Fishing Time: Thursday through Saturday
Weather: Warm,
but a bit cooler than average. Sunny and
calm winds with exception of Friday afternoon in got windy.
Moon Phase: Full
Moon
Location:
Saguaro Lake, Alamo Lake, and Lake Pleasant
Water Temps:
Averaged 60-64 degrees
Best Baits:
Weightless Senko, roboworm on a drop-shot rig
Who Went: Casey Davies, Dunc
The cold weather finally hit home, but I’m not quite ready for it. I decided to take a few days off and head south with my buddy Casey. We hooked up the boat and drove 10 hours through snow until it finally quit 100 miles outside of Phoenix, AZ.
Casey’s sister
lives in Phoenix and offered us a base camp for a few days. Turned into more than a base camp as they
were excellent hosts feeding us smoked ribs and all you can eat halibut they
brought home from Alaska where they live most the year. It was sooo good! I also fell in love with their little weiner
dog Maggie!
The first day
we fished at one of the coolest lakes I’ve ever launched my boat. It’s called Saguaro Lake, but its nickname is
“Land of the Giants”. It’s not known for
producing a lot of fish but has produced many giants in the double digits. My kind of lake!
The lake is one
of many reservoirs along the Salt River which is set in the red rock desert
with Saguaro Cactus lining it’s shorelines.
It was gorgeous. We made our way upriver
dodging many underwater hazards along the way until we reached the dam. Started fishing and worked our way back down
river. We were also lucky to see some bighorn sheep on top of the canyon rim.
Fishing a new
lake is tough and we struggled. I landed
one small largemouth bass, and Casey found a pile of bluegill to get the skunk
off him. Unfortunately, those were the
only two fish caught. I got the feeling
this was a lake that takes some time to learn, especially fishing it in the
winter months. Either way it was worth
the trip.
On day 2 we drove two hours northwest of Phoenix to Alamo Lake. The locals at the tackle store said this was a good producing lake but wasn’t known for producing big bass. It certainly was not the prettiest of lakes and was in the middle of nowhere.
We
fished the morning with only a catfish pulled off the 40-foot bottom with a Ned
Rig to show for it.
In the late morning, we moved across the lake to some points with submerged brush. The bite turned on for a minute, and I caught 6 small bass using a weightless Senko and Casey put one in the boat as well.
Soon
after the bite died and the wind came up something fierce, so we said goodbye to our donkey friends that kept us company for the day and headed back to home base.
On our last day
we decided to fish the closest lake to home base at Lake Pleasant. Mixed reports on Lake Pleasant said it can be
tough, but it has big fish and can get hot at times. It’s a huge reservoir and
reminded me of Lake Powell. We launched
in Scorpion Bay and crossed the lake to fish some islands that a guide told us
usually produce.
We tried almost
every type of bait and technique I know how to fish and couldn’t buy a
bite. I wasn’t seeing anything on the
fish finder either. It was a ghost town.
We moved down lake to some rocky points to try our luck there. I fished on a 20-foot shelf off a rocky point
and saw a good mark right on the bottom.
I sent my roboworm on a drop-shot down toward it and immediately hooked
up. It felt like a small fish, but once
it got close to the boat it surfaced. It
was not a small fish at all and probably went 4-5 pounds! Sadly, we will never know because it surfaced
one more time and spit the hook! I was bummed! It was the only good fish of the trip. I ended up catching one smaller bass off the
same shelf, but that was it for the day.
We met some
locals on the boat ramp when we left and they were there all day and caught two
fish. Said 3 weeks ago they were
catching 40 fish a day. Figures! Shows that winter fishing, especially in
water you are unfamiliar with, can be really tough! Either way it was fun to get out of the cold
and visit some new lakes! Luckily, we didn’t
get snowed on going home!
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