Skip to content

Fathers Day on the Kissimmee Chain

Featured Replies

  • Super User

Josh came over for a Fathers day fish.  We started on running water in Hatch and boated a hand full of dinks in the first hour on top water and shad raps.  We then decided to go after some bigger fish before the storms got here.  Moved down lake to a pad field with scattered K grass in 4 FOW.  The next two hours consisted of hand to hand combat with 3+ pounders in the jungle.  Best 5 of the morning would have been around 17 pounds with two monsters left for next time, both over 7.

20230618_063047.jpg

Josh's big one of the day.  5.25 lbs

20230618_074020.jpg

Looks like a great Fathers Day

What is "K grass" Kissimmee grass?

  • Author
  • Super User
1 hour ago, Ski said:

What is "K grass" Kissimmee grass?

Yes sir. 

 

We have two dominant emergent grass species in central Florida.  Kissimmee grass and Maidencane.  They look nearly identical  (yellow/brownish stalks with green leaves) so I just lump them into "K Grass" as a label.  

 

Sorry for not explaining myself better.

 

FD

  • Global Moderator
4 minutes ago, FD. said:

Yes sir. 

 

We have two dominant emergent grass species in central Florida.  Kissimmee grass and Maidencane.  They look nearly identical  (yellow/brownish stalks with green leaves) so I just lump them into "K Grass" as a label.  

 

Sorry for not explaining myself better.

 

FD


Fishing down here for over 40 yrs and never heard it called Maidencane. 
 

It’s a good day, I learned something!

 

 

 

 

 

Mike

  • Author
  • Super User
2 minutes ago, Mike L said:


Fishing down here for over 40 yrs and never heard it called Maidencane. 
 

It’s a good day, I learned something!

 

 

 

 

 

Mike

Yea, I have been hanging out with the FWC's biologists too much...they are shoving stuff in my old brain that I really don't need to know.  :)

7 hours ago, Mike L said:


Fishing down here for over 40 yrs and never heard it called Maidencane. 
 

It’s a good day, I learned something!

 

 

 

 

 

Mike

It’s funny how we all call things by different names. Ive heard it called Maiden cane since I was a kid. Just because that’s what my dad called it. I never heard Kissimmee grass until a few years ago. Then I started thinking I was calling it the wrong name. 

Im sure it probably also has a fancy Latin name that I can’t pronounce. 
I guess it just how you first hear it that sticks. 
 


 

  • Author
  • Super User
35 minutes ago, Capt Steve said:

It’s funny how we all call things by different names. Ive heard it called Maiden cane since I was a kid. Just because that’s what my dad called it. I never heard Kissimmee grass until a few years ago. Then I started thinking I was calling it the wrong name. 

Im sure it probably also has a fancy Latin name that I can’t pronounce. 
I guess it just how you first hear it that sticks. 
 


 

Kissimmee Grass and Maidencane are different plants even though they look nearly identical (I can't tell them apart).  They have two fancy latin names that I can't pronounce either...

  • Global Moderator
24 minutes ago, Capt Steve said:

It’s funny how we all call things by different names. Ive heard it called Maiden cane since I was a kid. Just because that’s what my dad called it. I never heard Kissimmee grass until a few years ago. Then I started thinking I was calling it the wrong name. 

Im sure it probably also has a fancy Latin name that I can’t pronounce. 
I guess it just how you first hear it that sticks. 
 


 


Yep, a lot of things in fishing are that way. 
 

In Florida we call reeds, well……reeds

but in California they’re called Tules. 
Never heard that until I signed on here and haven’t heard it used since. 

 

To me and everyone I know a lipless hard bait is a trap, but some guy I met thought it was just what you get your foot caught in!
 

Lately I’ve noticed some on here call tournaments a Derby! 
I thought a Derby was just a hat or a horse race. 
 

 

 

 

 

Mike

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

Recently Browsing 0

  • No registered users viewing this page.

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.