Okeechobee Wrap Up
Brent Ehrler Blog
Date: 2-7-2011
Okeechobee was a tough one for me, I caught a lot of fish, but just didn’t get any size. I guess 3no size2 is a relative statement.
On day one I was able to put an over 20 pound limit in the boat which I actually thought would be pretty good. I weighed in early in the first flight and there were already a handful of bags in the mid 201s before I even got to the scales, so I knew it wasn’t going to be pretty. By the time the day shook out I sat in the high 401s on the leaderboard and knew I1d need to get bigger fish if I was going to move up the leaderboard. On day 1 we had an hour delay before blast off due to fog and with my early flight it was a short day. Since I was still able to get a decent 20 pound bag, I had some positive thoughts going into day 2 because it was going to be a longer day on the water for me.
On day 2 I ran to a new area that I though I could get a solid limit from. I seriously thought I could catch them there, but it never panned out. Overall, on day two I don1t think I fished very smart. I spent a few hours too many at my first spot before I moved on. I actually had three spots I wanted to fish and after I left the first spot I ran to the second and found a 6 pounder on a bed. She rushed my bait once, but didn1t take it. Then she left the bed and hid a few yards away, so I stuck around the area fishing hoping I could go back and get that fish to go and it never panned out.
I started to feel the pressure and I know a big mistake a lot of us make in times like this is to pull the trolling motor and run around. So I forced myself to leave the trolling motor in the water, turned up high and I instead ran around the same area. In hindsight, it probably wasn1t my best decision. My day 2 co-angler caught a 5 and lost a 5 and I never caught one much over three pounds.
The baits I used this week were the Yamamoto Swim Senko, which I swam pretty fast around the cover, a Trixie Shark from Reaction Innovations, which I fished like a buzzbait, a regular Yamamoto Senko and awhole host of other baits. One thing I reinforced to myself was how great the Lucky Craft MH Pitchin1 rod is. It’s the most versatile rod I have ever owned, I fished about 8 different baits on it and its just a solid stick. The soft tip and good backbone make it the perfect combination for precision casts and good hooksets, I1ve used a lot of high end rods over the years and this rod is by far my favorite.
I am on the road right now to Arkansas where I hope to spend a couple days on Beaver to get some pre-practice in. Only problem is its going to snow and rumor has it that some of Beaver is actually frozen over. That’ll make practicing pretty tough and probably wouldn1t help a lot even if I do get out on the water. Ice? Really? I’ve seen the movie titanic and running across a potentially ice laden pond doesn’t sound to inviting.
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