Guided Bass Trips July 18 through 24

Fishing Reports and Lake Conditions Only. Ask your questions and post remarks in the General Forum Please.

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GuidedBassTrips
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Guided Bass Trips July 18 through 24

Post by GuidedBassTrips » Mon Jul 26, 2010 2:23 pm

I just finished up a very busy week of guide trips on Black Lake with 1 day at Chippewa Bay. John Cascia Sr from Easton, PA and his son John from Buffalo had booked me for five days Monday thru Friday. I had Jeff Scott and his son Jeff from PA on Sunday the 18th and finished with 3 boys from Virginia Beach age 12, 14, and 16 on Saturday the 24th. Thanks to Mom Melissa for trusting them with me for a day on Black Lake. I think she wanted to get rid of them for a day!

The six days on Black Lake were very similar. The fishing has definetely tailed off compared to the first weeks after opening day. This is very common the 3rd week of July. The annual algae bloom is in full swing and the post-spawn feeding binge is over. The fishing was still good at times but instead of averaging 20-30 bass a day the average was between 10 and 15. One day only produced 8 bass and there were a couple of days where they did not catch a bass over 3 pounds. The senko was still probably the most consistent when fished on outside weedlines. The topwater worked ok some mornings. The live crayfish worked some but seemed inconsistent. I did not have time to get wild shiners to use.

Instead of 5 days all on Black Lake, I picked a nice day to take John Sr and John Jr to Chippewa Bay for something different. I tend to like the St. Lawrence later in the summer and Black Lake earlier. The smallmouth in the St. Lawrence will continually group up more in key areas on the shipping channel as the season progresses. We actually started the morning catching a few largemouth inside the bay including a nice 4lb largemouth on a senko off one of the islands. Later I took them out to the channel where I showed them how to fish a goby imitation on a drop shot. It is a hard technique to show someone for the first time because of the depth and current. But they managed to still catch several average size smallmouths with one that was 3 pounds. They enjoyed the beauty of Chippewa Bay and learning a new technique.

Overall on Black Lake, the algae bloom should begin to clear and I'm hoping the crayfish bite will pick up for the smallmouth. Right now we are kind of "in-between". The largemouth will continue to be on weedlines but should also begin to progress toward the points and deeper water. Especially if the water drops.

On the St. Lawrence, the smallmouths are definetely ahead of last year with more fish in the 40-70 foot range. The best time to catch these fish will be when they begin to drop the water level in August. The increased current really gets them to feed if you can stay on top of the fish.

Good luck to everyone.

www.guidedbasstrips.com
Give a starving man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach him how to fish and you feed him for a lifetime.

Imbit
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Post by Imbit » Mon Jul 26, 2010 9:38 pm

Thanks for the update - I enjoy reading your reports. I was up last week for the bloom & am returning weds through sunday for another go. Hopefully, it will be better now that things are clearing up. Senko's & crawfish colored crankbaits (Storm Wart & Fat Raps) were top producers and the usual buzzbaits before dark.

I haven't fished BL in probably 15 years ... amazed how many more smallies were caught that I recall in years past (not a bad thing). Report to follow ...

John

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