Sure thing!
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Took my mom fishing for a couple hours this afternoon - the bite was slow, but she did catch a female northern-strain bluegill on her first cast that weighed right at 16 oz.:
We also caught two 14-oz., a 13-oz., and this hybrid that was a little bigger:
11.75", 31 oz.
That hybrid looks like he's eatin good![]()
Helicopter Pilot
Vietnam 67/68
Proud Member of the Southeast Asian War Games Team
She is indeed, Blackhawk! I caught her about forty feet from the feeder. I think it's safe to say she hasn't missed any feeding times lately.
Maybe you can contact Russ Bailey and see if he'll come and do a show with you. That would be a very good way to get the word out about your buisness.
Those fish looks like they are on steroids LOL.Have you ever thought about turning a pond or two into crappie ponds. Its my understanding that they are the fastest growing fish.
Lets go soak a line. Pat
Hi Bowhunter, thanks for the compliment on the fish! I have two arms to my business: pond and lake management, for which I manage private waters for whatever the owner's goals are, whether those goals be trophy bass, trophy bluegill, nice-sized bass and bluegill both, etc.; and my guiding business, for which I spend my own money on eleven ponds and lakes from a half-acre to twenty-two acres in size, managing those ponds and lakes intensively for trophy bluegill. My agreement with the owners of the ponds I guide on, requires me to give half of whatever I make guiding, to the landowners.
When I began working with these ponds I guide on in 2009, I felt that there was an open niche in the world of guiding in respect to trophy bluegill. There are thousands, if not tens of thousands, of privately-owned waters in this country that are intensively managed for trophy bass, where anglers can pay $300 or $400 per person per day, up to $1000 per person per day, for the chance to experience bass fishing on a level typically not found on public waters; but, presently, I only know of one private water in the country that is open to anglers and that has bluegill fishing good enough that two-pound bluegill are common, and they charge $1000 per day per person, or $600 per person for groups of four or more. I began spending my own money on the ponds I guide on three years ago because I felt that if I were able to get the fishing in them to where it was comparable to that lake that has a good number of two-pound bluegill, and I charged half or less than half as much for anglers to fish, that people would beat a path to my door.
So, as of now, I'm about a year away in most of my ponds from having fishing comparable to the $1000/day lake; I have one pond that will give that lake a run for its money by March or April, and is already a better bluegill water than most people could ever imagine; but, unfortunately, it appears as of now that I overestimated the appeal of trophy bluegill to anglers, because the business is failing badly. I really didn't advertise the guiding service much before this year because I was still working on getting the ponds turned around, but I've been getting the word out on several sites for a few months now, and I've had several people ask about my rates; but I don't know if people are comparing said rates to guides who guide public water on which they don't have to split their fee with a landowner and haven't spent $20K getting the fishery to where it is, or if they're unaware of what comparable private waters charge, or the economy is bad and they just can't afford it, or what, but no one is booking trips. I had two guys fly in from Texas in July and they caught roughly forty bluegill over a pound, including four in the pound-and-a-half range, in three days of fishing, but those are the only two guiding clients I've had.
So I'll probably give it another year (assuming I can come up with a way to keep buying the fish food), and if it doesn't improve drastically, admit defeat.
Have you considered making one or more of the ponds "fly fishing only"? I'm not sure if that would help or not, but Callaway Gardens here in Georgia has incredible bluegill fishing, and it's strictly fly fishing, C&R only. During colder months, they also stock big trout in the ponds, so people can fish for them as well.
http://www.callawaygardens.com/resor...o/fishing.aspx
It seems to be pretty popular, but there are a lot of other attractions at CG. It's conceivable that the FF operation loses money but is subsidized by other more profitable activities.
Anyways, it's just a thought.
Last edited by deathb4disco; 10-06-2012 at 09:23 AM.
Sounds like you have done an awesome on those ponds. Have you try putting a bug in the ear of in-fishermen. If they came down and did even a small show with you I bet that would bring you and the landowners some real good money. Just a thought. I commend you for all the hard work, tme and money you put into your business and I hope for the best for you. I know it isn't easy to guide on public water but it is even harder on private waters starting from scratch. Good luck in your indeavours.
Lets go soak a line. Pat