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Thread: catfishin in the south

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Oklahoma City, OK
    Posts
    174

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    Great! Then I guess I just learned still another technique to use when all others have failed for Mr. Wiskers! I'll give it a try next time.

  2. #12
    Join Date
    Dec 2000
    Location
    Bonneau, SC USA
    Posts
    1,622

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    Following Pics posted for JGW. These kitties as
    well as others were caught on flies. John is
    currently buried in snow wishin he was fishin.*G*





    There was a third whopper but I couldn't get it to
    post. Warm regards, Jim

  3. #13

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    Poke's got it---Buggers. I never fish for them but always welcome them. I don't have a pattern for them other than to say it's easiest to catch them in the Spring. Like Poke, I've caught them up to 10 lbs on poppers. I wish I had a pattern for them but "Spring Time" is all I can tell you and Oh, yeah, Buggers.
    Robert

  4. #14

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    white wooly bugger. floating line. 2 bb-shot 3 feet up tippet from fly. let it hit the bottom, then bounce it and bounce it. only works in shallower waters, but usually produces cats for me. I think the bb-shot stir up the mud some, which spooks up real food and attracts the fish's attention. maybe not. The difference between cats and no cats has always been the bb-shot for me, heh.

  5. #15

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    I'll open a can of worms here. My go-to catfish fly is a #8 BreamKiller with a drop of crawfish scent. I've caught channels up to 16# on it, on a 5 wt. Great fun.

  6. #16

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    Quote Originally Posted by RG/AR
    I'll open a can of worms here. My go-to catfish fly is a #8 BreamKiller with a drop of crawfish scent. I've caught channels up to 16# on it, on a 5 wt. Great fun.
    My god folks did you see[hear] that .... he used a

  7. #17
    Join Date
    Apr 2001
    Location
    Palm Bay, Florida/Rock River Wyoming, USA
    Posts
    284

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    Cats, especially Channels, Blues and Whites are opportunistic feeders. Flatheads/Yellows are too but in a category of their own and I'll explain in a minute. The first group love live forage and feed on everything from crayfish to worms and especially minnows. Hence Muddlers, Crayfish patterns and the ever loving Wooley Bugger does the trick nicely. The key is finding them feeding and IDing the forage.

    For instance I was fishing a northwest Missouri impoundment early spring and the Walleyes were spawning in the rip rap of the dam. Fishing for these with a Yellow Maribou Muddler, I caught several nice Channels along with a couple huge Crappie which were likely drawn to the minnows and crayfish that were trying to snipe walleye eggs. or to the eggs themselves. Another time and situation found minnows drawn to a fish feeder in an urban pond and the big Cats drawn to both the minnows and the fish food. Had dozens on that day. Lastly below dams - minnows get munched and injured in the turbines and it's catfish city. Again a big Muddler will often do the trick. I have a couple tied with a streak of red in them to simulate blood.

    Flatheads are different as they use their sensory organs to double check the liveliness of the prey and seldom hit something that doesn't vibrate. Plus they are low light specialists. Add a bead tube to your flies or any of the rattle bead devices and work close to the snags. I've caught a few but very few. Look at the IGFA fly rod records if you want to see how hard they are to catch on the fly--a worthy challenge.
    Good Fishing,

    Chuck S (der Aulte Jaeger)

    "I've traveled a long way and some of the roads weren't paved"

    http://fishing-folks.blogspot.com/

  8. #18
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    913 Jackson Lake Rd, Chatsworth, Ga. 30705 (423) 438-1060
    Posts
    2,619

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    I was on a another post for a fly swap with the Mara Blonde Patterns. It's sort of a hobby of mine. Just for beans, this afternoon, I tried my Mara Blonde color pattern for catfish, and to be fair, I did not go to the tail races, but in the lake proper. And I used the same one pictured that has already caught more than 20 fish.



    All I did was spray it with Shad Smelly Jelly and twitch it slowly along the bottom in <10' of water, along the rip raps. This is what happened in 10 minutes.



    It took me about 4 minutes to get him in, at which time I had a small crowd of spectators. I had an Army Corps of Engineers Officer, take this picture with my camera (he knows how to use it much better than I). He wants to submit it for a State Line Class Record. I don't think fly lines qualify for this, but I guess we'll see. In 2 hours of fishing, I caught 7 more catfish and 3 stripers. All were smaller than this one. And the fly is still fishable!

    Anyway, I believe I've stumbled on another 'can't fail' pattern!

    Semper Fi!

  9. #19

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    nice catfish. I enjoy catfishing with heavy rod and reel on a large cooling lake kind of near my home. Got some monster flathead and blues, but the rest are dinks. Theres literally thousands upon thousands of them . I just throw in a worm, cut shad or wooly bugger tipped with tiny baby shad and I seem to get a bite. Hmm, makes me want to test out my 4 wt on the dinkers. They fight fairly hard, more of a strong fighter than a quick fighter, and since they average about 8-11 inches, they should be quite fun on the 4wt more than on my old 6 weight.

  10. #20

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    Quote Originally Posted by Chuck S
    Cats, especially Channels, Blues and Whites are opportunistic feeders. Flatheads/Yellows are too but in a category of their own...
    A warmwater fly fishin' sage once told me that channel cats have the best eyesight and feed similar to other fish. Bullheads rely on smell and feel (whiskers). So.....

    ...don't be ashamed to sauce up them flies for bullheads, fellers!

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