Monday, March 31, 2014

PS Fishing Carp Net

Last week I decided to upgrade my carp landing net for the upcoming season. After careful consideration, I decided to order the Metallica Net, manufactured by Balzer, from PSFishing.com. I purchased a similar net from Resistance Tackle last year, but I think I need something a little more "heavy duty". I particularly like the folding mechanism. It appears well built for the job.

Here are a couple of pictures:


From order to my door in less than 1 week

110" length, 35" head size and 1/2" rubberized mesh

When I took it out of the box for the first time, my first thoughts were, "I'm going to need to start catching some bigger fish."

I haven't fished with it yet, but I'm looking forward to catching some Michigan common carp that can fill the net properly.

Sunday, March 30, 2014

First Day Carp Fishing in 2014

I headed out about 8 a.m. intending to fish a new spot. Five or six others arrived ahead of me, so shoreline access was too crowded. There were too many ice chunks further away from the ideal spot, with no clear access to water. I punted and headed north in search of another spot.

I stopped by Sterling State Park first. The lagoon I like to fish was iced over.

I ended up trying Erie Metro Park today. The water level was down a lot. It's the first time I fished there so it took a few casts to find water that was deep enough to actually fish in. A few snags later, I settled on a spot.

I fished from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. with no luck. My wife came by later for a while and snapped a picture. She calls it "The Grumpy Fisherman". I'll admit that when I'm not getting bites or catching fish, I probably look like this a lot.


I did make a valuable observation today regarding solar lunar activity. The best time for fishing today was between 11:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. I am not 100% confident that solar lunar theory is accurate, but interestingly the water fowl nearby started becoming very active at 11:45 a.m. and stayed active until shortly after 1:30 p.m. The geese, ducks, and 9 trumpeter swans nearby were very, very active during the solar lunar window. But the water fowl must not have told the fish they were supposed to start biting.

It is warming up though because that chunk of ice in the foreground behind me was almost completely melted when I left for home.

I think I'll try a spot closer to home tomorrow after work. It's on Belleville Lake and very near my house. I hope my luck improves.

The forecast this next week is in the 50's and even a few 60's, so things should be improving soon as spring arrives with a little warmer weather (and water temps).

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Planning for First Day Fishing in 2014

Well it's finally here...the eve of my first day of carp fishing in 2014! The weather this year has played havoc with my fishing plans, but it's starting to break with 40 degree temps last week and forecasts for 50 and 60 degrees this next week. But what we really need for a successful day of fishing is some sunshine!

I've got some new fishing gear and some that's used, but it's new to me. I'm lucky to have friends who have helped me with some hand-me-down equipment. And when the time comes, I will pass it along to someone else who is just starting out with carp fishing.

Today I have been prepping some hair rigs, organizing my tackle boxes, and packing my bait supplies. With the weather still on the cool side, I've also packed a few different jackets and I'll carry my Carhartt overalls along too. With mid-40 degree weather, it doesn't take a lot of wind to get a little chilly.

Last year I used pineapple flavor profiles exclusively, but besides pineapple I plan to experiment with some others as well.

I'll be heading to Lake Erie bright and early in the morning. Wish me luck.

Scout Look forecast for tomorrow:


From ScoutLookWeather.com

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Carp Fishing Landing Net

I have been shopping for carp landing nets today. I have a basic landing net I purchased last year, but hooks snag on it easily, it's fairly small, and kind of "delicate".

I ordered a new one today from www.psfishing.com

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Okuma Trio Baitfeeder

Will this be my new reel at some point? It just might be.

Okuma Trio Baitfeeder Reel

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Detroit River Carp Fishing

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I found this spot last fall. I can't wait for the weather to warm up a little more so I can return for some more carp fishing.

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Saginaw River - 2014 Midwest Regional - May 3 - 4

I made my hotel reservations for the 2014 Midwest Regional at the Saginaw River. This is going to be a big event this year.

I've never fished the Saginaw River before, but I'm looking forward to it in May. Let's hope the spring rains hold off until after the event.

Wooden Shoe Carp Classic - Holland Michigan

I have made my hotel reservation for the carp fishing even in Holland, Michigan for May 17 - 18.

My wife and I visited during the tulip festival a couple of years ago. Holland is a great place to visit. I can get my carp fishing fix and she can get her shopping fix. They have a wonderful venue for carp fishing and the downtown shopping area is fantastic.

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Happy Birthday to Me!

I received my order from BigCarpTackle.com today. Here are a few pictures of the birthday presents I purchased for myself.

Shipping package

Wychwood economy landing mat
 
Compact storage
 
Nice sized area for landing fish
 
Wrapping for NGT alarms I ordered
  
3 NGT alarms, Nash Fang Twisters, Ashima beads and Fox swivels

Korda rig safe box

Interior view


Monday, February 24, 2014

Big Carp Tackle and Carp Bait Order

Yesterday I put together an order of carp fishing supplies from BigCarpTackle.com. Hooks, a landing mat, some new alarms, and a Korda Rig Safe Storage Box are headed my way. Next on my list I need to put together a bait order.

Last year I fished pineapple flavors exclusively. I used pineapple maize, pineapple dip, pineapple in my ground bait, pineapple boilies and pineapple booster. This year I am thinking about changing it up a little bit.

I am thinking about trying to switch up my flavors based on the time of year. For example:

  • Crayfish in spring
  • 4 Season and Scopex in summer
  • Pineapple in fall
I don't know how much flavor really matters, but I know that pineapple works fairly well through out the year. It will always be my fall back plan, because I have a lot of confidence in it. Now I need to gain some confidence in some other flavor strategies.

For my ground bait I am going to switch over to a butternut flavor, which I think will pair fairly well with the Scopex.

I have fished boilies on a limited basis up to now and I don't know if I'll change how often I fish with boilies. It's a confidence thing. I have confidence in flavored maize, but for me the boilies are still a work in progress.

World Classic Baits pineapple flavored maize


Saturday, February 22, 2014

The 10,000 Hour Rule

In Malcom Gladwell's book Outliers, he expounds on an observation that it takes 10,000 hours of performing a specific task to become good at it.

According to the theory, someone wanting to succeed as a college quarterback needs to play football for 10,000 hours to become good enough for a college scholarship. Hours throwing the football in the back yard with dad, brother and neighbor kids. Hours of high school practices, summer camps and informal one-on-one skills training.

A golfer needs to play golf for 10,000  hours to become good enough to start thinking about entering the professional level. Hours playing rounds at the local course. Hours of one-on-one instruction and lessons. Hours of practice at the driving range.

And therefore, to become an expert carp fisherman takes 10,000 hours of dedicated study and practice.

At this point, I'd estimate I fished about 20 times last year for an average of 6 hours each. I haven't even begun to scratch the surface of carp fishing at this point, but I'm going to enjoy the road to 10,000!

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Carp Fishing Beginner


My first carp
When I started fishing exclusively for carp I must have performed 30 or 40 Internet searches for “how to carp fish” and “catching carp”. Many of those searches on Google.com, Yahoo.com and YouTube.com returned very informative videos, blogs, and discussion forums about how to fish for and catch carp. Many of those resources helped me tremendously and shortened my learning curve and helped me catch carp sooner versus later. I skipped over a lot of the trial and error experimentation that would have occurred without those resources.

I caught my first carp July 21, 2013. My wife and I headed out to Ford Lake in Ypsilanti, MI after work for a few hours of fishing. Totaling 975 acres, Ford Lake was created by Ford Motor Company to generate hydroelectric power for their manufacturing plants in the 1930’s. It’s just a few miles from my home in the nearby Belleville/Van Buren Township area, so there will be many, many more trips to the lake which is one of the best known lakes in Michigan for carp sport fishing.

During my second visit to Ford Lake specifically for the purpose of catching carp, I hooked a large carp within 90 seconds or so of the first cast. It was so fast that I hadn’t even set up my fish net yet. As you might imagine there were a few anxious moments trying to reel in the fish and grab the net, which wasn’t even unfolded yet. It was definitely a Bad News Bears fishing moment, but predictable I guess since it was my first time fishing for carp.

Monday, February 17, 2014

Angling for Bass and Bluegill


I started fishing in the family pond in Missouri.

After receiving an honorable discharge from the Air Force as the Vietnam War was winding down, my dad purchased a small farm near Jamestown.  We lived in a 12’ x 60’ single-wide trailer located in the northwest corner of a former cow pasture.

The farm had 1 acre pond that was well stocked with largemouth bass, bluegill, crappie and a few channel catfish. The pond had a large rock on the north bank. During periods of heavy rain the rock was completely submerged, but in drought conditions the rock was completely visible and made a nice place to fish from.  My earliest memory of  fishing is when I was about five years old my dad and I spent Sunday afternoon fishing at the pond for the first time. He sat me on the rock with a Zebco 404 reel mounted on a 6-foot fiberglass rod. The rod was rigged up with a standard fishing line in the neighborhood of 8 lb. test, a single-barb hook with common red wiggler onboard, and a medium-sized plastic bobber.

I don’t recall whether I actually caught any fish that day or not, but I do remember my dad caught several catfish. Seeing the fish and the fun of it all piqued my interest. It was all quite simple. Throw out a hook with a worm. Watch the red and white plastic bobber and when it sinks below the waterline; pull hard and start reeling as fast as you can.

Those were the days before satellite service and cable television. We were lucky to get the three primary over-the-air national networks ABC, CBS, and NBC. The traditional rabbit ear antenna was useless where we lived. There were too many hills, trees, and distance between the transmitters. So my dad mounted a bigger antenna outside next to the house. My mom would stand in the living room with the door propped open while my dad manually rotated the large antenna outside with his hands. Sometimes it worked, but most of the time it did not, so we spent a lot of time outside in the summertime.

Lucky for me those summer evenings included periodic return trips to the pond. Sometimes the entire family would go; mom, dad, brothers and sister. One time, I remember running up to my dad for help tying on a hook with an artificial worm and almost stepping on a water moccasin. Or could it have been a cotton mouth? At any rate it didn’t make any difference to my dad because he immediately loaded us all back in the truck and our night of fishing ended almost as quickly as it started. We returned to the house empty handed many times, but we probably caught at least one fish 2 out of 3 trips to the pond.

Most of the time, we traveled from the house to the pond in the back of my dad’s pick-up truck. My dad and mom sat in the cab and with four kids, poles, and tackle box sitting in the bed of the truck. My dad would back the truck up to within a few feet of the pond’s edge and drop the tailgate. We didn’t always to it, but I can remember fishing at least a few times while actually standing in on the back tailgate.

My mom or dad helped thread a red wiggler on the hook. Sometimes my dad would cast the pole and hand it to me. When I got a little older, I learned to cast it myself. By the time I was seven or eight, I could fish completely by myself.

I continued fishing in that pond for the next several years whenever I could convince my mom or dad to take me there. After I got a little older, I even convinced them to allow me to ride my bicycle back to the pond by myself.

The only thing that would keep me from fishing was periods of dry weather, because we had to dig our own fishing worms for bait. Hard, dry ground made finding fishing worms very difficult. To a fourth, fifth or sixth grader; worms were a valuable commodity. No worms meant not fishing. A ready supply of wigglers offered hours of free entertainment. We didn’t know what a video game was at that point and I think we would have chosen fishing over “Pong” in those years anyway.

One Sunday morning I convinced my grandpa to help us and he suggested we dig behind the chicken house where water ran off the roof and the ground near the building was shaded for a big art of the day. We hit the jackpot and found a lot of worms in that spot. It’s a little unclear to me for sure, but back then we counted everything. I think we dug somewhere north of 60 worms that morning, which provided worms for several trips back to the pond. Thanks to the lesson from grandpa we learned that during the driest months the hog pen and shaded side of the well house would usually produce 15 or 20 worms amounting to a couple of hours’ worth of fishing.

One time in the early 1980’s when I was 12 or 13 my brother and I caught 17 bluegills in less than 2 hours one September afternoon. Another time we actually had the school bus drop us off at the alfalfa field on the way home, so we didn’t have to walk the extra distance to the pond all the way from the house. That day turned out to be one of the best days of fishing I can remember as a kid. We would barely get the worm threaded on the hook and tossed into the middle of the pond before another fish jumped on the line for us to reel in.

A year or two later, we moved away from that farm to a house in the very small town of Lone Dell near St. Louis. I wasn’t crazy about moving there at all. To an eighth grader, moving to a new school is a pretty tough proposition. I left the basketball team, baseball team, and few friends that I had for the unknown.

It was a long drive following behind the moving van, but 3 hours later we arrived at our new home. All was soon well with the world though because our new home had a pond in the front yard! I fished there every chance I got. It was a bigger pond, but as luck would have it this new pond was under-stocked with fish. Catching fish of any size and more than a couple here and there was a tough proposition, but doable with a little patience. Within a couple of years we moved again and access to fishing was extremely limited for while.

In 1990 during my senior year of college at Westminster College in Fulton I rekindled the fishing bug again. It was spring, good weather and the school year was winding down. Looking for some more free entertainment, I headed to Wal-Mart and purchased a Shimano spin caster, some 12 lb. monofilament and a Shakespeare Ugly Stik. I fished at the city park, the county park, the pond behind the grocery store, and anywhere else considered public property that I could walk up to and cast out a line.

Fishing styles had changed since my days sitting on the rock in our farm pond. Single hooks and bobbers yielded way to plastic worms, plastic spinner baits. My favorite lure that year was the dual diamond blade Strike King variety. It made a big commotion in the water and was the perfect lure for anyone with a short attention span. Fishing that lure was pretty simple by casting and retrieving; casting and retrieving all day long. It also happened to be the lure of choice that year for the fishing gurus hosting the Saturday morning and Sunday afternoon fishing shows on TV. There were several of them that I watched religiously. Roland Martin from Florida, Babe Winkleman from Minnesota, and Jimmy Houston from Oklahoma were all very popular, but my favorite at that time was Bill Dance from Tennessee.

I became reacquainted with fishing techniques and theory by watching Bill Dance Outdoors on Saturday and Sunday afternoons on The Nashville Network (TNN). At that time in the early 1990’s the guy wearing the University of Tennessee baseball cap with the friendly southern drawl, was the best known fishing personality on TV, in commercials, and at appearances throughout the country. I listened to every word he said about fishing and must have watched a hundred episodes.

If I’d had more money at the time, I’m sure I would have spent a lot of it on fishing tackle that he recommended on the show. I spent hours and hours flipping through the Bass Pro catalog day dreaming about having enough money someday in the future to buy a fiberglass Ranger bass boat, with a foot operated trolling motor, live well, Hummingbird Fish Finder, and 4 cylinder Mercury outboard. While reading the Bass Pro catalogs page-by-page, I could vividly imagine and almost literally feel the sun’s warmth on my arms, wind whipping through my hair, and water spray hitting my skin as I piloted the boat across the lake on the way to my favorite bass fishing spot. I would have even settled on an inexpensive metal bottomed Bass Tracker or Lowe sans the live well, powered by an inexpensive Johnson outboard. I had the fishing itch – real, real bad. Some called it a bass fishing fever supplemented and spurred on by regular episodes of Bassmasters on TNN highlighting bass fishing professionals like Denny Brauer, Guido Hibdon, Jimmy Houston, Rick Clunn, and Kevin VanDam.

After class and on Saturdays in March and April I made the short drive to the Little Dixie Wildlife Area between Fulton and Columbia. It’s a 205 acre lake that is well-stocked and maintained by the Missouri Department of Conservation. I haven’t been there for many years, but in 1990 there was plenty of shoreline fishing access. I caught many, many bass there using a Strike King spinning bait with the popular yellow and white colored skirt. I must have caught 30 to 40 bass that spring on the same lure. One afternoon I even caught enough bass to bring some back to the fraternity house. I cleaned them and we served them for supper later that evening.

After college graduation, I moved to Kentucky for my first job. Up to that time, I was fishing every day or two in Missouri. But in Kentucky, I had more difficulty finding small lakes and ponds that were accessible for fishing from shore. Kentucky has some fantastic bass fishing lakes, but access is much better with a boat. I later moved to Tennessee and found it to be very similar for someone without access to a private pond.

Not having a boat, and not having friends who did, put an end to my bass fishing adventures.

I didn’t fish again for 24 years.

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Lucky Fishing Shirt

A moderate sized common carp caught in August 2013 during a trip to Bandemer Park
located on the Huron River in Ann Arbor, MI

I started fishing for carp in July 2013. As my friends on Facebook will attest in those first few weeks of fishing, my fishing wardrobe consisted of shorts, a t-shirt and my Australian made Brahma hat. I wore the shorts and t-shirts for comfort and the Brahma hat to protect my bald head from sunburn.

Gaining the knowledge needed to begin catching carp was not an easy process for me. I did a lot of Google searches; and a lot of trial and error experimentation before I hit on a combination that enabled me to start catching carp with some relative consistency. After all, if you're not catching carp at all, how much success do you really need to be considered successful even if only a very, very minor one? In my case...catching one or two fish would do.

Things were so bad at one point that I started believing in various superstitions. Things like, using 3 specific baits in case fishing preferred 1 more than the other 2; casting at various distances from the shoreline to simulate various fishing depths; leaving the lines in the water while packing up the car to allow for a few more minutes to get a bite and hopefully catch carp; and any time I actually did catch a fish or two during a session I tried to emulate all of the details from the prior session to a "T" to hopefully duplicate those minor successes.

And, predictably, my superstitions applied to my clothing as well. For 90% of my first 10 or 12 fishing sessions, I wore the same faded reddish t-shirt purchased during a vacation trip to the Grand Canyon in 2010. Some friends on Facebook pointed out that I needed a new shirt since that Grand Canyon shirt was apparently the only one remaining in my dresser drawer.

Eventually the weather turned cooler and I started catching more and more carp, so the t-shirt had now been relegated to the bottom dresser drawer. But don't think for a second that I won't pull it back out if I ever have a fishing slump again!