.

Sunday, April 17, 2022

Study Reveals Why Some Largemouth Bass Are Harder To Catch


Anglers debate whether whoppers get big because of what they eat or where they live, but a study at the University of Illinois found that some largemouth bass owe their longevity and size to their parents' genes.

In an experiment spanning more than 20 years, researchers discovered that vulnerability to being hooked is a heritable trait among largemouth bass. Curiously, it is not a genetically-passed physical propensity for fast growth. On the contrary, researchers found some bass get big because other bass are inherently more likely to get caught.

"The potential for angling to have long-term evolutionary impacts on bass populations is real," David Philipp, an ecology and conservation researcher at the University of Illinois, wrote in a project overview published in the journal Science Daily. "If we truly want to protect this valuable resource into the future, then we need to understand that and adjust our management strategies."

In the study, fishing was strictly controlled on a 15-acre research impoundment run by the Illinois Natural History Survey. Anglers reserved blocks of fishing time and put every fish caught in a livewell. The fish were measured, tagged to track how many times each had been caught, and released.

"We kept track more than four years of all the angling that went on," Philipp told Science Daily. "Many fish were caught more than once. One fish was caught three times in the first two days, and another one was caught 16 times in one year."

After four years of documenting the catch, the lake was drained, and researchers collected more than 1,700 fish.

"Interestingly, about 200 of those fish never had been caught, even though they had been in the lake the entire four years," Philipp said.

Saturday, April 16, 2022

I Knew I Was Taking Chances Going Fishing Twice This Week

With today being Saturday, I figured the parking lot at West Neck probably would be pretty full, especially since I wouldn't be arriving there until about 9:30 (can't help it that I'm getting slower as I get older), and as I quickly learned after turning into the drive, I was correct. I also knew that there was a slight chance of some showers in the area today...the TV weather girl told me that while I was eating breakfast. To my delight, though, she was wrong. Nary a raindrop fell on me today (good thing, too, 'cause y'all know I'm sweeter than sugar, and we all know what happens when sugar gets wet...it melts, of course).

And further, unlike my earlier trip this week, I managed to rig the boat and launch it without a single hitch. In case you didn't read my previous report, I launched the boat Monday without first attaching one end of the rope to the trailer stanchion. By sheer luck, I got around the van soon enough to save myself the embarrassment of bidding my boat a "bon voyage" without me. The rope still was just sliding down the ramp when I got my big, fat foot on it and saved my day.

I also was lucky enough this morning to kiss my wife goodbye without having to duck a right cross aimed at my jaw. Ya' see, my wife has a notorious habit of coming up swinging when I kiss her goodbye while she's sound asleep. Of course, that's mild, compared to the trick she once pulled shortly after we were married.

We were making a trip back to Kansas to visit my folks at the time and had had to make an unexpected stop at a bed and breakfast in Pennsylvania (I think it was). The problem was that I had blown a recap tire on the ol' car (I was poor back in those days, what with child support and all) and dropped her and my son off there, while I went in search of an all-night gas station to buy another tire. Suffice it to say, I was gone for hours before finally getting to the bed and breakfast to rest my weary bones. Knowing she and the boy would be sound asleep, I very carefully put the key in the door, unlocked it, and was just starting into the room, when my frightened wife sat straight up in bed and started hollering (of all things) RAPE!!! Fortunately, I got the situation under control before anyone could call the police on my butt.

However, I do digress. Let me now get to the point of this diatribe...in short, an explanation for the one chance I took today that truly did not play out the way I had hoped. As I often do, I went back to the same areas today where I caught fish Monday, with one minor detour to start the morning. That quick detour and the first two hours of my fishing day were totally without incident. I hit 'em with a crankbait, spinnerbait (the same one I had success with Monday), and three different topwaters without finding a single taker. That left just one thing I hadn't tried yet: a weightless Senko.

I soon realized I probably should have been throwing the Senko all along, because I quickly had a couple of "iffy" bites that simply never turned into anything. But then I happened upon a point, where just as I was making my approach from downwind, I saw a bass break water...a good one, at that. When I was in range, I let go a long cast with the weightless Senko that, for me, surprisingly was nothing short of magnificent...if I do say so myself. I assure you I never could have done it a second time if I had spent the rest of the day trying.

Anyway, I felt the fish pick up the worm as soon as it hit the water...there was an ever so subtle "tick" in the line. I then took up enough of the slack I could tell the fish still had the bait and was moving with it. I watched with intense focus, as the fish ever so slowly swam around the point, and started toward open water...still with the worm in its mouth. At this point, I took a calculated chance. I wanted to see just how far the fish would go with the worm (even though standard practice calls for setting the hook as soon as you feel the fish). Accordingly, I mashed down the thumbar on my reel and lightly rested my bare thumb on the line, watching intently as the fish just kept heading to open water.

When the fish had gone several feet (and I figured he might drop it any moment), I decided it was time to reengage the thumbar, and lay fire to him. Immediately, the fish, in all its glory, went airborne and did a short tail walk, before shaking that ol' head and throwing my Senko.

Needless to say, I was disappointed that I didn't get to hold the fish, weigh it, and get a photo, but, in this case, the show I got more than made up for that disappointment...even if it was the only fish I hooked all day. The Senko worm, unfortunately, had globbed up on the end of the hook, preventing it from burying solidly in his jaw. Still, though, the image of that line moving through the water, then that moment of truth, will live in my memory for the rest of my life. I'll never know how much he weighed, but I do know he was "a dandy."

P.S. As I was leaving Albright's to head back to West Neck, I stopped and talked to a fella in a johnboat, sitting at the mouth of the cut-through. He told me he had caught two nice fish this morning in the oxbow on the left, just after you pass under the high-rise bridge heading south. If I understood him correctly, he at the time was fishing the rock wall in front of that home that sits on the far side of the oxbow. Said he caught both fish on a buzzbait. As he explained, both fish had only slapped at the bait but still had gotten hooked...one in the mouth, and the other on the outside of the mouth. According to a couple things I read online, the solution to bass slapping at a buzzbait is to add a trailer to it.

Friday, April 15, 2022

The Kind of Day That Makes Up for a Whole Bunch of Bad Ones

That's what Rob Chatham and a friend of his had today during a trip to fish some North Carolina water. In about seven hours of fishing, they collectively put together a bag that would have weighed somewhere around 18 pounds.

Said Rob, "The farther we went in the creek, the better the bite got." And that was reflected in the final tally.

At day's end, they had boated at least 15 bass, including some in the 2-, 3- and 4-pound class, and topped off by one that weighed 6-4.

Their winning bait today was a soft plastic, rigged various ways. And it must have been the only thing that was working, because as Rob pointed out, they were motoring out of the creek when they happened across a guy who asked if they were catching anything, 'cause he wasn't. Rob explained that a glance at what this guy had tied on was spinnerbaits and crankbaits.

Rob's response to the guy's question kinda bothered me, though. He said, "Oh, we caught a couple." I can't help wondering if he managed to say that with a straight face. Why? Because I recall another time when Rob and I were fishing together, and a fella stopped and asked us the same thing. When I responded in exactly the same words that Rob used today, I thought he was going to strip a gear, trying to keep from laughing out loud. We, too, had loaded the boat that particular day.

Anyway, my heartiest congratulations go out to both Rob and his friend. They indeed had a very good day.

James and Chickahominy Rivers Subject of Virginia DWR Tagging Project

By Marci Whitmore
Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources

The James and Chickahominy Rivers boast strong largemouth-bass fisheries that attract anglers from across the country and play host to tournaments of varying sizes. Large tournaments typically launch from the James River, which offers excellent bass fishing. It also connects anglers with adjoining waters, such as the Chickahominy River.

Because of Chickahominy's reputation as a productive fishery, many anglers travel between it and the James to fish. As a result, during 2020, invasive Alabama bass were detected in Diascund Creek, a tributary of the Chickahominy. Additional detections of Alabama bass have been reported in the Chickahominy.

In April 2021, the Virginia DWR began a largemouth-bass tagging project to assess fish movement between the James and Chickahominy Rivers. The goals of the project are to estimate translocation between the rivers, assess the impact of translocation on the Chickahominy bass population, evaluate Alabama bass-dispersal vectors, and understand fish distribution post-release by anglers. This in turn will inform DWR management decisions, such as if and when stocking may be required to maintain the quality of the largemouth-bass fishery and identifying areas for Alabama-bass monitoring.

DWR tagged 648 preferred-size (greater than 12 inches) largemouth bass throughout the Chickahominy River with red-dart tags and monitored movement via angler reports and partnerships with B.A.S.S. and the Bass Federation to identify tagged fish at tournament weigh-ins.

Over the past year, DWR biologists were able to determine that largemouth-bass movement between the James and Chickahomy Rivers is largely driven by tournaments. This is because non-tournament anglers targeting Chickahominy bass overwhelmingly launch from and stay within the Chickahominy.

Despite this pattern, biologists found only 3.4 percent of largemouth bass were moved from the Chickahominy to the James River as part of large tournaments. Non-tournament anglers were responsible for 0.3 percent of observed translocation to the James River. Additionally, reported tagged bass released in the James River by anglers were later reported as being caught in the Chickahominy. Because of the long distance (greater than 35 miles), it's likely that these fish were translocated by anglers. However, this indicates movement in both directions between the two rivers.

Biologists also used data from creel surveys and field sampling to estimate the abundance of preferred-size bass in the Chickahominy River, as well as estimate the percentage of fish that are vulnerable to being caught and moved to the James River by anglers throughout the year. Overall, 12.5 percent of preferred-size largemouth bass were considered vulnerable to being moved from the Chickahominy to the James by anglers.

It's important to note that the 12.5 percent of vulnerable bass reflects the percentage of fish that are at-risk of being caught and translocated and represents an estimate of the maximum percentage of translocations. The observed percentage of bass translocated from the Chickahominy to the James was 3.7 percent over the course of a year.

Translocations by tournament and non-tournament anglers are very low, relative to the size of the bass population, and are not expected to negatively impact the Chickahominy largemouth-bass population.

Thursday, April 14, 2022

"Just One More Cast"...What Does It REALLY Mean?

Probably about the only time you can take it at face value is when you're married and have taken your mate fishing with you. Especially if she's a non-fishing person, she very well may be sitting there armed with a treble hook ready to sink into your rear end if you don't start moving toward the car.

In situations other than that, however, "just one more cast" is apt to have various meanings, e.g., one more hour, one more fish, 'til sunset. In short, it may mean "we'll probably be fishing longer than originally planned."

More importantly, "just one more cast" symbolizes the optimistic attitude necessary to outwit a fish that might not be hungry. It also speaks to the perseverance it takes to be successful in a sport where the opponent (the fish) is not always visible.

There are times when the "just one more cast" mindset has turned a bad day's fishing into a good one. Most of the time, it's a good excuse to extend the fishing trip, simply because it's fun to be on the water. When one considers the alternatives, such as doing yard work or cleaning out the garage, it's no wonder so many choose to fish longer.

As one veteran angler allowed, "It's really interesting how many times the last cast of the day produces a fish, and often, the biggest fish of the trip. The other day, for example, I took a few youngsters crappie fishing. Two of the three had caught several 13-inch or larger fish, while the other one only had a few that were closer to eight inches. When it came time to pull the fishing lures in for the final time, the third youngster made one more cast and, yes, caught a 17-inch crappie...the largest fish of the day."

Many believe that the last cast has a very high likelihood of hooking a fish. Conversely, though, catching a fish on the first cast of the day is said to bring bad luck for the rest of the day.

Wednesday, April 13, 2022

Remembering a Fishing Trip From Nearly 50 Years Ago

No, this isn't one of my tales. Rather, it's one that I found during some Internet research and decided to share.

The year was 1973, and a fella (named Don) was fishing Lake Millwood in southwest Arkansas. The conditions there at the time was described like this: "The weather was hot, the water was hot, but best of all, the lake was really hot. When you found the bass, it was one after another, cast after cast."

Don said, "All my life, I had fished with a Zebco spinning reel. However, earlier that year, my friend, George, had dragged me kicking and screaming into the world of baitcasting reels. Having grown up casting right-handed and reeling with my left, I had a lot of trouble adjusting to the traditional right-hand baitcasting reels. Earlier that week, I had broken down and bought a new Ambassadeur 5100C (left hand) reel and a new rod to match. I don't recall the price, but at that time, it was a lot of money for me."

Don went on to explain that he and his friend had taken the 60-mile trip to Lake Millwood, towing the friend's 16-foot Ranger with an at-the-time "monstrous" 115-hp motor. The friend was introducing him to the lake.

"George told me to tie on a black worm with a blue tail," noted Don. "Then he dropped the trolling motor and found one of his hotspots: an old creek bed about 7 feet deep."

"You go first," said George. "Just throw it on the other side and slowly let it fall into the creek."

Don did as he was told and immediately felt a small tap, then nothing. The line went limp, so George told him to "set the hook hard."

He did and subsequently thought he was hung up. As Don relaxed, the fish pulled back at least as hard as he had set the hook. In an instant, the rod and reel were gone...jerked completely out of his hand by an offended, irate largemouth the size of which I only had heard about. The fish did a victory leap right in front of them, as if to say, "I win this one, sucker!"

Soon the water was calm, with not a ripple. The air temperature was nearing 100, "and I'm sure my blood pressure was nearing 200," said Don. "I wanted to cry...my brand new rig was gone after just one cast."

In case you're wondering, the story doesn't end here. It actually gets better. Turns out George had brought several backup rigs.

"Here, tie on some of these and try to snag the line or rod," said George, handing him some Mudbug lures (see accompanying photo).

They had to pull these baits really fast to get them to dig the bottom of the creek, and George finally hooked something. While it wasn't the missing rod and reel, it was a nice 2-pound bass. Soon after, Don also hooked a fish about the same size, and for the next 10 minutes, they both sat there pulling in bass...all nice fish, but nothing like the one that had gotten away earlier.

Suddenly, though, the bite turned off, and George speculated that the rod had been dragged too far away for the Mudbug dredging to work. Not wanting to give up just yet, Don made one more cast with the diving lure and got hung up in the process. George then maneuvered the boat over closer to get the bait back.

"As I picked up the line with my hand," said Don, "I felt a vibration and a slight pull. I started reeling again and found my Mudbug hooked to another line. In sheer excitement, I grabbed the line and started pulling it in, completely forgetting about the fish. I was too busy thanking George and whoever else was within yelling distance."

Soon, Don had hold of the lost rod and felt the weight of a totally exhausted 7-pound bass on the end of it. They figured the fish had looped the line around something and fought until it had worn itself out.

As Don explained, "I don't think there is a moral to this story, except maybe that good things happen to unworthy people occasionally. I still have the reel...some 36 years later...in a place of honor in my garage. I turned the big fish loose, but the others we caught made great fillets."

Monday, April 11, 2022

Finally...A Decent Fishing Day

I had begun thinking I had PO'd the fishing gods good this time, after repeated outings with absolutely nothing to show for it but a bruised ego.

Before I get into that, though, let me bring everyone who's interested up to date on a different matter...that being the sale of West Neck Marina. Per the notice I saw today in the window of the marina store, the new owners are Bethany and Jimmy Vaughan. The notice goes on to say that no immediate changes are planned.

Unfortunately, the new owners didn't provide an address for mailing checks to pay your storage fees, so until one is forthcoming, I reckon we're left with two options: Send monthly payments to them at the marina's address, which is 3985 West Neck Road, Virginia Beach, VA 23456, or put your checks in sealed envelopes and drop them in the metal box beside the store's front door. If you happen to find the new owners around the premises, you also could hand the money to them directly.

Now for my fishing day. It started with a bit of a hiccup. Seems I had remembered to perform all the necessary preparations, save for looping one end of the launch rope over the stanchion on my trailer. As a result, the end had fallen in the water and was drifting away by the time I walked around the van and got hold of it, and tied the boat off at the ramp.

From there, it was a short ride south for what I had hoped would be some topwater action. After throwing a popper for an hour, though, I had yet to have the first strike, so I put that rod down and picked up the one with a spinnerbait tied on. Things started happening then.

In no time, I had found two 1-pounders on back-to-back casts. A bit later, I added a 1-9, then capped off the day with a 1-15. The bright sun was directly in my eyes when I hooked that last fish of the day, and even with my sunglasses on, I couldn't tell what it was for a few seconds as I fought to get the sun out of my eyes. Admittedly, I thought it was a bowfin until I got my first clear look. Had a good hookset, however, and soon boat-flipped the bass.

As I idled alongside the dock at day's end, my friend, Rob C. showed up in time to back my trailer down the ramp, then pull me out once I had secured everything. All in all, it was a good day, compared to the last several outings I've had. Will settle for 4 any day of the week, especially when they're all keepers.

Sunday, April 10, 2022

Deeper Water May Still Be Working for Some Anglers...

Others, though, are beginning to find success in the shallows. Talked to a friend just yesterday, who had been out for a couple of hours in the early morning with another fella and found success with their topwater baits. Also overheard some anglers at the Dewey Mullins Memorial Bass Tourney last Sunday talking about the topwater action they had enjoyed.

Topwater bass fishing, as we all know, is one of the most popular techniques in this sport. Few things equal the joy of watching a big bass come out of its environment and attack your lure. It just never gets old.

The warming temperatures of spring offer anglers of all skill levels a first-hand opportunity to experience this adrenaline rush. As the bass move to and from their annual spawning grounds, topwater lures are a sure-fire way to elicit some vicious reaction strikes.

A basic question everyone has to answer first, though, is: What lure do I throw? According to Wired2Fish writer Walker Smith, there are five that he recommends anyone should keep in their collection, starting with frogs.

"Big bass have a hard time turning them down," he said. "Although you may not always catch a lot of fish with these hollow-bellied lures, the bites you get are likely to be the "right" ones. If you keep it in your hand long enough, your perseverance will be handsomely rewarded.

"While you'll have a good chance of finding a solid frog bite whenever the water temps exceed 55 degrees, these lures often are at their best throughout the post-spawn period," he continued. "As the bass protect their newly hatched fry, they become incredibly territorial, and the walking and spitting of a hollow-bellied frog is difficult to beat.

"Willow trees and other types of brushy, overhanging cover are excellent targets for topwater frogs. It's also a good idea to target the front of docks.

"There's rarely any doubt when a bass eats your frog. While some may discretely sneak up and slurp it down, the vast majority of bites will be quite dramatic. When you see the explosion, give the bass a half-second or so before setting the hook in order to make sure they are connected with it, then set the hook upwards as hard as you can."

Another tried-and-true choice throughout much of the year, but especially in the spring, is poppers. While they're not ideal for thick cover, due to their treble hooks, they are a force to be reckoned with when used in fairly open-water scenarios. They can be used comfortably with either casting or spinning gear.

"You'll have your best luck with topwater poppers in isolated cover during both the spawn and post-spawn periods," noted Smith. "As long as the water temperatures are in the 60-to-75-degree range, it's a good idea to have one rigged up and ready to cast. These lures are especially effective when fished over bedding areas. They also disturb groups of post-spawn fry, which forces otherwise lethargic bass to bite out of pure reaction.

"Stumps, corner dock posts, outside grass lines, and sparse laydowns are high-percentage targets, but don't rule them out around the late-spring shad spawns, either. Most of your targets will be in close proximity to spawning flats, so focus your efforts on shallow, south-facing pockets with a sandy or firm bottom composition.

"Popper bites aren't always overly aggressive, so it's important to keep steady visual contact with the lure throughout your retrieve. Some bass will go completely bonkers on the bait, but some of the bigger fish will suck it underneath the water with very little fanfare. Forget a dramatic hookset; just sweep your rod to the side, much like you would with a crankbait."

While prop baits may seem like they're designed for a steady surface retrieve, they're most effective when fished just like a topwater popper...a few small twitches, followed by intermittent pauses. And, as explained by Smith, "They're an excellent choice around shallow bass beds, post-spawn bluegill beds, and even cruising wolf packs.

"When you find yourself in the back of a spawning pocket," he continued, "be sure to make specific target-oriented casts to any dark areas you see, including stumps, vegetation, or even small rocks. Shallow bluegill beds perhaps are the best springtime targets for prop baits because, as the big post-spawn females are recovering from the rigors of the spawn, bluegill represent an easy and nutrient-rich meal.

"Many prop-bait bites will be very similar to topwater popper bites, but it seems as if prop-bait bites can be even more subtle at times. Expect bites that you won't even hear or see...the lure just simply disappears. A winding sweep is all that's needed to the large majority of your bites."

Another topwater lure recommended by Smith is the buzzbait. In his words, "It's a remarkable tool for quickly covering large areas of water and remains one of the best big-bass baits in existence. They can work almost all year long, depending upon your location. And it's not unusual to see outstanding buzzbait catches in water as cool as 48 degrees or as hot as 85 degrees when the bass are very active.

"A relatively quick, steady surface retrieve makes them a solid choice when you're searching for a productive spring pattern. Fan cast them over large spawning flats, make short pitches to isolated cover, and target pre- and post-spawn staging areas.

"There's no such thing as a stereotypical buzzbait bite, but because of the constant tension and contact with the lure throughout your retrieve, they won't be hard to detect. Braid is a good choice of line due to its lack of stretch. Whether the bass explodes on your lure, or simply sucks it under, just keep tension and speed your retrieve, and you'll enjoy a healthy landing percentage."

Smith's last recommendation is a soft-plastic toad, which is often overlooked in favor of fancier and/or flashier offerings. While some anglers utilize a steady retrieve to allow the toad to spit and sputter on the surface, others actually will allow the bait to sink into small holes to fool big bass. "Regardless of your preferred method, the bass will inhale these baits," Smith assured.

"You may not get many bites on the toad throughout the prespawn period," he continued, "but it's certainly worth trying when the water is above 55 degrees. Once the spawn begins, toads are red-hot all season long.

"With the efficiency of a buzzbait and the weedless qualities of a hollow-bellied frog, soft-plastic toads excel at covering vast expanses of thick cover in a short period of time. Grass lines, grass mats, stumps, potential bedding areas, and underneath docks are all fair game for these baits," Smith concluded.

Can only speak for myself, but you can bet I'll be tossing topwaters for the foreseeable future, especially during the early morning.