Did some pre-Christmas shopping at Willard on Thursday. Hoping to pick up some stocking stuffers in my fish basket. Actually ended up with several nice gifts. First, air temp at launch was a balmy 38…warming to almost 50 at noon. My last few launches on Willard have been in the high teens or low 20s. Second was the weather. A bit cloudy most of the day but absolute FLAT CALM…all day. The third was actually being able to launch my float tube this late in the year. Latest I have ever tubed Willard. Usually capped before mid-month in December. But with the high water this year (and mild temps) the water was still a non-solid 37 degrees.
Met a couple of other jolly old elves…Ira and Alan…who were launching their “sleigh” a bit before I got my “red-nosed” ride on the water. They got out to “the spot” and had already caught a couple of perch before I got there. And I got one fairly quickly too. It was still getting light. Figured it was gonna be a bananner day. Figured wrong.
Actually, I didn’t get another fish for about 2 hours. Wasn’t seeing much on TV and kept moving around searching. Didn’t see the guys in the three boats doing much either. So I motored over to my old fave spot I call the “Kitty Condo” out off Eagle Beach. It is an area of humps and bumps (old road bed) that almost always produces at least some catfish. And this time of year the perch sometimes hang out there too. Thankfully, there were some there to catch on this trip. But no cats.
Over the next hour and a half I managed to coax several more perch to join me in my red nosed ride. Two small ones went back in the water to grow bigger for next year. But I ended up with 9 in the basket. Good quality too. The biggest was right at 14” but there were three others that nosed the 13” mark. Smallest was still over 11”. I got them on 3 different “ornaments”. All were on small chub minnows…pinned on 1/4 oz. “ultra minnow” jigs in pink-silver, blue-silver or holo gold with orange spots. Most of my fish came from 20-21 foot depth. But my two biggest came from under a school of shad I found in about 18 feet of water.
As a final note, I did a little more CSI examining of the “Christmas cookies” I filleted this trip. I expected to find nothing but a few of the tiniest dying shad in them. Some had only soupy remnants of meals past. A couple did have two or three of the newly consumed shadlets. But others had larger shad…one had a single 5-6 inch shad that had just been eaten. Guess that fish decided he needed to “floss” with my lure. Bottom line: the perch are actively feeding…not only on dead and dying shadlets but on larger schooling shad as well.
Met a couple of other jolly old elves…Ira and Alan…who were launching their “sleigh” a bit before I got my “red-nosed” ride on the water. They got out to “the spot” and had already caught a couple of perch before I got there. And I got one fairly quickly too. It was still getting light. Figured it was gonna be a bananner day. Figured wrong.
Actually, I didn’t get another fish for about 2 hours. Wasn’t seeing much on TV and kept moving around searching. Didn’t see the guys in the three boats doing much either. So I motored over to my old fave spot I call the “Kitty Condo” out off Eagle Beach. It is an area of humps and bumps (old road bed) that almost always produces at least some catfish. And this time of year the perch sometimes hang out there too. Thankfully, there were some there to catch on this trip. But no cats.
Over the next hour and a half I managed to coax several more perch to join me in my red nosed ride. Two small ones went back in the water to grow bigger for next year. But I ended up with 9 in the basket. Good quality too. The biggest was right at 14” but there were three others that nosed the 13” mark. Smallest was still over 11”. I got them on 3 different “ornaments”. All were on small chub minnows…pinned on 1/4 oz. “ultra minnow” jigs in pink-silver, blue-silver or holo gold with orange spots. Most of my fish came from 20-21 foot depth. But my two biggest came from under a school of shad I found in about 18 feet of water.
As a final note, I did a little more CSI examining of the “Christmas cookies” I filleted this trip. I expected to find nothing but a few of the tiniest dying shad in them. Some had only soupy remnants of meals past. A couple did have two or three of the newly consumed shadlets. But others had larger shad…one had a single 5-6 inch shad that had just been eaten. Guess that fish decided he needed to “floss” with my lure. Bottom line: the perch are actively feeding…not only on dead and dying shadlets but on larger schooling shad as well.