Ohio outdoors, photography, fishing, hiking etc. Visit my website at www.stevenoutside.com
Sunday, June 7, 2020
stripe time
Been catching one or two fish like this each of the last few days before daylight. Kind of an interesting pattern I've not heard before. The fish have been on the outside of bends. You know where the current digs a head high cliff and the bank continues vertically underwater and the current is just about as fast as it ever gets. Right before the sun comes up or even in complete darkness before the sky brightens. (hence the lack of more photos, they were terrible) Anyways right before daylight you might hear or see since its been a full moon, a pop, pop, pop as a hybrid or two busts bait right against the cliff. I was throwing Vic's lipless crank with a pearl with a red head. You had a few minutes of action before the sun comes up and things quit.
Saturday, May 30, 2020
Four days on the river
Whew, what an adventure. Rain, sunny, storms, clear water, muddy. It seemed every hour had a personality of its own. Things I'll remember most; sitting in an old barn on a hay bale waiting out a storm and having a mouse walk around between my feet just like he owned the place. Being waist deep in the river and having a beaver swim up to like four or five feet away before slapping his tail and diving. And even though I caught several 19 inch smallmouth the fish of the trip was for sure the fattest broadest 18 inch smallie I've ever seen who just absolutely hammered a big willowleaf spinnerbait right at the rod tip then tore off in heavy current like a freight train. And the catfish, by trips end I spent more time seining bait and catfishing than anything else. The cats were going nuts in the rising river and you could catch a shovel or a channel on seemingly every cast. No giant cats but just one right after another. Between the rising muddy river and the catfish I felt like Huck Finn and Jim. The smallmouth bait that worked best over the four days was a big curly shad on an underspin jighead just chucked out and winded back like you would a spinnerbait. The biggest smallie was right at 19.5 and between the smallies, an occasional hybrid, four white bass and a whole bunch of cats I'd guess 150 fish were landed over the four days. In four days of river camping in some challenging conditions new gear I tried out and I would highly recommend are Cabela's dry bags, North Face quick dry pants and XPG bug repellant shirts. I've worn the North Face pants on three separate three and four day trips so far this year as well as a dozen other wading trips and find the things are bulletproof and worth spending a little extra on. Another piece of gear I've found I really like having in the Jackson or in the canoe is a Sawyer Squeeze. Having a regular pump water filter is still the best thing to process a bunch of water in camp but having the Sawyer on a water bottle you can just dip in the river as you float along and get a drink is really nice. Between all the rain and portaging the canoe and a bunch of gear around a couple lowheads this was for sure the most physically challenging trip of the year but also probably the one I'll remember best in a few years. warning there are a whole lot of photos even though I didn't even take some photos of some nice smallies because it was raining so hard one day…
Four days down the river...
Whew, what an adventure. Rain, sunny, storms, clear water, muddy. It seemed every hour had a personality of its own. Things I'll remember most; sitting in an old barn on a hay bale waiting out a storm and having a mouse walk around between my feet just like he owned the place. Being waist deep in the river and having a beaver swim up to like four or five feet away before slapping his tail and diving. And even though I caught several 19 inch smallmouth the fish of the trip was for sure the fattest broadest 18 inch smallie I've ever seen who just absolutely hammered a big willowleaf spinnerbait right at the rod tip then tore off in heavy current like a freight train. And the catfish, by trips end I spent more time seining bait and catfishing than anything else. The cats were going nuts in the rising river and you could catch a shovel or a channel on seemingly every cast. No giant cats but just one right after another. Between the rising muddy river and the catfish I felt like Huck Finn and Jim. The smallmouth bait that worked best over the four days was a big curly shad on an underspin jighead just chucked out and winded back like you would a spinnerbait. The biggest smallie was right at 19.5 and between the smallies, an occasional hybrid, four white bass and a whole bunch of cats I'd guess 150 fish were landed over the four days. In four days of river camping in some challenging conditions new gear I tried out and I would highly recommend are Cabela's dry bags, North Face quick dry pants and XPG bug repellant shirts. I've worn the North Face pants on three separate three and four day trips so far this year as well as a dozen other wading trips and find the things are bulletproof and worth spending a little extra on. Another piece of gear I've found I really like having in the Jackson or in the canoe is a Sawyer Squeeze. Having a regular pump water filter is still the best thing to process a bunch of water in camp but having the Sawyer on a water bottle you can just dip in the river as you float along and get a drink is really nice. Between all the rain and portaging the canoe and a bunch of gear around a couple lowheads this was for sure the most physically challenging trip of the year but also probably the one I'll remember best in a few years. warning there are a whole lot of photos even though I didn't even take some photos of some nice smallies because it was raining so hard one day…
Four days down the river...
Whew, what an adventure. Rain, sunny, storms, clear water, muddy. It seemed every hour had a personality of its own. Things I'll remember most; sitting in an old barn on a hay bale waiting out a storm and having a mouse walk around between my feet just like he owned the place. Being waist deep in the river and having a beaver swim up to like four or five feet away before slapping his tail and diving. And even though I caught several 19 inch smallmouth the fish of the trip was for sure the fattest broadest 18 inch smallie I've ever seen who just absolutely hammered a big willowleaf spinnerbait right at the rod tip then tore off in heavy current like a freight train. And the catfish, by trips end I spent more time seining bait and catfishing than anything else. The cats were going nuts in the rising river and you could catch a shovel or a channel on seemingly every cast. No giant cats but just one right after another. Between the rising muddy river and the catfish I felt like Huck Finn and Jim. The smallmouth bait that worked best over the four days was a big curly shad on an underspin jighead just chucked out and winded back like you would a spinnerbait. The biggest smallie was right at 19.5 and between the smallies, an occasional hybrid, four white bass and a whole bunch of cats I'd guess 150 fish were landed over the four days. In four days of river camping in some challenging conditions new gear I tried out and I would highly recommend are Cabela's dry bags, North Face quick dry pants and XPG bug repellant shirts. I've worn the North Face pants on three separate three and four day trips so far this year as well as a dozen other wading trips and find the things are bulletproof and worth spending a little extra on. Another piece of gear I've found I really like having in the Jackson or in the canoe is a Sawyer Squeeze. Having a regular pump water filter is still the best thing to process a bunch of water in camp but having the Sawyer on a water bottle you can just dip in the river as you float along and get a drink is really nice. Between all the rain and portaging the canoe and a bunch of gear around a couple lowheads this was for sure the most physically challenging trip of the year but also probably the one I'll remember best in a few years. warning there are a whole lot of photos even though I didn't even take some photos of some nice smallies because it was raining so hard one day…
Four days down the river...
Whew, what an adventure. Rain, sunny, storms, clear water, muddy. It seemed every hour had a personality of its own. Things I'll remember most; sitting in an old barn on a hay bale waiting out a storm and having a mouse walk around between my feet just like he owned the place. Being waist deep in the river and having a beaver swim up to like four or five feet away before slapping his tail and diving. And even though I caught several 19 inch smallmouth the fish of the trip was for sure the fattest broadest 18 inch smallie I've ever seen who just absolutely hammered a big willowleaf spinnerbait right at the rod tip then tore off in heavy current like a freight train. And the catfish, by trips end I spent more time seining bait and catfishing than anything else. The cats were going nuts in the rising river and you could catch a shovel or a channel on seemingly every cast. No giant cats but just one right after another. Between the rising muddy river and the catfish I felt like Huck Finn and Jim. The smallmouth bait that worked best over the four days was a big curly shad on an underspin jighead just chucked out and winded back like you would a spinnerbait. The biggest smallie was right at 19.5 and between the smallies, an occasional hybrid, four white bass and a whole bunch of cats I'd guess 150 fish were landed over the four days. In four days of river camping in some challenging conditions new gear I tried out and I would highly recommend are Cabela's dry bags, North Face quick dry pants and XPG bug repellant shirts. I've worn the North Face pants on three separate three and four day trips so far this year as well as a dozen other wading trips and find the things are bulletproof and worth spending a little extra on. Another piece of gear I've found I really like having in the Jackson or in the canoe is a Sawyer Squeeze. Having a regular pump water filter is still the best thing to process a bunch of water in camp but having the Sawyer on a water bottle you can just dip in the river as you float along and get a drink is really nice. Between all the rain and portaging the canoe and a bunch of gear around a couple lowheads this was for sure the most physically challenging trip of the year but also probably the one I'll remember best in a few years. warning there are a whole lot of photos even though I didn't even take some photos of some nice smallies because it was raining so hard one day…
Four days down the river...
Whew, what an adventure. Rain, sunny, storms, clear water, muddy. It seemed every hour had a personality of its own. Things I'll remember most; sitting in an old barn on a hay bale waiting out a storm and having a mouse walk around between my feet just like he owned the place. Being waist deep in the river and having a beaver swim up to like four or five feet away before slapping his tail and diving. And even though I caught several 19 inch smallmouth the fish of the trip was for sure the fattest broadest 18 inch smallie I've ever seen who just absolutely hammered a big willowleaf spinnerbait right at the rod tip then tore off in heavy current like a freight train. And the catfish, by trips end I spent more time seining bait and catfishing than anything else. The cats were going nuts in the rising river and you could catch a shovel or a channel on seemingly every cast. No giant cats but just one right after another. Between the rising muddy river and the catfish I felt like Huck Finn and Jim. The smallmouth bait that worked best over the four days was a big curly shad on an underspin jighead just chucked out and winded back like you would a spinnerbait. The biggest smallie was right at 19.5 and between the smallies, an occasional hybrid, four white bass and a whole bunch of cats I'd guess 150 fish were landed over the four days. In four days of river camping in some challenging conditions new gear I tried out and I would highly recommend are Cabela's dry bags, North Face quick dry pants and XPG bug repellant shirts. I've worn the North Face pants on three separate three and four day trips so far this year as well as a dozen other wading trips and find the things are bulletproof and worth spending a little extra on. Another piece of gear I've found I really like having in the Jackson or in the canoe is a Sawyer Squeeze. Having a regular pump water filter is still the best thing to process a bunch of water in camp but having the Sawyer on a water bottle you can just dip in the river as you float along and get a drink is really nice. Between all the rain and portaging the canoe and a bunch of gear around a couple lowheads this was for sure the most physically challenging trip of the year but also probably the one I'll remember best in a few years. warning there are a whole lot of photos even though I didn't even take some photos of some nice smallies because it was raining so hard one day…
Saturday, May 23, 2020
socially distant
Spent the last few days wandering around Tennessee, catching stripes, sturgeon and huge drum on 2oz jigs below TVA dams one minute then catching miniature brook and rainbow trout out of tiny brooks on the flyrod high in the mountains. Sleeping in the car and out on the rocks. Drinking hot chocolate made on the backpacking stove one day and waiting out a storm eating deviled ham on saltines under a big leaning tree the next. In other words just living the good life...
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