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4/29/12 Creek Hopping

Posted: Sun Apr 29, 2012 9:05 pm
by Ken G
The plan was to get out in the earlier part of the day and hit 4 creeks before the rains came at exactly 3 PM. At least that's the time predicted for the coming rains.

I should have skipped the first creek. It was the furthest. When crossing over it, it was ridiculously low and clear, not a good sign. Then, a couple of cars were parked off the side of the road directly in front of the path to the creek. I knew they were a couple of slug bank anglers. The wading anglers park their cars in the parking lot, about 100 feet away.

We all know that for bank anglers, the best spots are at the very end of a well worn path that leads directly to the water. It has to be a good spot, there's a path directly to it. I never bothered going to find out if I was correct.

Off to the next creek.

This one was also ridiculously low and crystal clear. Decided to keep the fishing to the deepest spots. At 5 feet deep and able to see the bottom without a problem, deep didn't seem to matter much.

First hole, I was able to watch a smallie come off a log and inhale the helgie I had tied on. It didn't seem to care that I was standing a mere 15 feet away and could be seen easily.

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In the next hole, the biggest around, the distinctive tap, tap, tap of a rock bass. Missed the first one, got the second, and continued to miss any others.

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All the big fish usually here this time of year were nowhere to be found. Just not enough water and too clear. This is the lowest I've ever seen the creeks in April. We need rain. I was able for the first time ever to get a glimpse of what is at the bottom of this deep hole. A decent sized tree runs the length of it, but then, I kind of knew that based on snags and lost jigs.

Did manage to hook a couple of more smallies. Only bothered to snap a shot of one.

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On my way out I ran into Nat Lawrence on his way in, fly rod in hand. I had Nat out a few weeks ago on a guide trip and I'm impressed by anyone that will drive 60 miles one way just to try their hand at catching a few smallies on the fly. I warned him about how I tagged all the fish in one stretch. He asked about further down. I was more impressed. I hope he got something for his efforts.

Off to the next creek, low, clear and very cold. More dink smallies hiding in the darker spots on the bottom of the creek.

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I kept thinking I should try something other than the helgie, but they kept hitting it. Got these two, one after the other.

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Same fish, different pose.

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From the one area where the two above fish were caught, I could see more swimming around. Nothing could get them interested. They were probably traumatized by watching their friends get dragged through the water by a little helgie and suddenly lost their appetite for little bugs with attitude.

Then I went for a walk. You could tell it was a gray day, no pictures of anything but fish.

The last time I tried to walk around the point at the mouth of the creek was at least 8 years ago, probably longer. It was impossible, there was a deep hole that forced you to hop up on shore. I know I've mentioned a flood we had in August 2008. Further upstream on this same creek it completely changed how this creek works. The same thing has happened at the mouth. The hole was completely filled in. With the river level up a bit, it should have been impossible to walk around the large point.

It was easy. The hole was filled in with tons of gravel.

For some reason I had taken off the fish producing helgie to work the mud line between the creek and the river. Probably a mistake. Not even a tap.

Then I heard thunder rumble off to the west. A couple of rain drops dimpled the surface of the water. I checked, 3 PM exactly. For once I wanted the weathermen to be wrong and they weren't. Never made it to the fourth creek.

Wound up with 7/3 on the catch/self release scale with the one rock bass thrown in for good measure. I could live with that for a couple of hours of fishing. Especially when I went into the whole thing expecting nothing.

Re: 4/29/12 Creek Hopping

Posted: Sun Apr 29, 2012 9:10 pm
by Ken G
You're opinion please...

Should I keep these as fishing reports that go on the forum or should I be doing these as blog posts?

This whole thing took me all of 45 minutes, that's from processing the photos to typing it all up. In other words, I didn't give it much thought.

I think for the blog posts I should at least make a little more effort or give them a bit more thought.

I'm curious, let me know what you think.

Re: 4/29/12 Creek Hopping

Posted: Sun Apr 29, 2012 10:19 pm
by Adam HnG
No opinion for ya, just looked at the pics and didn't read it :D jk
I never have the time for a lengthy post and even my short ones with uploading pics takes 15 minutes just to have a timeout on the page and have to start over. Picks are not as important to me if the writing is good.

Re: 4/29/12 Creek Hopping

Posted: Sun Apr 29, 2012 10:38 pm
by Nick
Sounds like a pretty decent day out there. It's pretty cool that you ran into a customer putting the info he learned to good use.

I kind of like the quick report thing sometimes.
I also like that helgie

Re: 4/29/12 Creek Hopping

Posted: Sun Apr 29, 2012 10:49 pm
by Adam HnG
Nick wrote: I also like that helgie
X2

Re: 4/29/12 Creek Hopping

Posted: Mon Apr 30, 2012 7:34 am
by Special Ed
Why not do both?

Or make it a blog post with just pictures link back to the forum with teh report... or vice-versa.


I wanted to get out Sunday real bad. Had my stuff ready but I was having too much fun with my kids to walk away from them.

Re: 4/29/12 Creek Hopping

Posted: Mon Apr 30, 2012 8:59 am
by Jon Coe
I like it as a part of this forum cuz you were talking of where and with what.

What was the size/weight of that bullet type jig? Why do you use it instead of a round head jig?

Re: 4/29/12 Creek Hopping

Posted: Mon Apr 30, 2012 9:38 am
by Ken G
Thanks guys, note to self, more pics for Adam till he learns how to read better. :D

I think I will keep them separate somehow. It will force me to do something better/different for the blog.

Jon, the hook used was a slider head. No clue as to it's weight, this was a lighter one. Google Slider Head, cause I can't remember who makes them either. I was out fishing my secret ponds the other day and was using that with a 4 inch finesse worm. The slider head is made so you can hook things up weedless. When I got to the creeks, I was too lazy to change it out so I just stuck something on it.

I have a real technical mind don't I? Too lazy, that will work. Rube Goldberg goes fishing.

Was also rummaging through my bins of useless plastic shit. Wanted to start carrying around helgramites. That one is a Mister Twister Exude helgie. I like it cause of the bigger chunk of plastic at the head, it has nothing to do with whether or not it Exudes anything, the fish don't care. Had it laying around 10 years or so. My favs are Case Helgies, but when I reached into my pocket on my vest, that one came out first, so I used it.

I told you, well thought out process. Nuthin' up my sleeve.....

The bigger Case Helgies are too thin at the head. If anyone knows how to make molds for pouring plastics, let me know. I want to redesign this one.

Not sure how helgies work on the murkier river, but they are an absolute must have for clear water.

Nat's a cool guy. We've been emailing back and forth for 3 years. I'm apparently to blame for his weekend 60 mile jaunts to Fox Creeks. I like guys that do the research then ask questions. They know, they just need a couple of details.

Re: 4/29/12 Creek Hopping

Posted: Mon Apr 30, 2012 11:33 am
by Nick
Ken G wrote:
The bigger Case Helgies are too thin at the head. If anyone knows how to make molds for pouring plastics, let me know. I want to redesign this one.
Travis at StankX - he needs a killer helgie in his line up

Re: 4/29/12 Creek Hopping

Posted: Mon Apr 30, 2012 12:07 pm
by Ken G
Nick wrote:Travis at StankX - he needs a killer helgie in his line up
Never had any contact with him or StankX. I'll look into it.