Road Trip

I love fishing forums. Got a tip about a new place to check out. Did a little research and it is all open to the public, just not heavily advertised. 

 Weather turned out to be pretty awful. Cloudy/sunny, on/off, but really cold for April (this was a few weeks ago). Still, despite the wind and cold, I landed three chunky bluegill and one largemouth.
 Caught this guy deep in cover. This new place has loads of submerged logs and trees to fish, most excellent!

I love exploring new places and successfully catching fish while I'm at it. I'll be back for sure.


Fisherman's Retreat Bass Fishing Blast in Redlands

I was told the bass bite was good at Fisherman's Retreat, near Redlands, so off I went. This was my first time to this private/pay to fish set of ponds, so I was kind of hesitant. Entry was $15 for 12 hours of fishing, considerably more affordable than many other pay-to-fish private lakes. When I got there, about 10-15 other anglers were bank fishing, soaking bait for "whatever" would bite. Sun was peeking out and the water was super clear, not a fish in sight. Lots of swell lily pads though!
Fisherman's Retreat is in San Timoteo Canyon, a scenic valley. The ponds have excellent bank access for shore-bound anglers like myself and have a lot of awesome cover for bass fishing. Take a look at the following:
 (Big bass story after the break)




I neglected to take photos of the massive shrub/reed fortress that harbors loads of bass in one of the ponds (there is two ponds available for non-member anglers). It's nice to finally find a SoCal fishing spot with lots of cover to fish. Casting to nothing (except grocery carts) at city park lakes isn't anywhere as exciting as this! Coming out to Fisherman's Retreat and seeing "true" bass cover reminded me of fishing back in Oklahoma and Texas-loads of cover that just begged to be casted to.
So, on to the fishing. I spent a lot of time hiking around the smaller pond, looking for bass. The water was crystal clear, but I only spotted a few at first. I did see a very large female, but she wouldn't take any lures. However, I finally angered one 14'' bass with a Yum Crawbug:
After that, I started nailing fish on the Crawbug. It's one of the more realistic and affordable crawfish lures I've found and bass always seem intrigued. I have to fish it on a jighead, rigged like this


(closeup of the last fish)
I met up with several other FNN members, really great guys. They were fishing plastic worms, so I switched it up and got this guy on a Berkely plastic worm:
Got one more on the Crawbug, then I took a break and re-rigged my poles with some topwater stuff. I know it's early for a topwater bite, but I just had to try it out at dusk. I went back to the spot where I had seen the huge female, and pitched the Crawbug back out to her. I was aiming for a spot about the size of a trash can lid. Messed up the first cast, thankfully the sun had just gone down and it didn't spook the bass. Second cast was right on and I saw her race over, inspect the Crawbug, and engulf it. I have never had a bass pull like this one did, with long, powerful runs, heart-stopping leaps and mad thrashing. 6lb mono held up in the end. Enjoy the results.



Super thanks to the guys who got the pictures (they caught a 20lb+ carp that day, nice fish!). This bass was 20 inches long, didn't get the girth measurement (absolutely loaded with eggs). She was quickly released back after a few photos. Definitely a fish I will never forget, might even be heavier than my longer (but skinnier) PB from last year. Judging from the photos, I'm pretty tempted to say this new fish is the better one, but who knows?
Anyway, I had a blast fishing Fisherman's Retreat. It's a little expensive, and it's definitely not like most SoCal lakes/ponds, but it was fun. 
I'm running out of these bugs.

Parting shot.

Fairmount Park Piggies

 Fished Fairmount Park yesterday and today. The water is warm, still murky (but nothing like last month's chocolate milk lake), and the fish are active. Carp are visible all around the lake, the sunfish are coming out of their hiding places, and the bass...are biting. Jackall Flick Shake worms were the ticket.
 Catch and release fishing is something many people cannot seem to wrap their brains around, especially at parks like Fairmount. On my first fish of today, a family asked me to give it to them. I politely declined, letting them know I release my bass. However, they couldn't undertstand this and kept shouting and yelling, asking me to give them the fish "for their dad." As I unhooked the bass and lowered it back into the water, one of the girls in the group went ballistic, screaming, "No, no, no! Give it to us!"
You want a fish from Fairmount that badly? Sheesh. Pony up $4 and grab a largemouth at 99 Ranch Market, fresh. Leave the dirty city park fish alone. DFG doesn't stock Fairmount routinely with bass, and there certainly isn't enough to go around feeding all of Riverside.
 My third crappie from Fairmount. Little guy couldn't resist a slowly-retrieved Yo-Zuri!