Root Admin Phil Lilley Posted May 22, 2018 Root Admin Posted May 22, 2018 Big browns can be caught on just about anything, anywhere, any time of the year on Lake Taneycomo. The current state record caught by Scott Sandusky, weighing 28 pounds 12 ounces, was caught on power bait around Cooper Creek. The previous state record brown of 27 pounds 10 ounces caught by Rick Osborne, was caught on a scud (fly) up by Table Rock dam in the trophy area. Big browns are caught on flies, jigs, night crawlers, power bait, spoons and other lures all year long. Increasing chances at a trophy fish of a lifetime While big browns can be caught on anything, any time, you can increase your odds of catching one. Targeting bigger fish is a key way to make this happen. Browns, like all other fish, will take advantage of an easy meal. The bigger the meal the less energy they have to expend. Start presenting bigger meals. The bigger fish are looking for the most bang for their buck. They expend much less energy eating a good sized shad or rainbow rather than spending all day collecting midges and sow bugs to fill the hole. Start using a bait that represents something that would satisfy a big fish for a good meal. Make it big enough that a big fish would have to eat it, or a very aggressive smaller fish with a huge appetite takes it. Everyone loves the numbers game Catching 100 fish in a day has always made for story telling tails that last for years and make great memories. I still like to play the game of trying to catch 10 fish in 10 casts. Number games are fun! I also like catching trophy browns. When I decide to chase the big boys, it is not a numbers game. I do not catch them every time I target them, but I am catching them on a more consistent basis when targeting them. Committing to catching a big fish The idea seems simple, but it is really hard to commit to catching a big fish. Making the commitment means using lures that do not normally catch big numbers of fish. If they do catch fish, chances are, the fish will be big, or at least, be an aggressive fish with a lot of gumption to hit a lure that big. For me, at first, it was hard to keep throwing a 5 inch jerk bait or deep diving crank with out getting bites on every other cast knowing that if i was throwing a jig, I would be seeing that kind of action. Shad on Lake Taneycomo Bigger fish are keying in on shad. Proof of this is when catching bigger fish, they are spitting up shad. Bigger browns that are being brought in to be weighed are leaving regurgitated shad in the live wells. I have been noticing increased shad busting activity mostly in the early morning hours and later in the afternoon. This is not happening only when the flood gates are open, or in the trophy area. It is happening all up and down the lake. Baits When I am targeting big browns, I will use bigger baits that are normally thought of as being used for bass and walleye. Mega Bass 90’s, 110’s, 110+1’s, Bomber Fat Free Shad in the Fingerling and Fry sizes, and Berkley Flickershad in 7cm and 5cm are the main baits I like to use and each one is for different water conditions, time of year, and flows. I loose a lot of gear! On a four hour trip, I average loosing 4-5 lures, but I am catching a lot of big browns. I guess I have to look at it as, “What is a trophy class brown worth?” Five baits at about $7 each equals $35. Is that worth it to me? The answer is yes! Flickershad are relatively cheap and catch big fish. Do you have to throw $25 Mega Bass? No. I just like throwing them under certain conditions. Bomber Fat Free Shad are about middle of the range and probably my favorite. I started to make the change to targeting pigs two years ago during a high water event. The flood gates of Table Rock dam were open along with 4 units of generation with about 24,000 cubic feet per second of water flowing. Tons of shad were coming over the dam and jig fishing was incredible catching good sized rainbows and some browns. The problem was, the only way to get to the bottom was to be using two 1/8 ounce jigs. I decided one day to throw a Mega Bass that I normally used for walleye on Upper Bull Shoals in the winter. First cast I caught a 20 inch brown. I lost the lure on the second cast, so I knew it was getting to the bottom, but loosing $25 hurt. I had a Bomber Fat Free Fingerling in Bill Dance pearl white that I decided to try. While drifting in 24,000 c.f.s., I cast the lure back up towards the dam. I started reeling it down, and to my surprise, after about 8 cranks on the reel, it hit bottom. I stopped reeling to let it get off the bottom, and again, to my surprise, it just kept digging the bottom. Twenty seconds later, the rod was almost jerked out of my hands. After a good fight, I landed a 22 inch brown. I continued fishing that way and after 4 hours, I had landed 6 fish over 20 inches. I found after time that I could keep the Fat Free Fingerling down from the dam to Short Creek with 3 or more units of water flowing. That's almost 5 miles of water under the right conditions you can just drag a potentially big fish catching crank bait. During the summer months of July and August, the Corp began a pattern of running 4 units of water in the late afternoon. I took the Mega Bass 110+1 up to the trophy area and gave it a try. First time beating the banks in high generation produced 4 fish over 20 inches in two hours of fishing. That became a habit every afternoon. I think I had one or two trips that summer during flows like that where I did not boat one over 20 inches. I did loose 10 of those Mega Bass lures in those two months. That method of jerk bait fishing for big browns was productive from the dam down to Fall Creek. During lower water conditions, I still had been noticing big browns being brought in from all over the lake spitting up shad. Another phenomena that was happening was seeing big browns all up and down the lake busting shad on the surface. This is not just happening in the trophy area but I have seen it as far down as the Branson Landing area. Throwing the Mega Bass 90 has been a good way to target the shad busting browns during the heat of the moment. I have also started playing with the Bomber Fat Free Shad in the Fry size with lower water flows. I can get that bait on the bottom with 2-3 units of water flowing and keep it down by just dragging, from the cable to Fall creek. I have also begun trolling that bait along with the Flickershad from Fall Creek to Branson Landing and catching trophy class browns. In one 4 hour period, that method has produced 3 big browns to the boat. The results are in! Since making the decision to make a commitment to fish for big browns, I have increased my catch rate on the trophy class fish. I no longer go out fishing with hopes of catching a big brown every now and then. I now know its just a matter of time before I catch another. The change in technique, lures used, and the commitment to sticking with it has put several trophy class browns to hand and seems to only be getting better. Give it a try. on your next trip down to Lake Taneycomo, commit 2-4 hours hunting for that trophy class fish. You might be pleasantly surprised! View full article Seth, BilletHead, Ham and 14 others 17
JestersHK Posted May 22, 2018 Posted May 22, 2018 Great write up Phil. Quality over quantity, and some days if you're Duane you get both LOL! I'll tell ya one thing, this time of year I am used to getting a random text from my buddies or my wife about a big Brownie posted on your FB or social media every once in a while, but man its like every other day someone is catching a big one! I guess the food buffet is still going strong from having the gates open for so long? You'll have a heck of a photo montage for May 2018 thats for sure. Def makes it hard to go to work, and not be down there monster hunting with you guys. Johnsfolly 1
Seth Posted May 22, 2018 Posted May 22, 2018 This brown frenzy just needs to hold out for two more weeks. I'll be down May 31-Jun 3 with nothing but fishing on the agenda! I need to break my curse for catching a legal brown.
Root Admin Phil Lilley Posted May 22, 2018 Author Root Admin Posted May 22, 2018 Edited... I left out the last paragraph.
Travis Swift Posted May 22, 2018 Posted May 22, 2018 16 minutes ago, Seth said: This brown frenzy just needs to hold out for two more weeks. I'll be down May 31-Jun 3 with nothing but fishing on the agenda! I need to break my curse for catching a legal brown. I will be down for 8 days starting June 9th. I plan to explore the bass fishing down stream more but I'm also going to commit some time to throw big swimbaits 6 inches or bigger and some glide baits to try and catch one of these big browns as well. What is Duane doing with that Mega Bass, jerk jerk pause like bass fishing, drifting with it etc?
JestersHK Posted May 22, 2018 Posted May 22, 2018 Don't forget the night bite fellas. Although I have yet to land a monster at night, I've seen them cruising. Like Phil said just play the odds and eventually the work pays off. My payoff has been big Walters, and Big rainbows at night, but throw those big sticks at night and its bound to find one eventually. Daryk Campbell Sr and Johnsfolly 2
snagged in outlet 3 Posted May 22, 2018 Posted May 22, 2018 I'll be down June 13-17!! JestersHK and patfish 2
Seth Posted May 22, 2018 Posted May 22, 2018 53 minutes ago, Travis Swift said: What is Duane doing with that Mega Bass, jerk jerk pause like bass fishing, drifting with it etc? I've always just fished them like a traditional jerkbait.
Travis Swift Posted May 22, 2018 Posted May 22, 2018 13 minutes ago, Seth said: I've always just fished them like a traditional jerkbait. that's how I have always fished them as well. only busted 20 inches once though. we always threw them on the bluff across from lilleys back 15 or 20 years ago. got a ton of follows and would always catch a few as well. I still do it but seems like I have gotten away from it for a few years and not do it as much as I used to. Kinda fell in love with jig fishing at the cable and have forgotten that stretch some and not used jerkbaits as much for some reason. Maybe time to get back to old school ways again. Johnsfolly, JestersHK and Seth 3
Gavin Posted May 22, 2018 Posted May 22, 2018 You usually want to fish a jerk bait aggressively for brown trout. No long pauses like you use for cold water bass fishing. Keep it moving at a good erratic pace and speed up when you see one coming. The high dollar suspending baits really changed the game 10-12 yrs ago, but there are days when a $7 Rogue or old school floating Rapala J-9 or J-11 does the trick. Usually start with a 4.5" (110-112 mm) model even in gin clear water.. You will want several...Floaters, some that run 1-3', some that run 3-5', and some that run deeper. If a brown does not eat the front hook something is wrong with your presentation (pace, size of the bait, attitude of the bait on the pause (flat or nose down on the pause). Rainbows will usually eat the back hook regardless of your presentation. Think that rainbows are just dumb & curious, they are not ambush predators like brown trout. Daryk Campbell Sr, JestersHK, Johnsfolly and 1 other 4
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