Saturday, April 3, 2010

"That's the Biggest Bass I've Ever Seen with my own eyes!"

April 3rd-

You'd have thought today was April's fools day, but brotha I ain't kiddin...we MURDERED em today!!! This is without a doubt the most productive and impressive day that I've been a part of in my entire angling career. All 1 year of it. I really don't know where to begin, or even if blogspot handles the amount of pictures I'm about to post. Today was in every sense of the word, Epic.

Eric met me for the super early bite at the honeyhole behind Otter's. If you remember, last time we came to this spot Otter and Eric were catching Fish Ohio sized Crappie and Bass and I couldn't get Nary a Nibble. I wore my "have a crappie day" t-shirt to ward off the evil spirits. The weather report was 77 and windy with a chance of thunderstorms, but when we got to the lakes they were as calm as glass. I was eager to throw a topwater bait which I've yet to do in 2010 in Ohio. There was action all over the surface so I knew they'd be biting.

I'm trying all different kinds of rythmns with the Torpedo topwater trying to figure out what the fish wanted. About 20 casts into the day a monster bass exploded on the lure! I had to have woken up the entire county as loud as I was yelling.

"Top" o' the mornin' to ya

There might not be anything better than a big ol bass blowing up topwater. The commotion on the surface slowed down so I switched to a watermelon Paddle Tail Senko with a 3/16oz slipshot sinker. What a fantastic decision that ended up being, as you'll see below. I was walking around the bank pitching and flipping it into the brush surrounding the shore. I'd let it hit the bottom and pop it a few times, then let it fall. They were CRUSHING it on the fall. Pop, pop, sink BOOOOOM! Slayin em.

Do yourself a favor and pick some up from Bass Pro Shops

After a 20 minute hike back to Otters to move our cars out of his neighbors driveway, Eric and I were back on the pattern. I switched the Senko Strike King fluke style soft plastic in shad. The pattern was still white hot and I caught 3 more in a matter of moments



Suddenly we hear a roar off in the woods. A wall of wind drilled us straight in the face and didn't stop the rest of the day. Of course, we had found a fool proof pattern that was resulting in big bass every few casts, and the wind had come to screw it up. However, fishing in windy conditions can be pretty productive. The wind blows the small bluegill, shad and other baitfish to one side of the lake because they hate the current. And let me tell you this, where there's baitfish, there's big fish.

Eric had caught a few small guys until he hooked into a "blogworthy" fish. He was having a tough day on the water. He missed multiple fish and was getting hung up alot. I'd gladly trade that for what was in store for the lucky bastard

Look closely at the size of this fish to give you perspective on what you're about to see...

The wind was getting pretty out of hand at this point and I was tempted to call it a day. We had been on the water since 7am and we were working the hell out of baits. Otter and I were about to start throwing nightcrawlers in the windy end of the smaller pond. Eric had ventured down to the far shoreline where the wind was coming in determined to get more bass on the watermelon fluke rig.

That's when I heard shreeking screams of words I cannot publish even on the internet, with the word "giant" in between. Otter and I took off sprinting. I could see the monster from 500 yards away. We catch up to Eric right as he's lipping the fish and all 3 of us go absolutely bananas.

Ladies and gentlemen, enjoy the show...



Wait for it...






Wait for it....









6LB 10oz -Fish Ohio Largemouth




This is the condition I found Eric in when I walked up. He was bent over clutching the Behemoth to catch his breath. Look at the belly on that toad!!!






She was so full of eggs it looked like she was about to burst. Just kinda hanging out up in the flats about to spawn, which the only reason he had any shot to catch her. We quickly weighed her, took our pictures and safely released her back into the water. CPR- catch, photo, release. That's why the spring bite is so critical. The LUNKERS that lurk in the deep water 10 months out of the year move up into the shallows to spawn, and it's the only chance you'll have to get your picture taken with them.


We were pretty much acting like the Bengals won the superbowl. 6lb 10 oz Largemouth bass!!!!!! All 3 of us said "That's the biggest bass i've ever seen" at one point or another. My, how Eric's luck had changed. He turned frustration and persistance into the biggest bass that he may ever catch. He wisely decided to call it a day considering it can't get any better. Truly one of the greatest walk off performances I've ever seen.

How do you follow up a 7lb bass? The wind was so feirce at this point you could hardly cast. Otter found a digital camera by the bank and we looked through the pictures on the memory card and the guy caught some nice fish. A few minutes later he comes poppin up out of the woods looking for his camera. He said he caught 15 bass in 1 hour there yesterday. Otter and I threw on some night crawlers and decided to see what happened. BANG BANG BANG BANG. 4 consecutive casts I caught a Bass, 2 hand sized blue gill and a Crappie. THAT'S THE CYCLE BABY!

Even "Lil' Super" got a monster! That fish is bigger than he is!



And to all you losers who stayed in bed this morning instead of participating in history, have a crappie day. All in all, Eric caught a damn near 7lb Fish Ohio Largemouth and I caught 11 Bass, 1 Crappie and 10+ bluegill. I caught fish on 5 different baits and presentations. It actually kinda felt like we were Anglers, and not just guys going fishing on a Saturday afternoon. Congrats to Eric on a career size Fish Ohio Largemouth, and congrats for releasing her to get bigger!


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