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Phil Lilley
Phil Lilley

May 11 fishing report

We have seen 15,000 cubic feet per second water release since last Friday evening after a more-than-expected rain event last week.  The Beaver Lake area received the most rain, up to 6 inches, while our area averaged 2.5 inches.  The forecast called for about an inch of rain.  Beaver Lake's level was already high so this rain put it up close to their flood pool which is 1130 feet.  A combination of spill gates and turbine release kept the level in check while at Table Rock Dam, water released increased to move water through the system.

Now that we've had a full week of release, lake levels have slowly dropped to moderate levels, just not low enough to see a reduction in release.  Turbines at both Beaver and Table Rock facilities are not being used, one at both places.  Spill gates are open to make up for turbine release, 5 gates opened one foot at Table Rock.  Beaver gates are now closed and they are only running one unit 5 or 6 hour a day.  Beaver's level is now at 1128.38 feet.  Table Rock is at 916.53 feet and dropping almost 6 inches a day.

My flow forecast for Taneycomo is - I think they'll shut the gates down within the next 24 hours and run 3 units full for a while.

Our trout in Taneycomo have seen a lot of shad and other forage fish come over the spill gates the last 7 days.  We're catching trout that have big bellies, as well as seeing bass, crappie and walleye below the dam.

White jigs, spoons, crank baits and shad flies are all working very good... but we're seeing spells when the fishing is slow.  In the past when we've seen a "shad hatch", fish fill up on shad so we throw dark jigs at them and they seem to like it.  So brown, sculpin, olive and black all have worked well when the fish aren't hitting white or white and gray.

The white bite has been good all the way down to Short Creek, it's been reported.  They're also doing well drifting #10 and #12 gray scuds on the bottom too.  In year's past, we've seen our scud population explode during these high water events so this may be occurring.

It's hard writing a fishing report when you know in a few hours water conditions will change, thus changing how this report should be written...  but I believe drifting bait on the bottom from Fall Creek down will become a lot easier and successful once the water slows down.  I think minnows will be the hot bait too, along with night crawlers.  There's a lot of rainbows in the lake right now.  The Missouri Department of Conservation haven't slowed stocking down because of the high water and catch and keep rates have been low.

I think I'll wait and add to this report in a couple of days because of the change that's coming.  I'll have a much better idea what the fish are doing and the best way to catch them.

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Just got back in.  Working a variety of jigs from well below FC to Trout Hollow and only landed 6 rainbows, had 4 more on.  No best colors - sculpin/ginger and sculpin/peach I guess got more bites.  White - 0

High sun though... Babler said 6-8 am was best bite.

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Very light boat traffic for a Saturday and only a couple of guide boats, Lisek and I.  He started at Short Creek with a Power Worm and I started at Fall Creek drifting minnows.  All along the way from FC to SC brown bass were chasing shad and also busting some small trout.  Several times we saw trout being chased on the surface by nice SM.

I was just amazed that these trout did not want a minnow we had one fish from FC to SC ramp and I switched to a power worm 7' under an indicator.  Immediately we had a double.  Why in heck with the water holding shad did they want that stupid pink worm?

We started at 6 and from 6:30 to 8:30 we wacked them really good.  At that time on that stretch the sun hits the water pretty hard and it was over.  Early and late had been the key up top with the gates open on the shad fly for me too.

Threw a spoon at the brown bass for a while but no takes, but I bet a jerk bait or a swim bait would have caught them.  At that time we were to busy catching trout to change.

Had one pretty nice male rainbow but could not get it to post.  I sent it to Phil so he might be able to post it.  Most all the fish were just completely full of scuds and midge larva.  They fought hard and were really thick across the back.  We were catch and release today but we could have put a very respectable string of 12 to 15 inch fish together.  Lisek said he thought they were restricted area fish that had come down when the water shut off.  Regardless, they need to scurry back up there or someone will be eating petty well.

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5-15-18  Follow up;

With two units and a level of 706.5 fishing is just about as good as it gets.  There is enough water movement and depth to get just about anywhere you want to fish.  We are currently working a corporate retreat out of Lilleys'  I believe this morning we had 6 guides each taking from 4 to 6 clients per boat.

I fished the restricted zone from Andy's into the keep zone to just above Short creek dragging a tandem fly set with an egg and scud combo, using a 1/8 oz weight.  We made 4 passes in 4 hrs. catching 12 fish per pass with the best a couple of chrome bright 15 inchers that jumped several times.  The size 12 grey scud caught I'm guessing about 90%

Surface temp was 48 degree and the smallmouth are still chasing shad especially from Fall Creek to Short Creek on the Channel side.  We caught several trout that spit up shad, with some of the shad being 4 inches in length.  You can also see single and very small groups of shad skimming right under the surface.  Never a big school like TR but for sure enough to keep our fresh stocking of SM interested.

And NO MDC did not stock any smallmouth, they stocked themselves with a 200 ft. plunge thru the flood gates the last couple of weeks.

Chuck from Anglers said he was the only guide in the upper restricted zone this morning.  Fishing the same tandem I was dragging he fished them on a fly rod on 10 foot of 6X under an indicator and said they had several trout up to 17" and a constant bite.

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