John Berry Posted April 19, 2008 Posted April 19, 2008 I took a client from Michigan to the Norfork. As they did yesterday, they turned the water off mid morning. We drifted down to McClellan's and fished there. It was greatly changed from the flood. The main channel has moved from the right side of the lower island to the left, the tree hole is graveled in and I saw a three foot gar in the Ace in the Hole Water. I must say that was a bit unnerving. The fishing was good. The hot fly was an olive scud. John Berry OAF CONTRIBUTOR Fly Fishing For Trout (870)435-2169 http://www.berrybrothersguides.com berrybrothers@infodash.com
jdmidwest Posted April 19, 2008 Posted April 19, 2008 Gars have been invading my smallmouth streams over the last 10-15 years. All have been connected to the Mississippi River. The Castor, Whitewater, Little Whitewater, and the Saline all have gar in them now in the upper reaches. I used to consider them a nuisance, now I have learned how to catch them on the flyrod. I have a ball catching them now and have not noticed a change in the native fish except a few less sunfish. I tend to target them on hot summer days when the bass are shut down. "Life has become immeasurably better since I have been forced to stop taking it seriously." — Hunter S. Thompson
Thom Posted April 19, 2008 Posted April 19, 2008 When I lived in Illinois we fished below the dam at caryle (Kaskaskia river) for crappie, white bass etc. On slow days in the hot summer you could put a piece of nylon rope on the end of a crappie hook and shag it out. The gar would hit it and snag their teeth on it. As you said a ball to land them and they get big. No problem to get someone to take them there for eating. Thom Harvengt
Don Posted April 20, 2008 Posted April 20, 2008 I never caught a gar on a fly rod. I talked to a few others who have. They say that the fight is not as tough as one would expect based on the length of the fish because they are not very flexible. Regardless, I thnk I would like to bring some nylon rope minnow flies with me when I float the James this summer. Don May Don May I caught you a delicious bass.
DoveTail Posted April 20, 2008 Posted April 20, 2008 I have fished some streams that were infested with gars. About 25% of the white bass and crappie I would catch had bloody scars on their backs. I am sure those big gars eat a ton of fish. So how do you hook / snag or keep a gar on with a ball? What kind? I have heard of the nylon before but not balls.
Thom Posted April 20, 2008 Posted April 20, 2008 I think the politically correct name for that bait is Rocky Mountian Oysters. Check with your local butcher. I have never heard of catching gar with them though. Thom Harvengt
fly2fish Posted April 21, 2008 Posted April 21, 2008 I think the politically correct name for that bait is Rocky Mountian Oysters. Check with your local butcher. I have never heard of catching gar with them though. Didn't it say they had a ball catching them, and not catching them on balls? I don't think anyone would waste a good meal of deep fried RMO's to catch something of a lesser delicacy. HC
jdmidwest Posted April 22, 2008 Posted April 22, 2008 You all are nuts, I rather eat a gar then nuts.... I am from Cape Girardeau for now. "Life has become immeasurably better since I have been forced to stop taking it seriously." — Hunter S. Thompson
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now