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Johnson’s Silver Minnow and other bass classics

mt silver minnnowI hope you all are getting used to seeing my Outdoors page in the Sunday paper, on the back of the Ticker business section. That’s a recent change from its longtime home in the Friday Sports section and, honestly, a change I’m also still getting used to. Online at Roanoke.com, the feature still lives in the Sports section.

For this week’s feature I took a look at some  classic bass lures, including the Johnson’s Silver Minnow pictured here. You can read the story HERE.

I wouldn’t claim that my list is the definitive list, but I think it’s pretty solid.

Anyone care to disagree? What did I miss? What’s on the list that shouldn’t be.

Ralph’s big striper, and thoughts on SML fishing derby

ralph's striperSome of you already know that Wild Lifer Ralph Barton made an exception to his “no tournaments” rule and entered the Optimist Tournament over the weekend. He finished second in the striper category with this dandy, which tipped the scales at 17.58 pounds.

When I saw Ralph at the awards he said he had been catching some nice stripers while plugging after dark. “I was going to be fishing anyway so I figured I would go ahead and enter.”

The fatty (below) caught by Ralph’s girlfriend, Jan Wilson, didn’t meet the 37-inch tourney minimum, but sure was a nice fish, too!

My column in today’s Roanoke Times noted a few of the changes going on with the tourney, including the folks from the Challenger Little League Baseball group getting involved.

Sid Witt and the others at CLLB are interested in moving this event forward. They’ve already made some improvements to the event, which hasn’t changed a whole lot in its execution and production since its early days starting 45 years ago.

Read more »

Big fish and another DQ at Optimist’s tournament

ayers catfish webThe annual Smith Mountain Lake fishing tournament, brought to us for 45 years now by the Roanoke Valley Optimist Club, ran Friday through Sunday at Smith Mountain Lake.

As I wrote in my story in today’s Roanoke Times, the event featured some pretty impressive catches, including a 35.32-pound flathead catfish pulled in my Christee Ayers (picture here) of Union Hall. This wasn’t just a lucky catch for Ayers. She is a catfishing expert who has been at this a long time.

As for the disqualification, which you can read more about in my story, they used to be rare at this event. In recent years they have become a regular occurrence. Tournament organizers pulled a number of anglers in for polygraph tests and that delayed the awards by a bit. When one of the tournament officials made an announcement apologizing for the delay due to the desire to ensure the cleanest tournament possible, the crowd cheered. One man shouted, “That’s the way it should be.”

Local Scott Howard wins big at Everstart tourney

scott howard

Courtesy of FLW Outdoors

Out-of-towners took the top three spots on the pro side at the recent Everstart Northern Series tournament at Smith Mountain Lake.

On the co-angler side, Scott Howard represented the local crew well.

Here’s my column in today’s Roanoke Times about how Howard pulled off the win.

Oh, I thought you said you wanted “stripers”

So, a friend just tipped me off, via Facebook, of an interesting job listing on the Roanoke Craigslist site.

The “employer’ (yes, there’s a reason I’m using quotes there) is seeking four “mature ladies,” (employer’s quotes, not mine) to star in a fishing video at Smith Mountain Lake. The models (should be between 35 and 55)  will get $500 cash for three days of filming, as well as lodging on a house boat during the production.

Oh, the catch. The video is being described as an “adult nude fishing video.”

Filming supposedly starts Friday.

We are supposed to use pictures with our blog postings as often as possible, but I decided I would go ahead and leave this one to the imagination.

I know what you all are thinking. You are thinking that the local outdoors reporter, if he were worth his salt, would get on the horn right now and figure out how to get on that houseboat for a story on the “Making of the adult nude fishing video on Smith Mountain Lake.”

I’m guessing I might have trouble securing a press pass for that, however.

 

A pair of big trout for Richie Ponton

ponton troutIf you followed the recent thread about trout truck followers, you might remember Richie Ponton chiming in with an opinion that not all nice fish are pulled out of the creeks the first day.

He provided this proof yesterday, sending this shot of two big browns that he caught while fishing Potts Creek the day after it was stocked.

Disqualified bass angler tells his side

nickerson fishI was able to talk yesterday with Josh Nickerson, the fisherman who was disqualified from the Oakley Big Bass Tour event at Smith Mountain Lake.

Nickerson (pictured here) was leading the tournament and poised to win a $30,000 Nitro Z7 bass boat, plus a $1,000 cash prize, before he was kicked out for failing a polygraph test.

I also spoke with Mark Jones, who runs the tournament trail. Jones provided a basic statement, just as he did in 2011 and 2012 when the top anglers were disqualified. In the first two tournaments neither of those anglers completed the polygraph test. In Nickerson’s case, he got through the test but the examiner detected deception.

You can read my Roanoke Times column HERE.

It’s pretty unreal that this makes the third year in a row for this to happen at Smith Mountain Lake. Disqualifications aren’t unheard of in Oakley events, but Smith Mountain Lake certainly holds the record.

I’d be curious to hear from fishermen who have taken polygraph tests at other tournaments. What was the experience like?

Oakley Big Bass Tour: Ratcliff wins; more controversy?

mike_ratclif

Courtesy of Oakley Big Bass Tour

I didn’t get out to the final awards for the Oakley Big Bass Tour at Smith Mountain Lake on Sunday. I planned to write about it today for tomorrow’s column. Still do.

I see where Mike Ratcliff of Conrad Brothers Marine was the big winner. Funny, huh? Guy who sells boats wins a boat. Wonder if he’ll give me a good deal on that sweet Nitro!??

I am hearing rumblings that the tournament again was marred by a DQ. There were DQs the last two years and you’d think the streak would end, right? Anyone know anything? Send me an email if you’d rather not post anything here.

Here’s the list of the top 10. If you are one of these guys, or know one of these guys, I’d love to talk with a couple of these guys today. My office number is 981-3395. I’m running out for a couple hours of late-morning turkey chasing but will be in the office after about 11 or noon.

Congrats to all the winners!

Overall

RANK ANGLER WEIGHT
1 Mike Ratclif 6.32
2 Tim Goff 6.13
3 Nathan Ward 6.02
4 Mark Vest 5.84
5 Thomas Wooten 5.75
6 Jarrett Albright 5.50
7 Ronald Nelson 5.43
8 Geoffrey Hill 5.31
9 Jonathan Leonard 5.18
10 Ralph Hollifield Jr. 5.05

Britt Stoudenmire’s big New smallmouth, and thoughts on the river

britt_smallie6Britt Stoudenmire is among the most passionate and concerned fishermen I know, especially when it comes to his home water, the New River.

Stoudenmire, who has built the New River Outdoor Company into one of the river’s premier outfitters, stays up on issues that impact the river. Among his concerns are the surges in water level from Claytor Dam releases.

In an email to a number of river stakeholders early last July, Stoudenmire included a graph of the up-and-down river flow, along with his assessment of the impact:

“This furthers the evidence that AEP is not taking into account river users, boaters, river related business on the New River below Claytor dam by subjecting them to nearly a 6″ increase/decrease during supposedly “run of river”, “levelized”, “recreational” flow during the busiest week of the year.

6″ of unwarned out of the blue inconsistent water jeopardizes safety and boating, ruins fishing, stresses fish, and makes running a recreational business on the New River extremely difficult.”

Stoudenmire has been providing info for my fishing report this season, for which I am really thankful. He and his guides are on the water pretty much daily, so they know what’s going on. Space doesn’t allow me to repeat his full reports verbatim, but you can find them every other week on the DGIF Outdoor Report. The short take is they have been catching some nice smallmouths — such as the big one Stoudenmire is holding here — on the New this year.

I heard from Stoudenmire this morning, in reference to my naming the James the best trophy smallmouth river in the state. As I wrote in the post below, I expected to get some feedback. I hoped for it. Today’s piece — and here’s the link again — was my opinion. But I have to say that it wasn’t like I just was making stuff up, or basing it on my own fishing experiences. I referred to data, and I considered the regular feedback I get from my sources.

Stoudenmire included some really interesting points in his note, and I don’t want to simply paraphrase them. So here it is:

“read your article in the paper today and i’d like to add several comments if that is ok:

1. the james river runs nearly 300 miles in the state of VA, with 200ish being smallmouth water. not counting claytor lake, there is roughly 100ish miles of new river in virginia. big difference there. i’d say there are still even even if you are looking only at citation registrations.

Read more »

Cast your vote on Virginia’s fishing bests

perchActually, this isn’t a poll.

For a feature on today’s Outdoors page in The Roanoke Times, I listed what I believe are some of Virginia’s best fishing spots. I suspect some might argue with a few of my choices.

Is Smith Mountain Lake really the best lake for trophy largemouth bass? What do you think?

I referred to data from the Virginia Angler Recognition Program, info that tells things like that if you want to catch citation yellow perch like the one pictured here, Claytor Lake is a good bet.

But a lot of this is subjective. Also, length restrictions kept me from going into much detail. It would be possible to write a book on Virginia’s best fishing.

Anyway, let’s hear your thoughts.

Friday, May 24, 2013

Weather Journal

Chilly holiday weekend AMs

Fri, 24 May 2013 04:12:55 +0000

About this blog

Mark Taylor.

While growing up in rural Southern Oregon, Mark Taylor developed a passion for the outdoors while he and his younger brother tagged along with their father on fishing, hunting and camping adventures.

Graduating from Northwestern University in 1988, Taylor spent four years as an officer in the U.S. Navy based in Norfolk before moving into journalism.

After five years writing about the military for a Norfolk-based publishing company, he became the outdoors editor at The Roanoke Times in 1998. He lives in Roanoke with his wife and twin daughters.

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