Have you ever trolled spoon plugs on KY lake?
[QUOTE=Dave Stewart;575363]I enjoyed having your company and my wife thanks you for going out with me. She worries about me going out by myself now days. If any of you other folks are coming to the north end of Ky Lake and don't mind riding around in my 22ft Ranger and putting up with an ol guy you might give me a call to see if I am in the mood to go fishing. I don't promise you will catch a lot of fish but I don't mind sharing my years of experience with you.[/QUOTE]
Years ago I found KY lake placid like glass and enjoyed a day out on the main lake. I didn't get to do that very often in the two weeks a year we spent on KY lake over the years. Normally the lake was rougher and my boat (john boat type) was not the type of flat bottom square front that did well when the waves were up. With no "V" front my boat would slam into the waves and almost come to a full stop with water spashing over the front of the boat and soaking everyone. So when the water was calm as glass I gleefully cross over to the Easter Side of the lake to fish the mouth of Panther Creek. I could see on the old map of the lake where the creek entered the old river bed. So I got out the heavy duty fishing rod with lead core fishing line and tied on a big spoon plug (those advertized and used by Buck Perry back in the 1960's). Buck was the guy that taught people to fish deep and trolling a spoon plug across the bottom of the lake was about as deep as you could get.
I hooked up a big large mouth bass on the first pass and started to dream of filling the boat with a limit of LM bass that day. But the fish got off by jumping three times and tossing the spoon plug off its' face. I started trolling again but foul on a stump and lost my one and only spoon plug. But I did learn that big bass did indeed stay out in the water along the KY lake ledges.
Now if I had a bigger boat that could handle the white caps on KY lake I would have fished the main lake ledges more often.