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Craziest Conditions I Have Ever Fished 2024


fishing user avatareverythingthatswims reply : 

Today, I got out of class at noon, headed back to my apartment, and hooked up the boat to take her home for Thanksgiving break. Unfortunately, my brothers will be keeping her in VA for the winter, so I will once again be kayak-bound! On my way home, I drive by a place called Mount Storm. Mount Storm has a power plant lake on top of a mountain, at 3600' elevation. It is a very unforgiving place, all the flags up there are tattered from the wind, the trees only have leaves on one side, and the gas station up there has the windward side door blocked off to entry. My route happens to pass within 2 miles of the boat ramp, and even though the conditions were less than ideal, I had to give it a go!

 

Dropping the boat in was a task, I pulled the keel up on the bank, but had to get a rope and tie a cleat to a tree so it wouldn't drift away while I parked my truck. Air temps were in the 30s, and although the forecast said it wouldn't get below freezing, the ice on my reel would say otherwise. I don't know what the wind speed was, it was no less than a sustained 20, and the gusts were pretty intimidating. I stuck to the protected side of the lake and stayed close to the ramp. When the fog would clear, I could see waves hitting sea walls on the far side of the lake and launching whitewater a pretty good ways upward.

 

I ended up landing 5 largemouth and 2 smallmouth, all of them in the 1-1.5lb range. I used a SK 1.5, a vision 110, a 1/2oz jig, and a ned rig. I only had a couple hours of daylight so I didn't really have time to put together a pattern, but the wind was blowing so hard that my pattern was just to fish what was fishable! I've fished in 30 degree temps a pretty good bit, but the wind made today absolutely brutal. I started with fingerless big wool gloves, but had to switch to full fingered gloves, because the wind would suck the heat right out of my fingertips.

 

I like getting out in extreme conditions, because since I do fish tournaments, it's nice to have some experience in rough water and nasty weather for when the time comes! @Bluebasser86 fishes in these conditions every time he goes in the winter but it's a big deal for a southern boy like me.

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My fingers barely made it through holding those fish for a photo!

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 And that's a smallmouth in clear water on a 1/2oz black and blue jig. (it was too cold to even think about putting a trailer on another jig and retying)

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That smokestack is probably the best visual I have for the wind (I was idling that's why my trolling motor isn't locked!)


fishing user avatarBluebasser86 reply : 

Used to have a tradition of fishing on New Year's Day with a friend of mind because his birthday is on the 2nd. Several years ago it was 9* when we launched with a high of 21*. One of the coldest days I've ever fished soft water but we caught quite a few fish that day. It's crazy some of the things you don't think about that you learn fishing cold conditions. A metal spinning reel stem between your fingers is like holding an icicle, micro guides are not an option, changing baits is almost impossible, braid turns into a slightly flexible icicle, you can backlash a reel really badly if there's enough ice in the reel or one of the guides to stop a cast, you can get a headache from running if your forehead isn't covered well, all kinds of fun stuff.

 

I'm almost to the point that I prefer those conditions because I'm rarely sharing any water when it's like that and the fish seem to bite better when it's nasty in power plant lakes. 

 

When the steam is freezing to the buoys and your cold weather suit, you know it's really cold.

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fishing user avatarTurkey sandwich reply : 

Both of those look rough.  

 

I've had some frigid days ice fishing (read: every time I've ever gone).  I haven't gone as an adult, but as kids we didn't have any portable shelter and would run a wind blasted lake chasing tip ups.  

 

More recently, last weekend wasn't rainy or crazy windy, thankfully, but we did camp 35 minutes from the river in North Central PA and the air temp got down to 14 at one point.  We waded all weekend, and regardless of layers, 20-34 degree air temps and 40 degree water temps over two days beat the **** out of me.  I used to love getting out in cold weather, but this was probably my coldest trip since back surgery.  It got rough.  I also learned some things, like if you're going to teach the girl you're dating (who has only very basic fly casting skills) how to cast streamers, don't do it when it's 14 degrees out.  


fishing user avatarTnRiver46 reply : 

Nice fish, way to tough it out. I wish we had power plant lakes! TVA has some steam plants that used to discharge hot water but I think after a few ash spills they only discharge luke warm water in fairly small amounts


fishing user avatarOregon Native reply : 

Last cold water/day experience I had was a couple years ago when we had some good snow.  Less than a mile from the boat ramp I got stuck in the snow on a little hill on a corner....$#@$.  I felt the snow would melt some as the day got a bit warmer but new I had to make it too the lake to fish the day first.......good thing a friend was following and saved the day.

P.S.  Seems like cold...rain keep many many people off the water......Love it.

P.S.S.  Good job on fishing....it's an addiction huh!


fishing user avatarPro Logcatcher reply : 

Anytime I'm out in a thunderstorm and holding a metal rod I consider crazy!


fishing user avatarTurtle135 reply : 

Good deal! I have run up to Storm three times in the winter when everything was frozen solid in Maryland. A little bit of wind goes a long way on that body of water and I can't imaging what it was like with those wind speeds!

 

Was there on a clear cold day with a fishing buddy. Couple of hours in and we were wondering why we were being pelted with hail. Whatever was coming from the smoke stacks that day was freezing and falling on us.


fishing user avatarTOXIC reply : 

Things we do to fish!!  :lol:  Lucky for me I have access to a nuke discharge lake of 3,000 acres.  Never freezes or drops below 50 degrees no matter what the outside temp.  If I can get there, I can fish.  Little tip.....don't take the plug out of your boat before you drive to the ramp or you will have to sacrifice a whole thermos of coffee in the bilge to thaw the ice that now is now frozen in the threads. 

 

 

 

 

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fishing user avatarscaleface reply : 

You guys ever been out then come back with a ramp covered in snow ? I did it "once" .


fishing user avatarTnRiver46 reply : 
  On 11/18/2017 at 4:46 AM, scaleface said:

You guys ever been out then come back with a ramp covered in snow ? I did it "once" .

Boat paddle doubles as snow shovel


fishing user avatareverythingthatswims reply : 
  On 11/18/2017 at 3:23 AM, TOXIC said:

Things we do to fish!!  :lol:  Lucky for me I have access to a nuke discharge lake of 3,000 acres.  Never freezes or drops below 50 degrees no matter what the outside temp.  If I can get there, I can fish.  Little tip.....don't take the plug out of your boat before you drive to the ramp or you will have to sacrifice a whole thermos of coffee in the bilge to thaw the ice that now is now frozen in the threads. 

 

 

 

 

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You ever hear about the kid who caught a DD from his kayak on that lake? B)


fishing user avatarBluebasser86 reply : 
  On 11/18/2017 at 4:46 AM, scaleface said:

You guys ever been out then come back with a ramp covered in snow ? I did it "once" .

The biggest problem is when you get back and the ramp is a solid sheet of ice from other guys taking their boats out of the water. 

 

I had one time that I was on the Kansas River on a good blue cat bite and it was snowing hard the whole time. Got back and the long, steep river ramp was covered in snow. Took a long time to get the boat out and up the ramp that day.


fishing user avatarOregon Native reply : 
  On 11/18/2017 at 2:19 PM, Bluebasser86 said:

The biggest problem is when you get back and the ramp is a solid sheet of ice from other guys taking their boats out of the water. 

 

I had one time that I was on the Kansas River on a good blue cat bite and it was snowing hard the whole time. Got back and the long, steep river ramp was covered in snow. Took a long time to get the boat out and up the ramp that day.

Spooky


fishing user avatarCatt reply : 

Fished a tournament back in the 70s with 22 mph Northwest winds, 27°, & sleet!

 

Every 3-4 cast I had to stick my rod in the water, shake it, to get ice out of the eyes!

 

My jig rod was frozen to the deck & the rod box was iced shut.

 

Caught one of the biggest stringers of my life!


fishing user avatarChance_Taker4 reply : 

I wasn't fishing but last weekend my uncle asked me to help pull his dock and pontoon out of the water for the winter. When we get there it was 22*, snowing, low 40s water temps in northern Michigan (Torch Lake). We get the boat and dock out no problem but the boat lift that has to come out sunk in about 18" of muck. My cousin and I went swimming in nothing but our boxers for about 45 minutes to get the thing unstuck and out of the water. We were numb but burning at the same time. The redness of our skin was starting to turn purple. Not a fun experience and has deterred me from fishing in the cold.


fishing user avatarIndianaFinesse reply : 

The absolute windiest time I've ever been out was last summer, I was going down a bank throwing a buzzbait when a wall of rain moved across the lakes at an amazing speed.  It went from glass calm to hurricane force winds in a matter of seconds. Hit us hard, luckily we were nearby an empty boathouse that doesn't have a lift inside it, so we were able to take shelter in it.  Barely got there though, our little 15 horse motor could hardly make headway into the wind.  We later found out that a hurricane had actually touched down about half a mile from where we were, and winds were reported up to 75 miles an hour.  This was on a small (360 acre) lake, so the waves didn't have as much distance to build as they do on larger lakes.

 

The time that I was closest to sinking the boat and the largest waves I have ever been out on occurred on a lake called Monroe (largest lake in Indiana, and of coarse we were fishing at the far side of the lake from the ramp).  I was prefishing for a tournament there in early July and had been having a terrible day.  We had fished from 6 am from 7:30 pm and only had one keeper, and we hadn't even been shaking fish off.  Started seeing a storm build along side of the lake around 5:30, but for the next two hours it just seemed to run parallel to us.  Since we had absolutely zero patterns going for the tournament, we kept on fishing.  Then around 7:30 we got a call from someone who basically told us to get the heck off of the lake right now, the storm had just knocked out power to a huge part or the surrounding area with reported wind speeds of 40 mile an hour sustained with gusts up to 70.  And it was looking like it was going to stop running parallel to us, and instead go right into us.

 

So we fired up the motor and got out of the cove we were fishing, and in literally 5 minutes the lake had gone from ~10 mile an hour winds to 40-70.  Our 21' fish and ski (it has a way deeper v and handles waves much larger than a bass boat would, luckily) was getting waves swamped over the bow all the way to the wind sheild on almost every wave, filling the boat with water.  By this point the rain was coming down so hard that we lost track of the shoreline, and the wave action was so jolting and the waves that we couldn't figure out were were on the small GPS screen we have mounted on the dashboard.  We were driving essentially blindly, on an unfamiliar lake, with no view of the shoreline, and we couldn't even read our GPS.

 

We ultimately ended up finding our way into a protected cove where we hid from the wind for about 20 minutes, but the rain was still pouring down and the boat was filled with so much water that it was sitting dangerously low, even though the bilge pump was on.  After that we decided to try and get back to the ramp again, this time by hugging the shoreline as lone as possible.  By the time we got back to the main lake, the storm had calmed down and virtually disappeared, the rain had lessened and the wind down to a breeze.  

 

The whole way back to the ramp we saw boats ran up on shorelines, bassboats and pontoons alike.  Several had obviously ruined the hulls by choosing to run up the shorelines, apparently the owners thought that they had to do that to keep from sinking the boat with them in it.  One especially nice Ranger bassboat with twin power poles had run up on the riprap shoreline, ruined its hull, and the back end was under water.

 

Never before had I actually felt like we were more likely to sink or flip the boat than not, the experience has definitely gave me a new appreciation to the power and danger of wind, especially on big lakes.

 

Coldest ever was a day with a high of 28 and a low in the single digits, with freezing rain that would freeze on your jacket, in addition to 10-20 mile an hour winds.  No rain gear can keep you dry in that.  By far the coldest I've ever been, but we caught a boat load of fish vertically jigging blade baits.


fishing user avatarTOXIC reply : 

Yes, I fished anyway.  

 

 

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fishing user avatarPaul Roberts reply : 

Love this thread. Been there. Good tips too (Thanks, BB86).

 

Back when I lived in steelhead country we sometimes hit  super-cooled conditions (water below 32*) and "anchor ice". I used to pop my flies or bait in my mouth to thaw them.


fishing user avatarJaderose reply : 
  On 11/17/2017 at 11:48 PM, Pro Logcatcher said:

Anytime I'm out in a thunderstorm and holding a metal rod I consider crazy!

Not crazy.  Stupid!


fishing user avatarTnRiver46 reply : 
  On 11/21/2017 at 1:41 AM, Paul Roberts said:

Love this thread. Been there. Good tips too (Thanks, BB86).

 

Back when I lived in steelhead country we sometimes hit  super-cooled conditions (water below 32*) and "anchor ice". I used to pop my flies or bait in my mouth to thaw them.

Even the salmon eggs?


fishing user avatarPro Logcatcher reply : 
  On 11/21/2017 at 2:21 AM, Jaderose said:

Not crazy.  Stupid!

Gotta risk it for the biscuit ????


fishing user avatarTOXIC reply : 

If you notice, there is a buzzbait on one of my frozen rods.  :o  That's what a nuke cooling lake in winter will do to ya!!:P  Nothing like catching topwater bass in a snowstorm.  BTW that was the WORST and most DANGEROUS conditions I EVER towed in.  I left my house for a 60 mile tow to the lake.  It was clear and dry but very cold (that's why the rods were on deck).  When I got 10 miles from the lake it started "misting".  The road became a solid sheet of ICE.  I was towing a 20ft boat on a dual axle trailer.  I had come too far to turn around and I knew that if I could get to the lake, everything would thaw once I launched.  If I even as much as touched my truck brakes, the trailer would try to come around the truck.  I IDLED the last 5 miles past over 40 cars and trucks in the ditches.  


fishing user avatarPaul Roberts reply : 
  On 11/21/2017 at 8:06 AM, TnRiver46 said:

Even the salmon eggs?

Yup.


fishing user avatarOregon Native reply : 
  On 11/19/2017 at 12:19 AM, Chance_Taker4 said:

I wasn't fishing but last weekend my uncle asked me to help pull his dock and pontoon out of the water for the winter. When we get there it was 22*, snowing, low 40s water temps in northern Michigan (Torch Lake). We get the boat and dock out no problem but the boat lift that has to come out sunk in about 18" of muck. My cousin and I went swimming in nothing but our boxers for about 45 minutes to get the thing unstuck and out of the water. We were numb but burning at the same time. The redness of our skin was starting to turn purple. Not a fun experience and has deterred me from fishing in the cold.

YOU are one tuff individual......WOW

  On 11/21/2017 at 8:06 AM, TnRiver46 said:

Even the salmon eggs?

Back in Oregon trout fishing I used to keep the water pack trout eggs in my mouth while stream fishing....that way didn't have to slow down with the catching.  Tried the oil pack once........only once!!!!!!!


fishing user avatarTnRiver46 reply : 
  On 11/23/2017 at 11:33 AM, Paul Roberts said:

Yup.

Mmmmm tasty


fishing user avatarshimmy reply : 
  On 11/18/2017 at 1:40 PM, everythingthatswims said:

You ever hear about the kid who caught a DD from his kayak on that lake? B)

I heard about a kid who didn’t have a scale, but still called his fish a DD...????


fishing user avatareverythingthatswims reply : 
  On 11/24/2017 at 4:45 AM, shimmy said:

I heard about a kid who didn’t have a scale, but still called his fish a DD...????

"My PB is probably the world record"


fishing user avatarBassObsessed reply : 

Things we do to try to catch a trophy fish. I know what ya mean, Monday I had minimal feeling in hands and feet even with arctic socks and boots. Upstate New York 28 degrees snowing and windy.

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fishing user avatarshimmy reply : 
  On 11/24/2017 at 6:07 AM, everythingthatswims said:

"My PB is probably the world record"

That's there specifically for the people who keep claiming certain weights, but never weigh them. Hence the stupidity of it and use of "probably." My PB is only half of the WR. The shannanigans always seem to be the magical numbers of "5," "8," or "10 pound" claims.


fishing user avatarOCdockskipper reply : 

Last December, we had one day where the air temperature dropped into the 40's & I had to wear a jacket...


fishing user avatareverythingthatswims reply : 
  On 11/24/2017 at 10:53 AM, shimmy said:

That's there specifically for the people who keep claiming certain weights, but never weigh them. Hence the stupidity of it and use of "probably." My PB is only half of the WR. The shannanigans always seem to be the magical numbers of "5," "8," or "10 pound" claims.

I'm just playing man. I'll never know how much the fish weighed, but the measurements put it almost half a pound over 10, so in my mind I like to think that it probably was.

 

Either way, it's one I will never forget!


fishing user avatarPaul Roberts reply : 
  On 11/25/2017 at 12:13 AM, everythingthatswims said:

I'm just playing man. I'll never know how much the fish weighed, but the measurements put it almost half a pound over 10, so in my mind I like to think that it probably was.

 

Either way, it's one I will never forget!

Close enough. That was a heck of a catch. 


fishing user avatarsoflabasser reply : 
  On 11/24/2017 at 4:45 AM, shimmy said:

I heard about a kid who didn’t have a scale, but still called his fish a DD...????

 

Last year I caught a 26.5'' by +17'' girth bass that was under 10 pounds according to my scale. Most people would call that bass a +10 pounder, even a +12 pounder, but I prefer to stick to what my scale says. Have caught several double digit bass, so I knew the scale was right on this particular bass. Not enough girth for its length.

  On 11/24/2017 at 8:12 AM, BassObsessed said:

Things we do to try to catch a trophy fish. I know what ya mean, Monday I had minimal feeling in hands and feet even with arctic socks and boots. Upstate New York 28 degrees snowing and windy.

IMG_4612..JPG

Nice smallmouth bass. A couple weeks ago on vacation I fished while it was snowing and caught a couple smallmouth bass. It was cold and windy that whole day, but it was nowhere near the worst weather I have fished in. Have fished several times in +6-8 foot seas in small 20-22 foot boats...now that is some ruff fishing weather. Luckily for me my friend is a master boat captain since most people would of capsized a boat in those types of conditions.


fishing user avatarBassObsessed reply : 
  On 11/25/2017 at 6:55 AM, soflabasser said:

 

Last year I caught a 26.5'' by +17'' girth bass that was under 10 pounds according to my scale. Most people would call that bass a +10 pounder, even a +12 pounder, but I prefer to stick to what my scale says. Have caught several double digit bass, so I knew the scale was right on this particular bass. Not enough girth for its length.

Nice smallmouth bass. A couple weeks ago on vacation I fished while it was snowing and caught a couple smallmouth bass. It was cold and windy that whole day, but it was nowhere near the worst weather I have fished in. Have fished several times in +6-8 foot seas in small 20-22 foot boats...now that is some ruff fishing weather. Luckily for me my friend is a master boat captain since most people would of capsized a boat in those types of conditions.

I fished the day after this pic. Was a little warmer but 40mph gusts and 4ft breakers. Only one other boat out besides us and I don't think he stayed long as he was in a 12-14ft boat.


fishing user avatarshimmy reply : 

My 27.5 inch length and 19 inch girth was almost 11 pounds on the scale. I re-weighed it multiple times. The first weight was at the 10 lb 15 oz, but i kept re-weighing it to make sure i knew the exact weight which settled at 10 lb 12 oz. I would have preferred 10.15. The projected weight with a calculator was 14 pounds. I would prefer 14 pounds...The calculators are just flat out silly. Nevertheless, i remember that picture of your giant in Virginia and ANYBODY would love to catch that beauty. 

 


fishing user avatarSam reply : 

Many years ago fished a club tournament out of Poplar Creek on Lake Gaston after a sleet and snow storm passed earlier that morning leaving us with some light snow showers.

 

A number of guys turned around on I-85 and went home due to the dangerous driving conditions.

 

I remember two distinct things about that March event:

1.  The big lady I hooked on a crankbait is still swimming to Chicago with my crankbait in her mouth and;

2.  A lady came onto her upper deck and took a photo of us in the boat with three inches of snow and ice on the deck. She said she could not believe anyone would be out in that weather fishing.

 

Glad you had a fun time on the water and nailed some nice ones.

 

Glad you are safe.

 

 

 

 


fishing user avatarPaul Roberts reply : 

Gotta calibrate your scales to really know. I use 2.5lb and 5lb weights hung in a plastic bag. I calibrate at 2.5, 5, and 7.5 -as far as I need to go where I live. Some scales calibrated at the 2.5 mark are a little off at 7.5, and vice-versa.


fishing user avatarWIGuide reply : 

I've fished in some pretty nasty stuff over the years, cold, rain, wind, snow, it really didn't matter. I still went. Last year was the latest I got to fish up here, I made it into December. The ramp was iced up, skim ice on parts of the lake, 20 mph winds, cloudy overcast skies, and a high that was never supposed to make it over freezing. The trip started off on a bad note before I even left....my locks were frozen on my boat and needed to be unthawed with a hair dryer before I left. It was cold enough I couldn't make more than a cast or two without my rod icing up regardless of which one I tried. It was one of the few times I didn't catch at least something, but it was still worth giving it a try and would do it again in a heartbeat. 

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fishing user avatarbrgbassmaster reply : 

Wasn't cold but 4ft rollers on Saginaw bay smallie fishing in a nitro bass boat. Used to have videos. That was scaaaaaary. The big walleye boats were already 8n and couldn't believe we mad3 it back. And honestly neither could we. Also have fished when it was 28F and guides were freezing but catching 6lbrs on deep crabks. Probably coldest I've been but the fishing helped. 


fishing user avatarBassWhole! reply : 

I'll post a picture from the boat in mid January from the North East ocean fishing with no gloves. Wimps!;)




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