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Everything posted by Phil Lilley
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3 units are running. TR 916.4 feet Taney 710.7 feet 15,017 cfs
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Tony Wedele just called me and said there's 5 flood gates open at Table Rock Dam. TR's lake level is at 916.31 feet and rising about a tenth every hour. Beaver is rising about the same, may be a little faster. This is the first time I've ever seen the Corps open gates AHEAD of rising water. I don't want to say unprecedented but it may be the cast, and a change in operating procedure. They don't usually open the gates unless TR hits 920 feet. I've asked Tony to get a water temp and to look for any shad that should be coming over the top.
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Looks like the Beaver area got the brunt of the rain. I see 5 inches in some places down there. 3.5 to 4 inches up here.
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Does anyone have any pictures of the river I can use for OAF and the St. Francis River section? Thanks
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No boat.
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Paul said the whites were above 10c bridge, in and above the first shoal. I guess it's tough getting past that shoal right now.
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Someone at the Corp must have gotten the valve at the dam jambed because the flow hasn't varied much in a while. That's not a bad thing though. Most of us like this slow flow - anywhere from 1,200 to 2,500 c.f.s.. Water temp remains about 44 degrees. There's been several things working here for trout. The Berkley pink Powerworm has been the hottest bait for most anglers, drifting and fishing it under a float 5-6 feet deep from Short Creek down past our dock. Minnows are selling like crazy and they're not using them to fish for crappie! Babler said he drifted them from Fall to Short Creek and caught some nice rainbows. They're using them down around Monkey Island too and doing well. Night crawlers too, in the same streches. They're still hitting spoons - Cleos and Kastmasters. If you've been on social media today you would have seen this picture of Jack Harris and his trophy 25-inch brown caught today on a blue and silver Cleo near the mouth of Cooper Creek. Duane has had some guide trips as well as taking some friends fishing this past week. He's done well throwing jigs in the trophy area - white and white/gray 1/16th ounce up closer to the dam and sculpin/ginger from Lookout to Fall Creek with the Narrows being the hottest area by far. He's using 2-pound line to throw the small jigs. He also had a fly fishing tour this morning in which his clients caught decent numbers on gray scuds under a float. But did the best stripping a sculpin pine squirrel in the Narrows area. It doesn't look like we're going to get the big rain they'd forecasted ealier in the week. Most of the rain will soak in seeing our ground is now pretty dry. We could see a bump in lake levels in which the dam operators may turn up the flow a bit but nothing major... unless they miss their estimates. We'll see.
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Lemon Law? Find a good lawyer/angler and have them send Mercury a letter...
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Harris lands a nice brown this morning
Phil Lilley replied to Phil Lilley's topic in Upper Lake Taneycomo
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Jack Harris caught this 7.6 pound, 25.25-inch brown this morning trolling a blue and silver Cleo. Released at the dock.
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Welcome to the most active and informative fishing site on the internet for Lake Taneycomo. Please take advantage of this wealth of information on our fishery, join in on the conversation and ask questions. Our rules are simple: Be nice, read before you post questions, share fishing reports if you'd like and enjoy our beautiful lake! And oh yes, be safe on the water.
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- trout fishing
- lake taneycomo
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My friend who fishes the Spring River just emailed and told me OK has lifted the limit on white bass, at least on Spring River. I have not confirmed it... but he said people are catching hoards of them and cleaning hundreds at a time at the ramp.
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Our cleaning staff check a bed as soon as they walk into a room to clean. You'll find bed bugs in fine establishments more often than dives... business people who travel all the time are the ones who most times spread them and they tend to stay in nice lodges. Our pest control people told us not to apologize for bed bugs... because it's not our fault that we get them. It would be neglectful if we had them, never checked and let them spread, infecting many people. That's when you find "dives" that have them and don't go to the expense to exterminate them.
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Did you know they can be in movie theaters... old cloth seats.
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2016. We bought the covers after we got rid of them. They're white - easy to spot the bugs/inspect beds and enclose the mattress so that if we get them again we don't have to throw away a good mattress. They're pricey!
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Sounds good. You said it... devils!! We spent $15,000 on mattress protectors that summer. Most people don't know what the lodging industry has to put up with.
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Darn... I didn't check them!!
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When we'd go in the heated room, me, Duane and Ryan would take turns. 2 of us would stand at the door with a timer and watch the guy who would go in and make sure they didn't have issues with the heat. He'd only stay in for 30 seconds... we timed it. It was hot!
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OK... gotta tell it now. It was May/June, our busy season. After 33 years in the biz, we got our first taste of bed bugs. The people who reported them said they had experienced them before and took it all well. Of course they had to go to the extreme to keep from taking them home... take off clothes, put them in a plastic bag with all other belongings to be washed and dried, heat treated. The local company came in and did a chemical treatment first. Supposed to come back and treat again after 10 days to kill one that would hatch. But we had live adults a couple of days later. So they heat treated. Still had bugs. They heat treated again. Still bugs.... all this within a week or more. We're still down... losing business. That's when we found our problem. They were in and behind the wood panel walls! So we tore out all the paneling, ready for more heat. but the company we were dealing with were booked up... bed bug business was booming! So we went out and bought our own heat source... a couple of butane blowers. We heated the room up to 150 and put fans all around to distribute the hot air. For 2 hours we kept it hot, going in every 10 minutes to check everything. Our fans started to fail... and melt. We wanted to make sure no bed bug or bed bug egg would survive. And they didn't. We've had 2 other incidents of bugs but they were minor compared to this. Fun times in the lodging business...
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I got a good bed bug story... when I get time I'll share it. The short of it... we took matters in our own hands after our bug company couldn't do the job! And no we didn't burn the build down!
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I looked and this is a setting I cannot change. .1 mb or 100 kb is the biggest image size.
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The maximum size for a profile pic is 100 kb... you're just over that. Sorry I didn't see this post till now.
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DIXON, Mo. – The Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) reports that 11-year old Maverick Yoakum of Dixon became the most recent record-breaking angler in Missouri when he hooked a river redhorse on Tavern Creek using a rod and reel. The new “pole and line” record river redhorse caught by Yoakum on March 4 weighed 10-pounds, 3-ounces. The new record breaks the previous state-record and world record pole-and-line river redhorse of 9-pound, 13-ounces caught at Tavern Creek in 2016. Yoakum was using worms when he caught the fish. MDC staff verified the record-weight fish using a certified scale in Brinktown. <Read More>
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Moderate generation continues at Table Rock Dam despite the fact the lakes above Lake Taneycomo are close to or just below their seasonal power pool levels. Beaver Lake continues to release water and is at 1120.94, a little less than a foot over pool level. Table Rock's lake level dropped below 915 feet yesterday, which is its seasonal power pool level. Table Rock Dam has been releasing between 3,000 and 11,500 cubic feet per second of water -- yes it's been all over the place. The pattern has been heavy flow for an hour or two after dark and then again about dawn for another hour or two. Then it varies from one to two units, 3,000 to 7,000 c.f.s. of water. How long will this continue? It's so hard to say. I would think with the lakes dropping to "normal" that operators will back off and not run as much. Selfishly, we like it running for no other reason than to drop the lakes further to make room for any spring rains possibly heading our way. Our water temperature remains about 44 degrees and clear. Starting at the dam, the trophy area, Chuck Gries and Bill Babler (fishing guides) report drifting brown or gray #14 or #16 scuds on the bottom, either using a drift rig or suspended under a float, has been catching good numbers of rainbows but very few browns. There's a good layer of green algae on the bottom, so you need to check your flies quite often and clean the green slim off of them. They are also doing fair using a red San Juan Worm and an egg fly. Babler is using a Y2K. White jigs are still catching trout, too. We're using any where from a 1/16th-ounce to an 1/8th- ounce depending on generation, with the heavier the flow, the heavier the jig. The fish seem to like the jig moving quicker, too. I've been shaking the jig and then letting it fall, an action similar to a jerk bait. Other colors have been working, too. Sculpin/ginger, brown/orange, ginger and black/olive have been good colors. But white is still the best overall. There's been some anglers fishing a 1/16th-ounce jig under a float and catching well. All the colors I've mentioned plus pink. They're fishing it anywhere from five- to eight-feet deep, using four-pound line. This technique has been good in the trophy area as well as below the area. Chad Knight caught this 18-inch smallmouth bass last week drifting a sculpin jig under a float, fishing along the bluff bank across from the resort. Steve Dickey, another one of fishing guides, has been keeping his clients in trout, fishing a Berkley's Pink PowerWorm under a float eight-feet deep from Monkey Island down through the bridges. Guide Buster Loving's clients came in yesterday with a heavy stringer of two limits of rainbows weighing more than eight pounds total. They caught them on spoons down below the Fish House at the Branson Landing. Buster said it took him a while to find the school of rainbows but when they did it was "lights out!" White Berkley's Power eggs and white or yellow Power nuggets have been catching rainbows drifting them on the bottom from just above Lilleys' Landing down through Cooper Creek, then from Monkey Island through the bridges. Anglers are still hooking trout (and other warm water species of fish) in Roark Creek, but catching has slowed down a bit. This is an army buddy of Duane Doty's, Billie Welker. And this is the first trout he's ever caught . . . and it wasn't his last.
