I headed out to a bay on KY Lake last night to see if my luck had changed from the previous trip. I knew the front that just passed thru was going to have a north wind blowing but hopefully not too hard.
It was just getting dark when I dropped a buoy to mark brush on a drop I wanted to try. I dropped my anchor and put out the new lights I am so proud of. I didn't get the boat positioned exactly where I had hoped so rather than put down the Terrova, I decided raise the anchor and kick the boat forward a few feet with the Yamaha. BAD MOVE!! Seems I had just enough cord out on the rear light to let it get into the prop. WHACK!! I knew instantly that sound wasn't going to mean well. I pulled up the cord with 2 inches of what had been an 18 inch light still attached. Nobody to blame but the guy in the mirror for that one. I had a spare with me so no sense in crying over spilled milk.
I got positioned and started to put out 6 rods, 2 of them ultralights with 4 pound line. I hadn't got all the rods set when one of the ultralights bent double. I thought I had hung it up but when I grabbed it out of the holder, the fight was on. Ends up it was a gaspergo over 10 pounds. Luckily I was able to keep it out of the other lines and get it up to where I could get a good look at it. It ended up breaking the line at the boat.
As it got darker, the baitballs started to form but no action. I set my minnows at various depths, hoping to find the zone. It never formed. The next fish I caught was a warmouth about 10 inches. Beautiful little fish but I had never caught one in 20 feet of water. Jigging all around the boat didn't produce either.
Over the next 3 hours I managed to catch 2 keepers and zero yellows. The lack of the yellows really puzzled me since they worried the hair off me the last trip.
The north wind continued to increase so around 11:30 I called it a night. Below is a screen shot off my X-26. Looks like I was where I needed to be but the crappie just didn't bite.
http://i101.photobucket.com/albums/m...psk4vrcdw2.jpg

