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Phil Lilley
Phil Lilley

Lilley's Lake Taneycomo Fishing Report, August 31

Trout fishing on Lake Taneycomo has been pretty good lately.  One of our guides, Bill Babler, said his clients caught 77 trout in a 4-hour trip yesterday, both on the Berkley's Pink Power Worm and night crawlers.  I'd say that's pretty good "catching".

Our generation schedule has been consistent too, with no generation at night through the morning, then moderate flow in the afternoons ending about sundown.  But that changed today when problems at Bull Shoals Dam caused a shift in providing power from the group of hydro dams in our grid. 

Here's the jest of what happened, from an email forwarded to me this Friday morning from Southwest Power Administration via Missouri Department of Conservation, Fisheries Division.  "Bull Shoals regulation stopped working yesterday, and the plant was placed in manual mode."  Regulation means, "running water round the clock to adjust for the small fluctuations in power demand".  One dam in the system must be running water, generating power, all the time so there's no interruption of power when there's fluctuations in the grid.  Regulating shifted to Table Rock Dam so now Table Rock has to keep running at least 35  megawatts (may be less, I don't know for sure) of power 24 hours a day till something changes. 

This minimum flow isn't much water.  It's less than one full unit. The current at our dock is barely noticeable and it doesn't affect dock fishing at all.  I does, though, affect wading below the dam and there is pretty good current down through Short Creek to Trout Hollow.  Bottom line, we like this minimum flow because it helps trout eat more, and more often.  When food is moving down with the current, fish can't help themselves - they eat.

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We're still on 2-pound line watch!  We're telling as many people as we can - it makes a big difference!

Blake, who is one of our dock hands, told me yesterday that he's converted many guests fishing off the dock to 2-pound line.  After not getting a bite, he will offer to tie a short piece of light line on to their line, retie the hook and let them try again with 2-pound tippet.  Wallah!  They start catching trout.  All it takes is about 24 inches.

Why 2-pound line?  Our lake water is very clear and trout see the line.

I know I sound like a broken record, reading my fishing reports but I'm not going to lie, or try to sell you a different lure or bait just to sound different.  The Berkley Pink Worm is still catching most of the fish for guides and second best thing is night crawlers.

The go-to jig color last weekend at the Branson Firemen's Benefit was black and brown.  Just ask Gerry Dwiggins, long time trout tournament fisherman, who landed and winning trout - a 23.65 pound brown trout.  He hooked it below the Branson Landing and took 45 minutes to land.  He was using a 3/32nd ounce jig and 2-pound line.

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Our brown trout do make a run to the dam area in the fall to spawn, although they are not actually successful creating any young trout.  They go through the actions and lay eggs but because of water flow and temperature, none hatch.  Some browns are showing up early and are being caught on small scud and midge patterns.

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They are seeing some nice rainbows up there too but wade fishing will be limited to close to the shore because of the minimum flows for now.

Boating to the dam, though, should be easy.  There's plenty of water to get to at least the Big Hole and fish the area from a boat.  I'd throw a variety of jigs colors starting with black/brown, sculpin and even white.  Again I'd use 2-pound line and either 1/32nd or 1/16th ounce jigs.

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Me and a buddy fished Saturday when they kicked up generation. Stayed between Fall creek and Cooper creek. 

Threw jerkbaits the whole time and caught nothing. We knew going over the chances were slim but we were only after one bite. 

For as busy as it was with pontoons, kayaks, and fishing boats, everyone seemed to be very cautious and courteous. 

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What size jerkbaits were you guys throwing? We couldn't get any action going on the jerkbait during the weekend of the Firemens tournament, but we were throwing 3" and bigger jerkbaits. Other people were throwing smaller versions and having some success though. It seemed like perfect jerkbait conditions too.

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I have noticed the jerkbait bite this year is very hit or miss. Wonder if they're getting used to the constant barrage? I noticed I got a lot more bites just letting the lure float with the current. Make two or three jerks and just let it ride (instead of the ferocious jerking usually done). 

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The best jerkbait bite I've experienced in a while was the evening after the CAM tourney in April. @JestersHK and I went back out after the tourney when a storm was blowing in and the fish were all fired up. We never boated anything huge, but caught several up to 16 or 17" and had some absolute studs chase our lures and stocker bows all the way to boat. DJ had one brown pushing 10# try to eat a stocker he had hooked right at the boat as he was lifting it out of the water. This was all between Fall and Short Creek, not the trophy area. I did catch a pretty good rainbow on a jerkbait the next day before we left just below the Narrows. I think it was 19". Aside from that trip, the jerkbait deal just hasn't been there for me this year.

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I'd be the first to admit we didn't/don't know what we were doing. We basically drifted more or less dead center and cast upstream to either side bank and worked them back to the boat. Trying to avoid letting the lure get way behind the boat and having to work against the current.We tried a couple drifts closer to the bluff side banks but really felt like with the short casts we weren't covering much water so we backed off and threw longer casts. 

 

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33 minutes ago, Ryan Miloshewski said:

I have noticed the jerkbait bite this year is very hit or miss. Wonder if they're getting used to the constant barrage? I noticed I got a lot more bites just letting the lure float with the current. Make two or three jerks and just let it ride (instead of the ferocious jerking usually done). 

the day in april that we caught like 22 browns in one day on jerkbaits they were biting it on the pause like you would bass fish in the winter.  Let it set for like 5 seconds between jerks and that's when they would hit it.  I figured it was cause the gates had been open and they had been seeing dead shad but maybe not?  I know it was the first time that they wanted it that way instead of the constant jerks.  You gotta experiment for sure to see what they want.  And they wanted a specific color that day also, that made a big big difference as well. 

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