Sunday, December 6, 2009

Merry Christmas from Lilleys' Landing Resort!

Merry Christmas from Lilleys' Landing Resort!

If you plan on taking in a Branson Christmas show this year, remember that most of the standbys such as Baldnobbers and the Presleys end by Dec. 12, as well as the new Peter Pan musical with Kathy Rigby.  Others such as the new Miracle of Christmas at the Sight and Sound Theatre and the Branson Belle have limited shows through Dec. 19-21, while a good variety have limited times through New Year's.  Those would include the Amazing Pets, Dixie Stampede, Grand Jubilee, Haygoods, Kirby Van Burch and the Legends, so please check individual listings. Silver Dollar City will also be open after Christmas, and the light displays in Branson Hills and at Shepherd of the Hills will be open until New Year's. The Uptown Cafe hosts a free lunch hour broadcast, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays to spotlight area talent, which you can also hear on KBFL 1060 AM and KBFL 99.9 FM. 

Remember we stay open year-round, so please call us if you can take a short getaway to Branson to enjoy the Christmas festivities here -- or just to escape on the lake!  We have plenty of openings up until Christmas and some limited rooms open between Christmas and New Year's, so please call us at 1-888-LILLEYS (545-5397) even at the last minute. 

Don't forget we can also expedite a gift certificate to you for a special someone for any amount of $20 or more.  We can designate whether you want it to be applied toward a room, boat rental or just for their choice. You can shop ouronline tackle store or call us to purchase a gift item from the store. 

As we close out the last year of the first decade of the 21st century, we still stand in awe that God provided us this beautiful place for people to make memories with family and friends amid the peaceful solitude of His creation.  But then how can we doubt His goodness when He gave Himself through Christ to bring our hearts home to Him!  "Blessing and honor and glory and power be to Him who sits on the throne and to the Lamb, forever and ever!" Revelations 5:13

Merry Christmas & Happy New Year from all of us at Lilleys Landing!

Lake Taneycomo Fishing News

Winter officially starts December 21, a little less than three weeks away, but it feels like winter this morning here in the Ozarks. Early temperatures dropped into the teens for the first time, giving the air a bite. Several boats left the dock this morning with eager anglers looking to catch some Lake Taneycomo trout. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is running water this morning for a couple of reasons, and you'll find these reasons pretty consistent to how water is run water all winter. Beaver Lake is still high from the rains this fall. Table Rock is at power pool or normal levels. Water is being run at Beaver Dam to drop lake levels there, and this water basically has to be washed through the system, from Beaver Dam to Table Rock through Taneycomo and Bull Shoals into the White River. Another reason for running water here: it's cold! Power demand and water management work hand-in-hand.

We did fish some down water last week as well as this past weekend. I, as well as other anglers, enjoyed getting out and seeing our lake as a lake again -- still with no current. The trout seemed to like it, too. They adjusted quickly and feasted back on midges, scuds and sculpin, their three main foods.

Looking back on this past fall fishing season, there really hasn't been any periods when trout fishing has been slow. Typically in the fall, we see fishing slow down because of the low dissolved oxygen or higher water temperatures, but fishing, or catching, has stayed consistently good all fall. Shepherd of the Hills Hatchery has kept up on stocking good numbers of rainbows, and it seems that once they're stocked, they grow fairly fast. Their colors change from dull-hatchery gray to bright silver, reds and greens. The trout we're catching now are fat, strong and sassy, pulling hard when hooked and then showing off their aquatic acrobatics.

As far as generation patterns and how to guess what may happen on any given day or weekend . . . typically little water is run on the weekends. Power demand is lower on weekends, but if the temperature dips below freezing early, generation may occur only in the mornings and be turned off in the afternoon. Otherwise, it's hard to predict. For most of this week, dam officials are running water 24 hours a day. I'm sure that is to release water coming in from Beaver Lake. Once that water is through, we will start seeing less generation unless we get more rain.

Our scud population is very good right now, especially above Short Creek to the dam. As a rule, we fish larger scuds, up to size 8, when the water is running and smaller sizes when it's off, down to size 20. But we are using size 10s during generation and size 14 when it's not right now, at least in the restricted area above Fall Creek and below Lookout fishing from a boat. Below the dam while wading you may have to size down further to get bit. Honestly, I have not been up there since they've started shutting the water down -- I'm only going by reports I hear from other anglers.

I did catch a few rainbows the other day while drifting orange PowerBait Gulp eggs between Fall and Short creeks and found their stomachs full of midge larvae. The larvae themselves were way too small to be imitated by our flies, but I bet the trout would still take a larger fly, too. We've had some incredibly big midge hatches lately, and the trout have seemed to target them.

As I mentioned, I did get out and fished the other day. I tried some different lures -- tried a jig and float using a 1/32nd-ounce brown with a orange head jig under a float six- feet deep. Dam officials were running one unit that day, all day, and I tried to keep the boat where I was fishing the edge of the channel or in water that was about six- to eight-feet deep. I'd work or twitch the float just a little every four seconds to give the jig a little more action. The rainbows I caught were all bigger than the ones others were reporting. All my trout were 14 inches or more -- and boy did they fight!

I didn't change my technique as I drifted past Fall Creek. I stayed closer to the shallow side of the lake, targeting the same depth of water and kept picking up rainbows all the way down to Short Creek. The size of rainbows didn't change either. I was amazed that these larger, older rainbows liked what I thought was a larger jig than I would normally use. I normally use a 1/100th-ounce jig or smaller when throwing a jig-and-float rig but left my small jig box at home.

Heading back up, I wanted to catch some rainbows for dinner so I started at Fall Creek and drifted PowerBait Gulp eggs on the bottom. I used a small, 7/0 spilt shot only, just enough to tick the bottom. I started with orange and caught two right off. They were smaller, whichis the size I like to eat. Switched to pink and . . . nothing. Back to orange and finished my limit before Short Creek. Now with one unit, the water is running pretty slowly, so I had lots of time to limit out in one drift. If I had been planning ahead, I would have known to pack night crawlers to drift live bait below Fall Creek. Night crawlers seem to catch bigger trout than Power Bait. But this worked out just fine.

Winter Forecast: What is a normal winter??? After the last three or four seasons, I'm not sure what is normal anymore. Global warming? Well to be honest, it was nice to have warm winters, if nothing else, to make it easy on the hands and face when fishing! But, alas, that mild pattern for a few years was tooo fleeting, and it seems we're back to cold winters. Wet? We've had more ice than snow, which is irritating for sure. I like snow -- a little. One snow and that's all. It's nice and pretty for an hour or so, but then we have to go out and deal with it. But no ice, please!! I guess I'm spelling out my wish list. No gifts this Christmas, please, just give me the weather that's good for trout fishing!

All kidding aside, weather plays a big part in fishing. Ideally, I would like to see a cold, wet winter for our fishery. We need the lakes to get cold to be healthy for the rest of the year. We also need some generation to keep the food base in good shape for the trout. That's it in a nut shell. I would also like to see a good shad kill (a natural shad kill on Table Rock), but this time I'd like to see the shad come through the turbines and into Taneycomo. Last year we saw lots of shad dying on Table Rock, but for whatever reason, they didn't get down to the inlet vents at the dam-face. Threadfin shad are our trout's dream Christmas dinner. It's gives them lots of protein and makes them mature to be lunker trout in little time.

If you like to wade below Table Rock Dam when the water is off, you might be interested in a project that the Missouri Department of Conservation is working on, in conjunction with the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation and Bass Pro Shops, to add fish habitat on Table Rock Lake and some of its tributaries, as well as Lake Taneycomo. These entities have donated $5 million to the five-year project. Thousands of cedar trees, hardwood stumps and rock piles already have been placed on Table Rock Lake.

They are conferring with local anglers on how to add structures below Table Rock Dam to enhance the fishery. Over the years, gravel has washed in the lake from unprotected banks, filling in once-deep channels and holes where trout used to rest from the current and anglers. The topography has evolved now to a large, shallow flat area with no structure to hold fish, so anglers move to areas where there are fish, mainly at the hatchery outlets and a few other places where there's running water created by riffles and rocks. MDC wants to create new areas where fish will hold, spreading out anglers and giving them more choices on where to fish.

Work below the dam may start as soon as this spring.

And Now... The Rest of the Story

Many of you have read the story of the new state record brown trout landed by resort guest Scott Sandusky two weeks ago as he drifted rainbow PowerBait by Cooper Creek with his Arnold, MO, buddies. What we haven't disclosed until recently was our special Thanksgiving blessing of fishing for and finding the lunker a second time -- this time out of a trash truck . . .

At 37 inches long, 24.75 inches in girth and weighing 28.8 pounds, Scott obviously needed to mount his prize, which was roughly a pound heavier than the previous record. We needed to make a decision what to do with his brown while the Missouri Department of Conservation processed the paperwork needed to make his fish the official new state record brown trout. Clint Hale, Shepherd of the Hills Hatchery manager, told us that the fish could not be consumed or taken to a taxidermist until the paperwork was complete which would take a few weeks.

So we needed to find a freezer big enough for a 40-inch fish to lay flat, since its bulk had been wrapped in towels to secure its shape. The only one we could find was in the kitchen at the First Baptist Church here in Branson, so dad and I took the fish and placed in the freezer. Honestly, I did think about labeling it somehow to identify it as belonging to someone but . . . I trusted that no one would mess with it. That was our downfall.

Dad flashed the fish off in the freezer Sunday night to some fellow church-goers, at least showing off the bulk size of the fish. The towels were frozen to the skin of the trout so he couldn't back the layers, but it was still an impressive sight.

On Wednesday morning, dad drove to the church to retreive the record fish to transfer it to a freezer we had. Once the fish was frozen solid, it could be stood upright, fitting into another freezer. The trout was gone. No fish in the freezer anywhere. Jerry asked in the office, but no one know about it. Then he learned of the fish's fate. It had been thrown out into the dumpster on Monday -- only to have been picked up that very Wednesday morning by the trash truck.

"I've never been so down in my life as when I saw that fish was gone," Jerry said. He began asking us all to pray for a miracle, and Carolyn, my mother, even called friends to pray.

I was headed to a meeting, and resigned myself to the fact that the fish was gone for sure, but dad's tenacity paid off. He called the Alllied Waste company and found out where the truck was headed, drove to Reeds Spring and met the truck there prepared for dumpster diving. The attendants there were experienced in finding the treasures people have thrown out. (Once retrieving some tossed diamond earrings.) They dumped the contents of the truck on a concrete pad and started picking through it with a small bobcat. Mom had accompanied dad for "support" and both were holding their noses and hoping they'd find the fish in decent shape, but with every move, the bobcat did not turn up any light teal-green towels or fish remains.

My mom is a woman of faith. Her relationship with the Lord is astounding, and she told dad she was hearing the Lord say it was in a pile "over there." Dad had all but given up on the search, but mom pushed for one more swipe of trash in the area God was directing her to. Then she saw the towel. She waded in and dug it out. The fish was still wrapped in the towel. A small tear in its back was the only visible damage to the fish they could see. They headed back home with the trout, praising God for His constant faithfulness and mercy -- this time exhibited in finding the fish.

Scott's brown trout is once again in a freezer, but this time it's in a safer place. Trout that large are actually replicated by taxidermists and not mounted in the traditional way of using the actual fish and its skin. But when the mold is made of the actual fish and a replica cast, Scott will have the mount of a lifetime, representing his "knee-shaking" treasure of a memory:

Scott and his friends, Scott Hawkins, Greg Lawson and Craig Thomas, had planned to catch some keeper rainbows to fry for dinner Friday night, then hit the trophy area for lunkers on Saturday. They drifted downstream, using rainbow-colored, paste Power Bait, bumping it on the bottom as you're supposed to. Just below Cooper Creek, Scott set his rod in the rod holder to help with another rig. Thinking he saw a bite, Scott picked his rod back up, set the hook and knew -- he had something big.

But he didn't know what it was . . . a catfish? A big carp? If it was a trout, it was a really, really big trout. Then they saw it. It was a brown trout.

He had his spin reel set to wind backwards, not trusting the drag. Smart guy because this fish didn't want to play. The brown surged for the far bank, spinning off so much line, so fast, that it was all Scott could do release the handle and watch his line fly off his reel. Then he stopped.

Working it closer to the boat, his team of anglers started to plan their attack. One retrieved the net and the other pulled up the trolling motor -- just in time. Four-pound line doesn't last long against a prop.

When most people buy a fish net, they don't expect to land a 37-inch fish, right? Scott's net could hold half this fish. It flopped in, it flopped out. Then Scott's net man, Craig, muscled up and got it in the boat. All was made official by Missouri Department of Conservation officials at the Shepherd of the Hills Hatchery. Shane Bush, MDC fisheries biologist and Quenten Fronterhouse, MDC enforcement agent, both helped in this process. Clint Hale, hatchery manager, was also present.

 

Charities We Support: Free Medical Clinic of the Ozarks

We can't let the year pass without letting you know how much we appreciate your business -- not only for the personal support for our families, but for the community outreaches we are able to undertake as well. In November, the Free Medical Clinic of the Ozarks -- where Jerry Lilley serves for free as the acting director -- completed its first year of operation, logging more than 950 patient visits for those who work in Stone and Taney counties but cannot afford health insurance. Because of community support, such as from Lilleys' Landing, the clinic has operated with a total budget of $26,000.

“It’s really a testimony to the faithful commitment of the volunteers who have such a heart for this,” said Dr. John H. Moore, a founding board member. “It’s phenomenal for a community of this size.” 

With the vision that the clinic would evolve only as the support evolved, board members began Veterans Day last year with general medical clinic hours from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays in the downstairs annex building of Covenant Life Church (Marsha & Phil Lilley's church) at Third and Atlantic in downtown Branson. But with the enthusiasm of medical staff — now numbering 16 physicians, four licensed physician assistants, 31 licensed nurses, two pharmacists and one respiratory therapist — the clinic soon expanded to rotating specialty clinics on Monday nights for orthopedics, gynecology, pediatrics and respiratory therapy. 

For efficiency, patients must bring proof of identity, residency and income (200 percent below federal poverty guidelines) on Mondays and Wednesdays from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. to apply for scheduled evening appointments. They also must verify by telephone later that they intend to keep their appointments. About 30 lay volunteers man the phones, keep up with the paperwork, greet patients and maintain the premises. 

In addition to evaluations by the medical staff, the clinic provides patients with their first medications and helps them acquire long-term medications through various drug assistance programs. Skaggs Hospital provides laboratory and x-ray services and has also set up the clinic with computers and technical staff to allow physicians to access all their patients’ medical records while seeing them in the clinic exam rooms. 

Eleven trained chaplains rotate to counsel each patient, offering to pray for them and their specific needs. Dr. Moore, who volunteers as one of the chaplains, said prayer is vital to the mission of the clinic. 

“No one has ever refused prayer,” he said,” and six people have actually prayed to receive Christ, professing them as Lord for the first time.” 

That kind of ministry, he said, is a fulfillment of a long-held dream for him. “I’ve wanted to be part of a clinic like this since I began in medicine,” he said. “In 30 years of practice, I had wanted to work at a clinic that provided free care and spiritual nurture as well.” 

Lilleys' Landing Resort & Marina Newsletter 
January, 2009

Sunday, November 22, 2009

State Record Brown Trout Broken on Taneycomo in Branson, MO

Written by Phil & Marsha Lilley   
Nov 20, 2009 at 11:15 PM

Today was a good fishing day. It was a good catching day. Any day is good to be out on the water and not in the office, right? I think Scott Sandusky believes that. He caught a big fish today!

It just wasn't a big fish. It was one of those big fish every angler dreams of. It was the biggest fish of its species caught ever in Missouri. We call that a state record catch.

He and his buddies from Anold, MO, arrived here at Lilleys' Landing for a weekend of fellowship and fishing for trout. They started early, well early afternoon. The idea was to catch some small rainbows for dinner, then hit the restricted, trophy area tomorrow for lunkers. It didn't work out that way.

They drifted downstream, using rainbow-colored, paste PowerBait, bumping it on the bottom like you're supposed to. Just below Cooper Creek, Scott set his rod in the rod holder to help with another rig. Thinking he saw a bite, Scott picked up his rod back up, set the hook and knew -- he had something big.

But he didn't know what it was... a catfish? A big carp? If it was a trout, it was a really, really big trout. Then they saw it. It was a brown trout.

He had his spin reel set to wind backwards -- he didn't trust the drag. Smart guy. This fish didn't want to play. He took off for the far bank, spinning off so much line, so fast, that it was all Scott could do release the handle and watch his line fly off his reel. Then he stopped.

Working it closer to the boat, his team of anglers started to plan their attack. One retrieved the net and the other pulled up the trolling motor, just in time. Four-pound line doesn't last long against a prop.

When most people buy a fish net, they don't expect to land a 37-inch fish, right? Scott's net could hold half this fish. It flopped in, it flopped out. Then Scott's net man, Craig, muscled up and got it in the boat.

At 37 inches long and 24.75 inches in girth, and the lunker weighed 28.8 pounds, roughly a pound heavier than the previous brown trout record. All was made official by Missouri Department of Conservation officials at the Shepherd of the Hills Hatchery. Shane Bush, MDC fisheries biologist and Quenten Fronterhouse, MDC enforcement agent, both helped in this process. Clint Hale, hatchery manager, was also present.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report 11/9/09 - Branson, MO

Back to almost normal. It's been dry for a week now! And it's sunny and warm! I think we've forgotten what this nice weather looks like here in the Ozarks. A friend said the KC area only had 7 days of sun and no rain in the month of October. This is a nice reprieve for all of us.

Generation here on Taneycomo is back to pre-monsoon patterns and soon will change again if the rain holds off. Change again? Table Rock's levels are dropping everyday and soon will drop to the point the Corp will slow down the flow and probably will shut turbines down. I know a lot of anglers who will welcome that!

Right now they are running 4 units but each one is running about half so you could say they're only running 2 units. They're running them all day and all night. Water is stained and 55 degrees. Stained is unusual for this time a year. It's due to the hard rains we've had. My sources say that Table Rock is showing signs of turning over. If that's the case, it's very, very early. One sign is the warming of the water. Last week it was 53 degrees.

Now for the fishing. It's been real good. Seems like there's lots of rainbows in the lake right now and they're biting most of the time. Had guests come in yesterday and today and say it didn't make much difference what they used, they'd catch trout. Gulp eggs in all four colors, night crawlers and other lures like medium to small crank baits and spoons. Silver CD5 Rapalas were the hot bait this weekend. Also white, sculpin and brown jigs.

Slower current has made it easier to get the bait to the bottom, especially down in our area of the lake. The speed of the water is slow and when there's no wind, like today, drift fishing is pleasant. I got this evening and drifted the trophy area... laid the rod down for a while and just enjoyed the sunset and peacefulness of the lake.

Last week, I got out before and after the flood gates were shut down and did pretty good on drifting #10 gray scuds from Lookout Island down past Short Creek (yes Short Creek). HAS to be on the bottom to get bit. It was my experience that most of the rainbows were small, less than 12 inches. It seems like we go through periods when we don't see many nice rainbows. The dinks have taken over. It's not that they aren't there, they just don't bite all the time. The small, freshly stocked rainbows -- they seem to bite most of the time.

As I mentioned, I caught quite a few below Fall Creek drifting scuds on the bottom. Surprised? Shouldn't be. There's scuds all through the lake, not just below the dam.

This evening, I got out and fished the bluff bank from Lookout down using 1/8th oz jigs. Snags tied with trout. I lost 4 jigs and caught 4 rainbows. But this time, 3 of 4 were big rainbows -- over 17 inches each. They weren't biting very well, I have to admit, but it was incredible being on the lake.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report 10/11/09 - Branson, MO

Boy what a week makes.  We were thinking this was going to be an awesome fall fishing season in the respect of fly fishing for browns below the dam followed by great rainbow fishing.  Thought we were done with high water but no... 5-8 inches later and we're right back where we were a year ago.  Well, almost.

Been having discussions on the forum about water temp and DO levels below the dam.  It's 61 degrees at the cable on the south or gates side of the lake and 50 on the north or turbine side.  Most of the readings further downstream are 55 degrees.  DO (dissolved oxygen) levels are over 8 ppm on the gate side which is great- and the temp isn't that bad either for our trout.  On the turbine side the COE is injecting liquid O2 to keep the DO levels up so really this is nothing like last year when we had about the same flow but 70+ coming over the dam and 65 thru the turbines.

Table Rock was thought to crest at 927 but looking at the chart right now it looks like it's crested at 923.  Talked to a COE guy this evening and although isn't an official, he thinks they will leave the gates open till Table Rock is down to 917.  No guesses when that might be but I'd think it will be a better part of a week.  He also said they might release more water thru the gates.

Wade fishing below the dam is extremely limited.  The water is up in the trees for the most part with some standing room at outlets 1 and 2.  I did see guys catching trout in both sites today.

I got out yesterday morning right after they opened the gates.  Lots of trash, leaves and grass in the lake made it tough to fish.  This afternoon, we got out again.  We caught a good number of rainbows in the first mile of the lake below the dam on 1/8th oz white marabou jigs.  It had to be on the bottom and with the wind blowing upstream, that was a hard trick.  But to do that well under the circumstances, we did well meaning the trout were hitting hard enough we could feel the bites.  That's a good thing!

We also drifted red san juans and #10 scuds from Lookout down past the flats on the shallow side and caught a few rainbows.  Again, they are eating- just have to get the fly to the bottom and keep it there.

Below Fall Creek, same thing.  Stay in the middle of the lake and use enough weight to get the bait to the bottom.  Gulp eggs and night crawlers should work great.  If the wind stops, catching will improve.

Sorry I couldn't come up with a rosy report.  Not many people like to fish in this kind of current.  It's scary to some and I don't blame them.  But if you're careful, you shouldn't have any problems.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report 9/21/09 - Branson, MO

Not a whole lot has changed in the past week here in southwest Missouri except a little rain on Saturday. Well, a lot of rain. Monett is cleaning up after local flooding, which is a town not too far down the road. Looking on our lake level page - SPA's Generation Site - I see that our area lakes rose from six inches to two feet. Taneycomo officials ran water all day Saturday and into the night, which turned out to be a huge blessing to those who fished Sunday. The rain washed muddy water and trash into the lake from creeks in the upper end, but the generation moved it on down lake. Sunday morning we had nice clear water greeting us, and fishing was pretty fulfilling for our anglers here.

Table Rock and Beaver lakes came up about six inches which was nothing to be alarmed about. We should not see any change in generation patterns this week because of the rains. But with more rain in the forecast, you never know what may happen.

Today's generation, Monday, usually dictates what we MIGHT see the rest of the week. The Southwest Power Administration chart reported no water would run until late this afternoon -- but nothing doing. One unit was running early and another unit was added about noon. Right now there are at least two units running. One nice thing about this hard generation is that it will clean out the lake a bit. So it's hard to say what the generation will be the rest of the week.

This morning Guide Bill Babler reported catching a lot of rainbows drifting from Fall Creek down to Trout Hollow using night crawlers. His clients caught their limits early and then caught and released the rest of the morning. Bill said their rainbows were good quality and fought hard. So if the water is running, this technique would be worth a try.

Yesterday, there was no current all morning. Guides reported doing very well using small micro jigs in tan or olive from the former KOA Campground site down to past Fall Creek, fishing them with two-pound line and four- to five-feet deep. There are two ways to work these -- let them sit with no movement or twitch them just a tiny bit every 10 seconds. Trout don't seem to be drawn by too much movement.

The normal Gulp Power Baits are still working. The Missouri Department of Conservation stocked twice last week and there seem to be plenty of rainbows caught in front of and off our dock here at Lilleys' Landing.

As far as fly fishing below the dam, well, I heard several reports from Sunday . . . one good and some bad. The good one was a guy stripping woolies off the point at the big hole; he did well, and he said others were catching trout, too. But others fishing below the big hole down to the former KOA said it was very slow. Farther down towards Lookout and below fishing picked back up and was excellent for most of the morning but slowed down in the afternoon after the water started.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report 9/14/09 - Branson, MO

This fishing report is going to sound like a broken record, basically because this report is going to sound a lot like my report from 2 weeks ago. Conditions haven't changed and neither has the fishing itself. It's still very good, rainbows are nice and fat and generation patterns are still about the same at the first of September.

This is one reason I haven't written a new report since September 3rd. Another reason - Marsha and I drove to Port Arthur, Texas last week to be with our daughter Sara and her husband Josh for the birth of their first child, our first grandchild, Jeriah Caden Clark. Good excuse - right?! We think so. Yes, I took my fishing rods with me but they were never unpacked. Good redfish fishin' in Port Arthur but that will have to wait for another visit!

Water is still cold and clear. Generation has been mixed but off most days with some water in the late afternoon and evening. Still funny how some people root for the water to run, even though fishing is so good. I think most anglers limited out off our dock today on rainbows (4), most using power bait is all colors and styles. I saw quite a few variations this evening. Didn't seem to matter. Quite a few rainbows midging late in the afternoon today in front of the dock. One thing I've noticed over the years is that rainbows will take midges and other insects off the surface in and on the edge of the leaf trail in the lake during autumn. A leaf trail is where a breeze pushes fallen leaves into a line in the lake, most of the time close to or against the bank. Rainbows love fallen leaves and the insects they deliver. And they love my black or red zebra midge, #14, just below a small indicator tossed just in the right place at the right time. Lots of fun! I target a rainbow just after he's taken a midge with my fly rod -- make the cast and watch for the take.

Jigs worked pretty well this week for some. Of course I'm partial to jigs -- I love to fish with them. But one guests of our had a great time last week trying jigs out for the first time. Here's his report:

We arrived at Lilleys last Saturday and now we have to leave tomorrow but while we were here I wanted to let all know that the fishing was great!

We - my wife and I - fished primarily from the Trophy area to the boat ramp...she was using pink and white power bait with good success.

I couldnt buy a bite on pumped nite crawlers so I decided to do something different....I started casting and bumping a 1/8th brown jig......when i started this the size of the fish went up dramatically. When we got back to Lilleys I was in the office and telling what I had caught fish on when Lisa told me that Bill had similar success on a Cinnamon jig.....well I figure if Bill is using it I had to buy a couple and give it a try.

Then the ultimate fishing event happened.....at least for me......on Friday we went just past the boat ramp 200 yards and I had cast out when i saw a flash of silver and my line started coming off my reel like crazy. I knew that I had a big one and she didn't want to come in at all....I fought her for at least 10 minutes to get her to the boat....my wife had the trout net....when I finally got her close enough I told her " you are going to need a bigger net" Thank goodness we had the old stand by.

You know your marriage is pretty solid when you can "guide" your wife to where the largest Trout you have EVER caught is racing all over the place and she keeps saying I cant see it....I tell here to watch the line.....and she says I cant see it! She is looking right and the fish is racing left....I think you ge the picture.

Needless to say I uttered only one cuss word when I thought she had grabbed my line and then she finally landed the trout. For the record I was using 2 lb line ...... the Trout was 18" long weighing in at 4 lbs according to Curtis.

No we didn't keep her, the fish that is - after all of the pictures and such I let her go under Lilleys dock to live to be caught another day.

By the way I have went up to that area all week and bumped either a brown or cinnamon jig and the bite has been fantastic!

While I'm copying and posting fishing reports, here's another from our guide, Bill Babler:

Fished Taney a couple of days this past week, with wonderful results. Also had the opportunity to traverse most of the upper part, taking clients from the restricted zone down to the Landing for lunch each day.

Seemed the entire upper end was catching extremely nice fish, and I'm sure it was a hangover from some very nice stocking right before the Holiday weekend. Fishing should remain good through the Fall, as it most usually does.

Restricted Zone on still flat water the ginger micro in 256th. oz. really seems to be the best nymph. Chuck from Anglers and Archery is still catching them on an egg pattern and always is doing well when I see him on the water.

Moving water for the first hr. after generation starts is really almost unfishable due to high volumes of moss on the upper section, but then as it dissipates, and the flow stabilizes pink micro's in 128th. or egg patterns are catching huge numbers of quality rainbows.

Seems we have a 20 plus inch fish on every trip to the top. Didn't say we got them to the boat, but we are seeing and getting clobbered by the biggin's.

Fall Creek through Branson, it pretty much seems as anything will work, with the brighter colors of powerbait being preferred by these fresh fish. Just driving through the boat traffic going to downtown, it seemed everyone had fish on or in baskets hanging from their boats.

Rainy cool weather this next week, should keep the fishing at a top level, until the stock of fresh fish gets depleted. As long as MDC keeps feeding the Branson Landing area to Cooper Creek, it should be great.

I have to add my personal fishing report from Saturday and this evening. Lilleys' Landing hosted a fishing weekend for the Ozark FFF Chapter out of St Louis. Brian Shaffer filled in for me Friday night with a Taneycomo Talk at the pavilion which I heard was a huge success. Then Saturday we fed them lunch at the Hatchery Shelter below the dam. I got to fish a little after lunch with Bob from the club. They had ran water Saturday morning, which confused everyone. But it was off by 1 pm and down by 2 pm. Bob and I walked down to the Narrows below the root wad and found lots of nice rainbows holding in the current. Problem was they weren't agreeable. Darrell from River Run had already set Bob up with a scud/san juan rig so I had him dead drift first the shallow, close water and then the center of the channel. He quickly hooked one rainbow and then a little later another. That would be all the action for Bob. I wondered down alittle further and caught one rainbow on a brown 1/100th jig- and that was it. I fish an egg fly and then a red san juan up by the root wad just so I could see what the heck they would do when I drifted it by their face. Most would ignore it, some would move and some would dart over to investigate but all refused any fly I threw at them. The only people catching fish were 2 kickers in the rebar hole and one other guy fishing to the side of them. It just was slow.

This evening I boated up to the red house in the trophy area- on the bluff- or what I call dry wash. Surface was slick, very dark and cloudy and a little mist. No one else on the water the whole time I was up there... really nice. I started and ended with a brown 1/100th oz jig under a palsa indicator 4 feet. The rainbows absolutely loved it. I caught over 30-35 rainbows in 90 minutes, lost 3 jigs and missed many more bites. Ended the slow drift down at the Narrows. Nothing huge- 14 inches was the biggest but most were 13-14 inch, fat and fought hard. Most jumped at least once when hooked.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report 9/03/09 - Branson, MO

We received some well needed rain this week. No downpours but a nice, gentle, soaking rain that really didn't affect our area lake levels. But for most of this week, the water has been running 24 hours a day at about one unit, bumped up to 2 units for a few hours in the late afternoon. I like this flow but I'm sure the fly fishers below the dam are aggravated because it takes away most of the wading area up there. But with one unit they can get out on the big gravel bar below outlet #3 and drift a scud or strip a wooly and catch trout.

But I think come this weekend, they will not run much, if any at all. The weather forecast says highs are going to be in the mid 70's which is unbelievable for this time of year. So the power demand shouldn't be high and they usually don't run water on weekends. So my prediction is very little to no generation this holiday weekend.

Trout fishing here on Taneycomo has been flat - great! I contribute it to the weather. Cooler temperatures seems to agree with our trout here, as well as other species of fish in area lakes. Plus it just seems like there's a lot of rainbows in the lake right now. I took a pontoon ride to the Branson Landing last evening with friends, ate at the Fish House and boated back after dark. Cruising down, a watched for midging rainbows and did see quite a few from Taneycomo Acres down to the bridges. Coming back, I could see more rises, especially in the Monkey Island area. That's evidence that there's big schools of rainbows in these areas actively feeding on bugs on the surface. If I were fishing last night, I'd try several things... cast a rooster tail, throw a jig and float or just cast a jig straight, probably a small jig like a 1/16th or even a 1/32nd oz if I had light enough line to throw it and work it close to the surface. The idea is to keep the lure close to the surface where the rainbows were cruising for midges.

Now during the day, most of these rainbows are close to the bottom, especially if it's bright out. So I'd go with bait - either night crawlers or Power Bait. Our water is clear so have to go with no larger than 4 pound line, small weights and small hooks. For worms, I use a #6 or #8 short shanked hook and for Power Bait I use a #8 hook. Colors of Power Bait - if I'm using Gulp Eggs, I putting a white egg on with another color... yellow, pink or orange. Some of the nuggets and paste are working too. Berkly has a hatchery nuggets that's brown which is doing pretty well. Anytime we have a big rainbow caught off the dock, the bait it was caught on becomes the hot bait of the week. There was a big rainbow caught last week on the brown nuggets so we've been selling a lot of brown hatchery nuggets.

Fishing up in the trophy area has continued to be very good. We've been seeing a lot of very nice rainbows up there and they've been biting pretty consistently. With this flow, we've been using a jig and float with an olive or pink jig fished 4-6 feet deep and drifted basically down the middle of the lake from Lookout down to Fall Creek. There are a couple of hot spots above Lookout but for the most part I haven't done that well up there so I've been starting my drift at Lookout. Of course, I like working a jig straight, no float, off the bottom as well. Sculpin has been the best color in the 3/32nd oz size and working it in the deeper water, channel side of the lake.

Hope everyone has a relaxing and enjoyable holiday weekend!

Friday, August 28, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report 8/23/09 - Branson, MO

Since I'm writing this on Sunday, it's hard to tell what this week's generation patterns will be. Has this been a crazy month temperature wise or not!!?? And the 10 day forecast looks just as nice as this past week's. Low to mid 80's and sunny. In saying that, this past week's generation pattern was a bit puzzling. They ran one unit all day and most nights. This weekend, off all day and night with the exception of an hour late in the afternoon. All our lakes are at or below power pool. Cooler temps mean low power demand. So we may see a week of very little generation.


Keep an eye on http://ozarkanglers.com/forums/index.php?showforum=4 for updated information and reports.


Check lake levels here - http://ozarkanglers.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=17240


And you can see what the generation schedule will be a day ahead here - http://www.swpa.gov/generationschedules.aspx


Off the fishing subject, have to put a plug in for an event here on Lake Taneycomo coming up next weekend. It's a trout tournament held out of Lilleys' Landing Resort and Marina benefiting our local police and fire departments. Starts at 8 am and weigh in is at 4 pm. Check out http://news.lilleyslanding.com/1st-annual-guns-hoses-fishing-tournament for more information.


August is usually hot and the trout fishing is usually not. But this month has been the exception. Our guests here at Lilleys' Landing have caught alot of rainbows off our dock as well as drifting in this area in boats using both night crawlers and Gulp power bait. Had some wind this week which again is a little unusual. When it got windy, anglers switched to trolling jigs, spoons, spinners and crank baits and did well. Mainly trolled from Lilleys' downlake to the Landing. The rainbows being stocked are good sized trout too, averaging 13 inches.


I took a couple of girls out the other day for their first trout fishing trip. We drifted from Fall Creek to Short Creek and they caught their limits of rainbows plus a real nice 17 inch brown, which was released. They were running one unit which isn't much water. The current isn't fast and with the wind blowing upstream, it was tough keeping the line tight and the boat drifting with the current. But working the trolling motor and using less weight than usual, they learned a bite from the bottom and hooked enough fish to achieve their limits.


Trout fishing IS pretty easy. Just have to be patient!


I got out and fished alittle this week. I love fishing two things - jigs and dry flies. I did both this week. Since returning from Alaska, I've been on a dry fly kick. I caught so many nice rainbows, chars and grayling in Alaska on dries, I've tried to carry it over to here at home. And I've done pretty good too. I like fishing the bluff bank from Lookout down to the channel swing most days. There always seems to be a handful of trout holding along the bank waiting, looking for bugs to snatch off the surface. My stimulator usually does the trick. And these rainbows are usually larger than normal too. Great fights!!


My sculpin jigs are working great too. If they are running more than 1 units, I use an 1/8th oz jig but sometimes, like yesterday, I notice with no units or one units, the trout seemed to like the jig swimming more than the usual dropping and jigging. I switched to a 3/32 oz jig, thinking it wouldn't sink or drop as fast. I could get it close to the bottom and lift the rod tip slowly or slower than I usually do (I pop or twitch it normally)... they like that. I first noticed this when I'd throw the jig out and let it sink. When it's sinking, it's not sinking straight to the bottom but sinking at an angle. The lighter jig and different retreive got me more hits. But they are biting short. I missed many more than I hooked, but it's still fun.


In additon, I am posting videos and mid week reports on my facebook account so look me up! http://www.facebook.com/plilley?ref=name

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report 8/11/09 - Branson, MO

This has been a strange August so far... but typical at the same time. Weather has been on the cool side with some rain thrown in. This weeks appears to be on the cool side with rain today. Should be good for fishing. On the typical side, our trout fishing is fair- only fair. It usually gets alittle tough in August. Our water gets real clear and the trout become picky, it seems. It's not the amount of rainbows stocked - MDC stocks the same amount in August they do in June and July. It's just typical late summer doldrums.

That's not to say trout can't be had. Water has been off in the mornings and running starting about 2 pm till dark each day. This has been consistant for the past couple of weeks. It gives fly fishers a chance to wade below the dam as well as boaters time to still fish using crawlers and gulp eggs below Fall Creek. The clearer water means dropping to 2-pound line will get you more bites.

I fished the earlier part of the week last week. One morning I threw 3/32nd oz jigs straight, no float, below Fall Creek for 3 hours and boated my limit of rainbows - four. I missed quite a few bites and lost several before getting them to the boat. I used 2-lb line and tried brown, sculpin, sculpin/ginger and brown/orange.

At the same time, there were friends of mine fishing from a pontoon in the same area using crawlers and Gulp eggs on the bottom. They'd catch one or two in one spot and then I'd have them move downlake, not more than 400 yards. They started close to Fall Creek and ended the morning at Short Creek with 12 nice rainbows.

Another good report - after the water starts, drifting from Short Creek down past Cooper Creek has been pretty decent using Gulp eggs, one white or yellow and one pink or orange. Stay away from the bluff side of the alke because of down trees and other looming snags. Only use as much weight to get you to the bottom -- you'll feel the strike better and not get snagged up as much.

Also after the water starts, work a medium to large crank bait along the bluffs and snags for browns and rainbows. Later in the day is better for browns.

Bill Babler-

Fished Taneycomo several times in the last week with different degrees of success. As far as I have been up is Lookout. I have not been able to fish the lake on moving water, just under hot, bright, and very still conditions. 

Lower restricted area to Mouth of Fall Creek has been producing some bites, but it also has had plenty of fishermen. I really have not seen schools of trout and with the current conditions, they would be visible. 

Two flies for me are working with some degree of success over others. The first being a sculpin micro jig in 256 oz. With the low water right now I am fishing it about 3 ft. below the indicator. Best bite is occurring from Casket Rock, the Big Rock on the South East Shore across from the Tennis Courts, to the Fall Creek Ramp. With the low non-flowing water, fish this fly on a complete dead drift, only shocking the indicator very infrequently. Most takes are extremely light.

Grey or Silver scud in sizes 14 thru 18 with a red tie at the head are the second choice. Again fish this scud a bit deeper, to drag it on the bottom or just above. The trout will pick it right off the bottom, no problem. Not much movement is required. Same locations. 

In the afternoons when the water starts, size 14 and 16 peach eggs are reported to be the best bet.

Fall Creek, to Short Creek; Bite early is very good on 256th. oz micro's in ginger with a gold head or sculpin with a orange or gold head. Fish these flies through the area of the old Fall Creek dock, just where the dock used to sit. I am using about 7ft. of tippet to an indicator here. If you see trout midging or any surface action, fling your fly in that direction, and you most often will get bit. Move the fly a bit more here than in the restricted zone on this deeper water. The trout are not well positioned and need the movement on the fly to keep contact with it. 

As the sun hits the water in the same area, Inflated Night crawlers are working to some extent, and catching very quality fish in the up to 22 inch class, with stringers of 14 to 16 inch trout being the norm, rather than the exception. Numbers are not high however but patients will lead to a very quality limit. 

Day before yesterday, We had two limits that I will guess averaged 16.5 inches, but the total for the 4 hr. trip was only 13 trout

Keep your boat anchored on the shallow side and throw into the deeper bluff channel. Be prepared to be patient, and just wait. Boat traffic is your friend, as the fish are not moving much and when a boat comes by it repositions the fish. You get a bite on a passing boat most every time.

Bob Kline is guiding the lower end and fishing the Corn Field, Bull Creek, and the mouth of Cedar. He reports about 30 fish in half day trips on orange and chartruse powerbait, but the fish are not near the quality as from Fall Creek, through Cooper Creek.

I have had two reports in the last week telling me the Branson Landing area, from Monkey Island through Roark Creek, are extremely slow. 

All it takes is the stocking boat thru there one time to change that as you know.

Bill Babler White River Outfitters fishing guide service whiteriverbb@msn.com 417-332-7016

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

lake Taneycomo Fishing Report 8/3/09 - Branson, MO

Haven't written a fishing report in almost a month. May be a record... not a good one I guess. Between traveling and home projects, I've only just gotten out on the lake the last couple of evenings.

This was quite a July, wasn't it? Sure love this global cooling. Fish do too. Generation has been different almost everyday. We check the charts every afternoon to see what they will do the next day - alot of our guests come in and check. It's been pretty accurate. Most mornings it's off and running in the afternoon - up to 4 units. I've heard the same thing everyone has heard about Beaver Lake being dropped resulting in more generation here but we haven't seen it yet. Table Rock is in good shape, not high at all, so we'll see what happens here in the next couple of weeks.

Fly fishing below the dam has been fair to good- depends on the day and time of day. Still catching rainbows on dries - beetles and ants, some midges. With all the rain we're having, san juan worms in brown and tan are working good in the swifter moving water and with the water running. Scuds in #18's and #20's in tan, olive and brown have been good but have to use 7x tippet to do any good, especially in sunny weather.

From a boat, they're using either micro jigs or small 1/125th oz jigs under a float when the water is off both above Fall Creek and below. No wind, the bite has been REAL light, barely moving the float so you really have to pay attention. And again, 2 lb line a must. Change colors if you're not getting bit. Vince reported NOT catching fish on olive but changed to sculpin and did good. There's not much difference in those colors... but it made a difference for Vince. If they stop hitting one color, don't keep fishing it, change. Change depths too.

Evenings are great to get out on Lake Taneycomo. Very little boat traffic and it's been great out there, very mild and little fog. The water starts to drop out about 7 pm. I've been fishing from Lookout to Fall Creek throwing 3/32nd oz jigs and working the middle to channel side of the lake. I tried a white jig and they ran from it. Best color has been a combo sculpin/ginger jig. There seems to be pockets or schools of trout holding here and there, not spread out throughout the area. I'd go for several hundred yards without a bite then get 3 or 4 trout in a row. The size of the rainbows I'm catching are still very good. Had one pushing 19 inches the other day. All are fighting real well. Now I have gone to using 2 lb line. I usually do in the fall months when the water gets gin clear and the trout get alittle fussy about the line size. I've been telling anglers who are fishing below the dam the same thing - go to 7x flourocarbon and you'll get bit more often. I did see some fish taking dries off the surface as the water dropped out last evening along the bluff bank. I didn't have my fly rod or I would have tossed a beetle or elk hair at them. It's getting time for dry fly fishing to get REAL hot. Fun times!

Below Fall Creek, Bill's been catching some REAL nice rainbows on night crawlers, water running or not. Anchor in the middle of the lake and throw to the channel when the water is not running. Inject the worm with air using a blow bottle. Four pound line is ok but 2 pound will catch you more fish. Also, I'd think you'd do well working 1/8th oz jigs along the bluff bank while the water is running. If these are rainbows that have come out of the trophy area, they should take a jig well. Dark earth colors the best- brown, sculpin, olive and combinations work best right now. Of course, jig and float will work in this area too. Best when there's a chop on the water but if it's slick, pay close attention to the float because they might not move it much on the bite. Water off, they've been catching rainbow on gulp power bait, anchoring on the shallow side and throwing to the middle from Short Creek up to Fall Creek. Anchor off the channel and you won't have boats running over you all day.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

1st Annual Guns and Hoses Fishing Tournament

What: A fishing tournament on Lake Taneycomo in Branson, Missouri sponsored by Lilleys' Landing Resort and Marina
Why: To raise money for the Branson Fire and Police auxiliary funds to help support our community. Where: Lilleys’ Landing Resort & Marina, 367 River Lane, Branson, MO A free lunch will be provided after the weigh-in!

When: 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, August 29th, 2009 Enter your two-man team by emailing Megan@lilleyslanding.com for an entry form. Then drop off or mail in your completed copy of the entry form and your $75 entry fee to Branson Fire and Rescue attn: Kory Klein, 110 Crosby Street, Branson, MO 65616 Prizes will be awarded for 1st through 3rd places and big fish. Each boat that enters will get a raffle ticket, and additional raffle tickets can be purchased for $5. If you register before the tournament day, you also get an extra raffle ticket! 50% off boat rentals will be provided by Lilleys’ Landing for tournament teams. 
To reserve a boat rental call 417-334-6380. If you need any assistance contact Kory Klein (417) 294-3319

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report 6/28/09 - Branson, MO

Another glorious week has passed here on Lake Taneycomo. It's been hot! Temperatures have hovered close to 100 each day but I can honestly say the trout fishing has been equally hot as well.


Doesn't matter what part of the upper lake we're talking about, fishing has been good this week. Can't say as much for the boating skills, or may be I should say etiquette, on the lake. It's amazing how some boaters don't have a clue what boating rules are, rules like we have on out streets, roads and highways. Rules, if you break them, can cause damage and injury, tickets and citations. If everyone practiced one thing, just one thing, they'd improve their safe boating skills by 100%. That simple one thing is watch your wake. That and steer clear of fishing lines. Wakes cause boats to rock, cause some boats to actually take on water. They throw people around in the surrounding boats, they knock fishing gear from their perches, they cause stress. And it all can be avoided. The bigger your boat, the bigger your wake. Going slow actually does more harm than going fast but that doesn't give you the right to fly by boats in close quarters. Idle speed means just that, put it in gear and don't accelerate.


Yes, there's a reason I'm bringing it up. Yesterday I had a group of boys out fishing above Short Creek. There were three jon boats with an adult and 3 boys, most of them under the age of 10, in each boat. We were anchored well off the channel, allowing boats plenty of room to boat by. There were other boats up and down the lake pretty much doing the same thing. Most boats heading up and down the lake were safe boaters, moving through at slow speeds as to not to throw big wakes at us. But there was one boat that didn't slow down and he didn't keep a safe distance from our first boat in line. He buzzed by within 20 feet of our boat. He even had a small boy with him. I yelled to slow down and I got a hand jester like, "what's the big deal"? Put the shoes on the other foot- had someone did that to him, he'd be ticked. Bottom line, he put those boys in danger by his boating practice and the awful thing about it he knew no different.


Fishing... sorry for the soap box episode.


We did catch trout yesterday. We floated night crawlers and did real well. All nine of the boys caught at least one rainbow and some caught their limit of 4 rainbows. We used 4 pound line, #6 short shanked #89 hooks, #7 split shots set 18 inches above the hook and used half a night crawler, hooked once in the middle, letting it hang off each side. Don't worry about hiding the hook. Shoot some air in the worm using a blow bottle or a hypodermic needle. This floats the worm off the bottom 18 inches. You'll get more bites, faster bites using this technique verses no air at all, just letting it lay on the bottom. Night crawler fishing between Fall Creek and Short Creek has been excellent early in the morning.


Oh yea- did I mention generation? The only generation we've seen has been from about 2-3 pm till dark, running up the lake about 6 feet or 3-4 units and then dropping out about the time they get it up and rolling. Up slow and then back down slow. Interesting pattern. Now this coming week, we might see a bit of a change. With temperature dropping to the upper 80's and low 90's, we may see days with no generation at all.


Lincoln Hunt, a good friend of ours from Dallas, is up for a visit. He likes to wet wade below the dam (no waders, saddles or just wading boats). He's been up there almost everyday this week hammering the rainbows. He's using mainly #20 black zebra midges under a dry fly indicator about 12 inches deep. I got up there one day this past week and caught a nice 18 inch rainbow on a #16 olive elk hair caddis but it was the only taker on the caddis. The best area, reported Lincoln, was below Rebar.


I've also heard using small scuds - #20's - have been working well in the Rebar Hole but you got to get there early - 6 am - to get a good spot. If you get there too late, you might be referred to as a slob for not getting out of bed before dawn. Sorry- inside joke.


Get out in a boat and run above Fall Creek into the trophy area for some great jig and float action. Best jig is still the tan 1/256th oz micro jig although that little brown jig Vince tied for me has done well too. It's a jig he tied himself but he got the jigs from an online store - http://heartlandflygear.com. I ordered and received some of the jig heads and they look marvelous! I've already tried a few, using just a bit of marabou. I think that's the key to these small jigs... you can use too much and these jigs lose their effectiveness. Heartland Fly Gear has an incredible inventory of all sizes of jig heads... plus he's a member of our forum to boot. Check it out.


Again, I'm tying on 2-3 feet of 2 lb Vanish as a tippet. Water is clear and most mornings it's real still. Need that smaller line to attract more bites! And oh yes... the talk is you have to use 7x fluorocarbon below the dam no matter what wet fly you're using. 6x won't cut it. Although I did catch my nice rainbow on 6x but that was a dry. When using a dry, you have to match the size of fly to the size of tippet or you're going to have a twisted mess.


If you catch the water running, don't be scared to throw a medium crank bait like a rapala F-5 or F-7 against the bluff banks below Fall Creek.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report 6/22/09 - Branson, MO

Not much change in the fishing, catching and fishing conditions on Lake Taneycomo this week. Generation, if anything, has lessened in the past few days. Water has been off most mornings and staying off into the afternoon. They've been bumping the flow up to 2-3 units by 4 or 5 pm but dropping it in late evening and off by dark. This is a surprise to me really... unseasonable hot temperatures I would think force the Corp to run lots of water to meet an increase of power demand but they evidently have other sources of power they are drawing on, ie. coal burning plants. We'll see if this generation pattern continues.


It seems like MDC is keeping ahead of anglers demands for trout. Fish keep being caught and kept and nice ones too. We've seen lots of nice stringers come in to the dock this past week, most caught below Fall Creek on Gulp Eggs and worms. We've been boating up past Fall Creek and fishing the trophy area where we're finding an abundance of rainbows to catch. And the number of rainbows below the dam is very good too. We'll see if these numbers hold through the hottest part of the summer- July and August.


Above Fall Creek, we're still catching big numbers of trout, mainly rainbows, on small jigs under a float. Micros in the 1/25th size in tan or olive under an indicator 3-4 feet deep- best! I learned from Bill Babler to keep a spool of #2 lb Vanish line in my bag. I use 4 lb XL Trilene green line on my spin reels but when I'm using this jig and float method and especially using small micro jigs, I find it's best to add 2-3 feet of #2 lb Vanish to the end of the 4 lb. I get more strikes adding the tippet to the line. I use a triple surgeon’s knot to connect the lines. The link points to a double knot- I just add another loop-through for the triple knot.


My fishing buddy Vince and I went fishing the other evening. He had these small jigs, about the size of a micro jig, but these were lead-ball head and he tied just a bit of marabou onto the body. We used brown jigs and man the rainbows really loved them. We sat in the Narrows about 3/4 miles above Fall Creek and caught trout after trout for over an hour before dark. He said a friend of his found them on the internet... I'm looking for them now!


Same guys fishing last week caught some great rainbows while the water was running on small crank baits thrown against the bluff bank below Fall Creek. We usually throw Rapalas F-5's or F-7's and use several colors including black/silver, black/gold and rainbow.


Power bait colors... well that has varied quite a bit this week. Had some guys come in and say they really caught them good off the Cooper Creek Public Dock on yellow nuggets. Most anglers are using a combination of white and pink Gulp Egg off our docks and up near Short Creek. I've seen some people trolling small crank baits, rooster tails and jigs and doing pretty good. And been selling alot of spoons- Colorado gold and rainbow styles.


Fly fishing below the dam has stayed very good over the past week. Down water has given waders access to the upper end most days which is nice. Grey scuds #16 and #18, san juan worm, cracklebacks have been hot I'm told and thread midge in black and tan #20 and #22. Zebra midge under an indicator 12 inches fished from the Big Hole area down to the boat ramp- excellent- especially when rainbows are actively feeding on midges in the film. Also soft hackles in #18's reds, blacks and yellow stripped quickly if there's a chop on the water.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Large Rainbow Caught 6/2/09 - Branson, MO

John Boudreaux caught this 20 inch and 5 almost 6 lb rainbow trout on a white jig upstream from Lilleys' Landing on Lake Taneycomo in Branson, Missouri!


John Boudreaux caught this 20 inch and 5 almost 6 lb rainbow trout on a white jig upstream from Lilleys' Landing on Lake Taneycomo in Branson, Missouri!

Monday, June 1, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report 6/1/09 - Branson, MO

If you've followed my fishing reports over the years you know I'm honest to a fault. I report poor fishing when it happens, and now isn't the time for a poor fishing report! It's just the opposite.


I saw something yesterday that I haven't seen in a number of years, may be ever on our lake. There was no generation, water was still. No wind and high, bright sun. A glassy lake surface allowed me to see everything in the water at some distance. I was guiding a couple from the St Louis area, fishing the trophy area above Fall Creek. The lake up there is fairly shallow and with the gin clear water, we could see into the water very easily. What we saw were schools of rainbows, large and small. But as we caught what we thought were "small stockers", upon netting these trout we realized they were large trout, most over 15 inches and very heavy. So what were the "large" trout we were seeing? Very large rainbows.


For over a year we've seen heavy generation day after day after day. For years I have said generation creates a healthy tailwater -- more food is produced for fish and that is evident right not by the condition of our trout. They are fat and colorful. And not just up in the trophy area. We've seen limits of rainbows brought to the dock by anglers who are fishing below Fall Creek, catching most of the nicer rainbows on night crawlers.


So how are we catching some of these trophies? Up in the trophy area, with these blue bird days of high sun and little wind, throwing a 3/32nd oz jig straight and hopping it sharply just off the bottom is how we found to catch them yesterday. We were using a sculpin/ginger or sulpin/peach jig yesterday. By using a jig with a little light color in the jig, we could see the jig in the water as we worked it back to the boat. We could also see the rainbows chasing and nipping at the jig, sometimes over and over and over but not really taking the jig in its mouth. But if more than one rainbows was pursuing the jig, the competition factor would cause them to be more aggressive and one would take the jig more often than coming up with no bite at all. It was fun to watch.


Another interesting observation, one that I've already addressed here -- I was after smaller rainbows to keep yesterday. My clients wanted to take 4 or 5 trout home to eat and we had only caught rainbows over 12 inches. Can't keep rainbows between 12 and 20 inches in the trophy area. So I was shaking my jig away from the larger ones and working on catching what I thought were smaller than 12 inch rainbows. But when I'd hook and land one I thought was under 12 inches, they turned out to be well over 12 inches! Then what were the larger ones!!?? Fortunately, we did end the morning with 7 rainbows we could keep.


We've been trying to start our morning trips at 6 am and really you can get out even earlier than 6 but for most folks, 6 am is early enough. We're trying to get out before the sun gets up and over the water. Fishing really drops off when it gets bright out, especially with little or no wind. Now if the wind picks up and we get a chop on the water, the fish come alive. We saw this again yesterday. Bill Babler had 3 fly fishing clients. They were fishing above us in close proximity. They were struggling to get bit with the flat water but when a breeze would come through, breaking up the surface just slightly, they'd all have a trout on the line. Chop on the water makes a HUGE difference, even when bait fishing.


Early in the morning above Fall Creek, we've been fishing a tan or olive micro jig or a #14 red zebra under an indicator 3 to 4 feet deep in the shade of the bluff either using a fly rod or spin rod. Use 2 lb test for more hookups, especially when the sun comes up over the water you're fishing. Bill's also using a combo with an egg fly on a small jig hook and tying a #14 gray scud OR a #14 red zebra under the egg about 18 inches. You can also throw that straight jig and catch them too. If you're not into flies that much, a simple marabou jig will work -- colors: olive, brown, brown/orange, sculpin and vary the choices with either a dark head or an orange head. Size: 1/125th, 1/100th, 1/80th but unless they're running water I would go any heavier than a 1/80th oz. If they are running water I use a 1/32nd oz jig under a float.


Later in the morning and on into the afternoon, I'd try a dry along the bluff bank. I notice the fish were really getting active along the bank yesterday about noon and if I had fly fishers in the boat, we would have tossed a #8 stimulator at them and I bet they would have loved it.


Below Fall Creek, air injected night crawlers fishing in the middle of the lake between Fall Creek and Lilleys' Landing has been deadly. Don't wind the worm on the hook in a ball -- hook it one time in the collar of the worm, letting it hang off the hook on both sides, pinching off the tail. Inject air in the head of the worm so that it floats. Set the weight about 12 to 18 inches from the bait so that it floats that distance from the bottom. Don't use any line heavier than 4 lb and for best chances to catch fish, use 2 lb line. Remember, if the fish swallows the hook and you wish to release the fish, don't touch the fish... NEVER handle a trout when releasing it with a dry rag or a dry hand! Simply cut the line close to the fish's mouth and let it drop back in the water. The hook will work it's way out or dissolve eventually.


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Thursday, May 28, 2009

Lake taneycomo Fishing Report 5/26/09 - Branson, MO

Finally... a real good fishing report. For Taneycomo, it's been long overdue.

It might be expected - for there to be a bunch of rainbows in the lake for a holiday weekend like Memorial Day weekend. It's a good thing. Shepherd of the Hills did their job well, stocking much loved and sought after rainbows the week before.

At least our guests here at the Landing (Lilleys', not Branson) were happy with their "catching", even though the weather wasn't the nicest.

Rumors of big rainbows abound from 2 to 4 pounders being caught off the dock plus a 10 pound rainbow caught above Fall Creek by a client fishing with one of our guides.

I guided with Bill Babler both Saturday and Sunday. Armed with fly rods and silver scuds, we pounded the water between Lookout and Fall Creek both mornings and came up with alot of nice rainbows on each drift. We set our #14 scuds anywhere from 8 to 12 feet below an indicator and tried to stay in the middle-to-shallow side of the lake. Sunday morning the bite was light - the rainbows weren't taking it and running but spitting it out rather quickly, causing quick releases.

Down lake, night crawlers drifted on the bottom was great from Fall Creek down past Short Creek. Anglers picked up some real nice, colorful rainbows on this drift. Minnows too. The larger rainbows that have been in the lake for a long period seemed to go after more natural baits, not the power baits. They seemed to catch more of the freshly stocked rainbows.

Even drifting below our place downstream was very good using Gulp white with pink eggs.

Back to the trophy area, drifting jigs under a float worked well for one of our guides- Vince Elfrink and his clients. He started out with ginger1/50th oz jigs under a float Sunday morning, then quickly switching to pink jigs when the generation was bumped up from one unit to two. One of his clients caught over 40 rainbows that morning.

Throwing 1/8th oz jigs straight was also good this weekend, using white, sculpin, scuplin/peach and brown jigs. Most worked the bluff banks but some just worked the bottom of the lake, staying in the middle.


 

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report 5/19/09 - Branson MO

There's something funny brewing as far as generation here on the lake. Of course, we're the step child of all the lakes here on the White River. We are the pass-through channel where all the water from NW Arkansas and SW Missouri flows through. There's talk of flood gates which I don't understand. The Corp is supposed to meet with local officials to talk about what they (the Corp) needs to do to alieviate some of the high water levels above Taneycomo. Table Rock is in great shape. It's only 2 feet over power pool which for this time of year is perfect. Beaver Lake, on the other hand, is very high - 1129 feet which is only one foot below flood pool.

Now from past water levels, this level on Beaver isn't unusual. I remember a few years back, the Corp held Beaver Lake at 1129 feet for weeks. At the time, I didn't understand why. Keeping a lake right at the top of the flood pool where one good rain would put it over the top, taking away all control of flow doesn't seem smart to me. One foot of variance sin't much room for error. But today, they have the dam at Beaver shut down. Why?

Today, they shut Table Rock Dam back to 2 units most of the day and off during the night. I understand that move in light of TableRock's levels but at some point the Corp is going to have to move alot of water through Table Rock, through Taneycomo into Bull Shoals, which is another story altogether. The rumor of flood gates is strange. Flood gates are only used in extreme cases, although fishing wise, I love flood gates in May and June. Some of the best fishing EVER has been when flood gates are opened on Table Rock in the spring.

Our water is 46 degrees right now. That's cold, even for trout. They like 50 degree water. If they opened flood gates, the water would rise into the 50's for sure plus dump a bunch of shad into the lake. Our trout would respond immediately, moving to the dam and feeding on the shad. We've seen the browns move up and feed, making them fairly easy to catch during these runs.

But we'll have to see what happens. Bottom line, we're going to see generation for most of the month of June. How much remains to be seen.

Fishing... has really picked up this past week. Boy, it was really slow for several weeks. Our guides were really crying the blues and when they cry, everyone else is finding catching trout extremely hard.

Why the turn around? Not sure. More trout stocked- yes. But we're seeing some real nice rainbows below Fall Creek coming on night crawlers and minnows that must have some out of the trophy area. This isn't unusual at all. We see this every year about this time. Seventeen and 18-inch rainbows taking natural baits mostly. Jigs too. Some flies like scuds and san juans.

Had some great reports of rainbows coming on jigs worked along the bluff banks this weekend. Kelly Stammer and his church group did real well throwing brown and orange 1/8th oz jigs along the bluff banks. I've suggested throwing rooster tails and small crank baits too. It seems they are hugging the banks, staying out of the current.

It's hard writing a report right in the middle of a transition like this. Not knowing exactly what they are going to do with the water is tough but you can be assured there will be alot of rainbows stocked for the upcoming holiday weekend. Hopefully the weather will be nice to us.

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report 5/15/09 - Branson MO

Boy, we're seeing alot of water flow past our place these days. Not like a year ago, thank goodness. But still, generation from Table Rock is non-stop full 4 units to drop the lake levels of Table Rock and especially Beaver Lake. Northwest Arkansas has gotten more rain than Southern Missouri and Beaver Lake has almost reached flood stages. With the rains in the forecast, we're going to see lots more generation here.


Good news -the stocking truck has been doing a pretty good job lately. Catching rainbows has picked up here the last week. Now, catching isn't the easiest because of the high water but we've seen some of our guests catch their limit of rainbows in a day's time.


I had reported doing pretty well last week, fishing the bluff bank from the old Sun Valley Resort down past Cooper Creek Access using jigs, either under a float or thrown straight, especially hitting the eddies and slower water. This is still ok but not as good with the higher water level. I had fair success using white, pink or brown jigs.


Drifting Gulp Eggs from Short Creek down through the Cooper Creek Access is some of the best fishing we've seen this week. Use one white egg with a pink, yellow or orange egg on a #8 hook. Be sure you do 2 things: keep the bait on the bottom and stay in the middle of the lake.


Drifting minnows in the same area and drifting down further to the Landing was good for some of our guides yesterday. They are seeing some nice sized rainbows caught right now- some up to and heavier than a pound.


I'd try a few other things if I were fishing - there's good, calm water on the inside bend from Taneycomo Acres down to Monkey Island. I'd throw rooster tails and spoons along this bank. While boating down to the Landing the other day with the family to eat at Shorty Smalls, I noticed a good number of rainbows jumping and midging in this slack water. Jig and float may work pretty good too.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report - Branson MO 4/23/09


Well... we're not calling it "fishing" here on Lake Taneycomo anymore, it's now called "drifting". Recent rains have caused Table Rock and Beaver Lakes to rise more than two feet over their power pool levels this week so water continues to flow through Taneycomo down the hill to Bull Shoals. High flows are not unusual for us in the spring. It's actually the norm. Lots of water flow and high winds makes for a difficult day of fishing even for the best of us. Presentation goes out the window replaced with the attempt just to feel the bite which is crucial to catch the fish! What I mean by that is we have to change from our normal fishing, "go-to" patterns like drifting with bait down the river to throwing a spoons, a spinner or crank bait... something that isn't affected as much by wind and movement. That's what we've done and it's working fairly good. Find where the trout are has been equally challenging. But we think we've done pretty well in that department. From Monkey Island down through the Landing is where we're been seeing the most trout caught this week. Last night, my mom and dad took my daughter Sara and I out to eat at the Landing. As we sat outside on the lakefront deck, I watch the slick surface of the lake carefully for rises, and sure enough those rainbows started midging in a couple of areas- one was down by the Princes Cruiseliner and the other up behind the Fish House with a few stragglers inbetween. Midging rainbows means they are feeding on the surface, close to the surface where they'd see a rooster tail or cleo thrown and worked a foot or two under the water. Drifiing Gulp power eggs has been good when the wind is low. Some guys fishing all this week said they did really well drifting from the power lines above Monkey Island down through the island using a white and a chartreuse egg on one hook. Now minnows has been the hot bait till I heard this report. I'd pack a minnow bucket just in case. Had a couple reports from the trophy area this week. Still tough conditions up there but they are catching some good quality rainbows on san juan worm, #10 gray scuds and peach egg flies drifted on the bottom. Morning and evenings have been the best time to get out and enjoy this drift.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report - Branson, MO 3/30/09


Boy, it's been tough figuring out our generation patterns lately. It looks like we're entering our first spring rain period where about every 3 or 4 days a front and shower move through the area. Man I feel for the people up in North Dakota... we were there just about a year ago. This year though our lakes are at power pool levels -- a good place to start out a possible rainy spring.

Our water has been running alot more than it has not been running the last week. Fronts and showers (and painful memories of April, 2008) are keeping the managers at the Corp second guessing whether they should run alittle today -- or alot! Just like today: their on-line schedule said 3 units in the morning dropping to one unit in the afternoon. In reality they ran 3 units all day... they must have thought, "We better run more water cause we may get more rain than what's forecasted for tonight!" Total speculation on my part. It is frustrating for us guides who have to try to make a plan for the day's trip but we make do.

With the water and wind, fishing- or catching- has been alittle tough. I've seen some anglers in boats anchored in the mouth's of some of our creeks doing rather well. Fall Creek has been a popular place the last few days. I'd say they're tight-lining night crawlers behind the boat. You can tie to or anchor in some of the eddies on the side of the lake or in the mouth of a creek but be extremely careful to think out any possibility that you could come undone and swing into the current. That or your anchor could drag and you could find yourself in heavy current, still with an anchor our. Fast current and anchors lead to serious possibilities. Drifting into downed trees in heavy current is equally as bad. Be very careful!

I have drifted flies on the bottom in the trophy area my last 3 guide trips including 2 full day trips Sunday and Monday and did fairly well. We drifted them two ways... one is straight-line using either a #4 or a 3/0 removable split shot 4-5 feet above the first fly and a second fly tied on in tandem 18 inches from the first. We're using a #12 scud, gray, brown or olive and a #14 red or black zebra. They hit the scud more than the zebra so sometimes we're using two scuds. The other method is under a float. We're fishing the flies 10-12 feet deep. We're also using a pink micro jig, chrome head.

There's only one good area we're finding fish that will bite. This is pretty weird considering I know there are rainbows all over the place in the trophy area. The best drift is over the flat at the Narrows. The Narrows is where the channel swings from the east to the west side of the lake, about a half mile above Fall Creek. There is major bank improvement work being done at this spot- can't miss it. Some of the construction guys cheer us every time we drift by and catch a trout. We drift on down to Fall Creek, picking up one or two on the east side of the lake, off the gravel bar. We're catching alot of rainbows under 12 inches -- so if you're having trout catching 4 to take home and eat, buy you a few scuds and head up to this area and drift a fly instead of power bait and you'll do ok. We did land several over 15 inches too but not many.

Over the weekend, our guests did catch trout below Fall Creek mainly on minnows, night crawlers and gulp power eggs- chartreuse best color. Roark Creek proved to be a great spot to go and get out of the current and catch rainbows too. Jig and float- use a jig head (1/32) and put an orange gulp egg on it and fish it 4 feet deep. You'll do well!