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.