Actually.....I should say Barkley.......I never made it to KY
Fishing was pretty good Friday. I have not been down there for a little while, so it took us a while to "figure them out". It helped that I got some info from Dave Stewarts Reports and I also talked to him about some whites and yellows that I wanted to harvest. Never did get on those, mostly because we didn't fish KY.
At any rate.....we found shad STACKED up on creek channel banks. We followed these channel banks back about 100 yards from the mouth, throwing crankbaits, shakey heads, and redeye shad baits.
Again.....All on Barkley. We ended up catching 35 on Friday, with 9 keepers.....top 5 were a little over 14lbs. NOT a bad day.
Saturday was a lot tougher. We caught 6 dinks all day. At around 5:00pm we headed back to the ramp, but decided to fish on last "favorite" spot. On that particular area, the river channel bends REALLY tight to a bluff wall, leaving a 50ft area that is nice and flat, and about 15-20ft deep. This area was LOADED up with shad, and we caught 9 fish, including 2 keeper smallmouth in 45 minutes.
Friday, we fished between Donaldson and Dover on South Barkley.
Saturday, we fished between Poplar Creek and Prizer Point on South Barkley.
One thing I noticed........It seems like South Barkley had a lot more shad "doing their thing" and bass busting and chasing them.
I'm not too sure if current, weather, or what other conditions changed on Saturday to make it so "tough". I also wonder if there is any truth the the fact that the south part of those lakes could be "further along". That is what I was told by a few folks and I think that if is that much shallower, maybe it does cool of and warm up quicker, leading the the fish to transition first.......
Finally.....this was mostly a "fishing expedition" type trip for me. I've never been down towards Dover, and I've not fished passed the prison on North Barkley. I think we added about 20-30 new spots I definitely will be fishing next weekend, and the 10 days in October.
AND I really cannot wait until the spring.
Later,
Geo




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