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AverageAngler

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  1. Some catches from this weekend: Early morning bite, in the span of 15 minutes I hooked into four fish, one broke off and two others shook at the boat. Womp womp. Skipping flukes way under overhanging trees. Needed to hit the base of the shore to incite any bites. Big one of the day flipping a bellows gill into the thickest part of that submerged tree there. Caught 9 bass this trip flipping and skipping with a few more in between on bladed jigs. We transition into the night bite! This was a separate trip from the above two fish. I also had a rough time landing hooked fish this evening, it’s been a common theme for me this month. 10-15+ bites/hooksets but less than 50% conversion ratio. This one took a frog fished s l o w l y parallel to a main lake point in about 3ft of water. Second pond of the night and we have reached the smallies! They would bite and miss and keep repeating until they finally take the lure. This one and a few others were taken on jointed jitterbugs. I was gonna take a better photo, but then she shook off my hand before the flash went off so here we are. bladed jig bite. Smallmouth bass are already hard to land during the day, but oh my goodness they’re even harder at night. A fish torpedoing into your kayak at 1 in the morning with a mouth full of hooks is something that I’m unsure on whether or not I enjoy. 🫣 New moon next week, looking forward to hopefully landing a giant. Still haven’t reached the 4.5lbs mark this year. Lots of numbers so far but no real size.
  2. It’s night fishing time! Who needs sleep when you got caffeine and the desire for a bass in your hand.
  3. 80 bass. It took me March, April, and May to catch 80 bass this year and you did it in a day?? Congratulations LMAO. 🤣 I did some exploring this weekend, tried out three new ponds by the cape and I had some varied success at each. The first pond was a kettle hole and I spent the first two hours paddling around trying to locate them. After a while I noticed the sun starting to create a shade line and I found a small point that looked right. I tossed my bladed jig along a sand to rock transition and caught my first bass of the day. Soon after I caught two more on a dropshot. I noticed the depth the fish were at and then made another pass across the pond to an underwater point that had the same depth range. Bingo, four bass on a jerkbait and one more on a dropshot. I caught one more later on in a different area but in the same depth. Overall I caught 8 bass and lost about 5 or so that jumped off. The next day I went to a pond that has a very good reputation, and I thought i was going to have a banger of a day when in the first 30 minutes of the morning i caught three fish including a tank pickerel. The next three hours were a s l o g however. I got lucky and ran into a school of small bass feeding on baby herring and was able to land four in quick succession on a little karashi. I packed up after that blitz and tried another pond closer to my home. At this point the wind picked up and i spent most of my time trying to keep my position at this new pond. I landed one bass and one pickerel there, but the success was nowhere near like the morning. Water temps this weekend hovered between 78-84°. Summer is kicking. On the dropshot! Jerkbait. Fast and constant was the name of the game. I’ve really spent a lot of time figuring out these baits and there is so much nuance to them. Every time it seems like they want it different. Another one on the jerkbait. Almost a pin sized pickerel. Absolutely smoked the giant dog-x. Frog bass. Smoked it as well. When they we’re biting topwater they were hitting it hard.
  4. This weekend I tried for Stripers, kind of failed miserably. My skill gap locating striped bass compared to largemouth bass is quite large; hopefully I’ll get better with the former. Saturday I got my first frog bass of the year, and Sunday I got away for a few hours and tried a new section of a pond i’ve been frequenting recently. Summer came in hot! Choked it! Fat and healthy. On the dropshot.
  5. That cold front this past weekend was something else huh. I went out twice and I managed to get a couple fish feeding shallow. I tried the Charles River in Needham and the current was flowing more than expected due to the rain. Looks like we’re getting more rain on Sunday too, we definitely need it but the vibes of the summer in 2023 where it rained for 14 weekends straight are starting to be felt🫣. Nice post spawner after work. The bass in the Charles were tight to cover, they bit right at the current breaks.
  6. Oh how I missed this forum! This past month has been kind to me in terms of freshwater fishing; I put in a lot of hours trying to improve my game and I feel pretty good on what I learned. Saltwater has been a different story but I’ll keep improving little by little. Instead of detailing my numerous trips I’ll just share some highlights: My first ever Wachusett Reservoir fish! It took me about a year with 5 trips ranging from 1-4 hours to get this one. I landed another about 30 minutes later but this one was way prettier. On the jerkbait. Nice 3.5lber on a bed. I just had to flip the tube in there when I saw the female was still on it. Personal Best brook trout, also on a jerkbait. One of about 20 I caught this day. I noticed after the first week and a half of May most beds were vacant and the bass were post spawn. Big ol slab at about 14 inches. Underspin. This past weekend I went down to the Cape, post spawn was fully in effect and the smallies were chewing. A rainy Morning on Memorial Day brought some awesome topwater action with most fish hovering around 17-18inches. The next day brought some bluebird skies and some shallow flat bluegill eaters. Water temperatures between 67-70°. Some pretty pumpkinseeds too. And a giant pickerel. 25 inches on the baby bull shad.
  7. I went out this afternoon to my favorite clear water pond to see if the smallies were either still prespawn or on beds. Although the past week has seen colder than seasonal averages, the smallies were right up near the shoreline tending to their nests. I must have kayaked past about 5-8 fish before one finally committed. Not sure how unpopular it is in the forum but I really enjoy the challenge of coaxing a fish to bite on a bed. Naturally I put them back in within 30 seconds, but seeing them nose down and suck up a bait is really fun. I landed 10 and saw about 30. The water levels are real down here and a lot of them were actually deeper than last year - around 8-12ft deep.
  8. I definitely missed the memo on these jigs, they seem awesome but yeah 12 dollars is insane. That looks way bigger than 3lbs 😆
  9. I actually haven't tried either craws, my allegiance lies with the sk rage craws and the zoom speed craws. Both of them provide a different type of aggressive leg kick. I use jj's magic sometimes and while it absolutely stinks I do believe that the fish hold on longer. My favorite way to rig them is either on the back of a jig or a bladed jig. If I'm using a texas rig I prefer a beaver style bait or a brush hog. Here are some highlights from the past week. I’ve been truly blessed enough to fish a lot this month, and while I didn’t get that spring giant, I did catch good numbers and have really upped my confidence fishing colder water. I also gained a lot of confidence in the soft glide bait. Sometimes the YouTubers really put you on to a gem of a technique.
  10. I L O V E orange on a craw. I'm not so sure the crayfish are the same in Maine but here outside of Boston all of them that I find have orange tips at the end of their claws.
  11. Thank you very much "You got soft hands!"
  12. Some highlights of the past week. The warming trend earlier was pretty kind to me with a nice 4lber but I got stormed out on Sunday and yesterday was a total grind. Hopefully they’ll be active again by the weekend.
  13. Saturday I went out with a cousin of mine to try to get him a fish for the first time in years. The first pond was a dud but the second pond seemed to have a lot more action. The colder nights this past week definitely put the fish in a funk since the only other people that were catching were trout anglers using powerbait. We landed two rainbow trout jigging a kastmaster off the bottom, and missed two others. Honestly it was a success considering how much everyone else around us was struggling. Sunday I went out near the Cape to try and catch a big one and ended up with a number of different fish. 3 pickerel, 2 bass, and an assortment of panfish. All the bigger fish were on a bladed jig, with the panfish going after a jerkbait. The river was a lot shallower than the ponds I fished the day before, which helped me locate them a lot easier. The winning areas were either emergent wood structures in shallow flats or overhanging trees opposite the channel swing in shallow water. This warming trend with warm nights has me excited for the upcoming weekend. I'm blessed enough to have three days off so I plan on going ham on the water.
  14. It wasn't very warm yesterday but it sure was windy and it got the fish at a local pond all fired up. I got about 10 in an hour after work all on little swimbaits and crankbaits. I've been struggling at the deeper ponds this spring but the shallow weedy ones have been a lot more productive.

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