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Wednesday, July 28, 2004 |
Here's
a story from the Ol' B.A.S.S. Master himself, Ray Scott. I know
Tim Tucker personally, so I believe it's as true a story as you will
hear from a southern bass angler. Enjoy!
SCOTT ON-LINE
Ray Scott Outdoors, Inc. By Ray Scott Founder, Bass Anglers
Sportsman Society (B.A.S.S.)
BIG FISH Scores Alabama IGFA Record
Any
bass angler landing the next world record bass -- over the recognized 22-pounds,
4-ounces registered by George Perry so long ago -- will need a judge and jury on
board to swear to the facts before the catch will be credited. Such is the sanctity of IGFA record catches.
I felt
confident on a recent hot June day on my lake. On board were two well-known bass fishing outdoor
writers. Tim Tucker, a senior
writer for BASSMASTER Magazine, and Alan Clemons, the outdoor editor of The
Huntsville Times. To their credit
both are journalists of the high order -- what they call "investigative
reporters" on the hard-news side.
By
chance, the two writers had shown up at my 55-acre bass pond, known as
the "Presidents Lake" as the past fishing hole for both U.S. Presidents
George W.
Bush and his father, George H. Bush, (both lifetime members of the Bass
Anglers
Sportsman Society). Tucker and
Clemons were in the neighborhood covering the recent CITGO Bassmaster Elite 50
fishoff on the Alabama River, held at Prattville, Alabama.
The
writers let on as if they were interested in my lake-building and design used
to create "Great Small Waters," a three-set video series detailing my trophy
bass waters secrets. We talked
about lake design and the importance of structure in a bass lake, the food
chain and the value of supplemental feeding to "grow big bass."
The day
lingers longer in early-June, but the afternoon was wearing on, and the two
reporters slowed down in their rapid-fire interviewing. I suspected the two were more
interested in fishin' than talkin'.
When I
approached the subject of "y'all like to fish a bit," the recorders were turned
off. The note pads put to rest.
As any
bass angler knows, early summer can be a so-so catch-as-catch-can period. Usually the big fish have slowed down
following the spawn and moved out from the easy targets into the shallows to
deeper-water haunts. One solution
to the problem is to scale down to smaller lures and light line.
I've been
pounding the seminar table at the Bassmaster Fishing University for the past
two seasons on the idea that "light is right" in slow-bite situations. By "light line" I'm talking
IGFA-approved four-pound-test monofilament.
My
fishing partners had listened politely as the Ray Scott Seminar on light tackle
was repeated. Then they picked up
their hawgin' sticks and winches spooled with 20-pound test.
So be
it. They of little faith. Light tackle doesn't mean a
limp-wristed weenie rod. The Ray
Scott Sportackle spinning rod has a tapered tip for range and accuracy, but a
butt section with some backbone and muscle. Team it with the Ray Scott SuperCaster 225 with the oversize
spinning spool, and like Davy Crockett you can go bear hunting with a
switch. I was grinning a few
moments later when on the first cast I felt the slight tap of a bass inhaling
the slow-sinking plastic Senko.
The
bass moved with the bait and I leaned forward to sweep the 7-foot rod into
action. With 4-pound test line,
you don't set the hook, but sweep the rod and use the reel to grind the
needle-sharp hook into the fish's jaw.
And pray the bass moves away from the cover.
Good
fish telegraph their size. The
message comes up the line as a strong signal. This largemouth bass was moving off, like a big rock headed
downhill. My right foot hit the
trolling motor foot control and moved the boat to keep pace without too much
pressure on the fish and/or the four-pound test mono.
Playing
a big bass on light line is a game of skill -- well, part skill -- and a lot of
luck. The Lady Luck played a
hand. The big bass moved away from
the structure -- a pile of sticks and planted brush on the ridges -- into deeper,
open water. The next test is to
play the fish, try to wear it down, and move it into hand-landing range without
the fish's "teeth" cutting the thread-like four-pound string.
More
big fish are lost at the boat.
Rush the bass and it makes a last-ditch surge for freedom. A poor drag setting will break your
line and your heart.
The
fight lasted over a minute and a half -- maybe two. Truthfully, it seemed like hours. Some bass you really want to put in the boat. And I wanted this one as pure proof of
the light-line capabilities.
Tucker
and Clemons, like good outdoor journalists, had packed their camera gear. And the steady click, click of the
Nikon shutter was in my ear. A few
expressions of "that's a good one" and later "That's a damn big fish to try to
catch on 4-pound line" sprinkled in their comments.
The
largemouth made its predicted last lunge and then rolled up at the side of the
boat and my right hand reached for its big lip.
Silently
I whispered, "Thank you, Lord."
For sure the bass was a blessing.
Holding the big largemouth up for a few more brag-board photos, I
suddenly realized the true size of the fish -- a possible Alabama state record
for 4-pound IGFA test line?
As a
matter of record, I knew the IGFA award mark was 6-pounds 6-ounces landed by my
fishing buddy Jim Kientz of Montgomery, Alabama on this very lake. Jim's feat had been duly recorded and
certified by the International Game Fishing Association (IGFA) record
book. I've weighed in a passel of
lunkers as weighmaster on the Bassmaster Tournament Trail, and I pretty well
can judge a seven-pound bass when I meet it. This might be a record-setting bass, I said to myself.
Getting
a record approved by the IGFA is a labor of love. Catching the fish is the simple part. For starters, the paperwork to IGFA must
include description of the tackle, details of the catch, photos, a 50-foot
section of the line used and the name of any witness and the fish to be weighed
on certified scales.
As to
the "witness" requirement, there was no question. Both Tucker and Clemons would swear to it on a stack of "Fishermen's Bibles." But,
certified scales? Bubba, that
doesn't mean your trusty (rusty) Zebco DeLiars.
So I
packed the bass in a water filled cooler and hustled the record contender up to
a nearby country store that had scales.
I was determined to keep the fish alive for its return to my lake. My good taxidermist buddy in
Birmingham, AL, Archie Phillips, could produce a replica for me.
The
digital scales marked the bass at 7-pounds, 9-ounces.
And the
record fish is still alive and well, swimming back in the Presidents Lake. Both Tim Tucker and Alan Clemons will
attest to the fishing facts. And,
maybe think seriously about the use of light line for curing the slow-bite
times. As good reporters do, they
continued to test their hawgin' tackle and well-rope line while awaiting my
return from the weigh-in.
And,
just for the record, the light tackle bite was still on when I got back in the
boat. According to the reporter
types, the light line produced more and bigger bites than their combined
efforts. Sometimes light is right!
-30-
(Post
Script: The IGFA has just
confirmed my catch as the Alabama State Record for four-pound-test line.)
Photo
at http://www.rayscott.net/news/nrphotos/igfarecordbass.jpg Cutline:
Ray Scott displays the 7lb. 9oz. Alabama
IGFA record bass for four-pound-test line caught June 5, 2004 on his lake. The bass was released alive.
9:27:09 PM
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© Copyright 2004 Dan Small.
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