Jump to content
Phil Lilley
Phil Lilley

Lilleys' Lake Taneycomo fishing report 7/10

20150706_065329.jpg

The COE has indicated to us that we should see full generation, but no flood gates, in the coming days until the lake stabilize.

There is no rain forecasted for the next 10 days.

Night crawlers are king! With all the runoff, our trout are seeing a ton of food washed into the lake and worms are at the top of the menu. We are going through more than 150 dozen worms per week and half of that are going to our fishing guides. Steve Dickey told me yesterday that the fish are getting wise, biting off the worms and not taking the hook. I found out he was correct this afternoon, drifting a night crawler myself.

Note the mouth of Fall Creek. We experienced a flash flood on Tuesday. Local rain dumped several inches of rain in a very short time in the Fall Creek, Roark Creek watersheds. The chunk limestone rock place on the bank just inside of the mouth blew out and shot rock out into the lake more than 150 feet. The riffle it makes should be a clear indication of boats NOT to travel on the right side heading upstream.

20150704_085819.jpg

Marabou jigs are still catching trout. Most of the time, we're throwing the 1/8th ounce jig straight with no float but there's really no dominate colors. I'm throwing a white or ginger and doing fair, then switching to a sculpin or black and doing a little better. And we're working the bluff and shallow, inside banks with 3 units running right now. Four units is tough working the bluff banks unless you're fishing down past Cooper Creek.

Chuck Gries, another one of our fishing guides, had his clients throwing a #7 floating Rapala yesterday below Fall Creek and they caught some nice browns as well as rainbows. He says to work them quick.

Lisek-Trout.jpg

We are still seeing an increase number of brown trout caught this summer. A lot of anglers drifting night crawlers, as well as throwing lures and jigs, are reporting dozens of browns caught lake wide. There's been a few legal browns over 20 inches caught (and released), but most measure any where from 16 to 19 inches long. That's why throwing a Rapala early and late in the day can produce some great action.

The scud bite has slowed down considerably, especially below Fall Creek. We are seeing rainbows spitting up scuds every once in a while but nothing like in early June when we saw schools of scuds along the banks.

Guys are boating up above Fall Creek and fishing the eddies behind and along islands and cut in banks and catching rainbows on jigs and spoons. If you're drifting and throwing towards the bank, be sure to target slack water--that's where the fish will be, trying to get out of the fast current.

User Feedback

Recommended Comments

There are no comments to display.



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 account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.