Tuesday, June 29, 2010

TEN FAVORITE BASS LURES: WHY, WHEN, HOW AND WHERE

I am frequently asked what is really my very favorite bait for bass. My answer is always about the same: whatever lure that would seem to work best at any given time and condition. Not at all trying to be coy, I always try to take the time to provide examples of just what I'm talking about. Sometimes the answer is as simple as whatever choice will most efficiently probe a particular type of cover I'm faced with. I'm luckier than many anglers I know-I really don't have a favorite bait. I learned long ago to keep my options open, study the situation I'm currently faced with, and opt for what experience and an open mind has revealed to me lo these many years. The fact is, if you are indeed one of those that indeed has an absolute favorite "go-to" lure, and at the same time is ultimately interested in becoming a truly accomplished fisherman, do yourself a favor and put that favorite lure away in a sock drawer somewhere for a season or two while you concentrate on other options in your arsenal. The point to be noted is that it is beyond doubt that there are times when that clean-up hitter of yours is an absolutely worthless option, and should simply not be considered at the expense of clearly better choices for certain conditions. Here is my modest and admittedly very general guide to how I process the variables and arrive at what choice when.These are my favorite ten lure types, in alphabetical order, and just when they are most likely to produce best.


WHAT: BLADE BAIT (VIB-E, SONAR, GAY BLADE)
WHEN: colder water conditions, and other times when schooling fish may be gathered tightly together and most vulnerable to a vertical presentation.
WHERE: deeper part of water column.
HOW: up and down snapping motion;allow it to fall back before repeating.
WHY: blade baits are at their best worked up-and-down , most effective approach when fish are "stacked up."

WHAT: BUZZBAIT (OBIE'S, UNCLE BUCK'S, TRIPLE-BLADE)
WHEN: lowlight conditions on hot, muggy days.
WHERE: precisely around and through obvious shoreline cover (trees,stumps), over then through surface-busting baitfish, down the side of weedlines and other transition points.
HOW: throw past a given target and have it running just fast enough to stay atop water when over choice spots.
WHY: great tool to initially gauge fish activity levels. Far superior in this sense to other more stationary surface lures. Primo for an area's bigger fish.

WHAT: CRANKBAIT (RAPALA, NORMAN, BAGLEY)
WHEN: when trying to determine where bass are at, and most active at what level.
WHERE: throughout the water column-down to about 25 ft., depending on the lip-size of the plug, line size, and length of line out.Utilize anywhere you can hit something, whether it be weed edges, rocks, wood, or the bottom. Always be intermittently hitting something.
HOW: experiment;colder the water, slower the retrieve. Use a snap, not a swivel.
WHY: an ideal searchbait. Works just as well deep as shallow.

WHAT:IN-LINE SPINNER (PANTHER MARTIN, MEPPS, ROOSTERTAIL)
WHEN: most anytime bass-particularly smallies- don't seem interested in anything else.
WHERE: just about anywhere the water isn't terribly deep. Really shine in moving water like rivers, creeks, and streams.
HOW: steady, deliberate retrieve.
WHY: cover water well. Ten times as effective attached to a ball-bearing swivel as they are without.

WHAT:BASS JIG ( HULA JIG, STANLEY, BULLDOG)
WHEN: spring, cold fronts, discolored water.
WHERE: usually in and around shoreline cover.
HOW: slow and deliberate-and quietly.
WHY: fishes isolated cover better than anything yet invented.

WHAT:LIPLESS CRANKBAIT (SPOT, RAT-L-TRAP, DIAMOND SHAD)
WHEN: spring, when bass are schooling or herding baitfish to the surface.
WHERE: under aforementioned schools, weedlines, for suspended fish.
HOW: often on a three or four count; sometimes effective ripped amazingly fast.
WHY: lure that best employs sound and sight- both at the same time.

WHAT: PLASTIC LIZARD (ZOOM, BERKELEY, BASS PRO SHOPS)
WHEN: pre-spawn, spawn, just after spawn.
WHERE: spawning areas, flats.
HOW: often on the business end of a Carolina rig, pulled slowly until it drops into spawning sites, imitating notorious egg-stealers like salamanders.
WHY: alarms and angers nest-guarding bass.

WHAT: PLASTIC WORM (CREME, CULPRIT, MANNS)
WHEN: most any time of the open water season. Best when worked deliberately along the bottom slower than many might think possible.
WHERE: too often too near shorelines. Most anglers would be well advised to move deeper almost always.
HOW: fish as slow as you can, then slow down a little more. Texas rig predominant, but Carolina, split-shot, wacky, and dead sticking all viable options.
WHY: has caught more largemouth than any other methods put together.

WHAT: SPINNERBAIT (TERMINATOR, TORNADO, BOOYAH)
WHEN: windier conditions.Dingier waters throughout the day.
WHERE: generally at its best fishing shoreline cover from shore to end of cover in deeper water.
HOW: warmer the water, faster the retrieve.
WHY: utilizes both sound and flash, and covers water well to boot.

WHAT: TUBE BAIT (TENDER TUBES, ZOOMS, POWER TUBES)
WHEN: throughout the day, and the year.
WHERE: precipitous dropoffs, riprap, sunken islands.
HOW: when working it on the bottom-think crawdad, when working it higher in the water column-think minnow.
WHY: number one smallie bait by acclamation, but also a great largemouth choice for flipping docks.

Sunday, January 3, 2010

GETTING THE MOST OUT OF CONSUMER SHOWS

The New Year has passed, the new fishing shows have started or soon will on our many cable choices, and the brand new wish books from Cabela's and Bass Pro Shops are now safely ensconced in our grubby little hands. That's right, the new year is indeed upon us, and with it will soon arrive the 2010 boat and/or outdoors consumer shows around the country. Industry insiders will be watching such events closely for signs that the country may truly be coming out of perceived economic doldrums. They will gauge such shows both for comparative attendance as compared to previous years and also canvassing many exhibitors to better discern whether these will be "buying crowds" in attendance or "tire kickers", willing to pay admission fees to aide in their varying degrees of cabin fever but still reluctant to do any serious buying just yet. For the individual outdoorsman to get the most out of these showcases, a little homework is sometimes well worth the effort. Here are some tips to hopefully assist you in this pursuit:


-check all local papers in your geographical sphere of interest to find listings of these upcoming events. Weekends (include Fridays!) are best to check these out as these are when newspapers are most likely to run their respective "Outdoor Almanacs" and ''Activities Calendars". Phone numbers and/or e-mail addresses will be included. Don't be shy about contacting the principals about any questions you may have about directions, admission fees, possible parking costs, show hours, and even a query or two about just what you might expect to be emphasized at a particular show. Get the specific address if you prefer utilizing Mapquest.

-remember to bring some safely tucked away excess cash. The fun thing about such shows is the utter unpredictability of what you may just find there, and don't assume that all vendors will be set up for credit cards.

-inquire as to any contests, door-prize opportunities, or giveaways that may be going-on, you don't want to miss these and many sportsman like going either right at the opening of a shows doors to better have a shot at items that may sell out, or going in the final hours of an event to perhaps bargain with vendors with either left-over goods or items they may sell cheap to simply avoid lugging them back to their headquarters.

-always take one initial lap around the entire show before doing any actual buying. You may well find the same items priced differently at different vendors.

-always try to acquire a listing of the seminars schedule to see what featured guest experts speak on what subject that may be of interest to you at what particular time. See if they offer a trout pond or such for the kids and a place to sit a spell and have something good to eat. Any true outdoors show offers such amenities. For instance, any show or "expo" that doesn't offer a varied schedule of guest speakers or seminars isn't really a sportshow at all, but simply another flea market. The kitchens at many smaller venues (smaller shows are often better liked than big expos) are often representing different charities or outdoors clubs, and deserve some business.

-take along a notebook to take notes at such seminars and to ask questions of vendors and charter captains. Be prepared to pick up literature, including business cards.

-go with family and/or friends to save money on transportation costs and possible parking fees.It seems the people I've noted over the years most enjoying themselves and best taking advantage of such shows come in groups of friends and families. The more the merrier. And one more thing. Make a point of letting co-workers and friends know of particular events that you really appreciated. Let them know in ample time to visit the affair themselves. And don't be at all shy about thanking the promoters and directors of promising and enjoyable shows.



Too many people are quick to quickly spread their displeasure over shows that fall short of their expectations, but never similarly voice their approval of worthy efforts. For the more worthy show efforts to succeed and thereby stand to benefit us all, some compliments over their efforts are hardly something for any outdoorsman to be shy about.



(For a listing of upcoming area sportshows, you may contact Jack at http://www.buckeyeangler.com/, or at 330-923-3168).


Sunday, October 25, 2009

NORTHEAST OHIO OPEN WATER FISHING YEAR IN REVIEW


As another rewarding angling season all too quickly winds down for many, it is time for us to take a break from autumn's last few dwindling days to look back nostalgically on 2009 and utilize our reporting stations (thanks to you all!) , readership, the Division of Wildlife,and our www.buckeyeangler members to combine with our own impressions, and rank our area fisheries as best we can by species of fish, top five each.Fisheries were judged not so much on past reputation and stocking stats, but rather on sheer fish caught and their relative size.> Here then are the top five District #3 per specie, for 2009:


LARGEMOUTH BASS
5.Lake Milton- 15'' limit continues to accomplish good things here. Evenings around the lake's relatively few precious docks a favored pattern 4. Lake Erie- inshore breakwalls and docks bite has become a common alternative for many, not just as a bad waves alternative anymore. 3. LaDue Reservoir- Geauga County favorite's mid-lake section continues to be a key area producer for many 2.Portage Lakes- not a banner year.Suffered through a curious late summer period of ongoing doldrums. Still awfully productive. 1.MOGADORE RESERVOIR- production still ongoing right now. Weedline edges bite on soft plastics and Traps gave way to summer topwater frog bite that was nearly as productive and more exciting.Late season deepwater crankbait bite (daytime) now gives way to (evening) buzzbait frenzy.

SMALLMOUTH BASS
5.West Branch- revisits category after extended hiatus. Population seems to be growing in sizes, if not sheer numbers. 4. Berlin Reservoir- infrequent early spring action topped by autumn points and deep water humps bite on blade baits and jigs. Better average size than West Branch. 3. Milton- continues to surpass this lake's encouraging bigmouth bite, even for average size.South side stands out 2.Lake Erie- good catches continue to be more elusive all the time, even as the comparatively less alarming walleye drop off gets all the press and wailings of concern. Will the true glory days ever return? 1.CUYAHOGA RIVER- with the smallmouth's now decided supplanting of the largemouth's premier status on all stretches but the Edison Pool, the easier access for most, greater fighting ability per pound, economic concerns and sheer numbers, the inevitable ascension of the river to the top spot had to happen.

BLUEGILL (INCLUDES REDEAR,SUNFISH,WARMOUTH,PUMPKINSEED)
5.Cuyahoga River- has all the species and sub-species in impressive numbers, if not always impressive sizes. 4.Portage Lakes- every lake in system has its own personality, and good numbers of often decent-sized panfish. 3.Lake Punderson- deeper than at most other lakes, but cold and sweet from these mountain-like waters. 2. LaDue- bottlenecks and weedy backbays remain the favored haunts of many of these nice 'gills. 1.MOGADORE- not what it once was, but that once lofty status certainly isn't threatened by any other fishery either. Redears stayed a little deeper than usual in this cool year, confounding many.

CATFISH
5.Berlin- area around old ramp continues to produce many quality channels. 4.Erie- more than a little iffy consumption-wise, but you could do worse than fish off these breakwalls on a hot summer's night. 3. Milton- start hitting surprisingly early in the year here, and some nice ones available. 2. Mogadore Reservoir- decade-old stocking of channels has positively and utterly transformed what was once just a haven for brown bullheads. 1.CUYAHOGA RIVER- we're largely talking legendary Edison Reservoir, of course, though LaDue and Rockwell more than hold their own. All the species are somewhere along the way, and deeper holes harbor the stuff of which dreams are made.
CRAPPIE
5.Cuyahoga River- arguably this fabled fishery's most under-appreciated specie.Pike, bass, and cats get all the attention, but check out the deeper sides of the Gorge Pier with a bucket of minnows some evening. 4.Portage Lakes- widespread throughout the system, with Turkeyfoot often best for size. 3.Berlin- average size may best its sister lake, but West Branch has the numbers. 2.West Branch- J-Lake area a sleeper.Rock Spring's Road area the most fished. 1.MOSQUITO RESERVOIR- easy ongoing champ in this category. Cemetery and Pikie Bay regions notorious.

MUSKIE
5.Erie- few and far between, but islands harbor more than a few. 4.Berlin- seldom discussed but much in evidence this past year, especially in July. 3. Clear Fork- a favorite of the hard core. 2. Milton- not one of the better year's here, but still a standout. 1.WEST BRANCH- good solid season here in 2009.

NORTHERN PIKE
5. West Branch- some nice ones came out of here this past spring. 4. Milton- a fun surprise for more than a few muskie trollers here. 3. Mosquito- if only we could fish the off-limits areas...You can actually hear the carp in their death-throes back there. 2.LaDue- doesn't measure up to the downriver hotspots, but certainly superior to other area lakes and reservoirs. 1.CUYAHOGA RIVER- again an easy choice.Tops in the category for numbers, size, relative health, and reproduction -by wide margins.

YELLOW PERCH
5.LaDue- lots of numbers, not much size. 4. Lake Hodgson- successful stocking of several years ago needs repeated. 3.Lake Milton- "off-season" blade bait bonanza just getting under way hereabouts. Surprising size. 2. Mogadore- emergence as inland Erie option well-deserved. Head southwest from islands west of Rt.43 and plumb the deeper holes. 1.LAKE ERIE- again, best perchin' of the year for the heartier just getting under way. Limit raise overdue.

TROUT- many of those newly-stocked specimens so unsuccessfully pursued in spring soon after go deep and bite even more readily just prior to when this private lake hangs it up for the year. 4. Rocky River- most underrated and accessible of the major Erie tribs.Runs clear to Montrose, and so do the steelhead 3. Punderson- clear, clean, deep,productive, and amazingly underfished. 2. Conneaut Creek- remote but ongoing king of the tributaries, a particular favorite of Keystone Staters. 1. ERIE- summer steelie spoon bite combined with autumn small-boat slow -troll successes along breakwalls and shipping lanes becoming too popular and notorious to not emphasize

WALLEYE
5. Milton-winter might be better than summer, ice or no.
4. Mosquito- lots of numbers but too often the crappie are bigger.
3. Berlin- has its moments, but there simply aren't enough of them.
2. West Branch- spring minnow & jig bite on mid-lake humps re-emerged nicely in later summer. 1. Lake Erie- precarious indeed hangs the crown. Walleye bite increasingly unreliable in midst of economic downturn = increasing numbers of anglers trying inland options.

Let the arguments begin!

Thursday, August 27, 2009

LOCAL CHARTER PRO AND FRIENDS MAKE FAIRPORT HARBOR TRIP A HIT

Followers of this column and our Web site probably know that I have in the past hardly expressed any affinity for trolling, regardless of specie. I'm the first to acknowledge the utter efficiency of the troll, its just that it has always seemed a bit less sporting and detached than jigging or other more conventional methods. Much of my preconceived bias against trolling techniques would significantly change by the end of this day.

The overwhelming advantage of trolling is the precision of keeping a multiple number of baits in the perceived "strike zone" while at the same time covering vast expanses of water in search of active walleye and steelhead. Tournament walleye pros will tell you the only time trolling is not the very most deadly means of attaining of a walleye limit is when the bite has effectively shut down. It is usually only then that trolling takes a back seat to more vertical presentations, like jigging. This is when the fish are so spooky, and their congregate strike-zone so small, that more aggressive horizontal methods such as trolling or bottom-bouncing with crawler harnesses may well serve to scare off more fish than it attracts. This was decidedly not the case recently when myself and nephew Danny of the "Buckeye Angler" pro staff, expert cameraman Stefan Welch of Welch Productions, and fellow Field High alum Jeff Hamilton and his wife Wendy, a Rootstown native, owners of Hamilton's West Branch Bait & Tackle, all met at the Grand River Marina on a weekday morning. Our goal was to film our first-ever Central Basin trolling show for the "Buckeye Angler" television program. It was overcast and a threat of rain loomed. I'm frankly always leery of whom we take our time to schedule filming sessions with. Travel and film crews are big expenses. It becomes increasingly important to pick our spots and research potential fishing scouts and partners prior to scheduling our seasonal shooting schedule, while at the same time being careful not to offend anyone. No such concerns this day. I'd heard through the Erie grapevine for some time how "Reel Time" charters Captain Mike Arnold could search out limits when others couldn't.The added plus that he was a local out of Diamond and a show sponsor to boot, sealed the deal. Mike eased the 33ft. Trojan Mid-Cabin with its two 502 cubic-inch Cadillac engines(!) outside of the breakwalls just past 8a.m.We headed northwest to about 68 ft. of water and more than one head nodded off during the smooth one-hour ride. Mike's pantheon of electronics is impressive indeed.


With a well-forecast and increasingly ominous front encroaching from our west, we knew every fishable minute was precious.The Okuma fiberglass trolling combos loaded with 20lb. Power Plus braid tied to . mono leaders were dispensed with due speed even as Dipsey Divers and Jet Divers were hurriedly but expertly affixed.Planer boards were similarly dispatched to the system post haste. The baits would indeed be Michigan Scorpion Stinger spoons arrayed in a variety of colors. Stingers are a thin spoon, much unlike Little Cleos and K.O. Wobblers, whose very flimsiness seems to contribute greatly to their unique action. It sure wasn't long after we decided on our order of turn that Jeff let out a yell and Danny leaped to the transom to reel in a gorgeous walleye at the end of 150ft. of line. A lot of great fun ensued as even larger walleye were nailed but what excited us all was the fact that the two acrobatic steelhead trout we hooked were the biggest creatures of the morning ! They were also a lot more fun-trolling or not-than a lot of my bassin' friends might prefer to believe. We wound up doing so well and keeping so busy that our trip being cut short by the impending front was hardly the negative development we it otherwise might have been. This kind of boat has little trouble beating a mere weather front back to the dock in comfortable, enjoyable fashion.


Awaiting us at almost adjacent "Brennan's Fish House" was a lunch even better than Capt.Arnold promised it would be. Jeff and Mike were both great company for our trio and Wendy was a picture of grace and tolerance as she listened to that full table of fisherman tell their stories, exaggerations, and lies about the sport we all share and love.

On the ride home, I think it was Stefan who mentioned that it was no surprise that the long-time "West Branch Bait & Tackle" locale has experienced such a resurgence in both business and reputation since people like the Hamilton family took over the reins barely five seasons ago. I guess sincerity, honesty, and family values still count for something...


I want to personally thank Jeff for his unexpected role as defacto first-mate on the boat that day. Clearly, his expertise at his store comes not so much from what he hears as what he himself has experienced. Good luck trying to benefit from this kind of expertise at your local "Mart" store. You too can experience such refreshing expertise at Hamilton's West Branch Bait & Tackle
(330-297-9901).


Stow native Capt.Mike Arnold of "Reel Time"Charters (216-509-6180) is every thing they say he is.Knowledgeable without being uppity, helpful without being patronizing, consistently productive for a variety of species (they say he's an absolute perch machine), and with just enough of an Andy Griffith-like countenance to make everybody feel at ease and welcome. Come to think of it, his good friends the Hamilton's place now reminds me as a sort of Floyd's Barber Shop for anglers. You know, no pressure and everybody's welcome to just stop by and chew the fat on a rainy day, since the nicer days are now way too busy there. Though the impact of their businesses now spreads throughout the entirety of northeast Ohio and beyond, we are indeed awfully fortunate to have fishing industry representatives like this headquartered right here in Portage County.


Oh yeah, Goober says "hey".

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

HANG ON FOR BASSIN'S TOPWATER SEASON!

Just a little while back I had occasion to stop by Mogadore Bait & Tackle to leave off a trolling motor in need of repair and get some line machine-spooled, a service I am now spoiled on insisting on after years of seeing the benefits of so doing back in our family's Tackleshack days (1985-2001).

While there I asked the unfailingly honest staff there for the current fishing news, since I'd be sending it in to the Record-Courier with all the others for that Friday's edition of our popular "Area Fishing Report." My ears perked up when I received the news that the top water bass bite had just broken loose across the lake. No angling news gets my antennae up quicker than hearing that this most special time of the fishing season is indeed upon us. Now don't get me wrong, bass-particularly largemouth- may engulf a top water offering at different times during the open water season. Smallmouth in particular seem far more inclined to do so on a warm autumn day than any other, no question. There is little doubt though that when it comes to maximizing ones chances at the precious top water frenzy, the primo calendar period for bass runs from approximately mid-July to mid-October, remembering the water temps cool after the air temperature does. Just as angling knowledge references the "spot on the spot" when considering the narrowing down of a promising area, it is similarly necessary for the savvy angler to try to narrow down a calendar period to the best possible day in a given promising week. After all, fishing days for some are sadly limited by such intrusions as work and family. How unfortunate. However, if you're able to manage some scheduling flexibility, here are some tips for maximizing your top water bassing success; first, after a cool front and/or rainy period, try to fish the third or fourth stable, warming day of the comeback stretch. This will provide the time for the fish to fall back into preferred patters while at the same time allowing a lake , pond, or reservoir to clear up sufficiently to allow the bass to forage successfully. Lakes and streams may take a little longer, based on the severity of the preceding storm and the sheer amount of precipitation , particularly upriver of where you might plan to try your luck.The very best days are very often those that exhibit a grey "ceiling" or "low sky" combined with high daytime temperatures. The bite will almost certainly peak at dawn and dusk because these are "low light" conditions that facilitate the widening of the predator's "strike zone". Ongoing conditions of such a nature can conspire to provide a bite that lasts all day. After spreading the promising news to fellow "Buckeye Angler" Kirby Romesberg of Cuyahoga Falls and our friend , hard-core Portage County basser Dave Hutson, we set out for Mogadore, arriving just prior to four p.m. and were in and loading up by nine p.m. or so.We launched from the Rt.43 ramp on this venerable and aesthetically pleasing electric-only fishery in two "bantum " style boats provided for us by the Sun Dolphin Company of Muskeegee Michigan. These plastic wonders are perfect for electric-only fisheries.
The good news is the three of us caught a number of fish on our topwater offerings, highlighted by Dave's two 22-inchers and one 20 incher and a bonus 17'' and 14'' to round out his catch.Kirby contributed a dandy 19'' beauty on one of those new Lucky craft spinnerbaits and my four best were a 14'', a 17'' and two fat 18'' lunkers, and I'll refrain from telling you just how many we missed amidst the additional smaller specimens we brought in.yours truly forgot the weigh scale but I'm pretty good at fish weight approximations after many years of doing so for customers and tournament anglers.Dave's fish may well have both been six-pounders , but I'd rather err on the side of team modesty.




Most of our fish were nailed around the islands and along the underfished (the we did see some slop fisherman trying their luck along Rt.43's southernmost ends) south and southeast areas.
Many thanks to the gang at Mogadore Bait & Tackle (330-628-9872) for another great tip and here's hoping you might run into us on our next journey out to Portage County's ''Great Grey Lady". I can assure you this wasn't our last trip out there this season-by far. -Jack

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Stretch Your Budget - Fish Locally!

ECONOMICAL, CONVENIENT, AND PRODUCTIVE LOCAL FISHING TRIPS

Sometimes we just don't feel like going to the trouble of hitching up the big boat-providing we even have one. Sometimes we're a little short of cash, precluding any longer excursions.At still other times time itself severely limits our options to scratch that fishing itch. Fortunately, we live in an area of the country where our angling options are far greater, handier, and more economical than we sometimes realize. The most important variable, however, is that so many of these options can be extremely productive to boot. In these cases, you'll only need one outfit per attendee.Let's say a good choice might be a 5 1/2-6ft. light-action spinning rod matched to a reel loaded with 4-8 lb. test line. Light enough to offer some fun for panfish, and just stout enough to provide at least a fighting chance if a biggun' passes by, and the places I'm listing all offer that chance. So whether with live bait or not, with a little challenge funds-wise, and little time to get out for some fun after a summer dinner, here are some often overlooked choices for truly good fishing, all within minutes of the greater Akron/Kent/Ravenna area, and all accessible to the non-boater:

Fred Fuller Park(Kent)- take the winding road back to where the bridge spans the Cuyahoga to the adjacent softball fields. Not too deep or wide. Species: crappie, northern pike smallmouth bass.Favorite Bait:in-line spinners.

St.Peter's of the Field Church(Rootstown/Brimfield)- creek (Little Cuyahoga) runs by here on it's way to nearby Mogadore Reservoir. Species: panfish.bass,very occasional pike.Favorite Bait: minnows.

Cuyahoga River(Streetsboro)-leg that brushes along Rt.#303 contains some quality smallies.Species:smallmouth,pike. Favorite Bait: tubes.

Virginia Kendall(Peninsula)- down Kendall Rd. off old 8 north of Cuyahoga Falls.Pleasant setting features dock with ample room for the kids to pursue the pond's ample but individually smallish bluegill population. Dad can while away the time fishing amongst the weed pockets for largemouth, and there are some good ones.Species: bluegill, crappie, catfish, largemouth.Favorite Bait: redworms.

Cuyahoga River(Cascade Valley)- loaded with smallmouth, but be prepared to get wet and a bit mussed.Waders an option, though beware of some sudden drop-offs along this stretch's always-changing topograhpy. Species:smallmouth, warmouth, occasional pike and steelhead.Favorite Bait: tubes.

Mogadore Dock (Suffield)- clearly visible just east of Rt.43. Gets popular when the fall crappie bite beckons. Species: redear,largemouth, catfish,crappie. Favorite Bait: minnows.


Mud Brook (Cuyahoga Falls)-crosses Bath Rd. between Graham and State Rds. Rustic little time-killer.Species: bluegill, carp.Favorite Bait: dugworms.

Riverfront Park (Cuyahoga Falls)- widening stretch of the Cuyahoga just off the Front St. X-way exit.Very nice, with picnic facilities, restrooms, and drinking fountains. Species: bass, pike, crappie, panfish, carp, catfish,yellow perch,white perch, white bass. Favorite Bait: minnows. Curiously, city Parks & Rec. Dept. info still lists a non-existent canoe launch here.

Lake Rockwell Bridge(Mantua)- only legal means of sampling the Cuyahoga's least-pressured and most storied reservoir.Species: crappie,pike,largemouth, panfish.Favorite Bait: try topwaters.Careful maintaining legal status hereabouts, could get costly. Good Idea:call nearby Mark's Bait & Tackle (330-221-5213) for reliable info. Always worth stopping in there anyway.

Gorge Park Pier (Cuyahoga Falls)-best in fall for crappie and perch.Most visitors in the dark that SE corner is 25 ft. deep and SW corner is 35ft.So many visitors fishing down a foot or two wondering why no action.Sits on Falls side of legendary Edison Reservoir.Species: bluegill, warmouth, redear, yellow perch, white bass, largemouth, smallmouth, northern pike, crappie, bullhead, channel cats, carp, white perch. Wheelchair accessable. Little shade during day.

Well, there they are. All local, public, potentially productive, and near at least some numbers of everybody reading this.You may well find out that spending less time, money, preparation, and worry is a worthy pastime in itself. -Jack

Sunday, June 14, 2009

ERIE SMALLMOUTH BITE TRENDS EASTWARD
by Jack Kiser

There is no longer any doubt among Lake Erie's smallmouth bass fishing fraternity that the days of the Western Basin being the big pond's preeminent bass fishery have gone the way of the hula hoop.





The islands of the area may well still be named after these glorious battlers, and an inordinate number of bass tournaments may still originate from that same old Sandusky-to-Lorain stretch, but the days of 100 fish days at Ruggles Reef or off Kelley's Island are now as much the stuff of past history as the Oldsmobile.




It is clear the residual effects of decades of tournaments that regularly displaced huge numbers og big spawning fish, and charter captains making at least a partial transition from walleye to bass (often without their boats even featuring any livewells at all) brought a largely uninformed and woefully insensitive tableau to their bass fishing that revealed the worst habits carried over from their walleye fishing that eventuated in either the outright keeping and eating of these valuable sportfish or smallmouth actually kept on stringers or in coolers like they were indeed mere walleye for end of the day photo ops, after which their carcasses were more than a few times witnessed thrown dead and dying into the waters in and around shipping lanes, harbors, and boat slips.





To be sure, other not so clear cut or easily understood variables may also be at work in Erie's ecosystem that may also contribute to or better explain the now obvious transition of smallmouth prominence from the west end-which, to be sure, still boasts more truly productive smallmouth days than any inland lake-to the east 's far superior bass waters that seem to improve exponentially as one heads eastward, promptly noticeable in the central basin's breakwall area's and drop-offs around Geneva, Ashtabula, and Ohio's current bass champ, Conneaut.The improvements continue seasonally heading eastward, towards the smallmouth nirvana to be experienced at Pennsylvania's Presque Isle and New York's Dunkirk shorelines. Savvy anglers have learned to remember that much as with walleyes and even yellow perch migrations that roam easterly as the open water season goes on, the bass fishing in the Western Basin peaks in April, the Central Basin most often in May, and the Eastern most often in June. Key variables hear include greater depths and consequently slower-to-warm waters the further eastward we move. Sadly, for many of us older Erie bassers, much spoiled by years of 100fish days of yore in the Western Basin, even at that end's current April peak it falls far short of even average days at the lake's other end.this is evidenced to at least some degree by the increasing number of the more prestigious tournaments that have in recent memory abandoned the general Sandusky area for venues closer to New York.


Here's hoping that a more enlightened and motivated generation of bass anglers can instill a new ethic that, combined with Ohio's long overdue closed season on smallmouth bass, will usher in not only safe maintenance of the eastern basin's bass bounties, but the eventual comeback of Erie's once predominant western locales.


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Jack Kiser is the host of TV'S "Buckeye Angler", seen every Thursday evening at 7:30 and every Saturday morning at 6 on "The Cat", TV-35 in Cleveland and TV-29 in Akron (cable 14). You may reach him at his www.buckeyeangler.com Web site.