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3/2/2015 HOUSE REPORT: "A Diamond in the Rough..."

3.7K views 56 replies 34 participants last post by  savethetrophies  
#1 · (Edited)
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“I waited all winter long to feel a fish like this on the other end of my line. It was heavy, it was angry, and it struck my lure so hard that it nearly scared me out of my kayak!”

CONDITIONS:
Fishing conditions were nearly perfect Monday. Mostly sunny, no wind, and temps were in the mid 30’s - much warmer than any weekend we’ve had this year. Water in the Ohio River was muddy and cold at 34° and on a slight rise. Some chunks of ice were still present, but mostly gone. Fish were relating to ledges and hugging the bottom of the river.

REPORT:
KayakWars started two weeks ago and it has been very difficult to score any points for the tournament due to all of the ice. With a break in the forecast, I decided to switch things up a bit on Monday and go after some gar, carp and drum instead of chasing hybrids for a change. I'd be lying if I didn't confess that I was thinking about the all day, however. I hit the water around lunch time and proceeded to fish harder than I can ever remember fishing in my life. No breaks, no screwing around with gear, just 7 hours of non-stop fishing…and as a result, I caught a lot of fish.

The gar were pretty predictable, holding at 14-24 feet of water in a big sheet. It didn't take much effort to entice them into biting a very simple rig - a 4inch curly tailed grub dropped down to 13 feet, just above their heads. I ended up catching about 20 of them, slowed down only by the constant need to re-tie my line after they thrashed about and chewed it up. I also had to take a few Band-Aid breaks and seal all of the holes they were poking in my hands.
Here are a few of the bigger fish from early in the day:
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:B Half-way through the day, I ended up catching one of the biggest gars I've caught to date. I dropped a blade bait down onto what I thought was a school of drum and a massive fish hit it and ran. At first, I had thought it was a striper due to how much line it was running off of my spool, but it came to the surface and shook its tail at me, revealing a huge python-like body. Gar strikes are usually pretty passive as they often tap at lures and try to wound them. Every once in a while, though, they really get a hold of a lure and take off and jump. This particular fish surfaced and did the patented alligator head shake and death roll which always makes me pucker up a bit when a toothy fish over 4 feet long is thrashing around right at the side of my kayak. With a bit of patience, I was finally able to drag the beast up onto my lap by the snout (using my mom's borrowed oven mitt, of course!). The gar ended up measuring 51 inches which broke the KayakWars record for our division by 2 inches:
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The picture didn't quite do the fish justice, so I recorded a short clip:
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As if that wasn't a good enough surprise for the day, I paddled back out to the same spot and dropped my line down and was greeted by the first fish I mentioned in my opening lines. The diamond among the rough fish. When I flipped my line out, my blade bait never had a chance to hit the bottom. I was lowering it down on a pretty tight line when I felt the “crack” of a big fish punishing it. I hadn't felt a hit like this all winter, so I was quite startled when it happened. I pulled back hard to set the hook and the fish took off downstream, upstream, and every direction in between. In my distant memories from last year, I remembered that’s what hybrids felt like and I quickly put on my game-face and focused on the fight. The fish tired after a few good runs and I was able to net my first vertically-jigged hybrid of the winter. There’s no better feeling than a hybrid strike on a tight line in my mind. Here’s the fish– not a long one, but it had plenty of winter blubber to round it out:

(click for video)
 
#2 · (Edited)
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#13 ·
yes sir-ee bob... That's a bonafide trophy Gar as anything over the 48" is a trophy in these parts for Long Nose.. Any chance you got a weight on it?? Great report as always! and yup, those big gar can really put up a GREAT fight, I hate when the snobs talk about the trashness of a Gar, as it would change if they ever hooked a trophy and had it tailwalk and do the "One Last Run" under the boat, between your legs or wherever, all I know if I sorely miss getting into some good ones.. Thanks for the storyline, I was right there with ya...

Salmonid
 
#14 ·
Any chance you got a weight on it??
This one was just shy of 15 pounds. My biggest was an 17.7 pounder way up in the LMR back in 2012. I was fishing out of an inflatable Seahawk and the gar thrashed about wildly at the side of the boat and tore it all to hell. I thought for sure we were going down with the ship that day, lol. It was also a 51-incher. Have you ever seen one in all of your years go over 52 inches or twenty pounds, Salmonid? The state record seems almost unattainable!
 
#16 ·
Those are truly pigs.... the biggest ones I have seen seem to top out right around 50" but really put the weight on, the biggest state record pics Ive seen from all over all have HUGE bellys on them. As far as a fish bigger then 50" I know Flathunter ( Jack) had one from the middle Scioto that I think was 52" and thick. one of the biggest Ive ever seen a pic of here in Ohio, Ill see if I can get that picture, Not sure the weight but it was right up there in the mid teen for sure, maybe more.
Getting back tot eh state record, I doubt we will see one with the present down cycles of shad the last two years in the Ohio River but after a few good years of baitfish, Id say its possible.

Salmonid
 
#20 ·
yes sir-ee bob... That's a bonafide trophy Gar as anything over the 48" is a trophy in these parts for Long Nose.. Any chance you got a weight on it?? Great report as always! and yup, those big gar can really put up a GREAT fight, I hate when the snobs talk about the trashness of a Gar, as it would change if they ever hooked a trophy and had it tailwalk and do the "One Last Run" under the boat, between your legs or wherever, all I know if I sorely miss getting into some good ones.. Thanks for the storyline, I was right there with ya...

Salmonid
Pike, carp, gar are all trash fish IMO. The only true trophy fish within a 5hr drive of southwest Oh is Walleye & Muskie.