Cody Weir Largemouth Bass

 Cody caught this in a neighborhood pond.

Nice!

Mike Cracraft Smallmouth Trophy

 

Mike Cracraft submitted this fall smallie pick caught at a private pond in Southern Indiana.

Beautiful!!!

 

World Record Largemouth Bass

 

 

I saw this on Yahoo as one of the most emailed photos.

Good thing the fisherman didn't fall in the water or that bass's belly would be a little bigger!

In this undated photo provided by the International Game Fish Association shows Manabu Kurita of Aichi, Japan holding his July 2, 2009 record catch, a largemouth bass caught on Lake Biwa,Japan's largest lake. After nearly six months of waiting, he taking his place along side another angler, as dual holders of the All-Tackle record for largemouth bass each weighing 22 lb 4 oz and caught 77 years apart.(AP Photo/International Game Fish Association)

Indiana Smallmouth Bass White River

 

You never know when today is the day you catch a 21 inch Indiana Smallmouth Bass. I had fished for two days (Friday and Saturday) in Southern Indiana on a private lake and did not catch anything. When Sunday rolled around I was thinking maybe I ought to just sleep in today. Unfortunately, Captain Bradford McClatchie called a bit before sun up and said he had a good feeling about today.

We hammered smallmouth bass after smallmouth bass North of Noblesville on the White river.  This bruiser was 21" inches long and caught on a big white spinner bait slow rolling on top. It swirled the bait on top then dove down then came back up and jumped 5 feet out of the water. I nearly soiled myself.

We released about 20 or so smallmouth bass between the two of us.

Moral of the story: Get up and go fishing!

 

 

Tippecanoe River Trip Really Produces

On October 1, 2009, my friend Gerry McVeigh, of Fortville, and I took a guided trip down the Tippecanoe River. Our guide,  Chad Miller, is owner of Wildcat Creek Outfitters in Zionsville, and offers primarily guided fly fishing trips. Luckliy, about five per-cent of his business is old school spin casters like Gerry and me. 
 We entered the chilly river at 8a.m. just below the Oakdale Dam, and traveled the 9 miles to Springboro in an Oregon-style drift boat powered by Chad himself. We used a small variety of lures, alternating between 5" Yamasenkos, Rebel Crawdads and Buzz baits. This combination allowed us to cover the large area of water we were to travel that day, and adjust for the flats, ripples and eddies. Needless to say, we each had 2 poles rigged so we could quickly adjust to the conditions. 
Gerry drew blood first and often, landing two four-pound freshwater Drums on the Rebel Craw, as well as several 12" Smallies. I finally got my mojo working and at days end we had hooked or boated nearly 60 smallies, most in the 10-16" range, with three over three pounds getting away. Honest.  More than 90% of these fish were fat, and all were brilliant in color. 
The Tippe is the sixth-most biodiverse river system in the United States, supporting many species of fish, mussels, songbirds, birds of prey. The forest lining the banks is home to many species of animals and trees. 
A bonus we had was the number of birds of prey we saw; a Coopers Hawk, Red-tailed Hawk, two Osprey, two immature Bald Eagles, and five mature Bald Eagles.
Locally Chad offers guided trips  on the Tippe and Sugar Creek near Crawfordsville,  but offers trips to Ohio for Steelhead, Montana for trout, and even such far away exotic places as South Africa and Chile.