First off, as I was getting ready to launch, I got into a long conversation with a very knowledgeable angler fishing from shore.
Second - though a first in my lifetime - was a falcon dive-bombing the water in different areas for surface feeding fish in open water - a clue where to start casting.
A severe cold front was expected by 4pm and, as we all know, fish go nuts before a front arrives. The day started calm and the catching was easy - cast to the surface activity and fish on! As the day progressed, so did the wind gusting to 20 mph - at times dragging anchor.But the fish hit no matter! Even after the surface activity died, after allowing the lure to go to mid-depth (4'-5'), the strikes were still obvious and the hooksets solid - even at the end of 40' casts. All catches were from the middle of the long (vs round) lake mostly towards the east shore and south end over 7' deep flats and humps nowhere near shore. Kind a felt sorry for the anglers beating the banks and shoreline anglers catching little to nothing watching me catch fish after fish in open water.
By 4pm I could see dark clouds moving in fast so after the c&r of 65 fish I figured it was time to leave. Quality was the norm for many of the y. perch, sunfish and crappie. Here are some examples:
Deformed perch and the lure that caught it:
https://i.imgur.com/VMqJ9zd.jpg?1
average size range of the doz.perch caught 9-11", 11" the largest - another first!
https://i.imgur.com/b5xHWP8.jpg
...and sunfish:
https://i.imgur.com/2FNWdmz.jpg?1
Crappie weren't too bad either:
https://i.imgur.com/aJjItX5.jpg
clear tail grub did good as usual:
https://i.imgur.com/UKnAs6t.jpg
Most of the day before the storm hit:
https://i.imgur.com/6fSrTS4.jpg?1
Front moving in by 3:30 pm (calm before the storm):
https://i.imgur.com/h4JMAhW.jpg

