How I FeelFree

Day 1


I start my morning by hitting the rip-rap. The water is like glass, my favorite time to disturb the peace with topwater lures. Buzzbaits and poppin' frogs don't draw a hit so I try beneath the surface with spinners and cranks, no luck.
This is a tough time of year for bass bite. The temperatures are dropping at night, and they have impacted the water. My Garmin Striker is showing the water has dropped to 68 degrees. Not low enough to trigger bass to start their feeding frenzy in preparation for the frigid winter temperatures. The bass are in a partial state of denial. They suspend to rocks and ledges waiting for the warm sun to raise temperatures slightly.

I appear to be the only person on the lake, but hear the sound of aluminum-on-gravel in the distance confirming another boat is joining me. The small reservoir typically allows visual confirmation of any companions, but the haze denies me the opportunity. Wanting to hit the boat-accessible spots, I head directly to my first spot.
Upon arrival, I deploy my DIY stakeout pole (a fiberglass electric fence rod with PVD t-handle) and begin jigging. The haze burns off as the sun successfully slows the cooling of the water. It reveals an aluminum boat holding steady in the deep part of the lake on a bed I use ice fishing. Panfisherman. I still have time to hit the boat-accessible spots before the weekend warriors arrive.
After a short time jigging, I snag a small 11.5" largemouth. I love catching any fish, but am a bit disappointed my summer and fall tactics haven't yielded anything of size. With afternoon family plans, I decide to try cranking for my last hour. The wind has picked up, so I paddle into the wind and allow it to carry me back across the reservoir as I use a deep crank targeting the fish my Garmin is marking at 8-12 feet. However, this too proves fruitless. I call it a day, deciding to enjoy what remains with family.
Day 2

I spend the morning lounging. My friend is fishing my local reservoir and reports great results. I'm happy for him, but frustrated I wasn't able to locate anything the day before. My wife reminds me I've spent a few years fishing the body of water and patterns this year changed. Given my previous successes there, I get quickly frustrated when my old tactics don't work. I need to mix things up. After this pep talk from the wife, I shake it off as my friend and I decide our destination via text. Upon his arrival at my place, we head for the river in a mini kayak fishing convoy. Upon arrival, we employ our river car placement logistics and haul the kayaks to the starting point with one car left behind awaiting our completion.

After the initial hiccup, my friend confirms a good choice in lure/presentation by landing a smallmouth bass via buzzbait. I change my lure, which hasn't produced, to something similar as we continued our float.
The weather was perfect, blue skies, few clouds. I had deployed my drag chain, which acted more like an anchor with the strong headwinds. A group of fisherman in a small boat reported luck with Sheepshead and Walleye. I had gotten a few weak bites while fishing a slough behind a sandbar I stopped on. My friend landed a few smallmouth and got more bites, but we were hoping for bigger fights.

My buzzbait proving useless, I tie on a darker color to better contrast in the bright sun. Shortly after, we encountered some brush piles along the river where we both landed smallmouth. It reminded me why I love river smallmouth. It was only 13.5" but fought like a largemouth exponentially bigger. They are powerful fish, strong from surviving in the current.

I lean in to get a picture and notify my friend of its presence. While snapping pictures and attempting to get video of my new friend, the snake declines my friend request by biting my phone and swimming away (I googled the snake the following day and found it was a Common Water Snake, a non-venomous snake in Wisconsin). After the rude interaction, I withdraw my friend request and we launch to continue on our journey.
The interesting thing about river fishing is the constant change of scenery. The current carries you where it will. This requires a constant need to be alert of your surroundings, the changing current, and obstacles. My friend is having the best luck riding near the shoreline and keeping his lure in the strike zone longer so I adjust with the same approach since my current (pun intended) approach isn't working. This approach requires a greater level of awareness as I'm constantly adjusting the kayak and my equipment onboard to avoid the countless obstacles along the riverbank.
Eventually, about 6 hours into the float, we both express our exhaustion. The constant casting, reeling, adjusting, moving equipment, overcoming current, and obstacle dodging has taken its toll on our already weary bodies. However, unlike lake fishing, we cannot "call it a day" until the river says we can. We must carry on.

In addition to kayak fishing, I love mountain biking (specifically fatbiking as I can ride it year-round in Wisconsin). Here I am, feeling unnecessarily defeated on this amazing kayak with a great friend on a beautiful river. A guy enjoying another sport I love yells through the valley that I'm living the dream. I am. Kayak fishing is a dream that some are unable to enjoy. This is amazing. With a renewed vigor, I tie on my go-to spinner bait color (for when all else fails), stand up, and start casting. The cyclist yells, "Whoa!!! That thing is stable too, huh?!?!". I smile and yell back, "Yeah, I can stand and fish all day long! Have a good one!". I float out of shouting distance and start working the banks on the search for smallmouth.

A short time later, nearing the end of the float, I hook into another smallmouth. This one is smaller than the other but they always put up a good fight. I continue working the banks, pulling and dropping my drag chain depending on the current. The river is shallow here. My spinner is constantly snagging and banging off rocks. I get several bites, but nothing hard enough to hook.
As the bridge next to our boat landing approaches, I give the spinner another cast and the skirt flies off. I reel it in, prepared to replace the skirt with another when I notice the reason for my fruitless bites. The hook was broken off.... Sure, I could have gotten mad. But it was one hell of a float. Fun, but exhausting. I smiled, put my rod in the rod holder and took a moment to enjoy the setting sun behind me before we arrived at our destination. I was living the dream. This is how I FeelFree.
This is why I have found buying my kayak such a great investment. It's the fishing, sure, but it's everything else that goes with it.
ReplyDeleteMy local lake is Beaver Lake in Waukesha County. Small, carry-in only for the public. Nothing huge but the memories I have from this year...my first walleye to seeing my first bald eagle to having three hot air balloons float over the trees and come down to water level, only to have them float right over me.
Then the Fox River, a river I fished as a kid with my brother and Dad. I paddled upriver from the DNR landing in Racine County all the way up to where we would stop as the furthest point with our small 14 foot Mirrocraft V-hull boat. Seeing things now about 15 years later after moving away to get married (and now back here so you know how that worked out), things changed yet remained the same. I got to see all the parts of the river we had names for; The Stump, Trees-in-the-water, Farm Woman's Point, The Golf Course, High tension wires...they were all there, the same but different. The high tension wires are about as far as we would ever go. I went past that up to the next bend in the surprisingly weedy river. I see a shore with some rocks on the bank and trees overhanging that. Looked perfect but still, weeds had kept me from a bite all the way upriver. Will this be different?
Boy, was it different.
We grew up usually fishing for whatever bit our nightcrawlers, either on the bottom or under a bobber. Today I am using a chartreuse spinnerbait but no luck. I switch to a green/brown chatterbait. I notice a couple of fish surfacing so I try in that somewhat clearer area. about 10 casts in I get a bite, and then the fight starts. He jumped once, then twice, then got tangled into a knot of weeds as I got pulled into shore. I felt nothing but the line tight in the weeds. I thought I lost this monster small mouth and then I see the tail. He's stuck, too. It is close to the kayak so I just scoop everything up with my small net and then I see him, Monster. The first small mouth I've ever caught in that river and by far the biggest in my life. I clear away the weeds, get him unhooked from my destroyed lure, and get my pictures. I kiss it goodbye.
And then I break down and cry.
Going thru the divorce I felt worthless. I felt nothing was ever going to give me that joyous feeling again. Catching that fish showed me that life may get tough but you never know when something special is coming up, or in my case, just one more river bend further to have that special moment.
Thank you for sharing your story Brian. Glad to hear the sport brings joy to your life. There is certainly something about kayak fishing that takes the sport to a different level. I loved fishing before, but this is a whole new addiction. Tight lines brother.
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