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Texas Fishing Report
Submitted by Anglers Like You
The Angler keep others informed by emailing
fishing reports to us. Include your name in the message part
of your report if you'd like to receive credit for the report.
December 15, 2006 - Lake
Fork - Submitted
by Lake Fork Guide Trips - After a great trip to Lake
Baccarac in Mexico, I'm back to stalking the lunkers at Lake
Fork. We're currently having a week of warm weather at Fork and
the bass are once again on the feed. As we head into late December,
the early stages of prespawn are starting in some areas of the
lake. Meanwhile, lunker bass continue to be caught from deep
water as well. With big bass smoking jigs, spinnerbaits, and
lipless crankbaits now through mid-March, this is my favorite
time of the year on Fork. Numbers run lower this time of year;
however, the average size of your catch is at its highest for
the year, usually in the 4 to 5 lb range, with a good shot at
bass 7 lbs or greater.
Lake Conditions: Lake Fork's water level continues
to drop, currently reading 397.64', about 5'4" below full
pool. Even with the low water, almost all of the main ramps are
still useable without any issues. The water is clear in most
parts of the lake, especially in areas with submerged vegetation,
while the upper ends are somewhat stained. Water temps are on
the rise once again, currently reading 53 to 56 degrees in most
areas, perfect wintertime temps.
Location Pattern: From late-December through February,
I concentrate on prespawn and staging fish on points and along
edges of flats or creek channels. Areas with submerged vegetation
(primarily hydrilla, milfoil or coontail) for cover will typically
have the most active fish. While about any grassy area will hold
a few fish, start your search in areas that have lots of spawning
fish in late February and through March. It stands to reason
that the coves that hold the most spawning fish in early spring
will have the most prespawn fish in the winter. Main lake grass
beds near the mouths of these coves are holding a lot of fish
now, as are main and secondary points inside the coves, provided
there is deep water nearby. During warming trends, follow bass
back into the creeks and check the edges of grass flats and creek
channels.
Keep in mind, too, that the absolute water temperature
is not nearly as important now as the recent water temperature
trend. For instance,
water temps that are showing 52 degrees can result in slow fishing
if the temps were 58 a couple days ago. In contrast, fishing
can be great if the temps warm up to 50 while they were 44 a
few days before. In general, look for bass on the flats and farther
back in creeks during warming trends; conversely, drop back to
points and main lake grassbeds after cold fronts. Finally, the
day of and the day after cold fronts can be absolutely miserable
to fish, but these frontal days after a long warming trend are
usually the most productive times to fish.
For deep structure enthusiasts, points, roadbeds,
humps, flats and
ledges in 18' to 45' will produce some big fish during the winter
months as well. Use your electronics to find the schools of bass
and baitfish and work them over with spoons and dropshots. I'm
primarily concentrating on the shallow bass, so my presentation
pattern will focus on that.
Presentation Pattern: My wintertime arsenal is
pretty simple for
fishing along grasslines and creek channels. First and foremost
are red lipless crankbaits in 12 or 34 oz. Stick with the 12
for grass that is near the surface and go with the 34 for grass
that is deeper. Buzzing these over the top of the grass on a
quick retrieve is working best now, but after cold fronts, letting
the trap fall and ripping these out of the grass will trigger
most of the bites. 14 to 12 oz spinnerbaits with double willow
blades in white, red, or chartreuse and white will produce some
really large bass in the same areas that the lipless cranks work,
especially on windy and cloudy days. For a true giant, try swimming
the new Lake Fork Live Magic Shad in the same areas you'd throw
a spinnerbait. Rig it on a 4/0 wide gap hook and swim it slowly
back to the boat with a few pauses. When the water looks like
a toilet just flushed, it's time to set the hook!! When the bite
slows or the conditions are sunny and calm, I'll switch to a
suspending jerkbait or pitch a jig and a Texas rig. Gold jerkbaits
with orange bellies and black backs are my primary color. Work
these with long pauses over the grass and along the edges. For
jigs, I go with 12 oz black and blue jigs Texas rig, I'll pitch
a Lake Fork Flipper in black neon or blue bruiser with a 14 to
3/8 oz bullet weight.
Cover lots of water until you get bit. Once you
catch one, work the area over thoroughly with multiple passes,
employing several different baits. Fish tend to stack up in key
staging areas during the winter and these spots will replenish
themselves with more fish during the prespawn as more and more
big bass move shallow. Find some good staging spots and you'll
have a milk run of honey holes now through March.
Good Fishing,
Tom
December 14, 2006 - Lake
Fork - Submitted by David Vance - The fishing
this week has been good with the warm weather in the past few
days. Spinner bait,s are producing some good bass on windy points,
yesterday all of our bass came on a spinner bait by the end of
the day we had 17 with one that went 11lbs 9oz and two over seven
pounds. The spinner bait we used was a < oz Colorado willow
with nickel and gold blades and a chartreuse and white skirt.
We had most of our hits fishing the bait slow, most of the bass
would just stop the bait, when you get warm weather this time
of year slow rolling a big spinner bait on the edge of the grass
is a good pattern to catch big bass on lake fork. Red and orange
lipless crank baits are and will be my best baits day in and
day out now through February. Best water depth for me has been
5 to 8 feet on the edge of the grass on main lake and secondary
points. The best bite for me has been 10am until dark. Right
now I am fishing different areas each day. Birch creek, white
oak and little Caney are producing some good fish right now.
All the bass that we have been catching have been fat and healthy.
I love this time of year not many boats on the lake and on any
cast you have a chance to catch a bass of a life time. The lake
is 5 feet low so be careful running the lake.
I am now booking spring dates. Book early to get
the best available dates! Call 903-629-7699 or 903-629-5085.
Check out my Web Site http://www.lakeforktexasfishingreports.com
Good Fishing!
David Vance
December 12, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted
by Larry Bridgeman -
Quality Bass
Club-December 9-10, 2006: Rainy, cold weather greeted the
14 fishermen and women from Quality as well as the 17 members
from SWRI and Atascosa Bass Clubs this weekend at Falcon. Lake
water temperatures were in the 56-58 degree range which had many
of the big fish suspended in about 12 ft in 20-25 ft of water.
The outside air temperature topped out at 47 degrees Saturday.
Mike Robbins had the big bass for Quality weighing 8.37 lbs and
his stringer was just about 1/2 lb under Robert Dunlap's heavy
stringer of the day weighing 17.03 Lbs. The big bass was caught
on a Watermelon Red Zoom Brush Hog.
Sunday: The ambient temperature went up to 59 degrees and conditions
were good with no moisture and light winds. The big bass from
yesterday weighing 8.37 Lbs held for the weekend with Quality
and Miike Robbins continued on the fish to win first place heavy
stringer with 23.99 Lbs. Robert Dunlap came in second with a
very close 23.69 Lbs. Cal Biendorf was third with 18.25 Lbs.
Atascosa Bass Club had a 20.37 Lbs heavy stringer weighed
by Shane Pfullman and the second heavy stringer was caught by
Craig White weighing 17.19 Lbs. Shane
had the big bass weighing 6.36 lbs.
Sunday: Sunday was a good day for Joe Lancaster who was fishing
with Craig White. Although he was a guest, his heavy stringer
weighed right at 28 Lbs and his big bass weighed a whopping 12.53
Lbs. Shane Pfullman came in with the heavy stringer honors for
the club weighing 20.37 Lbs. Craig was second. The big bass was
caught in 5 ft of water on a California colored 4.20 Sweet Beaver
from Falcon Lake Tackle. Thanks to Craig White for the Joe Lancaster
picture.
SWRI Bass Buster's Bobby West had the big bass of all
clubs on Saturday weighing 8.52 Lbs and his heavy stringer weighed
32.00 Lbs. Floyd Dietzman had the second heavy stringer weighing
19.34 Lbs and Jerry Campos was forth with 17.64 Lbs, narrowly
missing third place weight of 18.06 Lbs turned in by Doug Black.
Watermelon Red Zoom Magnum Lizards caught the most fish but super
flukes and brush hogs were also catching fish. On Sunday Jerry
Campos caught a 10 1/2 Lb Big Bass and his Heavy stringer weighed
29 Lbs (Five Fish). She was caught in the Salinilias on an 8"
Watermelon Red Zoom Magnum Lizard. Thanks to Frankie West and
Jerry Camos for the picture of the 10 1/2 Lber.
The
Zoom Magnum Lizards and Brush Hogs have been two of the best
baits for big bass this winter. Plum Apple colored Brush Hogs
and Magnum lizards have also been working well. The GDD22 Norman
Crankbaits in Bull Bream have been working well as have the Firetiger
150 and Black/Red 131 Colored Cankbaits. Spinnerbaits have not
been among the best producing baits so far.
November 29, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted
by Larry Bridgeman - November 25-26, 2006: My neighbors
and frequent fisher folks, the Bendeles from Castroville
Tx, were down over the Thanksgiving Holiday and they found fishing
to be a bit on the slow side. About 10 fish a day was all they
could catch, but their guest Crystal Kempf (wife of Louie Kempf)
managed to catch a nice 5 lber. It went for a Carolina Rigged
Watermelon Red Baby Brushog. There will be days like that and
the prelude to spawning often presents some challenges.
Some other fishermen in from Laredo also reported
a slow bite. Charles Haralson has a guide trip on the lake today
November 29 th so we will have a report later today.
The reports we have received of good catches have
mostly involved big bass in 15ft or so of water in hardwoods
or on humps in the mid lake area on both the US and Mexico sides
of the lake. Watermelon Red has consistently produced fish in
either the brush Hog or Magnum Lizard baits. Some DD22 action
has been reported in Bull Bream and BSO9 (Red Chartreuse Craw
colored baits).
Until next time, have a great day on the water
and always practice catch and release
November 22, 2006 - Falcon
- Submitted
by Larry Bridgeman -  November 13,
2006: Thomas and Sheretta Law caught twin 10 lbers on the
13th.
Thomas's fish weighed 10' 11" and Sheretta's
weighed 10' 13". These two Falcon Lunkers were caught on
back-to-back casts. The Laws caught a number of smaller fish
to 7 lbs in addition to the nearly twin 10 lbers.
The Laws fish Falcon frequently and they catch
a number of good fish. However, to catch two 10 lb plus fish
on back-to-back casts even for them is a bit unusual. They were
using the Sweet Beaver in Watermelon Red and fishing in 16 ft
of water
November 20, 2006 - Falcon
- Submitted
by Larry Bridgeman - Universal City Bass Club-November 18,
19, 2006: The 48 members and one guest from the UCBC Bass
Club contested the first leg of their tournament Saturday and
there were a lot of 4-10 lb fish caught, weighed and released.
The big bass Saturday weighed 10.02 Lbs and it was caught by
Weldon Pierce. His total weight was 20.89 Lbs, which was third
heavy stringer. David Cole had the Heavy Stringer for 25.51 Lbs
which incuded several 7 and 8 Lbers. Marc Daymude had two 7 Lb
and one 5 lb fish giving him second Heavy Stringer of 24.47 Lbs.
The second Big Bass was caught by Steve Worley weighing 9.28
Lbs
Top Heavy Stringer for the ladies was Ginger Reynolds
with a 8.91 Lb BB and 18 .00 Lbs Heavy Stringer.
Sunday: Another beautiful day fishing Falcon greeted
our participants. High temps were 76 degrees and winds were light
gusting to 17mph.David Cole turned in a good weight giving him
heavy stringer honors of 41.12 Lbs. Steve Worley weighed a very
respectable 40.89 lbs for 2nd heavy stringer and Emile LaRose
was third with 36.68 Lbs. Weldon Pierce held on with his 10.02
Lb bass for Big Bass. The Pierce' s took heavy couple honors
with 60.61 Lbs. Youth male winner was Jason Kalinoski and Katie
Mergele took the heavy youth female honors. David Cole and Debbie
Howard took heavy boat honors with 62.35 Lbs. Altogether, there
were 258 fish caught weighing 741 Lbs.
Bumpy Jurica had the big bass of the day Sunday
weighing 9.77 Lbs
Big Bass were caught on Zoom Brush Hogs and Magnum
Lizards in Watermelon Red Color. The Sweet Beaver lures in 4.20
Sprayed Grass were also working for Steve Worley and his two
lunker bass both were caught using this bait.
    
November
20, 2006 - Lake Fork - Submitted by Lake Fork Guide Trips - Although
the general patterns and locations for catching bass remained
the
same at Lake Fork, I've found the fishing to be slower this week
for both
size and numbers of bass. A series of cold fronts seemed to have
the bass
in a negative mood for several days last week, although some
fish could
still be caught by thoroughly working key areas with finesse
presentations.
That pretty much tells me that the bass haven't moved far, just
slightly
deeper and tighter to cover. With a stable warming trend forecast
for the
end of this week, I look for the fishing to steadily improve
once again.
And big bass do continue to be caught, including a 12.4 lb,er
being weighed
in at Fork on Saturday.
While the
fishing typically slows in early December, lunker bass will start
moving into prespawn patterns in some areas of the lake by later
December,
and my favorite fishing of the year occurs in January through
early March.
It,s a really simple pattern"spinnerbaits, lipless cranks,
jigs, and
suspending jerkbaits fished in staging areas near spawning flats.
Numbers
run lower this time of year, but the average size of your catch
is at its
highest for the year, usually in the 4 to 5 lb range, with a
good shot at a
bass 7 lbs or greater. Don,t get me wrong, March and April are
a great time
to catch a lunker sight fishing or with a soft plastic jerkbait.
For my
tastes though, slow rolling a big spinnerbait or flipping a jig
around heavy
timber for truly giant bass during the prespawn is the best time
to be on
Fork.
Lake Conditions: With no rain over the past week,
Lake Fork,s water level
is once again on the decline, currently reading 397.86,, just
over 5,2
below full pool. Even with the low water, almost all of the main
ramps are
still useable without any issues. A very strong west wind on
Wednesday
stained some portions of the main lake, while many of the grassy
creeks
remain very clear. Water temps steadily dropped from the mid-60s
last week
to the 59 to 61 degree range yesterday (Sunday) in the main lake.
With a
couple more cold nights in the forecast, look for the temps to
continue to
drop for a couple more days.
Location Pattern: Typical of fall fishing, bass
are holding anywhere from
the backs of creeks and along main lake shores in literally inches
of water
as well as setting up camp on deep water structure. 18, to 30,
was the
best depth range this past week for structure fishing. When graphing
these
fish, keep in mind that schools that are relating to the bottom
will be the
easiest bass to catch normally. The other main pattern will be
weed flats
on the main lake and in coves with channels or points with deep-water
access
nearby. These spots produced some fast action for smaller bass
and a few
big fish. Typically, areas that are holding fish now are holding
lots of
fish. So if you,re catching fish, stay put and try multiple lures
until you
,ve caught everything you can. Conversely, if you,re in a good-looking
spot
but not getting bit, keep moving to other locations until you
hit pay dirt.
Presentation Pattern: Instead, small spinnerbaits
in white and shallow or
medium running shad colored lipped and lipless crankbaits have
worked best
for the shallow bass. If the bass aren,t in a chasing mood, wacky
rigged
straight tail worms like a Twitch Worm in June bug or watermelon/red
flake
have produced some fast action. For bigger bass, pitch a Texas
rigged
watermelon/red flake Lake Fork Flippers to wood and grass along
creek
channels. Work the Flipper really slowly for best results. When
the deep
bite has been on, I,ve been spending most of my time out there.
Carolina
rigged Baby Ring Frys or Magic Shads in watermelon/red flake
have produced
some good numbers and some big ones once schools are located.
Other days,
drop shotting Lake Fork Twitch Worms in watermelon/chartreuse
pepper or
watermelon/red flake has produced big numbers of keeper-sized
bass. ounce
chrome or gold jigging spoons and oz white jigs have been the
best bait on
some days.
Here's hoping you catch the lunker of your dreams.
If I can be of
assistance, please contact me at 214-683-9572 (days) or 972-635-6027
(evenings) or e-mail me through http://www.LakeForkGuideTrips.com
, where
your satisfaction is guaranteed.
Good Fishing,
Tom
November 14, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted
by Larry Bridgeman -
McAllen
Bass Anglers November 11-12th, 2006: Fourteen McAllen Bass
Angler members fished Falcon this weekend and they caught 257#
of Bass. Eddie Kucia was the 2 day heavy stringer winner with
35.99 Lbs of fish. His 2 day stringer was anchored by the big
bass of the year weighing 10.67 Lbs. Oscar Ramirez took the second
place heavy stringer honors with 35.33 Lbs and Joe Martinez took
third heavy stringer with 27.8 lbs.
Sunday's fishing conditions were superior and fishermen caught
58 fish weighing 157 lbs compared to Saturday's catch of 30 fish
weighing 100 Lbs.
Thanks to Al Malone for the report.
Circuito Interacional Fronterizo de Pesca de
Lobina (Bass Border Trail) November 11-12. 2006: The International
Bass Border Trail kicked off its 4 tournament circuit at Falcon
this weekend, but day 1 of the tournament was cancelled due to
high winds. The launching held off the Mexican Point in Nuevo
Guerrero was compromised by the high North winds. The Sunday
leg of the tournament was held as scheduled as winds layed down
and eventually changed to the SE. Jorge Gonzalez and Sergio Villarreal
from the Laredos International Bass Fishing Team captured heavy
stringer honors with 27.58 Lbs and Jorge had the big bass weighing
a reported whopping 14.95 Lbs. The second big bass weighed 11.9
Lbs and was caught by Rene Gonzalez/Sergio Herrera who also claimed
second heavy stringer honors.
The big 14.95
Lber came from the Marker 9 area on the Mexico side and it hit
a Zoom Brush Hog in Watermelon Red in about ten foot of water.
The second leg of the tounament circuit will be held December
9th and 10th at Las Blancas and the third leg will be held at
Sugar lake on January 20th and 21st. The fourth and final leg
will be the Championship, February 17th and 18th.It will be held
at the best producing lake of the first three tournaments and
the top 20 tournament anglers from the initial three tournaments
will be elgible.
Fifty-nine teams attended the Falcon Tournament.
Thanks to Jorge Gonzalez & Sergio Herrera for the report
and pictures.
November 12, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted
by Larry Bridgeman -
Austin Bass Club Tournament Report Falcon Lake
 A
front blew in Friday night late, dropping temperatures and increasing
the winds to 37 mph. By launch, the winds had dropped down to
about 25 mph and a few hours later, winds were straight line
at about 10 -15 mph. Fishing was slow to average with water temps
in the 72 to 74 degree range. The big bass were not too receptive
but there were several fish caught by anglers over 8 lbs.
Chris Badkins had the big bass of the day weighing
8.67 Lbs. Shawn Ramsey and Keith Nichols's 31.76 Lbs narrowly
missed the heavy stringer mark of Chris Badkins and Tim Spencer
of 35.20 Lbs. Jim Sparks and Ronnie Scott were in third place
with 27.54 Lbs. There were 16 anglers in 8 boats contesting the
tournament. Plastic 5" Zoom lizards, 6" Zoom Brush
Hogs and Zoom Super Flukes caught the most fish. Some fish bit
the DLN Crankbaits in firetiger color. Watermelon red was the
best color for plastics. 5 teams weighed in limits of 10 fish.
Sunday: It was a Chamber of Commerce Sunday
with light winds, moderate temperatures and a good bite. First,
second and third place team heavy-stringer weights for 2 day,
10 fish were Chris Badkins and Tim Spencer 65.24 Lbs, Keith Nichols
and Shawn Ramsey 61.34 Lbs and Ray and Robert Cedar 59.42 Lbs.
Tim Spencer held on for top individual,2-day weight with 37.23
Lbs with his 20.06 Lbs Sunday Heavy Stringer.
Chris Badkins's 8.67 Lb Bass from Saturday held
on for big bass honors. Tim Spencer had Sunday's big bass weighing
7.55 Lbs. Watermelon red and green pumpkin magnum lizards were
working well on Sunday.
Until next time, have a good day on the water and
always practice catch and release
 November
8, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted by Larry Bridgeman - Marvin
Hendricks and George Littleton were out fishing on the 1st and
found 40 fish to 8.2 lbs on Salt Craws in rootbeer pepper neon
to be the bait of choice.
"It probably wouldn't have mattered what you
were throwing because they were really biting".stated Marvin.
The fish were in 8 1/2 ft to 11 ft of water on the mexican side
and the fish were very aggressive.
There were no Bass Clubs here last weekend. However,
some 10 fishermen
are here from around Texas this week. A 7 lber was their big
bass so far. Pretty windy today November 8. They have found fishing
pretty slow, Red and black spinnerbait caught the big bass till
sun came out. A depth of 14 ft has been the best depth. Nothing
recent on Sugar or El Cuchillo.
 November 7, 2006
- Lake Fork - Submitted by Lake Fork Guide Trips -
On most days, good numbers and some big bass are currently
being caught at
Lake Fork, although the best pattern has changed considerably
from
day-to-day and often from hour-to-hour. With the bass being spread
out from
shallow water creeks to deep structure, changing tactics as the
conditions
dictate has been the key to success. Basically, if what you,re
doing isn,t
working well, try a different approach until you find what they
want.
Frequently, it,s as simple as changing lures in the area you,re
in and you,
ll start catching them. With water temps in the mid-60s and a
warming trend
forecasted for this week, look for the fall patterns to remain
at Fork
through November.
While the fishing typically slows in early December,
lunker bass will start
moving into prespawn patterns in some areas of the lake by later
December,
and my favorite fishing of the year occurs in January through
early March.
It,s a really simple pattern"spinnerbaits, lipless cranks,
jigs, and
suspending jerkbaits fished in staging areas near spawning flats.
Numbers
run lower this time of year, but the average size of your catch
is at its
highest for the year, usually in the 4 to 5 lb range, with a
good shot at a
bass 7 lbs or greater. Don,t get me wrong, March and April are
a great time
to catch a lunker sight fishing or with a soft plastic jerkbait.
For my
tastes though, slow rolling a big spinnerbait or flipping a jig
around heavy
timber for truly giant bass during the prespawn is the best time
to be on
Fork.
Lake Conditions: After a good soaking rain on Sunday
night, Lake Fork,s
water level rose about 4, currently reading 398.01,, just over
5, below
full pool. Even with the low water, almost all of the main ramps
are still
useable without any issues. After the fall turnover, much of
the main lake
remains stained brown, while many of the grassy creeks are clear.
Water
temps are currently reading 63 to 65 degrees in most areas of
the main lake,
while the backs of some creek were holding in the upper 50s after
a few cold
nights last week.
Location Pattern: Typical of fall fishing, bass
are holding anywhere from
the backs of creeks and along main lake shores in literally inches
of water
as well as setting up camp on deep water structure. For the past
week, I,
ve found schools of deep bass were holding deeper again, mostly
from in 20,
to 33, of water. When graphing these fish, keep in mind that
schools that
are relating to the bottom will be the easiest bass to catch
normally. The
other main pattern will be weed flats on the main lake and in
coves with
channels or points with deep-water access nearby. These spots
produced some
fast action for smaller bass and a few big fish. Typically, areas
that are
holding fish now are holding lots of fish. So if you,re catching
fish, stay
put and try multiple lures until you,ve caught everything you
can.
Conversely, if you,re in a good-looking spot but not getting
bit, keep
moving to other locations until you hit pay dirt.
Presentation Pattern: The topwater bite slowed
for me this past week.
Instead, small spinnerbaits in white and shallow or medium running
shad
colored lipped and lipless crankbaits have worked best for the
shallow bass.
If the bass aren,t in a chasing mood, wacky rigged straight tail
worms like
a Twitch Worm in June bug or watermelon/red flake have produced
some fast
action. For bigger bass, pitch oz white or watermelon jigs with
matching
Fork Craws to stumps along creek channels and along deep weed
lines. Work
the jig really slowly for best results. When the deep bite has
been on, I,
ve been spending most of my time out there. Carolina rigged Baby
Ring Frys
or Magic Shads in watermelon/red flake have produced some good
numbers and
some big ones once schools are located. Other days, drop shotting
Lake Fork
Twitch Worms in watermelon/chartreuse pepper or watermelon/red
flake has
produced big numbers of keeper-sized bass. ounce chrome or gold
jigging
spoons and oz white jigs have also caught a lot of bass on several
days
and these baits will often produce the largest bass of the day.
Here,s hoping you catch the lunker of your dreams.
If I can be of
assistance, please contact me at 214-683-9572 (days) or 972-635-6027
(evenings) or e-mail me through http://www.LakeForkGuideTrips.com
, where
your satisfaction is guaranteed.
Good Fishing,
Tom
October 31,
2006 - Falcon - Submitted by Larry Bridgeman - Atascosa Bass
Club-October 28-29, 2006; Craig White was leading the Atascosa
Bass Club day one event with 23.16 Lbs. His wife Patricia has
the big bass of 9.08 Lbs and is in 4th place for heavy stringer
honors with 19.89 Lbs. Shane Pfullman and Dub Billings are in
2nd and 3rd place respectively after day 1.
SUNDAY: The blow was on Sunday, at least
part of the day. Fishing was a bit off from Saturday, but Shane
Pfullman came out on top wth a heavy stringer of 41.25 Lbs for
10 fish. Craig White came in second with 40.45 Lbs and Patricia
White was third with 33.73 Lbs. Her 9.08 Lb big bass held for
Big Bass honors. Seventeen fisherman caught 128 fish weighing
343.85 Lbs. There were 15 fish over four pounds caught.
Thanks to Craig White for the report and picture.
October 24, 2006 - Lake
Fork - Submitted
by Lake Fork Guide Trips -
Significant cold fronts rolled through NE Texas every few
days, making for
an up and down week of fishing on Lake Fork. On the average day
we,re
getting about 25 bass, consisting mostly of 1 to 3 pounders from
both
shallow and deep water, with a few 4 to 7 pound fish mixed in.
On
post-frontal days, numbers have run lower and the big fish have
been scarce.
On the other hand, the days just before and as the front is moving
through
have been really good for both numbers and size, with a shot
at a real giant
bass. With the lake still holding near 70 degrees, look for fall
fishing to
stay good for numbers until late November and I expect more truly
big bass
to be caught as the water cools.
Lake Conditions: Once again, Lake Fork,s water
level continues to drop,
currently reading 399.82,, about 5, 2 below full pool. Even with
the low
water, almost all of the main ramps are still useable without
any issues.
After the recent fall turnover, much of the main lake remains
stained brown,
while many of the creeks are clear. Water temps steadily dropped
this week,
currently reading in the mid- to upper-60s.
Location Pattern: Typical of fall fishing, bass
are holding anywhere from
the backs of creeks and along main lake shores in literally inches
of water
as well as setting up camp on deep water structure. While most
of the
schools of deep bass were holding in 22, to 28, of water last
week, most of
my structure fishing has taken place much shallower this week,
more in the
12, to 22, range. When graphing these fish, keep in mind that
schools that
are relating to the bottom will be the easiest bass to catch
normally. The
other main pattern will be weed flats on the main lake and in
coves with
channels or points with deep-water access nearby. These spots
produce some
fast action early and late or all day on cloudy days. Typically,
areas that
are holding fish now are holding lots of fish. So, if you,re
catching fish,
stay put and try multiple lures until you,ve caught everything
you can.
Conversely, if you,re in a good-looking spot but not getting
bit, keep
moving to other locations until you hit pay dirt.
Presentation Pattern: Topwaters have been very
productive some mornings and
evenings. Shad colored poppers and Zara Spooks or black buzzbaits
have
produced fast action around pad fields and over grass mats. Small
spinnerbaits in white and shallow or medium running shad colored
crankbaits
have also worked early and late or all day on cloudy or windy
days. If the
bass aren,t in a chasing mood, deadsticking Texas rigged straight
tail worms
like a Twitch Worm in green pumpkin or watermelon/red flake have
produced
some nice fish. Fish all of these baits on deep weedlines or
along creek
channels in the coves. During the middle of the day, I,ve been
catching
most of my fish out deeper. Carolina rigged Baby Ring Frys in
watermelon/chartreuse flake or watermelon/chartreuse pepper have
produced
some good numbers and some big ones once schools are located.
Other days,
drop shotting Lake Fork Twitch Worms in watermelon/chartreuse
pepper or
watermelon/red flake has produced fast action for bass. to 1
ounce
chrome jigging spoons and oz white jigs have also caught a lot
of bass on
several days and these baits will often produce the largest bass
of the day.
Here,s hoping you catch the lunker of your dreams.
If I can be of
assistance, please contact me at 214-683-9572 (days) or 972-635-6027
(evenings) or e-mail me through http://www.LakeForkGuideTrips.com
, where
your satisfaction is guaranteed.
Good Fishing,
Tom
 October
23, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted by Larry Bridgeman - October 21-22,
2006-O.P.E.C. Legacy Tournament: Eighty-six participating
teams launched the first day of the 13th Annual charity tournament
to benefit the Falcon State Park. Cool weather and light winds
greeted the participants and all signs were positive for a good
tournament, at least for the first day. Jim Edwards (right photo)
and Jim Raulsten (left photo) were the day 1 heavy stringer leaders
with 24.12 Lbs for their best three fish. Their three big bass
all weighed about 8 Lbs. Mutt McNeil fishing with Bruce Fox had
the big bass of the day weighing 10.44 Lbs.Their 23.10 Lb heavy
stringer put them in third place for heavy stringer, out ounced
by Tim Blanchett and his partner with 23.70 Lbs. Mutt McNeil
received a gift certificate from Falcon Lake Tackle for 1st day
big bass and so did Jim Edwards and Jim Raulsten for 1st day
heavy stringer.
Sunday: Sunday conditions were wet and cool. Light
rain was falling over Falcon in the morning. Temperatures started
the day at 60 degrees, but as the morning progressed, temperatures
dropped to 56 degrees. Congratulations to Edwards and Raulsten
who held on for first place, 2-Day Heavy Stringer with 53.6 lbs.
That isalmost a 9 lbs per fish average for their 6 fish.
Perez and Perez had second heavy stringer weighing
45.55 Lbs and Vaden/Wagner had third heavy stringer of 39.8 Lbs.
They also had Sunday's Big Bass which was Big Bass of the tournament
weighing 12.24 Lbs. All together, 1511.92 Lbs of Bass were weighed.
Jim Edwards and Jim Raulsten received another Gift
Certificate from Falcon Lake Tackle for Sunday's Heavy Stringer
and 2-Day Heavy stringer and Vaden/Wagner received a Gift Certificate
for Sunday's and Tournament Big Bass.
October 11, 2006 - Lake Fork - Submitted
by Lake Fork Guide Trips - After being out of town a
couple of weeks on a family vacation, it's good to be back fishing
on Lake Fork. Since my last report, the lake has turned over
and fall patterns are starting to come on. Fishing was really
good last week, having slowed down a little as of late. Now that
temps are cooling after our recent week of hot weather, we should
start catching more big bass in addition to the good numbers
we're catching right now. As the temps cools, look for deep bass
to form big schools and relate to the bottom while shallow bass
gang up in creek channel bends. Add in pleasant days and fall
colors to the fast bass action and October and November are great
times to fish Fork.
Lake Conditions: As I write this, we're having
a good rain today, but we'll need a lot more days like it to
get the water level back up. Lake Fork's water level currently
sits at 399.98,, over 5' below pool. Numerous boats, including
some guide boats, have hit stumps recently; however, most of
the boaters we see aren,' wearing life jackets or even a kill
switch. As always, you'll find my customers and me wearing both
and I would encourage you to do the same. In better news, even
with the low water, almost all of the main ramps are still useable
without any issues. After the recent fall turnover, much of the
main lake is stained brown, while many of the creeks are clear.
Water temps are holding in the upper 70s and should drop this
week.
Location Pattern: With the disappearance of the
thermocline, fish will be caught in 6 to over 40, deep over the
next couple of months, on just about every pattern imaginable.
Deep structure like humps, roads, flats and points in the main
lake and in the mouths of major creeks are starting to hold some
big schools and will hold most of the giant bass. Schools that
are relating to the bottom will be the easiest bass to catch
normally. The other main pattern will be weed flats on the main
lake and in coves with channels or points with deep-water access
nearby. These spots produce some fast action early and late or
all day on cloudy days. Typically, areas that are holding fish
now are holding lots of fish. So, if you're catching fish, stay
put and try multiple lures until you,ve caught everything you
can. Conversely, if you,re in a good-looking spot but not getting
bit, keep moving to other locations until you hit pay dirt.
Presentation Pattern: Topwaters have been very
productive some mornings and will be good all day on cloudy days.
Shad colored Chug Bugs and Zara Spooks have produced fast action
around pad fields and over grass mats. Small spinnerbaits in
white and shallow or medium running shad colored crankbaits have
also worked early in the morning or all day on cloudy or windy
days. During the day, wacky rigged Lake Fork Twitch Worms in
watermelon on sunny days and June bug on cloudy days have caught
some bass, as have 3/8 oz jigs in watermelon or white with matching
Lake Fork Baby Creature trailers. Fish all of these baits on
deep weedlines or along creek channels in the coves. Simply position
your boat in the middle of the creek channel and throw your bait
to the grass edges and/or stumps near the edge of the creek.
Other days, I've been catching most of my fish out deeper. Carolina
rigged Baby Ring Frys in Chartreuse Pepper and Red Bug or Baby
Creatures in Killer Craw have produced some good numbers once
schools are located. Other days, drop shotting Lake Fork Twitch
Worms in Watermelon, shad or bar fish colored swimbaits, and
white or silver jigging spoons have been better. Basically, once
you graph a deep school, try a variety of baits and you,ll likely
catch a lot on a particular bait, and also a number of bonus
fish if you mix up your baits.
Here's hoping you catch the lunker of your dreams.
If I can be of assistance, please contact me at 214-683-9572
(days) or 972-635-6027 (evenings) or e-mail me through http://www.LakeForkGuideTrips.com
, where your satisfaction is guaranteed.
Good Fishing,
Tom
 October 9,
2006 - Falcon - Submitted by Larry Bridgeman - Ingram Bass
Club-October 7-8, 2006: Twelve members from the Ingram Bass
Club held their two-day October tournament at Falcon this weekend.
Plastic baits including Sweet Beavers were working in 10
to 15 ft of water. On Saturday, plastics caught the most fish.
Water temperatures were 82 to 84 degrees and water color is returning
to clear.
Jordan Pogue had the heavy stringer weighing 27.21
lbs. Jay Arhelger had the second heavy stringer which weighed
20.99 lbs. His big bass and big bass for the day was 8.26 lbs.
The second heavy bass was caught by Andrew Augirre and weighed
7.20 LBS. The third big bass caught by Ron Barclay weighed 7.07
lbs.
 SUNDAY:Tom
Moose had the big bass Sunday weighing 6.75 Lbs and his total
weight for the day was 13.59 Lbs. Jordan Pogue weighed
14.30 lbs for the day's heavy stringer and a two-day heavy stringer
total of 41.51 Lbs. Jay Arhelger had the second heavy
stringer weighing 33.30 Lbs. Sunday went for the Oldham 1 1/4
Oz Eye Max jig. Sunday was a beautiful day on the water with
winds below 5 mph.
Some of the Bass were taken from shallow water and were showing
signs of working the beds. However the majority of the fish are
still deep in 10 ft of water and deeper.
Until next time, have a great day on the water
and always practice catch and release.
  September 30,
2006 - Falcon - Submitted by Larry Bridgeman - Laredo Internaional
Bass Club- September 24, 2006: Twenty-two members from the
LIBC held their September Tournament at Falcon on the 24 th of
September. Gerardo y Armondo Montiel had the heavy stringer weighing
17.29 lbs. It was a three-way tie for second heavy stringer.
Sergio Herrera, Rene Gonzalez and Daniel Caraveo all weighed
in 16.8 lbs. Ricardo Guerrero had the big bass weighing 7.91
lbs. The fish were caught in 5 to 10 ft of water on plastics
and shad colored DD22 Norman Crankbaits. Zoom Watermelon and
Watermelon Red Brush Hogs and Paca Craws were the best baits.
All of the fishermen weighed 4-fish limits.
September 16, 2006 - Answer
to Florida Bass question - Hello. I read your question
about how to catch those bass you are seeing. I am a florida
native and have been fishing central florida for over 30 years
and i can tell you that if you put a live golden shiner in front
of those fish you will indeed connect with them. If you need
more information on how to fish with this kind of bait let me
know and i will send to you a link to all the info you need.
I have a few places where i catch my own golden shiners and keep
them in a tank to use when i want to go fishing. This is another
complete subject i know but once you start catching bass with
shiners you won't want to stop. If you buy them they run from
$16.00 to $20.00 a dozen, this is to much for me to pay so i
catch my own. Catching the bait is almost as much fun as catching
the bass! Jeff Morrow, Sarasota, Fla
September 15, 2006 - Falcon
- Submitted
by Larry Bridgeman - McAllen Bass Anglers-September 9-10,
2006: Fourteen McAllen fishermen were contesting their September
tournament which included the best three fish. JD Penny was in
the lead with a 20 lb stringer. He was also leading the big bass
pot with an 8 lber. Jeff Valdez was in second place hs with 15.13
lbs and Al Malone weighed in 15 lbs for third hs.
Sunday: Sunday was another great day for the club,
beating their Saturday total weight of 157 lbs and 39 bass with
158 lbs and 42 fish, However, one additional fisherman competed
on Sunday. This brought the two day total to 315 lbs and 181
bass. JD Penny won the heavy stringer honors with a two-day total
weighing 35 lbs 15 oz for 6 fish. He also had the big bass weighing
8 lbs. Andy Silva was winner of the second heavy stringer with
29 lbs 7 oz. Al Malone was third with 28 lbs 11 0z.
Until next time, have a great day on the water,
make sure your aerators are working and always practice catch
and release.
September 15, 2006 - Lake
Fork - Submitted by David Vance - With night
time temperatures already starting to cool down, the water temp
here at Lake Fork is from 82 degrees. Lower water temps means
that the Bass are starting to get more active. Over the past
week the Bass fishing has been good we are catching 25 to 30
a day we are now seeing signs that the Bass are beginning to
move into a Fall pattern.
The early morning Top Water bite is good for first
two hours of the morning, and by 10am the bass have been coming
up schooling. Best bait for me to catch these schooling bass
has been a rattle trap and when they are up you can catch them
on just about every cast. A lot of the bigger bass are suspended,
I have been using a 5 inch salt and pepper Grub on a jig head
to catch the bigger bass that are suspended under the schools
of shad. For the shallow bite this week we have been using a
wacky worm in 2 to 4 feet of water colors, watermelon and watermelon
red has worked best for me.
Good places to try right now are main lake and
secondary points, and there has been a lot of schooling bass
under the 515 East and 515 West bridges. The lake is about 4
feet low but is in great shape for some very good fishing over
the next couple of months. All of the public boats ramps are
in good shape and you will have no trouble putting in. By the
time we get into early October, the fall bass fishing will be
in full swing.
If you would like to book a guide trip and get
in on some of the grate fall bass fishing hear on lake fork,
you can reach me at 903-629-7699 or 903-629-5085 cell. or check
out my web site http://www.lakeforktexasfishingreports.com
Good Fishing
David Vance
September 13, 2006 - Lake
Fork - Submitted
by Lake Fork Guide Trips - Tournament season is in full
swing at Lake Fork, so this week,s report will focus on catching
tournament bass (keepers under the 16 slot and lunkers over the
24 end of the slot). Sunday,s big bass tourney was won with a
10.10 lb,er. Look for an 11 or 12 pounder to win the McDonald,s
Big Bass Splash. Although these big ones are tough to catch,
lots of bass under the slot are being caught right now and your
odds of catching a chunky 15.5 incher are good both shallow around
grass and on mid-depth structure.
Count on the current pattern to hold up until the
lake turns over and Fork settles down in late September. After
the thermocline has gone away and things return to normal, the
deep bass form big schools and relate to the bottom while shallow
bass gang up in creek channel bends. Add in cooler air temps
to the fast bass action and October and November are great times
to fish Fork.
September
10, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted by Larry Bridgeman - San Antonio
Bass Club-September 9-10, 2006: The San Antonio Bass Club
fished Falcon this weekend. Participants began arriving on Thursday
and by Saturday, most of the 29 fishermen and women had made
the trip. Weigh in is at the State Park Saturday at 4:00 pm and
at the Zapata County Ramp at 1:00 pm Sunday.
After Saturday's weigh-in, Don Pierce was in the
lead for heavy stringer with 5 fish weighing 21 lbs. Brian Beck
was in the lead for Big Bass weighing 10.5 lbs. There were a
number of anglers with 5-fish weights of 19 - 20 lbs including
Robert Pierce and Lehn Duerr.
Sunday: Len Duerr and his partner Matt Poarch brought
home the heavy stringer-boat 2 day honors wih a total of 77.55
lbs Len Duerr had 3 patch fish Sunday weighing 6.45, 5.60 and
5.65 lbs plus 2 Saturday giving him a 2 day winning heavy stringer
of 42.8 lbs. Don Pierce narrowly missed the mark weighing a second
heavy stringer of 40.9 lbs. Matt Poarch was third with 34.75
lbs. Kath Woodruff took ladies heavy stringer honors with a 2
day total of 24.05 for 10 fish. Susan Beck was second with 19.70
lbs.
The fish were caught in 5 -10 ft of water on DD22
Clown and Smokey Joe lures Saturday and Watermelon Red and Watermelon
Candy lures Sunday. Plastic Brush Hogs and Magnum Lizards worked
well on both days in Watermelon Red. Brian Beck's big bass was
caught on a 1 1/2 Oz White double willow leaf spinnerbait.
Until next time, have a good day on the water and
always practice catch and release.
September 5, 2006 - Lake Fork - Submitted
by David Vance - So far the Bass fishing here at Lake
Fork this week has been very good, cooler weather and calm conditions
has made fishing a blast in the last few days. On Sunday the
bite was on we had 19 by lunch and by the end of the day we had
43. The early morning top water bite has been good for the first
two hours, they have been eating a Pop R and a Rattle Trap. The
bass are schooling off and on all day. Good places to try right
now are main lake points. There has been a lot of schooling bass
from Wolfe creek to the dam, the biggest bass we put in the boat
in the last three days came off the SRA point this bass was 23
inches long and weighed 8lbs 3oz she hit a spoon in 25 feet of
water. Right now I have four rods rigged up a Pop R, Rattle Trap,
< Spoon, and a Carolina Rig. The best bait for me on the Carolina
Rig has been a watermelon red baby Brush Hog and a watermelon
seed centipede. The water temp right now is 84 degrees on the
main lake. Most of the people I have talked to were catching
fish some more than others but that is due to being at the right
place and the right time. All the public boat ramps are in good
shape and you will have no trouble putting your boat in. With
the weather cooling down the fishing is only going to get better.
If you would like to book a guide trip you can reach me at 903-629-7699
or 903-629-5085 also you can check out my web site. (click the
link above)
Good Fishing
David Vance
August 30, 2006 - Lake
Fork - Submitted by David Vance - This fishing
continues to be good hear on Lake Fork. We are already starting
to see some changes in the weather and with some recent rain
storms that are popping up just about ever other day, conditions
are starting to cool down a bit. We are catching good numbers
of 2 & 3 pound bass, you can load the boat right now if your
in the right place when these bass come up schooling. The water
temp at the time of this report was about 83 degrees on the main
lake. Lake Fork is almost 4 feet low and that,s not bad compared
to most lakes in the state.. All the public boat ramps are in
good shape no problem launching your boat at all. In the last
few days both shallow and deep patterns are working. The shallow
bite has been good working the edge of the grass lines early,
best bait for me has been a wacky worm watermelon & June
bug have been best colors for me. By mid morning the bass are
starting to school and best bait to catch these schooling bass
for me, has been a chrome and blue rat-l-trap. When these bass
go down I am still using a salt and pepper grub on a jig head,
most of our bigger bass have come on the grub. When the schooling
slows down I have been going to the Carolina rig, best depth
has been 15 to 25 feet on main lake and secondary points. Best
bait for me on the Carolina rig has been a watermelon red finesse
worm and a watermelon seed centipede. Good places to try are
the mouths of the creeks, big and little mustang, wolf, white
oak, are producing good numbers of bass we are catching 25 to
30 a day. The fishing will continue to even get better as we
head into the fall season, look for there to be a lot of small
bass up close to the grass while most of the big Bass are still
in deeper water for now. As conditions cool down over the next
few weeks the bigger Bass will start to move up.
The Fall fishing here at Lake Fork can be some
of the best anywhere, so don't miss out on some of the best Bass
Fishing of the year. If you would like to Book a Guide Trip you
can reach at 903-629-7699 or 903-629-5085 check out my web site
http://www.lakeforktexasfishingreports.com
Good Fishing
David Vance
August 28, 2006 - Falcon
- Submitted
by Larry Bridgeman - Alice Bass Club-August 27, 2006: A
total of 16 club members contested their Sunday tournament on
Falcon and by weigh in temperatures had reached 100 degrees and
winds were gusting to 28 mph. Lake temperatures ranged from 84
to 89 degrees.
Most of the fishermen and women had five-fish limits,
but Victor Perez had a winning heavy stringer totaling 24.86
lbs anchored by two 7 lb fish and the big bass of the day weighing
7.80 lbs. The smaller fish weighed 7.24 lbs. Jamie was second
with 18.28 lbs and Israel Garcia had third heavy-stringer of
17.60 lbs.
The largest number of fish came from drop offs,
ledges and hardwoods in 10 ft of water. The watermelon purple,
red bug and mean green plastic baits were all working well.
All of the fishermen and women were happy with
the results and they loaded of and left at 2:00 pm.
Until next time, have a great day on the water
and always practice catch and release.
August
25, 2006 - Lake Fork - Submitted by Lake Fork Guide Trips - Despite
hot weather and low water, both good numbers and big bass are
still being caught at Lake Fork. With the schooling bass and
the annual arrival of Lake Fork keeper-sized bass in the shallows
(under the 16 slot limit), those of you looking for fast action
or a limit for tournaments will have consistent success as we
head into September. If you,re like me and would trade one 8
pounder for 100 15 inchers, fishing for giant suspended bass
over deep water is where it,s at. Best of all, these suspended
bass receive very little (if any) pressure and they bite extremely
aggressively when they,re feeding. Of course, the trick is finding
the feeding schools and then keeping a lure in front of them.
Count on the current pattern to hold up until the
lake turns over and Fork settles down in later September. After
the thermocline has gone away and things return to normal, the
deep bass form big schools and relate to the bottom while shallow
bass gang up in creek channel bends. Add in cooler air temps
to the fast bass action and October and November are great times
to fish Fork.
Lake Conditions: A few showers delivered
a little rain & cooled things slightly. Lake Fork,s water
level continues to drop, currently sitting at 398.84,, about
4, 2 below full pool. Even with the low water, almost all of
the main ramps are still useable without any issues. After turning
brownish-green earlier in the summer, Fork,s water is now very
clear in the main lake. Water temps are running high, consistently
88 to 93 degrees before the rains. I,m still showing the thermocline
at about 28,.
Location Pattern: With the development of
the thermocline, it has effectively created a lake bottom for
the bass at about 28,. For the deep bass, many of them no longer
relate to the bottom and suspend above the bottom, at or above
the thermocline. These bass still actively feed; however, keeping
a bait in front of suspended fish is not the easiest proposition,
but not impossible. This is often where the largest bass reside
in August & September, so it,s well worth the effort to place
a bait in front of them.
For most anglers, it is easier to fish for bass
that are shallower and relating to cover or the bottom. Here
are the 3 main location patterns that fit this category. First,
main lake structure like humps and points that top out in less
than 28, are prime candidates. Use your graph and locate these
deep schools of bass. Second, weed flats on the main lake and
in coves with channels or points with deep-water access nearby
produce some fast action early and late. These places can also
hold really big bass during the day if you find deep matted grass
clumps. Finally, schooling bass are showing up all over the lake,
especially on the flat calm days. While schooling bass are liable
to pop up anywhere, bends of creek channels in major creeks are
my favorite place to consistently find big groups of fish. Best
of all, the bass will often school in the same place at about
the same time each day, so once you find a hot spot it will stay
good for days and often weeks.
Presentation Pattern: For suspended bass,
deep diving crankbaits like a Norman DD 22 in shad or bluegill
patterns fished over points and through treetops works well for
actively feeding fish that are suspended about 18, or shallower.
For deeper bass, counting down a spoon or swimbait and yo-yoing
it through suspended fish can be deadly. For really big bass
in late summer, my favorite technique is using a green pumpkin
10 Lake Fork Worm and yo-yoing it in deep timber. An ultra slow
retrieve and 25 lb line are the key to pulling these brutes out
of deep heavy cover. Finally, a Lake Fork Magic Shad in watermelon
with a chartreuse tail on a oz weighted hook is your top option
some days.
For fish that are on the bottom in 12,-28,, a Carolina
rig with a green pumpkin/red & green flake, watermelon/red
flake, or red bug colored Baby Ring Fry or a green pumpkin Twitch
Worm on a 4, leader is my staple bait. In brushier areas and
creek channel bends where the bass school, I,ll go with a bulky
ringed worm like an 8 or 10 Lake Fork Worm in green pumpkin or
red shad. In addition, medium-running crankbaits in shad patterns
worked along creek channels in the major creeks will help you
find concentrations of bass and will catch some big ones when
they come up schooling. For pure numbers of schooling bass though,
a or oz chrome lipless crankbait is hard to beat. Around the
grass beds, topwaters, spinnerbaits, lipless cranks and Magic
Shads worked over the top of the grass and along the edges will
catch good numbers early and late. For bigger bass, I especially
like to pitch matted grass and isolated grass clumps with big
jigs or heavy Texas rigs. Use a < or 1 oz jig in black/blue
or watermelon with a matching Fork Craw on the back or Texas
rig a watermelon red Craw Tube with a < oz or larger bullet
weight to punch through the tops of the hydrilla. Jiggle your
bait to get it to break through the mat, then yo-yo it in the
open water under the mat for 5 to 10 seconds in each spot. Braided
line and a heavy rod are essential to pull these big fish out.
Bites will feel like anything from a tiny bit of extra weight
to the thunk of running a concrete block through your lawnmower,
so stay alert and hang on!
Here,s hoping you catch the lunker of your dreams.
If I can be of assistance, please contact me at 214-683-9572
(days) or 972-635-6027 (evenings) or e-mail me through http://www.LakeForkGuideTrips.com
<http://www.lakeforkguidetrips.com/> , where your satisfaction
is guaranteed.
Good Fishing,
Tom
August 23, 2006 - Lake Fork - Submitted
by David Vance - The fishing this week has been good
for numbers, the bass are starting to school all over the lake
. The top water bite is steal off and on, the ones we have caught
on top have been on a shad colored Pop R. The best bait for me
to catch the schooling bass has been a oz chrome and blue Rat-L-trap,
when these bass come up you can almost catch them on every cast.
Most of the schooling activity I have seen has been in the mouths
of the creeks, and around the bridges 515 east and west also
the 154 bridge has been good. When these bass go down I am using
a Salt &Pepper Grub on a jig head to catch the bass that
are suspended. When the schooling action slows down I have been
changing to a Carolina Rig, I am using a 1oz weight and a three
foot leader 15lb line. Best baits for me on the Carolina Rig
has been a watermelon seed centipede and a watermelon red finesse
worm. We got a little bit of rain yesterday and it was nice,
I think this heat wave is just about over. Soon the weather will
be cooling off and the and the fishing will be heating up.
If you would like to book a guide trip you can
call me at 903-629-7699 or 903-629-5085 http://www.lakeforktexasfishingreports.com
Good Fishing,
David Vance
August
17, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted by Larry Bridgeman - McAllen Bass
Anglers-August 12th-13th, 2006-Sixteen anglers from the McAllen
Bass Anglers fought the 30 mph plus wind and sunny, hot weather
during their monthly Falcon Lake tournament. The winds gusted
to 35 mph, the temperatures rose to over 100 degrees, but the
fish never noticed. Three fish over 8 lbs were caught and one
over six pounds in the two day event.
The McAllen Bass Anglers fishes a reduced three
fish limit during summer months and all together, the sixteen
anglers weighed 242 lbs for their 83 fish. Congratulations to
Joe Martinez who weighed the top heavy stringer of 27 lbs 10
Oz. Eddie Kucia weighed 21 lbs 10 Oz for second place and Jess
Valdez was third with 18 lbs 2 Oz. David Alaniz weighed the big
bass of 8 lbs 9 oz.
The majority of the bass were caught in 10 to 17
ft of water on plastic baits including Brush Hogs and lizards.
Crankbaits were productive for some fishermen. Thanks to Al Malone
for the tournament results and big bass photo.
Until next time have a great day on the water and
always practice catch and release.
August 7, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted
by Larry Bridgeman - Atascosa Bass Club-August 5-6, 2006
The Atascosa Bass Club with 19 members present had a great
day fishing Falcon Saturday August 5, 2006. There were numerous
stringers (9 total) over 20 lbs, numerous fish over 9 lbs and
a lot of red faces thenks to the South Texas Sun..
The
club splits their weighin between the lower lake and upper lake
and we were only able to attend the upper lake weighin. However,
club members shopping at Falcon Lake Tackle reported a 27.34
lb stringer and a 8.1lb black were weighed at the lower lake
weigh in by Dub Bilings, which would place him in first position
for heavy stringer, Shane Pullman and Ted Wayland were in close
contention for second with 24 lbs each. Shane had 24.04 lbs and
Ted had 24.30 lbs. Shane's Big Bass weighed 11.48 lbs and Larry's
big bass weighed 10.48 lbs.
Roger Dove. John Pfullman and Terry Vrana were
next in line with 22.17, 21.60 and 20.45 lbs respectively. Their
big bass weighed 6.45, 8.48 and 10.11 lbs respectively.
Although big fish were caught on jigs, plastics
and crankbaits, the big bass were caught on Magnum Zoom Watermelon
Red Lizards and brush hogs.. Fish came from 10 to 15 ft of water
on both the US and Mexico sides of the lake.Mid-lake to lower
lake areas produced the biggest fish. Only one fisherman failed
to limit on Saturday and he had 4 fish weighed.
Sunday: The bite on Sunday was not nearlly
as agressive as it was on Saturday. The fish that were schooling
and chasing shad on Saturday were much less active on Sunday.
Sunday's heavy stringer was weighed by Craig White and it was
one of two 20 lb plus stringers weighed for the day at 22.12
lbs. Dub Billings weighed 19.39 lbs for a winning two day hs
of 46.73 lbs which I believe someone said is a new club record.
. Ted Wayland weighed a 20.06 lb stringer bringing his two day
heavy stringer weight to a second place 44.36 lbs. Craig White
brought in third place heavy stringer honors with 44.28 lbs.
Tinker Pfullman came in 4th with 38.81 lbs thanks to Sunday's
big bass he weighed of 8.71 lbs.
Pat White weighed a respectable 28.2 lbs for heavy
stringer ladies. Thanks to Craig White for the final numbers.
Until next time, have a great day on the lake and
always practice catch and release.
August 1, 2006 - Lake Fork - Submitted
by David Vance - The fishing this week has been good
on Deep Diving Crank baits and a Carolina Rig. The Norman DD
22 has worked best for me color chartreuses with a blue back.
Water depth 15 to 25 feet. Good places that are producing good
fish, are the old road beds, 515 east & 515 west, and main
lake points and humps. Today we had 33 bass, 8 of these bass
came on the crank bait and the rest on a Carolina Rig best baits
for me have been a Watermelon Seed fluke and a Watermelon Seed
Centipede. At this time, I am using a 1 oz weight with a three
foot leader line, size 15 pound test. The top water bite has
been off and on the past few days. The top water action that
we have had in the last week have come on a shad colored Pop
R and a Zara Spook. Most of these bass have been chasing shad
to the top, early in the morning. The bass are in a solid summer
pattern. So if you are coming to lake fork, the deep water pattern
will be the most consistent, for most of the day. If you would
like to book a Day or Night trip you can call me at 903-629-7699
or check out my web site www.lakeforktexasfishingreports.com
GOOD FISHING
David Vance
July 29, 2006 - Lake Fork
- Submitted
by Lake Fork Guide Trips - After being out of town for
almost the entire month of July, it,s good to be back chasing
the lunkers on Lake Fork. Unfortunately, I,m heading back out
of town for another tournament, so I won,t be able to flirt with
those big Lake Fork females very long. For those of you lucky
enough to be heading to Lake Fork in August, the lake is receiving
very little pressure and the big ones will still bite during
the day or at night. With the annual arrival of the thermocline
in about 28,, the patterns will be different for August, and
I describe below how to go about catching them.
With the summer heat, I,m really starting to look
forward to October and November fishing. After the thermocline
goes away and the lake turns over some time in September, fish
will be schooling and actively feeding all fall. It,s usually
the best time of the year to take kids fishing, as numbers run
high. It,s also the time of year when you can catch fish on about
any technique, depending on the conditions that day. For example,
we had one over 9 pounds on a topwater in 2, last October and
the next day had another bass that went almost 11 pounds in 38,!
Lake Conditions: Last week,s tropical system
delivered very little rain but did cool things slightly and brought
some refreshing winds. Lake Fork,s water level keeps dropping,
currently sitting at 399.38,, about 3, 7 below full pool. As
we are heading into our dry season, Fork will likely be very
low by the end of the summer. Although this makes for tougher
navigation, the bass will be consolidated and easier to catch
once you get to them. The water is clear in many places, although
some areas are a stained brown green due to algae blooms and
wave action. Water temps dropped to the mid-80s following the
cooler days. As anticipated, the thermocline appears to have
developed in about 28,.
Location Pattern: With the development of
the thermocline, it has effectively created a lake bottom for
the bass at about 28,. For the bass that were living shallower
than 28, during June, there,s no change to those patterns. For
the deepest bass, many of them no longer relate to the bottom
and suspend above the bottom, at or above the thermocline. These
bass still actively feed; however, keeping a bait in front of
suspended fish is not the easiest proposition, but not impossible.
This is often where the largest bass reside in August, so it,s
well worth the effort to place a bait in front of them.
For most anglers, it is easier to fish for bass
that are shallower and relating to cover or the bottom. Here
are the 3 main location patterns for August that fit this category.
First, main lake structure like humps and points that top out
in less than 28, are prime candidates. Use your graph and locate
these deep schools of bass. Second, main lake weed flats produce
some fast action early and late and can also hold really big
bass during the day if you find deep matted grass clumps. Finally,
schooling bass get going in August, especially on the flat calm
days. While schooling bass are liable to pop up anywhere, bends
of creek channels in major creeks are my favorite place to consistently
find big groups of fish.
Presentation Pattern: For suspended bass,
deep diving crankbaits like a Norman DD 22 in shad or bluegill
patterns fished over points and through treetops is your best
weapon for actively feeding fish. For less aggressive bass, counting
down a spoon or swimbait and yo-yoing it through suspended fish
can be deadly. For really big bass in late summer, my favorite
technique is using a green pumpkin 10 Lake Fork Worm and yo-yoing
it in deep timber. An ultra slow retrieve and 25 lb line are
the key to pulling these brutes out of deep heavy cover.
For fish that are on the bottom in 12,-28,, a Carolina
rig with a green pumpkin/red & green flake, watermelon/red
flake, or red bug colored Baby Fork Creature or a green pumpkin
Twitch Worm on a 4, leader is my staple bait. In brushier areas
and creek channel bends where the bass school, I,ll go with a
bulky ringed worm like an 8 or 10 Lake Fork Worm in green pumpkin
or red shad. In addition, medium-running crankbaits in shad patterns
worked along creek channels in the major creeks will help you
find concentrations of bass and will catch some big ones when
they come up schooling. For pure numbers of schooling bass though,
a or oz chrome lipless crankbait is hard to beat. Around the
main lake grass, topwaters, spinnerbaits, lipless cranks and
Magic Shads worked over the top of the grass and along the edges
will catch good numbers early and late. For bigger bass, I especially
like to pitch matted grass and isolated grass clumps with big
jigs or heavy Texas rigs. Use a < or 1 oz jig in black/blue
or watermelon with a matching Fork Craw on the back or Texas
rig a watermelon red Craw Tube with a < oz or larger bullet
weight to punch through the tops of the hydrilla. Jiggle your
bait to get it to break through the mat, then yo-yo it in the
open water under the mat for 5 to 10 seconds in each spot. Braided
line and a heavy rod are essential to pull these big fish out.
Bites will feel like anything from a tiny bit of extra weight
to the thunk of running a concrete block through your lawnmower,
so stay alert and hang on!
Good Fishing,
Tom
July 14, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted
by Larry Bridgeman - Wildcat Bass Club July 8-9, 2006: The
tournament results for Saturday's Wildcat tornament found Chris
Raub in the lead with a big bass of 7.10 lbs and a 17.15 lb heavy
stringer. Eric Herzog was a very close second for both big bass
at 7.01 lbs and heavy stringer of 17.03 lbs. David Herzog was
in third with 13 lbs.
McAllen Bass Anglers July 8-9, 2006 Eighteen anglers fished
this two day event. Early showeres on Saturday did not dampen
the spirits of the fishermen. Rod Simpson and Oscar Ramirez led
the day 1 tournament with 29 .10 Lbs Al Malone and Pedro Torres
were second with 28.62 Lbs and Joe Matrinez and David Trevino
were third with 24.87 Lbs. John Struthers and Andy Silva were
in 4th place with 23.79 Lbs. Sunday was a different story. Struthers
and Silva caught a total of 22.43 lbs giving them first place
for two days of 46.22 Lbs. Martinez and Trevino caught 19.15
Lbs for 2nd HS of 44.02 Lbs and Rod Simpson and Oscar Ramirez
took third HS honors with 42.57 Lbs. Altogether 18 anglers caught
89 bass weighing 329 lbs.
  June 29, 2006 - Lake
Fork - Submitted
by Lake Fork Guide Trips - The summertime fishing at
Lake Fork continues to be very good most days for size and numbers.
Depending on your preference, you can catch over 30 keeper-sized
fish most days on a drop shot, or catch good numbers of slot
fish and some real hogs on Carolina rigs, Texas rigs and crankbaits,
no matter how hot and sunny the days are. My customers and I
have added lots of pictures of 5, 6, 7, and 8 lb bass in the
past two weeks. Check them out for yourself at www.LakeForkGuideTrips.com. For numbers of
quality fish and a shot at a true trophy, it,s hard to beat structure
fishing on Lake Fork in the summertime.
June
23-24, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted by Larry Bridgeman - Tournament
Report-Helotes Bass Club: Helotes Bass Club - June 24-25, 2006:
Helotes Bass Club ventured to Zapata for their June Tournament
and it took over 19 lbs to take the daily heavy stringer honors
and almost 9 lbs to grab big bass honors on Saturday. Lake water
temperature Saturday was about 88 degrees and water clarity was
poor-to-fair in most parts of the lake. With the water continuing
to drop the fish were mostly in 11 ft or deeper water and watermelon/green
colored baits either in tubes or craw worms were working well.
The weighin on Sunday will take place at about 1;00M PM Sunday
at the State Park.
Danny De La Hunt won the BB and HS honors for the
weekend with 10 fish weighing 38.50 Lbs and big bass of 8.23
Lbs. His partner Mike Roscoe had the second heavy stringer of
38.23 lbs. Richard and Ngarm Ball had the HS for Couples of 55.42
Lbs. Ngarm had the Ladies HS of 26.95 Lbs. Richard captured 3rd
place HS with 28.47 Lbs. The Balls were culling fish by 10:00
am Sunday and there were a lot of fish 5 lbs and over caught
and weighed by club members. There were a lot of fish caught
by club members.
Fishermen were finding a lot of fish below 3 Lbs
in the upper lake and while the action was good, the larger fish
were being found in the lower lake. Israel Garcia and his wife
found an 8 lb bass on the Mexico side of the upper lake while
prefishing for next weekend's tournament.
There was still a lot of seismograph activity taking place in
the Mexican water. This was a big disruption for fishing
 June 19, 2006
- Lake Fork - Submitted by Lake Fork Guide Trips - June
and July are a couple of the best months of the year on Lake
Fork, often during the hottest part of the day. While numbers
of 3 to 8 pound bass are at their peak during June and July,
many lunkers are being caught right now, too. The top 4 places
in a big bass tourney last weekend went 12.9, 11.14, 10.36 and
10.24 pounds. In addition, a 14.59 lb,er was caught since my
last report. And the recent cool down and storms don,t seem to
have slowed down the fishing. Friday, we boated 2 bass over 7
lbs and another that weighed 6.81. Yesterday, Saturday, the small
fish were biting like crazy and we lost one well over 8 lbs at
the boat. Day or night fishing, it,s an awesome time to be on
Fork right now!
Lake Conditions: A few storms on Friday
and Saturday brought cooler temps and some wind, but did very
little to stop the dropping water levels. Lake Fork,s water level
is currently 400.09,, or 2,11 below full pool. Without some significant
rains in June, Fork will be very low by the end of the summer.
Although this makes for tougher navigation, the bass will be
consolidated and easier to catch once you get to them. The water
is clear in many areas, although some areas are a stained brown
green due to algae blooms and wave action. Water temps cooled
down to the low 80s following the storms, after reaching the
upper 80s earlier in the week. Submerged vegetation, including
hydrilla, milfoil and coontail, is growing rapidly in many new
areas and already starting to canopy in some areas, which will
make for some great jig flippin, later this summer. Finally,
I checked for a thermocline on Thursday with my temperature probe
and so far it hasn,t developed. Look for it to develop in about
28, around mid-July.
Location Pattern: As bass move farther away
from postspawn patterns and solidly into summertime ones, I,m
concentrating on main lake points and main lake humps, ridges,
ledges, and roads. Big bass can still be caught in the creeks
around grass and wood cover early and late; however, during most
of the day, I prefer to fish deep structure for schools of big
bass. Structure fishing is simply a matter of using your graph
to find deep cover like brushpiles or timber, then working over
the cover thoroughly. For faster action, find areas with schools
of bass and bait around the cover and get the net handy. Even
big schools of bass sometimes take coaxing to get a bite, so
being able to interpret your electronics accurately is the key.
Keep in mind that a lot of fish are suspended right now, further
making electronics interpretation essential to good catches.
Presentation Pattern: I,ve been concentrating
on the deep bite, so my presentation pattern reflects this. For
suspended bass, deep diving crankbaits like a Norman DD 22 in
shad or bluegill patterns fished over points, bounced over cover,
and through treetops have been very productive. I rig one rod
with 10 lb test to hit deep cover, to about 18,, while another
cranking rod is rigged with 20 lb test for heavier cover that
tops out closer to 10,. After I,ve cranked the area thoroughly,
I,ll switch to a swimbait, jig and/or a spoon. Either count down
these lures to the depth of the fish and swim them through the
schools or aggressively rip them off the bottom to catch the
suspenders. If your graph is showing bass on or near the bottom,
Texas and Carolina rigs, as well as drop shot rigs are catching
lots of big fish in 12, to 28,. For the Texas rig, I,ll go with
a bulky ringed worm like a 10 Lake Fork Worm for aggressive bass,
while a 6 Twitch Worm will work better for inactive bass. Watermelon
red, green pumpkin and blue fleck have been our top colors. The
Texas rig has worked best in heavy cover, fished very slowly
and twitched in place. For more open areas, the Carolina rig
with a green pumpkin/red & green flake, killer craw, or watermelon
candy colored Baby Fork Creature on a 4, leader has been our
staple bait. Work these baits along the bottom at a steady pace
until you come across a piece of cover, then slow way down and
leave it there as long as possible. Often, a big bass will do
you a favor and pull it out for you! Finally, for big numbers
of keeper sized bass, go with a drop shot rig. I,m using a Twitch
Worm in any shade of green, rigged on a 1/0 hook about 2, above
a oz sinker. For active bass, a constantly quivering wacky rigged
Twitch Worm works best. Conversely, if the bass are sluggish,
a weedless Texas rigged drop shot held almost motionless around
cover is too much for even the most finicky bass to withstand.
On 10 lb test and a medium action spinning rod, a 4 lb bass in
30, deep timber is quite an exciting challenge.
Good Fishing,
Tom
June 13, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted
by Larry Bridgeman - McAllen Bass Anglers-June 10-11, 2006:
Twenty anglers from the McAllen area fished Falcon and they continued
the legacy of big bass and heavy stringers established over the
last few weeks. They based out of the Falcon Heights and launched
at the State Park. All together, they weighed 93 bass at 283.55
Lbs and John Struthers had the big bass weighing 9.4 Lbs. Brantly
Bilman and Eddie Kucia had the heavy stringer for two days of
42.36 Lbs. J.D. Penny and his partner Jess Valdez were second
with a very close 41.11 Lbs. John Struthers and partner had 3rd
with 40.32 Lbs. Pretty good fishing when it takes 40 Lbs to make
third place.
Locals were not left out of the good bite either as they scored
numbers over 25 per day and sizes averaging 3-5 pounds and big
bass to just North of 9 Lbs. Plastic Super Flukes, Sweet Beavers
and lizards were all working and colors of Baby Bass, watermelon
red and red shad were going out the door.
Our neighbor was down fishing and found some bass congregated
around the Marker 9 area. His Brush Hogs and lizards, once having
located the fish, just kept producing in he same area. Many times,
big numbers of fish are located in the same tree or group of
trees.
Several customers were giving all-night catfishing a go this
week and scoring limits for their efforts. Shrimp tossed under
the tree limbs in 4 ft of water or so were catching a lot of
good fish.
Until next time have a good day on the water and practice catch
and release.
June 3, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted by Larry Bridgeman - The largest
and best attended tournament of the year at Falcon is Bass Champs
and this year two separate events were held one each on Saturday
June 3 and Sunday June 4th for the regular and Southern region
Championship respectively. A fully-rigged Skeeter Bass Boat was
awarded as the top prize at each event. Photo is all the
Saturday and Sunday HS winners and Saturday BB winner.
June
3, 2006 Bass Champs Tournament-Falcon: The 151 boat field
was sent off starting at 6:15 am and by a little after 7:00 am
everybody was on their way out fishing. Temperatures were just
under 70 degrees and winds were mild, gusting to 5 mph out of
the SSE.Prediction: The weight required to best the others will
more than likely have to be be north of 30 Lbs. Weigh in will
start at 3:00 pm and end about an hour later. Well, we were right.
The top stringer was 34.52 Lbs and Terry Oldham and his partnerJaime
Burtron were the Anglers who put it all together. This win put
them over the top and they claimed Anglers of the Year honors
in addition to their Falcon Tournament first place finish and
the fully-rigged Skeeter. This year's tournament set a record
with an average weight over 3.9 Lbs. Altogether 61 teams had
stingers weighing over 20 Lbs and 10 stringers went over 30 Lbs.
Mike Kernan and David Weber were second with 33.68 Lbs . Tim
Blanchette and Ted Sprencel were third with just North of 32
Lbs. Kevin Reissig weighed a 11.32 Lber for Big Bass of the tournament
narrowly out-ouncing the 2nd place BB weighing 11.30 Lbs weighed
by Oldham and Burtron. Nicolas Rocha and his partner, Abelaedo
Lozoya weighed in 1st and they set the bar very high with 31.82
Lbs. They were in the lead, dropped to 2nd and finally fell to
4th where they finished.
The plastic bite was strong all day with about
every type of creature bait working in the hardwoods typically
situated on main-lake points. Water depths were anywhere from
2 to 15 ft. It was common for anglers to have culled fish from
early morning on. As many as 100 fish were caught by a single
boat and fifty fish was not at all uncommon for many boats. Anglers
were unanimous in their description of events transpiring leading
to many lost fish. You had to set the hook and get them coming
to the boat before they had the opportunity to turn and head
down. Once they turned, forget it.They would get hooked up in
the trees. There were probably more good fish lost than caught
and even with that, big fish and heavy stringers reigned supreme
both days.
June 4th 2006 Bass Champs Southern Championship
at Falcon: I was regrettably unable to attend the Sunday
weighin because of illness. You wouldn't think the results from
Saturday could be beat, but they were. They were beat both for
big bass and heavy stringer. Saturday's second place team, Mike
Kernan and David Webber, had 5 fish Sunday weighing 37.98 lbs
for HS and the 1st prize of the fully-rigged Skeeter boat. That
is a little over 7 1/2 lbs average per fish . The Big Bass weighed
in by Jimmy Johnson and Shane Gibson topped the scales at 12.06
Lbs. George Kunkle (ABA Tournament Director) and partner John
Goin had second heavy stringer of 36.84 lbs with a 11.40 anchor
fish. The Trent Huckaby/Bubba Haralson team took third with 35.12
lbs and a 10.88 big bass as anchor. It took 30.60 lbs for yesterday's
winners Oldham/Burtron to place 8th. We counted 9 fish over 8
lbs Sunday and 12 over 8 lbs on Saturday.
May 29, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted by Larry Bridgeman -
Falcon Lake Tackle Welcomed Universal City Bass Club to Falcon
for their
May 27-28, 2006 Tournament:
 The
79 degree temperatures at daybreak with cloud cover gradually
broke and elevated to over 100 degrees peaking at 101 degrees
by weigh in. The fish and the 47 fishermen and women, youth men
and ladies all suffered the combined affects of the heat and
28 mph winds as did the club computer, which was fried by the
water from a spilled weigh bag. Tim Plocek out-ounced Walter
Vestal's 7.40 Lb Big Bass with a 7.43 Lb near clone Saturday.
The Heavy Stringer honors Saturday looked like they would go
to Mike Madaris with 17.34 Lbs until Larry Martin brought 5 patch
fish to the scales for 24.20 Lbs. His 5 fish weighed 4.36, 4.69,
4.97, 5.36 and 5.80 Lbs. Larry's wife Pat Martin had the Ladies
heavy stringer weighing 15.43 Lbs.
The plastic-bait bite remained strong today, The
best pattern was main lake points with 12 ft of water on hardwoods.
Lizards, tubes. Sweet Beavers and Brush Hogs all caught fish.
Watermelon Red, Watermelon Chartreuse, Dirt and Coon Nasty were
some of the best colors. There was some action on Bull Bream
crankbaits, red and black jigs, chrome blue back Rat-L-Traps
and white spinnerbaits, but overall, plastics were the best.
Typically the outside hardwood was the best location, but a few
probing casts from further out might reveal a subsurface hardwood
that is holding fish and not readily visible
Some of the fishermen were in and on fish from
daybreak until weighin, culling 60 or more fish in the process.
Other fishermen found their live wells to be missing the size
of fish required to even make the five-fish limit. It just seems
to depend on the location and the size of fish populating the
particular area. It was not uncommon for multiple big fish to
be found on the same hardwood.
That has been pretty consistent for the past couple
weeks so slowing down and working an area thoroughly may well
pay off in numbers of big fish.
SUNDAY:
That is exactly what Larry Martin did to bring in 10 fish for
the two-day event breaking all club records for two-day, heavy
stringer. He had 9 patch fish and the one holdout was 3.99 lbs.
His total weight was 48.05 lbs for the 10 fish. His wife sowed
up the top Ladies Division honors with 35.43 Lbs and needless
to say they had the top Couples weight of 83.48 Lbs. Since they
opted out of the Team Division this left a clear shot for 2nd
Heavy Stringer winner Mike Madaris (33.69 Lbs) and Mike Logue
to take Heavy Team Honors with 59.39 lbs. Congratulations to
other winners including Harvey Holmes with BB of 7.60 Lbs, Katie
Merkle Youth-Ladies Division with 11.65 Lbs and Youth-Male Division
winner T Bradford with 14.81 Lbs. Katie is pictured at right
with the Holmes' new Daschound puppy.
Altogether, 47 anglers combined to catch and weigh
324 legal fish weighing 806 Lbs and it was the third largest
weight of any tournament in Universal City's Club history
Don't forget Bass Champs next weekend. Saturday
is the Falcon Tournament followed by the Championship on Sunday.
Registration is Friday night or Saturday morning at Beacon Lodge.
Until next time, have a great day on the water
and always practice catch and release.
May 28, 2006 - Lake Fork - Submitted
by Lake Fork Guide Trips - Big bass continue to be caught
at Lake Fork, including several 10 to 11+ lb bass coming into
Lake Fork Marina in recent days. While my customers and I didn,t
catch any tens last week, most days we are catching good numbers
of bass along with some big fish mixed in. The bass are scattered
right now, with some still shallow in the very backs of creeks,
while others are setting up in deep summertime locations in the
main lake. Versatility has remained the key. In general, we,ve
done better in the shallows on windy and cloudy days, while the
deep bite has been best on sunny and calmer days, especially
in the afternoons. As the heat builds and more bass move deep,
June is shaping up to be its usual structure fishing big bass
whack-a-thon. If you want to learn how to use your graph to read
deep structure and then catch big bass with Carolina rigs, worms,
swimbaits and crankbaits, now,s the time to head to Lake Fork.
Lake Conditions: The past week has been
dry and hot, dropping Lake Fork,s water level to 400.48,, or
2,6 below full pool. Without some significant rains in June,
Fork will probably be very low by the end of the summer. Although
this makes for tougher navigation, the bass will be consolidated
and easier to catch once you get to them. The water is currently
clear in most areas, except for wind blown locations. Water temps
continue to rise, with readings in the upper 70s to mid 80s.
Submerged vegetation, including hydrilla, milfoil and coontail,
is growing rapidly in many areas and spreading in coverage and
height. In addition, the lily pads are really starting to pop
up and increase in density on the south end of Fork.
Location Pattern: My location and presentation
patterns haven,t changed much from my last report. I,m concentrating
on coves and creeks that had the largest populations of spawning
fish and starting there on the flats, creek channels, and points
just outside the beds. I,m working out progressively deeper inside
productive coves and fishing all of the cover and structure options
from the backs of the creek out to the main lake summertime holes.
Keep in mind that a lot of fish are suspended right now, so fish
bottom bouncing lures while also checking for suspended fish
with baits like jerkbaits and crankbaits. Once you try a few
productive spawning creeks, you should have caught some fish
and determined what types of cover, structure, and depths are
holding the most fish. At that point, look for similar water
around the lake and run the pattern. The fish are pretty scattered
right now, so you,ll normally do better by fishing lots of good
areas instead of camping on an area where you,ve caught a couple
good fish. Again, with the fish being in a transition mode, you,ll
need to repeat this process most days to stay in contact with
the most active fish.
Presentation Pattern: As for your lure,
let the cover, conditions, and the depth of the bass you are
fishing dictate your choice. With the fish being so spread out,
virtually everything in your tackle box will catch fish at some
point during early June, so stay flexible. Following are the
baits that have been working best for us this week. Topwaters
have been sporadic lately, so I,ve been doing better early with
shallow running cranks over the grass. Depending on the depth
of the grass, select one in a shad or bluegill pattern that will
occasionally hit the top of the grass. In addition, around shallow
vegetation and pads, wacky rigged Lake Fork Twitch Worms and
Magic Shads in green pumpkin and watermelon candy are working
well early and during the day. Texas rigged baits like Lake Fork
Flippers in black neon or watermelon/red are also producing big
bass when flipped to wood cover near grass or pads. Deep diving
crankbaits like a Norman DD 22 in shad or bluegill patterns fished
for suspended bass on deep points or dug into the tops of 10,
to 16, points and ridges are producing some big fish and good
numbers. Go with 10 lb test and hang on after you come through
submerged brush. Finally, Texas rigged and Carolina rigged Lake
Fork Baby Creatures and Baby Ring Frys in watermelon red &
green flake and green pumpkin are catching bass in 12, to 33,.
Good Fishing,
Tom
May 21, 2006 - Falcon - Submitted by Larry Bridgeman - There
were a number of anglers in town this weekend prefishing for
Bass Champs, which fishes Falcon on June 3rd and 4th for their
regular and championship tournaments respectively. Reports of
big bass caught deep by some of these fishermen on DD22 crankbaits
were frequent enough to make us believe there are a lot of big
bass still holding in deep water. Large numbers of schooling
bass were seen and caught in most areas providing a lot of action
if not a very big size. In addition to those prefishing, two
tournaments were held this weekend
May
20 th & 21st, 2006: The American Bass Anglers first day
tournament is history and Tournament Director George Kunkle had
the Heavy Stringer of 28.19 lbs. His partner David Sheffield
had the second heavy stringer of 23.85 lbs with a 10.09 Lb Big
Bass. The Carolina rigged Sweet Beaver combination in Watermelon
Red did the job for the duo with 10 fish weighing 42.04 Lbs producing
an average size catch of 4.20 Lb. George Aguilara had the third
heavy stringer of 14.25 Lbs with a 5.73 lb anchor fish. Most
of the anglers were culling fish early and the majority of the
anglers weighed 5-fish limits. The ABA tournament drew only 4
non-boaters who were matched up with boaters in a draw at 5:00
am. This is a great way for non boaters to be able to fish a
circuit but the message may not have gotten out to enough of
the fishermen regarding this event.
SUNDAY
ABA:Richard Gossiaux took heavy stringer honors on the second
tournament outweighing the other 12 anglers with his 15.17 Lbs
anchored by a 4,92 Lb Big Bass. He was fishing with George Kunkle,
but George's fish did not live up to the size of his Saturday
fish weighing in just below 10 Lbs.
Jerry Carpenter
had the Sunday Big Bass weighing 8.74 Lbs and second heavy stringer
of 14.48 Lbs. Bill Langenberg had the third HS weighing 12.32
Lbs
San Antonio Police Department (SAPD) had 32 Anglers that
contested their 2-day tournament. The heavy stringer honors Saturday
went to Don Hendricks with 21.52 Lbs. Aubrey Freeman Jr. was
close behind in 2nd with 19.42 Lbs and Johnny Barnes was third
with 18.39 Lbs. The Big Bass honors went to Craig Pryor with
a 7.76 Lb Bass. Pam Barnes was leading the ladies with 12.51
lbs. Hunter Gonzalez was the youth leader for Saturday.
There were a lot of fish caught mostly in 12 ft of water or less,
but fish were even shallower earlier in the day. Plastic baits
were number one followed by crankbaits and a few spinnerbaits.
Watermelon red was the best color for plastics followed by shad
and/or white crankbaits and spinnerbaits. The water temperature
was between 80 and 85 degrees and water clarity was stained.
Winds were gusting to 25 mph and the high temperature was 98
degrees. The morning started out at a pleasant 70 degrees, but
warmed considerably and it would have been very hot without the
wind.The anglers will re-tie tonight for some more action tomorrow.
The numbers of big fish lost was high even though a number of
good fish from 5 to 10.09 Lbs were caught by anglers in both
tournaments.
SUNDAY: Aubrey Freeman Jr had the first place 2-day HS
with 42.10 Lbs.
Keeping
it all in the family Aubrey Freeman Senior came in second for
HS with 36.82 Lbs. Aubrey Jr's big bass of 7.73 Lbs Sunday narrowly
missed Craig Pryor's big bass weight from yesterday of 7.76 Lbs.
Sonny Osborne Jr. had 35.86 Lb for 3rd HS. Susan Osborne took
the Ladies Division Honors with 23.73 Lbs. Hunter Gonzalez was
the youth leader for the two-day event.
Congratulations to the weigh-masters of both tournaments for
a speedy weigh in and a concentrated effort to keep the fish
in and returned to the lake as quickly as possible following
their being weighed. This helped assure the survival of as many
fish as possible and, at a time of the year when fish are easily
stressed, their conscientious efforts are appreciated.
Until next time have a great day fishing and always
practice catch and release.
May 22, 2006 - Answer to Florida Bass
question - You might try some garlic sent found at
most tackle shops. It covers a lot of smells and bass seem
to like it.
Bill Rose
Lincoln NE
May 9, 2006 - Lake Fork - Submitted by Lake Fork Guide Trips - Big
bass up to 13.76 lbs continue to be caught at Lake Fork. With
some bass in a post spawn pattern and others starting to settle
into summer patterns, covering lots of water and trying a variety
of patterns has been critical to catching fish. From topwaters
in shallow grass to Carolina rigs in 30,, just about everything
in your tackle box could work right now. The trick is quickly
figuring out which of those baits will work best, and where.
Similar to the prespawn patterns we fished just a couple months
ago, bass are on the move, so where you catch them today may
not hold many fish tomorrow. Find the most productive pattern
each day, then fish similar areas around the lake. The quicker
you figure out the pattern and the more productive water you
fish, the better you,ll do.
Lake Conditions: After numerous showers
and storms, Lake Fork,s water level is up slightly, currently
reading 400.75,, or 2,3 below full pool. The water clarity is
very clear in grassy areas, whereas some areas without submerged
vegetation are slightly stained due to recent rains. Water temps
continue to rise, with readings in the low to upper 70s, depending
on the area. Submerged vegetation, including hydrilla, milfoil
and coontail, is growing rapidly in many areas and spreading
in coverage and height. In addition, the lily pads are really
starting to pop up and increase in density on the south end of
Fork.
Location Pattern: I,m concentrating on coves
and creeks that had the largest populations of spawning fish
and starting there on the flats, creek channels, and points just
outside the beds. I,m working out progressively deeper inside
productive coves and fishing all of the cover and structure options
from the backs of the creek out to the main lake summertime holes.
Keep in mind that a lot of fish are suspended right now, so fish
bottom bouncing lures while also checking for suspended fish
with baits like jerkbaits and crankbaits. Once you try a few
productive spawning creeks, you should have caught some fish
and determined what types of cover, structure, and depths are
holding the most fish. At that point, look for similar water
around the lake and run the pattern. The fish are pretty scattered
right now, so you,ll normally do better by fishing lots of good
areas instead of camping on an area where you,ve caught a couple
good fish. Again, with the fish being in a transition mode, you,ll
need to repeat this process most days to stay in contact with
the most active fish.
Presentation Pattern: As for your lure,
let the cover and the depth of the bass yo |