
Nothing still, even in this seamingly prime location. I drifted around the bend and into a corner that appeared to be a pooling locatiojn for other drifting dead weight such as myself. Nothing even resembling a bite there either.After another hour and a half of going with the flow, and passing fishlessly through my secondary objective, I fished aimlessly in a backwater tangent of the river. Another strike out. I was begining to become more than very frustrated. I had thrown out everything in my boat (after tying it to the line of course) and fished it all every way I know how; but nothing happend.
I cruised across to the other shore line and spotted what I can only describe as a "p
oo-pipe" (bonus points for whoever can tell where I got that phrase). One cast on the down current side of this bad boy got me the first of several smaller sized bass. I continued to fish this side by paddling past the structure, and then drifting back down through it while tossing out the black power worm and slowing hopping it back to the boat.
I only had enough time for a few of these short runs, and only
caught about 4 more fish. Even though I wasnt impressed with any of them, it was enough to keep me from intentionaly heaving any of my gear in the water. On the down side, when I was pulling the kayak out of the water, I bent down and ooops...there go my pliers and snips....I tried to drag a lure across the bottom to find them, but it seems I only get snagged when I dont want to.
Thanks for the support everyone.
Coming up this week:
-How the accidental fisherman hooked his biggest fish ever and,
-Electronics, the ignorant do-it-yourselfers guide.

I believe the "poo pipe" reference should be credited to Mike Iaconelli. Good stuff all around. I like the forecast chart.
ReplyDeleteI am not sure about this whole team sandwich thing, but I do like sandwiches, especially the MB Pell variety whilest fishing.
ReplyDeleteAnd kudos to you for pinning the poo pipe on Ike. I believe the first time I heard it was on the Philly episode of City Limits.