Old plug Posted March 4, 2015 Posted March 4, 2015 hopefully your below Fall Creek or you will be showing your grand kids how to fish illegally at Taney. No I will not be below fall creek as I understand it the house is right across the lake from fall creek. My grandkids are 4 and 5 years old. What do you mean by legally???? I never fish illegally. And I have only been to Taneycomo. Is there some restriction above Falls Creek. I have never heard that there was some kind of restrictions above falls creek. Somebody tell you Illigal fish or is that your own assumption.
Terrierman Posted March 4, 2015 Posted March 4, 2015 No I will not be below fall creek as I understand it the house is right across the lake from fall creek. My grandkids are 4 and 5 years old. What do you mean by legally???? I never fish illegally. And I have only been to Taneycomo. Is there some restriction above Falls Creek. I have never heard that there was some kind of restrictions above falls creek. Somebody tell you Illigal fish or is that your own assumption. Above the mouth of Fall Creek there are special regulations for methods and possession. It's the trophy area now. Get on the MDC site for specifics. I know that area very well and there aren't any houses directly across the river from Fall Creek that are above the mouth.
Deadstream Posted March 4, 2015 Posted March 4, 2015 I'm getting old. The Great Lakes brown I was referring to was caught in the early 80's, was a WR at the time. I have the newspaper clipping somewhere. Only reason I remember it is because I was sitting on top of a gravel plant within site of the lake and we worked before sunup till after sundown. I hated that job.
Old plug Posted March 4, 2015 Posted March 4, 2015 Terrierman --- I spent a weekend at some resort down there several years ago for my sons bachelor party. I do not even remember the name. My sons future brother in law rented several cabins for the party for the weekend. I did not fish that time. I did go down on the dock at night and watched several people pulling trout out left and right under lights. I think they were using something like crappie nibbles. If there is no houses across from falls creek I have no idea where it is. I seen pictures of the house were going to rent and I do hope it was worth the $750 I paid for the place for the couple days were going to be there. If I do fish it will be by rolling small plastics over the bottom. I will check on that. But after a day keeping up with those grandkids I think I will be more than happy to sit on the deck and drink coffee.
Terrierman Posted March 4, 2015 Posted March 4, 2015 There are houses across from the Fall Creek Resort and dock but they are all below the mouth of Fall Creek. You and the grandkids will be fine. The area you are talking about is very nice.
Members Muddler4 Posted March 4, 2015 Members Posted March 4, 2015 No I will not be below fall creek as I understand it the house is right across the lake from fall creek. My grandkids are 4 and 5 years old. What do you mean by legally???? I never fish illegally. And I have only been to Taneycomo. Is there some restriction above Falls Creek. I have never heard that there was some kind of restrictions above falls creek. Somebody tell you Illigal fish or is that your own assumption. I think he was referring to this if above, in the Blue Ribbon water. Only artificial lures and flies may be used. Natural, soft plastic and scented baits are prohibited.
joeD Posted March 4, 2015 Posted March 4, 2015 This girl lived. Will be bigger next year and years after hopefully. She might be a state record in a few years. Who knows. Her gene pool is all over the White. That's because I put her back in the water. Daryk Campbell Sr 1
Smallieguy87 Posted March 5, 2015 Posted March 5, 2015 This girl lived. Will be bigger next year and years after hopefully. She might be a state record in a few years. Who knows. Her gene pool is all over the White. That's because I put her back in the water. That's an awesome picture Joe!
Deadstream Posted March 5, 2015 Posted March 5, 2015 Nice fish Joe. But whats your point? Maybe the fish caught last week was the reason why you caught that one.
Quillback Posted March 5, 2015 Posted March 5, 2015 Story from the AGFC website: COTTER – Arkansas’s trout tailwaters are famous for incredible scenery, fast action and some of the biggest brown trout in the world – just ask Kansas angler Calvin Johnston. Johnston, a resident of Olathe, Kansas, was enjoying his first trout-fishing trip to The Natural State Friday, February 27, when he hooked into a fish that will have people up and down the White River talking for years. “I’m a bass angler,” Johnston said. “But we have a few ponds in Kansas that are stocked with some small rainbow trout. I’ve gone to one of them a couple of times and maybe caught five or six rainbows, but this was my first real trout fishing trip and my first brown trout ever.” Johnston grew up in Little Rock and graduated J.A. Fair High School before moving to Kansas. He says his brother and brother’s friends from the Bryant Police Department always go to Rainbow Drive Resort on the White River for a trout trip during this time of year. This year he decided to join them to see what the trout fishing was like. “I used the same rod and setup that I use to drop-shot fish for bass,” Johnston said. “A medium-light six-foot, nine-inch spinning rod with 15-pound-test braid tied to a 10-pound-test fluorocarbon leader.” When the group arrived, the current was flowing too heavily to wade more than a few feet from shore, and the cold weather had most of the party taking a break to warm up Friday afternoon. “It was getting to be sundown, and I know that’s always a great time to fish for bass,” Johnston said. “So I headed down to the bank to cast a little. I didn’t even have any waders or a net and just cast from the bank. That’s when she hit.” Johnston says nearly all the line peeled off the reel on the fish’s first run. “I’ve never fought a fish like that before,” Johnston said. “She was running around rocks and grass and there were several times I thought I’d lose her. It felt like I fought this fish for 20 minutes.” Without a net to land the fish or even waders to go in after it, Johnston was stuck. “I started to yell for anyone to help,” he said. “One man finally asked what was going on. When he saw the fish roll at the surface, he ran to get a net. He said he’s been fishing there since he was seven years old and had never seen a fish like that in his life.” After a few tries, the pair finally managed to get the trout’s head in the net and pull her to shore. “Everyone started to come out of their cabins to see the fish,” Johnston said. “One man brought out a handheld Rapala scale, and the fish measured 40 pounds on it. That’s when I knew I needed to call the Game and Fish and get this thing weighed officially.” AGFC Trout Management Program Coordinator Christy Graham and District Fisheries Biologist Jeremy Risley met Johnston to weigh the fish on certified scales at the Mountain Home Field Office. “It’s official weight and length was 38 lbs, 7 oz., and it was 36.6 inches long,” Graham said. “I’ve looked into former records for brown trout in Arkansas, and can only find official records of two brown trout being larger –Rip Collins’ former world-record from the Little Red River that weighed 40 lbs. 4 oz. and the previous world-record fish from the Norfork Tailwater that weighed 38 lbs. 9 oz. “This is the biggest brown ever recorded for the White River,” Graham said. “We are extremely pleased by Mr. Johnston’s catch. The White and North Fork Rivers have always been known as world-class trout fisheries and this is just further evidence that anglers still have the opportunity to catch trophy fish.” laker67 1
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