Since I've put up much of anything. I thought I would share a few pictures over the last short while. I've been fishing whenever I get the chance. I have caught a couple fish in the last month or so on bait, but mostly on umbrella rigs and most of the time I've been fishing the heavy rig about 110 feet back. Just about all of the fish have been caught on the Capt Mack Farr white bucktails with chartruese trailers, but I have caught a number of fish on Farr shad head jigs with shad bodies.
It wasn't long ago and there were plenty of fish and bait stacked up in various areas of the main channel on the North end, but that is practically over and I've noticed that the fish lately have been more in the mouths of the North end creeks to about half way back.
There's been a couple of days fairly recently that the birds were working the areas I've been and man that has helped a lot. Just like the good ole times of winter time striper fishing....where ever the birds were working, the fish have been there pushing the bait up to them.
To me, if you can get out there and find working birds and fish, it's about as fun as it gets, but on the flip side of the coin, I've been just about as many times and couldn't find a fish. So for my fishing...it's been either feast or famine - either we're catching doubles, or we ain't catching nothing. Some of the schools of stripers we have seen on the graph while fishing have been phenomenal in size. It's a great feeling seeing those and catching them just seconds later...
I am pleased with how mild the temperatures have been so far this year, giving me the opportunity to get out on the water more often. If it keeps raining like this, our home lake will be full before we know it and that would be a blessing coming into Spring this year - it would put water back over all of those flats that we're used to fishing and catching on. That's my hope anyway. Here we go:










Water temps are fluctuating a little, but mostly in the upper 40's where I have been fishing lately. Fish have been from about 20 to 50 or more feet deep. I haven't fished the downrod as much as I should because the umbrella bite has been good, but I do know there's plenty of folks catching them that way. I guess you find a groove and stay with it best you can.
Good luck fishing!